Disagreement hampers redistricting plan
TOPEKA-An amended reapportionment bill tentatively approved in the Kansas House yesterday would divide the KU student voting population, which has been the threshold of support for Democratic State Rep. Mike Glover.
The redesign of the voting districts in Douglas County was the most significant change in the bill, which would require a new redistricting system.
State Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, who proposed the amendment, said it would bring the western parts of Colorado into the state's energy system.
However, Glover said the amendment apart the city's student population and would threaten his chances
Vogel's plan would take a large block of student voters in central Laurence out of Glover's district
"IT'S CLEARLY gerrymandering of the students," Glower said.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said, "With Vogel's amendment, part of the new 46th district in east Lawrence would stick into a student area like a c-clamp."
Glover agreed.
"That area of Lawrence has all of those three or four-story houses that are split into apartments and are infested with students," he said. "The issue is whether to split the western part of the city or the central part."
The House bill originally would have created a new
district in east Lawrence. The 40th District. The district represented by Glover would have been moved slightly to
The district represented by Solbach still would have included land to the north and the south of Glover's district.
Glover said Vogel's amendment would push part of his and Glover's district farther west and disenfranchise KU
"ITS GENERALLY understood that even if you don't agree with the opinions or philosophy of another group, they are valid."
Vogel said, "Who are we going to disenfranchise—the permanent residents in west Lawrence who have been there for umplem years or the people in central Lawrence who are only going to be on the two to six years?"
Glover and Solbach argued that it would be easier to split western Lawrence than central Lawrence.
"The last thing we should do is break up neighborhood," Glover said, "but it is easier to split up the western part of the city because it hasn't been built up as much."
The Kansas Supreme Court must approve the House restricting plan before it could become law in 1980.
Solbach said the Court might find Voget's proposal unconstitutional because, he said, it deliberately split the student vote and split the neighborhood in central Lawrence.
However, Vogel said residents in west Lawrence
"I didn't come onto the floor of the House to change John Vogel's district — I came here to protect my own district," Glover said.
deserved to be in the same district because they were permanent residents.
Glover and Solbach objected because Vogel's amendment would affect their district but not Vogel's district.
Exchanges between the Douglas County Democrats and Vogel were at times sharp.
"I want to apologize to the body for the trouble we're having with Douglas County," the clover said. "It's obviously a problem, but it has nothing to do with me."
After debating for about an hour, the House approve Vogel's amendment 62-53, largely along party lines.
The House had approved the first 42 House districts without a bickle before the controversy erupted about the vote.
"YOU'RE TRYING to put me on the witness stand and make me say yes or no, but I'm not going to play that game," Vogel said at one point, after Solbach had fired a series of questions at him.
However, Glover said and the House vote that he hoped Democratic Gov. John Carlin would veto the redistricting bill and force Vogel to compromise on the issue of the student vote.
"We're getting our case together to try to show the Governor he would better off to evert the bait. "Glover
He said Carlin may review the bill next week.
45th
6th Street
9th Street
44th
15th Street
KU
Massachusetts St.
Haskell Ave.
23rd Street
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Staff Illustration by Dan Martin
A LITTLE WARMER
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Women get bid to tournament See story page eight
Lawrence, Kansas
The University of Kansas
Vol.89,No.105
COLUMBIA
Staff photo by TRISH LEWIS
body president, turned over their student senate offices last night to Margaret Berlin and George Gomer. Although Harper and Robinson they were pleased with their accon-
didance.
Reggie Robinson, former student body vice president, showed mixed emotions last night as he appeared before the Student Senate. Robinson and Mike Harper, former student
Board approves mall land plan
Happy ending
By SHURLEY SHOUP Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The planning commission voted 8-2 to recommend to the city commission that the City Council consider the report.
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission last night took the first step that could bring a regional shopping mall to Lawrence.
A company based in Ohio has proposed building a shopping mall with about 80 stores at a site southeast of Iowa Street and Armstrong Road.
The annexation request was a non-poem bearing item on the commission's agenda. The department is planning department's recommendation and remarks from a representative of the committee.
The staff recommended that the commission approve the request but that once the land was annexed, the portion of land in the plain be relied on to flood plain and not RS1.
A CITY ORDINANCE states that all annuallanded land come into the city under RS-184.
The planning department told the commission they had evaluated the annexation request on the basis of the land's suitability for development, not on a specific use.
Margaret McKinney, a commissioner who voted against the anexation request, said that only part of the land was suitable for residential or industrial use.
Nearly one-third of the area is in the county flood plain.
McKinney said commercial zoning would allow a parking area in a flood plain, but that commercial use would not be compatible with Plan 95.
Plan '56 is a projection of the acceptable development around Lawrence by 1966.
Some downtown merchants and city officials have been concerned that a large suburban shopping mall would hurt recent efforts to improve the downtown district.
CHUCK WARNER AND HANK Booth, planning commissioners, said the commission should decide only the annexation request and not consider the possible land as well.
"My vote is cast not for the possible land use, but for annexation." Warner said.
Dean Harvey, planning commissioner,
said the land could be used only for
their use.
Booth said, "The city should be able to debate what the use will be, and the best possible way to bring it into the city is RS-1."
Richard Zinn, a representative of the landowners, told the commission that the land was "fully protected."
"The marketplace would indicate it is ready for development," he said.
ZINN TOLD THE commission that the annexation would be a reasonable expansion of the area and would be consistent with the commission's past annexation actions.
Johanna Kollmorgen, a planning commissioner who also voted against the request, said she was not sure a shopping mall would benefit everyone in that area. She said although the city would gain tax revenue, the township would lose it.
Proponents of the mall have said the mall would bring in added tax revenue for the city.
Developers of the proposed mall, Jacob, Viscorsi and Jacob Co. of, Cleveland, said last fall that the mall would contain three stores that had "recognizable names."
Don Jones, an associate of the firm, said the names of the stores would not be released until the issue came before the city commission later this month.
In other action, the commission approved the final plan for a proposed residential subdivision at 23rd Street and Lawrence Park. The commission also selected the oldest building in Lawrence, sica on the land.
The developers altered the original plan, which would have required destruction of the barn, in an attempt to give a private company the ability to purchase and renovate the barn.
The altered plan does not guarantee that the barn would be saved indefinitely, but would delay destruction until other options were eliminated.
Old, new leaders call for unity
By CAROL BEIER
Staff Renorter
Mike Harper, former student body president, called for commitment, and a new plan.
"You cannot defend--you cannot protect the interests of yourselves and those you represent by turning this organization into a quamure of internal bickering," he said.
Both old and new student executives urged Student Senators at last night's joint session of the Senate to forget the dif- ferent cases they had been during elections two weeks ago.
Craig Templeton, administrative assistant to the Senate, said earlier this week that the new administration might be willing to send Senators from coalitions other than their own.
Templeton was an unsuccessful candidate for vice president of the student body. He ran with the Imagination Coalition. In 2012, he won the book 35 of the 110 Senate seats in the election.
THE NEW student body president and vice president were on the Porch Step Committee.
vice president, also spoke last night on Senate. *unity* before *formally* addressing the crisis.
Both Harper and Robinson received standing ovations from the members of the old and new Senates when they stepped down from the lectern.
Reggie Robinson, former student body
Robinson said, "I don't think there is room for factionalism in the Student Senate. The elections should be put behind you. I wouldn't do that, but a sake does nothing for the Student Senate."
In her speech following the transfer of power from the old to new Senate, Margaret Berlin, student body president, addressed on the importance of working together.
GEORGE GOMEZ, student body vice president, listed other issues that will face the new Senate. He mentioned impending decisions on membership in the Associated Students of Kansas lobby organization, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and extension of the handicapped busing program begun in January.
"We will expect a lot out of you," she said.
"One thing we will really accept is unity."
Members of the new Senate heard two speakers on the recent controversy about the Kansas University Endowment Association's investments in South Africa
However, the Senate defeated a motion made by Barry Shalinsky, off-campus senator, that would have allowed concessions to the Election Association's investments.
The KU committee on South Africa released a statement Tuesday that the association was shirking its social responsibility by investing in businesses in South Africa.
CONSIDERATION OF the resolution would have required suspension of the rules of the Senate. The rules prohibit consideration of legislation at the joint session. The resolution is to be part of the agenda for the next Senate meeting March 21.
Berlin announced staff appointments for her administration. Mark Rafferty, Topeka sophomore, will serve as executive secretary, Keith Maib, Gladstone, Mo., will serve as treasurer and Templeton was reappointed as administrative assistant.
Black leader stresses heritage
By MARK L. OLSON
Staff Reporter
The most valuable tool blocks have today to shape their future is knowledge of the achievements and history of their ancestors,
Cleaver spoke to more than 250 people in the lobby of Ellsworth Hall.
this lecture was sponsored by the Black Caucus of Ellsworth Hall, and capped a month of activities at the University of Kansas Museum of Natural History.
Cleaver, a civil rights activist in Kansas City, Mo., has been instrumental in persuading the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration to investigate hiring practices of the Kansas City, Mo., police department.
Clever won the Tuesday primary election to the 5th District of the City Council of Kansas City, Mo.
"ON THE ONE hand. I am glad that you have passed to honor black history during Black History Month," he said last night. "But on the other hand, it is disgraceful that we should have to pause to honor black history."
The 34-year-old Methodist minister and Mid-Central vice-president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference said
Cleaver said that there were many great blacks in history, but that their accomplishments have remained unacknowledged.
He cited examples such as Charles Drew, a black physician. Drew developed the use of blood plasma; for transfusions, yet bied
to death on his way to a black hospital when a "white's only"
hospital refused to treat him.
"It is important that we understand history." Cleaver said, "so that we can wipe out what was negative and put in what is positive."
Cleaver said he thought that the status of blacks had repressed to the 1960s and that it might take another movement like that of the Civil Rights Movement.
The early slaveowners caused the most severe damage to the dignity of blacks, he said.
"The worst thing that white folk did to black folk was not tapping us or discriminating against us," Cleaver said. "It was the rule of silence."
He said that indigency began the moment the first slaves stopped off the boat at the colony of Jamestown, Va.
"That was the beginning of one of the most awful experiences that America has not been able to set over." Cleaver said
Cleaver emphasized a need for greater interest by blacks in the history of black people. He said too many times blacks, especially students, did not make a great enough effort to learn their own history.
"I HEAR THE black students saying the white students wouldn't take it because they thought they didn't need it," Clementine said.
We've got to be careful, we've got to be certain that we do not exclude our racial identity," she did. "God did not mistake us."
2
Thursday, March 1, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansan Wire Services
Amin asks Tanzania for peace
NAIROBI, Uganda - Ungandan President Idi Amiri sought yesterday amid reports of repeated victories by Tanzanian troops in a four-month-old
In a Uganda Radio Radio monitored in Nairobi, Amin asked Kenya, Zaire, Sudan, Rwanda and Burundi to try to persuade Tanzanian President Robert Mugabe to stop the genocide.
Nyerever said in a broadcast that the fighting could be stopped if the OAU agreed to condemn Amin for invading Tanzania, if Amin agreed to renounce his claim on a section of Tanzania, pledged never to invade Tanzania again and to compensation for damage done during the October invasion.
The Ugandan broadcast appeared to knock down rumors that Amin and his family had fled Uganda.
Credit problems haunt agency
WASHINGTON - The Social Security Administration said yesterday that it had been unable to credit nearly $80 billion in wages to the correct workers' benefits.
The problems, which mean that retirement benefits for the affected workers could be reduced, were caused by inaccurate or incomplete earnings reports filed by employers or the self-employed through the years, Social Security Commissioner Stanford G. Ross said.
Ross said it was unlikely anyone's benefits actually had been reduced.
"I'm not saying there couldn't be a rare instance where somebody got less, but it would be a remote case," he said.
Ross said the loss amounted to 0.7 percent of the $9.7 trillion in wages that have been credited correctly.
Ross said a new system of reporting earnings annually instead of quarterly would increase accuracy.
The agency has handed 10 billion wage reports since 1937 and credited all but 142 million correctly, he said.
Rabin predicts peace treaty
WICHTA-Yitzkul Rabin, former prime minister of Israel, yesterday predicted that an Egyptian-Eritrea peace treaty would be signed within two years.
"To be safe, I'd say by the end of April a peace treaty will be signed." Rabin said. He was in Wichita before presenting a peace treaty at Kansas State University.
Rabin would not say exactly when a true Middle East peace would come but that he was confident it would occur. His confidence was based in part, he said, on the Camp David accord reached last September among President Carter, Elevation President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin.
Rabin, currently a lieutenant general in the Israeli Army reserve and former chief of staff of the defense forces, said the failure to meet the previous ceasefire was "the most horrific" he had seen.
he also said he did not think any major advances would result from a meeting scheduled tomorrow between Begin and Carter because Sadat would not be
U.S. favors Eaupt's demands
WASHINGTON — The United States, attempting to break the deadlock in Midwest peace treaty negotiations, is supporting key Egyptian demands in the U.S.
The sources, who insisted on anonymity, said the Carter administration agreed with Egypt that a one-year timetable be set for establishing Pakistanian forces.
Under the U.S. proposals, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and faraizi Prime Minister Menachem Begin would agree to the timetable in a letter exchange
The sources said the administration also supported Egypt's position that the treaty should not have priority over Egypt's military ties with other Arab countries.
Sources said the administration also was backing Sindat in withholding an exchange of ambassadors with Israel until all of the Sindat is returned to Egypt.
OPEC OKs oil price boosts
VIENNA, Austria—The Organization of Petroleum Exports Gives approval yesterday to separate oil price boosts because it said the hikers will receive higher royalties.
Venezuela also announced that it would make an increase soon.
The announcement, made by the OPEC secretariat, followed price hikes made independently by the governments of Kuwait, Lilqa, Qatar and the United States.
Reports from Tehran, Iran, said the revolutionary government of Prime Minister Mohsen Bazargan would sell to the highest bidder when oil shipments in the country were expected.
2-cent fuel tax increase backed
TOPEKA-A a subcommittee of the House Transportation Committee has recommended an increase of two cents a gallon on gasoline and diesel fuel sold by some states.
The state now collects a tax of eight cents a gallon on gasoline and 10 cents a gallon on diesel fuel.
The recommendation includes placing revenues from one cent of the increase into the state highway fund and revenues from the other penny to the special city and county highway fund. The proposal means the state would evenly share the additional money with cities and counties.
The Governor's Task Force on Transportation last December recommended that the gasoline tax be increased only one cent a gallon and that the revenue be
But the subcommittee said it was recommending maintaining the two-cent differential between gasoline and diesel fuel because the trucking industry years ago agreed to pay the higher tax for diesel fuel in return for the elimination of an old tax that charged for each ton transported a mile.
China disputes casualty reports
BANGKOK, Thailand--Vietnam said that its troops wiped out a Chinese regiment and two battalions in the hilly province of Lang Son.
Analysts said the armies were maneuvering for position in Lang Son prior to what might be one of the most decisive battles of the 11-day old border war.
In Tokyo, the Kyodo news service reported it had been told by sources in an urban that nightlighting had been going on in the Lang Son area, but there was panicked speculation.
A Chinese spokesman dismissed Vietnamese reports on the Chinese casualties and declined to indicate the actual number of casualties.
In Peking, Treasury Secretary Michael Blumenthal told reporters after a meeting with Chinese Premier Hua Kuo-bo that China "must be taken seriously" in its assertions that the war would be blunt. Blumenthal said he was aware of Britain's opposition to the war and its wish for a "speedy end" to the conflict.
Iran to cut off oil middlemen
TEHRAN, Iran-Iran's revolutionary government said yesterday that it intended to cut out a consortium of middlemen responsible for marketing most
Hassan Naziz, new head of the National Iranian Oil Co., told thousands of oil workers that "the wort condor will with, the help of Allah, be eliminated."
Ayatollah Ruhullah Khomeini, who led the nation's Islamic revolution, said the revolution could succeed only if all foreign influence in the country were
Naith's statements implied that Iran would take over the foreign sale of its oil and that the consortium companies would be able to buy petroleum only as a result.
Weather...
Today's weather should be sunny and warmer with the temperature in the mid to upper 40s.
Stephan says constitution allows liquor pool changes
TOPEKA- Attorney General Robert Stephan said yesterday that the Kansas Constitution would allow sale of liquor by licensed sellers. But lawmakers wished to modify the private club law.
From Kansan Wire Services
In a legal opinion already stirring controversy on both sides of the emotional liquor issue, Stephan said he based his opinion on language contained in a Kansas Supreme Court decision last November in institutionalizing the 1974 liquor-restaurants law.
Stephale's opinion indicated the Kansas Legislature could pass a bill changing the private club law to eliminate the lounge pool system and allow sale of mixed drinks within the clubs. Private clubs are required to have a waiting period and fee for new members.
SUCH A BILL would need only a simple majority of both houses for approval.
Sen. Ron Hein, R-Topena, said he would ask the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee to introduce legislation that would allow the sale of mixed drinks in clubs. He said the bill would abolish the sale of mixed drinks and permit reciprocal club memberships, meaning several clubs may honor the same card.
STEPHAN'S DECISION came only hours before the Senate rejected a proposed constitutional amendment that would have allowed sale of liquor by the drink in
Senators voted 19-21, failing to win even a simple majority on a measure that would have required a two-thirds vote for passage. The vote ended a little less than two hours'
Stephan said the court's decision on the liquor-in-restaurants law was the first opportunity the court has taken to define what is meant by the open saloon prohibition placed in the Kansas Constitution by voters in 1948.
IN HIS EIGHT page opinion, the attorney general said the court's decision determined three essential elements must exist before a judge can order an employee to saloon. "Stephen said an open salon must:
- Be open to the public, without discrimination.
sua films
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Since private clubs are open only to members and are not open to the general public, Stephan said, they would not fall into their hands, because the court's definition of an open saloon.
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- Dispense or sell alcoholic beverages.
- Permit those beverages to be consumed on the premises of the establishment.
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Stephan said the other two elements were present with any private club operation.
The opinion was requested by Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, who, along with others, thought language in the court ruling last week might allow clubs to abolish liquor pools.
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Last fall the Supreme Court rejected a 1978 law that would have allowed sale of cocktails in restaurants merely by stating such establishments were not open saloons. The justices rejected that logic stating the restaurants allowed free access to the public and therefore would be forbidden by the constitution.
Stephan said the Supreme Court decision did not interpret the constitution as prohibiting any establishment that sells liquor by the drink.
An estimated 600 private clubs in the state used pools last year to serve members some $1.2 million worth of liquor, according to a report by state Alcohol Beverage Control Division.
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. . .
Thursday, March 1, 1979
University Daily Kansan
3
KU to get share of Big 8 profits
The University of Kansas expects to receive a $450,000 check this week at the Big Eight Conference meetings in Kansas City, Mo.
Bob Marcum, men's athletic director at
KU, said yesterday that the check was KU's share of Big Eight profits from the Orange Bowl and televised conference sporting events.
The meetings are scheduled for today.
Upcoming AURH election attracts few competitors
One team of candidates has filed for the offices of president and vice president of the University.
Students can vote at their residence halls from 4:30 to 8:30 p.m. Monday and Tuesday for voting.
Candidates for AUR office offices are Jay Smith, Greenisburg sophomore, president; Mark Fouts, Derby sophomore, vice president; Brent Lamb, Topa sophomore, Parvesh Kumar, Overland Park sophomore, and Sheri Burdenius, Overland Park sophomore. And Kano Kao Lawrence freshman, and Ron Giersch, Topke freshman, secretary.
"I expected more people to be running," Sinclair said. "but we've got some good races for secretary."
"I'd like to see as many people vote as last year."
Last year 1,252 people voted in the election, in which four candidates ran. About 4,500 people live in residence halls and are eligible to vote.
Saints, Fouts and Kumar are running as a coalition. The other candidates are in
Each candidate was required to obtain 50 signatures on a petition and to file by Feb. 23. In addition, the candidates for president and vice president are as a team and could live in the same hall.
Conservatism to be subject of Will speech
George Will, nationally syndicated political columnist, will deliver the second 1979 J.A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture at 8 tonight in Wooldruff Auditorium.
The lecture, "The Future of Conservatism," is free and open to the public.
Will won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary in 1977 and is recognized as an articulate exponent of political conservatism.
Will, who graduated from Trinity College in Hartford, Conn., also received a degree from Oxford University and a Ph.D. from Princeton University.
Will begin his national journalism career in 1072 as the Washington editor of National Review.
He previously taught political science at Michigan State University, the University of Illinois and the University of Toronto. He also as a legislative side in Washington.
He also gives a weekly commentary on
the Today show and appears frequently on
CBS.
The Vickers lecture series was established in 1707 by the Vickers family of Wichita in memory of the founder of the Vickers Petroleum Co., Inc.
Campus Veterans
General Meeting
Walnut Rm.
Kansas
Union
March 1,
1979
at
7:00 p.m.
Bill Dahman, Kansas City, Kan,
sophomore and chairman of the elections
committee, said he did not know why only one team had filed for candidacy.
"I had hoped that we could have a debate or forum for the candidates," he said. "Maybe we still can for the secretary and treasurer candidates."
tomorrow and Saturday among athletic director and faculty representatives of the
Del Brinkman, chairman of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation, is KU's faculty representative to the Big Eight.
The agenda for the meeting includes a proposed Monday night basketball television series, a report on a meeting of the task force on women's athletics and a discussion of crowd control and bench conduct.
The athletic directors will meet tomorrow with faculty representatives to review Kansas. University's football, report on the Jim L. Stanley case and discuss Title IX.
K-State's football team was put on probation in 1977 for exceeding the limit of 20 points per game.
Stanley was fired last year as Oklahoma
Watch K.U. play in the Big Eight Post Season Tournament Friday March 2 and Saturday March 3
Admission $22.50 for both nights
$12.00 for either Friday or Saturday night includes
- I reserved seat
Big Eight
ment
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ht.
SUA
- Bus transportation to and from Kemper Arena
- Pop on the bus
Bus will leave union at 5:30 p.m. each night Money will be refunded if K.U. does not play. There are a limited number of seats available so sign up today at SUA.
the international club presents
INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL 79
State's head football coach and accused of using private funds for the football team
Agenda items for the Saturday meeting of faculty representatives include a financial review and a review of hardship cases. A hardship case occurs when an athlete is injured and unable to compete during most of the season.
sunday, march 4 cafeteria and ballroom kansas union
KU hardship cases to be reviewed are those of Brian Bethke, John Odell, Joe Tumpim and Mark Wilburs, all football players.
7 to 9 pm cultural performances
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international club members 3.00
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editorial staff.
$ ^{4} $ARCH1,1979
Senators play games
The already questionable effectiveness of the Student Senate may be further stymied by infighting over an off-campus housing board.
The board is favored by Margaret Berlin, student body president, who said she would seek Senate approval and set up a seven or eight member
Berlin's efforts are opposed by a group of playschool politicians who say that their coalition, Imagination, holds more seats than Berlin's and that they will try to block establishment of the board. They have, said that the proposed services of the housing board would duplicate those already provided by the Consumer Affairs and residential programs offices.
BUT, THOSE two offices and Steve Ruddick, legal services attorney, have said they favor establishment of the board.
As Fred McEhenie, director of the office of residential programs said, "Off-campus students tend to get isolated. We want to make them feel like they have some way of plugging into what is going on at the University."
Despite the support of these campus organizations, some members of the Senate are vying for power when they
should be trying to provide additional service to students.
In fact, Craig Templeton, Senate administrative assistant, said he perceived the Senate as a divided two-party organization.
The dispute is unnecessary and insensitive.
"What we really have here is a two-party system and I think it's healthy," Templeton said. "The housing board that Margaret wants could meet with some problems."
TEMPLETON AND other student senators, allied against Berlin because she ran for student body president with an opposing coalition, are ignoring their responsibility to the students they supposedly represent.
But Templeton seems to think a balance of power is necessary—Imagination against Porch Step. In other words, the problem asks a pawn on the chessboard.
Berlin was correct when she said,
"We're no longer coalitions, we're all
one Student Senate. They were elected
senators, not as coalition
members."
It's time to stop any seed of division sown over the issue, of an off-campus housing board. Student needs should be met and should not be subjected to political maneuverings.
Nazi collection owner says exhibit valuable
To the editor:
As the owner of the Third Reich Collection which was housed at the Kenneth Spencer Research Library until April of last year, I was able to attend a session. I did not respond to both the supportive resolution of the AAUP and to the well-phrased letter of opposition from Judith Lomberg.
Unfortunately, I must observe that the impulsion to avoid and seal off a chapter of Israel's national socialism is social climate that allowed Adolf Hitler and his NSIDA is come to power in Germany in the 1930s.
This inability to examine, the unwillingness to study . . . in short, the "know-nothing" approach to history has resulted in the circumstance that little knowledge exists with regard to the true origins of the Third Reich amongst the general public.
At a conference in 1941, when asked what the policy was to be toward Jews, gypsies and Slavs in the Ukraine, Hither responded, "We'll treat them like Redskins!"
For example, only the most dedicated researchers are aware of the fact that Adolf Hitler was not much of an original thinker. He believed in the importance of learning from the English (Houston Stewart Chamberlin and Cecil Rhodes) and the concept of genocide from the United States.
"I stand against genocide," said Wiesenthal.
Anyone who doubts that genocide still infects humanity need look no further than the official pictures of the massacre at My Lai for confirmation.
I am both an admirer and supporter of Simon Wiesenthal, who, I am sure, no one can fault as an expert upon the period 1933-1945. Mr. Wiesenthal observed during his last visit to Kansas City that, "the worst possible result would be for future wars like the one that was simply a war between the Jews and some夜vichetic Germans."
George Santayana said it precisely,
Those who do not remember the past, are
contaminated by that past.
Keith Wilson, Jr.
Kansas City, Mo.
Kansas City, Mo
Two sides needed in Nazi exhibition
Many pros and cons have been presented on whether a Nazi exhibit in Spencer
To the editor:
While museum curators could not predict
KANSAN letters
the coming of "Holocaust" on television, the dates for Passover were and still are on the University calendar. N. Christian would be the first person to recognize antisemitic actions during the Easter holidays.
These problems represent the past, but the recent moves by University administrators and faculty suggest that it is a matter of time until an exhibit will take place.
As a university community we should neither "black box" potential knowledge nor should we be misdirected by viewing them as something to present a partial view. We need perspective.
An exhibit of artistic artifacts from the Third Reich regime are symbolic of political forces which generate societal results. Is it asking too much to view the proposed Nazi objects offered by Wilson and then see an exhibit of artifacts which "resulted" from the Nazis' mass murder of Jews, stars, prisoner drawings and underground circles represent resulting artifacts.
A final concern must be addressed in making such exhibitions. In a public television film, "Blood and Culture," the author uses Nazi art exhibit in Wyoming was shown.
During interviews, it was apparent that people enjoyed these works rather than disliking them. An exhibit with artifacts representing political causes and results will allow people to be exposed to the dilemma of such enjoyment.
Assistant professor of architecture and urban design
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor
Barry Massy
Business Manager
Karen Wendertz
Hollywood last week opened a Washington bureau on Capitol Hill that in the months to come will feature your congressman and mine, doing whatever it is they say they do, in living color on the tube.
General Mgr
Rick Musser
After almost 34 years since it was first proposed, the long-awaited television broadcasting system installed in the House of Representatives was finally plugged in. First day news accounts of the day's recordings reported that the reception was clear, but some static over Congress' handling of the broadcast system may eventually cloud
House coverage a one-sided show
supposedly, the rationale behind broadcasting lawmakers' proceedings to the public is that it will afford the public the opportunity to witness democracy at work. And some have reasoned that broadcast of House proceedings might even stimulate the politically disengaged by us to want to become involved in the democratic process.
But the disputes between network broadcasters and congressmen before the installment of the broadcast
To the distray of professional network broadcasters, the House productions are controlled exclusively by the House itself. This means no narrator, no instant analysis, no artistic cutouts, no flattering closures of dozing congressmen, no replays and no wide-angle shots of an empty chamber—as it so often is.
In effect, because the networks have no editorial control, the broadcast amounts to "the house cover itself."
During the formative stages of the House broadcast system, network brass and some members of Congress were involved in the debate over the tools of their trade to cover the debates. Further, they argued that a House-operated system would leave viewers with a feeling of "what you're seeing is what the House wants you to see. This, opponents of the House system argue, isn't important."
However, supporters of an in-House system objected that the networks would concentrate on unflattening shots of members, empty seats and young women in the audience.
[Image of a man with a black beard and mustache. He is wearing a dark shirt and pants.]
Vernon Smith
"The rule is that the cameras cover the legislative process only." Rep. Charles Rose, D-N.C., said. "A member thumbing with his eyes closed is not part of the legislative fight in the gallery is not part of the legislative process."
Rose was one of three Democrats appointed by House Speaker Thomas O'Neill J. D-Mass, to come up with an acceptable broadcast plan. An earlier test of House broadcasting failed in 1977, and O'Neill had made it clear that he opposed network intervention in House proceedings.
The panel studied broadcasting systems in other legislatures, including Canada's House of Commons, where professional broadcasters were hired to set up and operate the system that was ultimately controlled by the legislature.
At the taxpayers expense, Rosi's panel eventually spent about $44,000 to hire consultants for advice on how to set up and configure the equipment, cameras and other equipment that will record floor proceedings. The actual cost of setting up the system is unknown, but the House will pay its own professional broadcasters almost $278,000 a year to operate the system.
The system's tape machines will also serve another purpose. Members will be allowed to purchase a 30-minute tape, which can be used for training and send them to folks back home for broadcast over the local station. This has led to criticism that the broadcast could lead to grandstanding for purely political purposes and to oppressive opponents at a disadvantage in trying gain public attention.
Rep. John Anderson, R-III, who argued unsuccessfully for a network-controlled House broadcast system, already
has attacked the tapes policy agreed to by Democratic leaders.
In a Feb. 7 letter to O'Neil, Anderson charged that the policy allowed $^{14}$ house-controlled system to become uncontrollable under "unpredictable" expense." In addition, he said it would "distract and prolong our proceedings by encouraging more and longer time in the office."
The cost alone will discourage members from such tactics, he says, and the tapes won't be available to members for at least one day after the session in question, thus reducing their newsworthiness.
"Hot issues don't just l dent to last that long." he said.
It is apparent that Rose has no conception as to what distinguishes a "hut" issue from a "cold" one. One reason is the lack of a "room" in her last longer than a day, contrary to Rose's line of thinking.
Thus, Congressman would indeed be tempted to grandstand a little more in order to play the role of the chief public servant. The opponents of a favorable publicity tapes, the opponents of an incumbent, who is already at a disadvantage, would find the going so easy.
The effect of presenting only that part of the legislative process as described in high school textbooks, or instead of an independent congressman, is damaging to the political psyche. For who can truly be expected to believe what is shown if the congressmen do not present it?
In the early 1970s the French stateman Mirabene observed Congress and noted that, "the peers of America have a duty to honor their voices is harmony only for themselves, and must not vibrate in the ravished ears of an ungrateful and unhappy man."
Now, almost 200 years later, and despite the recent introduction of television, Mirabeau's observation remains unchanged.
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the Daily Karean
Industry threatens Alaskan beauty
Each of the opponents has retrained—the congressional battle over the permanent preservation of 121 million acres of Alaskan wild lands will soon be reimbled.
The controversial Alaska Lands bill,
designated H.R. 39, was reintroduced in
the House two months ago after being stranded
in the ocean as a pro-industry and
commercialization sentiment.
As a result of the impasse, and more importantly, the expiration of a provision in the 1971 Native Claims Act that prevented Alaskan development of wild lands. Presi-
STATE U.
BUREAUCRATS
BY T. M. ASLA
HELLO I'M DICK LEE, ACE TV REPORTER EXPOSING THE INEFFICIENCY OF STATE US BUREAUCRACY, BEING FAIR, I WILL NOW INTERVIEW ONE OF THESE INEFFICIENT BUREAUCRATS!
EXCUSE ME. BUT WHY ARE YOU WEARING A CLOWN MASK?
MY REGULAR MASK IS DIRTY.
BUT WHY A MASK! ARE YOU AFRAID OF REPRISAIS?!
OH NO! THIS MASK IS ON THE SIDE OF BUREAUCRACY!
BUREAU CRAFTS
Phillip Garcia
ALLOW OVER CAMPUS, THE
TERRIFIED OFFICE
WORKERS WHISFER;
MASKED MANAGER?
YOUNG MAN
lent Carter declared 56 million of the disouted acres as national monuments.
JIMMY CARTER
Carter's action granted the area the same protection against commercial as is given to national parks. In addition, Cecil Andrus, secretary of the interior, designated another 50 million acres as industrial or commercial development.
THE BILL, which is almost the same as the one proposed in the past session, has been heard in a subcommittee of the Interior and Insular Affairs Committee. Debate on the House floor is expected in early April.
Without a doubt, the bill faces an uphill fight. About 2,000 people tested on the bill in the last session and most of those favored the bill. The other group failed to get the bill on the floor for a vote.
A battle of many months-perhaps a year is=expected. To be sure, the battle
comprising more than 24 conservation groups who have banded for the fight.
At stake is one of America's last pure frontiers, which is equal in size to California.
On one side of the front are conservationists, headed by the bill's sponsor Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz, Rep. John Seibling, D-Ohrio, Andi and the Alaskan Coalition.
OPPOSING THEM is the ever eager and all too greedy commercialists and industrialists. The mining, timber and, of course, coal are the main sources by rabid support from the entire Alaskan congressional delegation and many Alaskans themselves, who have lived independently and self-sufficiently from the rest of the country. Many Alaskans want to
And then, there is the Naatak River, which has been declared by the United Nations as an International Biome because the water has not been polluted in the least by
But for the industrialists and commercialists, the frontier holds a different view.
There is the Arctic National Wildlife range with its roaring herd of Porcupine caribou, 125,000 strong. There is the Tongass rain forest with its dark mountains and picturequeen jungle. There are the glaciers on the coast of the mountain ranges of the Gates of the Arctic.
THEY EEY the estimated 12 to 49 billion barrels of oil and the 29 to 132 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. They eye the 130 million tons of coal angl large amounts of 16 df-
levent minerals, which the Department of Defense calls "critical" for security.
The industry lobby says preservation would damage Alaska's economy. But Anchorage, a major employer, the fishing industry, would benefit from preservation. He also said that the tourism industry could be expected to increase if the city tourism brought Alaska $190 million in 1978.
Andrus said the lands could be explored and developed if the need arose.
While the industries conceal that most of the oil, gas and mineral deposits lie outside the proposed preserves, they assert that the "best" are within the preserved areas.
THIS HAS NOT been the first time a choice has had to be made between letting nature, her wild lands and life exist as they do in the past, within her crust to withdraw vast riches.
But it may be one of the last choices of its kind. Many conservationists say this frontier is the last of the great wilderness areas the United States possesses.
The natural resources our lands have provided us during the past 200 years have continued to change.
It is time to demonstrate our gratitude. It is time we put aside the ideology of progress, production and profit and show reverence for a beauty that lies far away. Congress must preserve this part of the beauty of all beauties: nature.
1
Thursday, March 1, 1979
University Daily Kansan
5
Athletes react to merger proposal
By BARBARA JENSEN
Staff Reporter
Reactions to a possible merger between the men's and women's athletic departments at the University of Kansas were mixed yesterday among student athletes.
Plans for the merger were announced Tuesday at a University of Kansas Athletic Conference meeting.
"You're merging two very successful programs," Chet Collier, a member of the men's tennis team, said. "The women's teams competed with very little scholarship money this year and did a tremendous job. It will be good for them to get more money."
"I think it's important, though, to keep the football and basketball teams in a category as bringing in revenue. If you have a healthy team, you need an team, there is plenty of money to go around."
"BUT IF YOU gave the women's teams money that football needed, I think you would hurt the overall program because you'll end up bringing in less revenue."
"I'm really skeptical that it will improve the women's programs." Levinson said. "The merger isn't going to change any attitudes, and that's one of the big problems."
但 Anne Levinson, a member of the field
hockey team, said she would be disap-
pose if she could not play.
"You can't grow without moral support. Look how many faculty members go to the men's games but have never gone to a women's game."
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Levinson said she also was skeptical about the merger because the two departed in 2015.
"It's always been the philosophy of the women's program that academics come first, then enjoyment and competition in athletics are just a part of our education."
"BUT FOR THE men, sports are often a steppingstone to the professional leagues. They're interested in profit. So does that team? If they win, the most revenue gets the best treatment?"
"I think it could help bring the programs into balance," she said. "It could give us more exposure, more money and better results as long as we don't get overshadowed."
Kelly Phipps, a member of the softball team, said she thought the merger could be successful.
He said he thought a merger would eliminate a lot of paper work, but that it was important to remember that football and basketball were the biggest revenue-producers.
Dave Fletche, a football player, said the only problem he saw was of one financing.
Fletcher said he thought most of the football team was interested in other sports.
"BUT IF THERE are conflicts, such as scheduling the use of Allen Field House, I think the football and basketball teams have a priority because they bring in the money."
John Lyons, a member of the golf team,
said he thought the merger could help the
team.
"I don't see anything wrong with themer," he said. "In fact, if the golf teams were under one person, it could help in scheduling and traveling."
Under the proposed merger, Bob Mar-
cum, men's athletic director, would be
charged with a $70 million fine.
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Washington, women's athletic director,
would be associate director.
The athletic business office, sports information office, the William Educational Fund, special projects, basketball and football would be under the direction of Marcus
SUA Wants you hands down.
Washington would be in charge of a sports medicine program and non-revenue-profit programs.
TEDDY TIGER CAREERS
Join us every Thursday night at 7:00 pm in the Union for an open game of duplicate bridge. Whether you're a student, staff or faculty member, all you need is a 75' entry fee and you're ready to play. Don't be left out, join us tonight at 7:00 pm in the Union.
If Chancellor Archie R. Dykes approves the merger, it will become effective July 1, 2015.
For more information call Mike McGhehey
The plan also called for a merger of the KICC board and the Advisory Board on Wearable Technology.
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PETER WELCHER
It wasn't long into college that I rewasen it was still driving. Also realized where this ride was going and that I didn't want to go along. So I went home early the next day, regularly attending church, it was natural for me to start thinking about Jesus Christ. Yet my understanding of this Person was at best confused.
My pre-college lessons were basically happy. If I thought about it, though, there seemed to be little substance to my life. It was so easy to drift from day to day to carry by whatever the world offered. I guess I thought college would somehow provide me with my purpose.
Another Life changed by Jesus Christ
Then a couple of my high school friends left me some literature detailing what the Bible had to say about Jesus. In reading that material, I began to understand who Jesus was and why He mattered to me. I saw God, as an omniscient Judge, but, also but as a Person who loved me in a way I could not hope to eruak. I realized there existed, between God and me, a real moral gain, one that had no hope of crossing on my feet, but I had laid separated from Him by my sin. That was why Jesus came. He came to be the bridge for me. He died and paid the penalty for the sins which separated me from God.
Search Ended
Many things remained unclear at the time, but my heart told me to accept, so I moved Jesus to his payment and Lord. It
wasn't a particularly emotion packed or moving experience, but my spirit sighed with the relief of a load removed.
My life since has not been one of flying around in octaves, but one of moving steadily for ward in peace and confidence. Yes, I continue to have problems, and even to sit, everyday, but I am no longer bound by their penalty and guilt. There is no way to describe the utter utterness of the pain. I'm now a victim of an inmate convinced it is this life which I was always searching for. Now I have found it and have felt a sense of
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243 Massachusetts
Weekday
The weekly feature page of the University Daily Kansan
March 1st, 1979
GUITARS
MAKING YOUR OWN MUSIC
Jim Baggett examines the neck of the second guitar he has finished at Michigan Street Music. Baggett says that the process of making a fine instrument cannot be rushed.
Greg Smith held half with an unfinished skill and半肮ily cut into the soft wood with his knife, imlaying wood trim for the inlay.
Willingly setting aside his work to answer questions, Smith typifies an attitude in the shop that seems to say, "An no hurry job."
Smith and Jim Baggett started Michigan Street Music, 647 Michigan St., a stringed instrument shop, about a year ago. With part-time help from Rik Dishinger, associate professor of art, these Lawrence craftsmans carry on the time-consuming trade of making stringed instruments by hand. It usually takes six months to make a single instrument.
Across town another man, Oliver Finney, also spends six months building an other stringed instrument, the harpschneider.
Badger and taking so what time was important? Distractions be set to see each part can *rela* 'in' the form of the instruc*
"The parts of the instrument must fit together with very little tension so that the instrument has a unified voice to give it its best sound." Bagnett said. "They can only do this when the instrument is able to relax."
The neck and top of a guitar, one of three beams is working on, hang from a rack above the cluttered workbench. A violin, a bass, or an acoustic guitar are there.
Smith said, "You can be good with tools, but there is something more to strive for. We try to bring out our personal sensitivities."
"We try to feel something from the wood and try to tune in the wood to see what it wants us to do or make it sing out as it"
It is difficult for these men to talk about their work. They consider themselves artists and, like artists, they have a hard time expressing themselves.
"The wood is the inspiration for the instrument," Dishinger said. "A wood has a certain potential and you have to try to handle it."
Baggett said, "I read a quote that said 'Don't study guitar making, study wood and the variations in the grain.' Any fine woodworker studies the wood rather than the he is making with the wood."
Baggett and Smith remodeled an old gas station to hold their workshop and store. The shop has a feeling of newness. The building is made of brick.
"What we do is very much an art. The artist comes in as you try to see the design of your instrument in your mind and then
build it."
In contrast to the artistic approach the craftsmen at Michigan Street Music have toward their trade, Finkin, the harpspaced accordion player.
Finney said the harpsichord, a predecessor to the piano, was essentially a machine because the keys were joined to levers that plucked the strings, giving the instrument its characteristic pliant sound.
His shop is next to the Kansas River Bridge at 405 N. Second St. The nose of trucks rummble by his small, almost block shop across the street.
first harpsichord in 1920 as he was completing his doctoral thesis in English literature at the University of Kansas. Finney said, "This is much more satisfying than teaching freshman English, because when you finish the semester you never know whether you earned your money. When I finish a harpsichord, I have something physical I can look at and hear."3
Finney uses his harpsichord for $2,000 to $6,000. He got plans for his instruments from drawings of museum instruments.
"One of the most satisfying aspects of my work is when I hear someone play an instrument of mine in a concert," he said. "Then, I know I've done something to help them make their music in a way they couldn't have done themselves."
Photos by Randy Olson and Chris Todd Story by Bruce Thomas
JOHN B. KIRBY
Every piece of Rik Dishinger's violins at Michigan Street Music must be patiently hand-carved from blocks of wood.
7
Greg Smith, co-owner of Michigan Street Music, works on the Ramirez pattern of bracing on his classical guitar.
Y. WILLOD
7600
Early morning sunlight in Oliver Finney's Harschipson Shop allows him to use the best light of the day to balance the colour and texture of his paintings.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 1, 1979
7
Board lists punishments for users of fake passes
By CAITLIN GOODWIN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The Student Senate Transportation Board recommended four measures yesterday that could be taken against seven students who caught last week using forks bus passes.
The first recommendation was that the students pay a line from $23, the price of a bus pass, to $35, which is $1 a day for the first seven weeks of school.
"We figure that a student rides the bus four times a day," McMurry said, "and if he were paying a quarter a ride he would pay $1 a day."
Steve McMurray, director of the KU on Wheels program, said the board sent the recommendations to Caryl Smith, dean of the university's law department, to punish the students of the offender boys.
He also recommended that the students' enrollment records be held until they paid the fine.
The board's fourth recommendation was that the University put the students on disruptions.
"We could have gone anywhere from making them pay $23 for a bus pass to kicking them out of school, "McMurry said. "We need the middle ground and still lean to the severe."
The third proposal for punishment was that the students be prohibited from purchasing a bus pass for this semester and the next two semesters.
McMurry said this meant the office of student life would monitor the students' actions. If they committed any other violation, the University would then take strong action against the students. McMurry said that the hand of action the administration would take
Smith said she would not say how she would punish the students because of the Buckley Amendment, which says that violators' names may not be released.
McMurry filed a report with the KU Police Department last week stating that fake bus passes were being made and sold. He said one of the students who had been caught said he had bought his pass from someone else.
Detective Sgt. Paul Schultz of the KU Police Department said that he had not finished the investigation, but that he had some leads into the case.
"I've talked to some people, and there are still some things I want to check," he said. Schultz told two other students were caught using a piece of pink paper as a bus pass.
films sua
LAST GRAVE AT DIMBAZA
Thursday, March 1
Free Film:
Dara Nana Mahamo. This hard-hitting documentary illustrates South Africa's controversial policy of Apartheid and smuggled out of the country in pieces Winner, Cannes Film Festival for Documentary Tracey Moore
(1977)
Friday & Saturday.
March 2 & 3
WELCOME TO LA.
Dir. Alan Rudolph; with Ketha Dirin, Garadine Gardain, Harvey Kelly, Kally Kellerman, Sissy Spacke, Adam Hutton, Produces by Robert Altman.
Midnight Movie JABBERWOCKY
(1977)
Dir. Terry Gillam; with Michael Palin, Max Wail, Terry Jones. Another hilarious epic made by members of Monty Python's Flying Circus.
Monday, March 5 CHRISTOPHER STRONG
Dorothy Arzner; with katherine Hepburn, Billie Burke; Written by Zoe Akins. Hepburn in her first major role as a wealthy aviator. PLUS: "The Yellow Wallpaper," a short film based on the novel by Charlotte Perkins Giksau.
(1933)
Tuesday, March 6
THE DAY THE EARTH
STOOD STILL
Dir. Robert Wise; with Michael Rennan, Patricia Neale, Sam Jaffe, Music by Bernard Herrmann. One of the most intelligent science-film films ever made. "Gort! Klaatu barada nikto."
All films M R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
- Forum Room
McMurray said he wanted everyone involved in the forgery to be caught and punished.
"I would not call them forged passes, though," he said, "because they were just pieces of paper. They were just snaking on the bus as opposed to forging a pass."
To prevent future forgeryes, he said, the board would redesign th* passes so that they would be more difficult to copy. However, he said, the cost of the design would make it difficult to have a pass that could never be copied.
"I just hope they understand what a terrible thing they did against the other students."
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted; $1.50 admission
McMurry said the board would discuss the situation with Smith to determine what procedures would be taken against bus pass forgers in the future.
- responsible for Student Senate advertising in the Kansas.
* serves on Communications Committee
Student Senate Public Relations Director
- coordinates Senate open houses
Constituent Services Director
- plans special programs and projects
- handles complaints/suggestions that relate to Student Senate
- assists with Summer Orientation
* updates Senate publications
Director
- serves as a sounding board for students
- works on communication problems that involve students or senators
Applications are available in the Student Senate office. Applicants will be contacted for interview. For more information contact Senate officeLevel 3. Kansas Union, 864-3770.
Deadline for Applications is Thursday, March 2, 1979.
Student Senate is funded by Student Activity Fees.
Taco Grande BRINGS BACK
THE
25c TACO
FOR THE Whole Month of March Entire Month of March 31 Days of March March 1st Thru March 31st
9th & Indiana Lawrence, Ks.
1720 W. 23rd Lawrence, Ks.
CAR STEREO SALE
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Feb. 27th Thru Mar. 3rd!
1000 CAR STEREOS AND SPEAKERS
101
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study abroad '79
britain
CREDIT: up to 8 hours undergraduate or graduate
COST: $1850*
DEADLINE: April 1, 1979
france
CREDIT: up to 6 hours
COST:$1700*
DEADLINE: March 10, 1979
germany
CREDIT: 6 hours
COST:$1590*
DEADLINE: March 10, 1979
italy
CREDIT: 5-10 hours
COST: $1500 * for 1 month; $1900 * for 2 months
DEADLINE: March 10, 1979
mexico
spain
CREDIT: up to 7 hours undergraduate or graduate
COST: $550* plus transportation
CREDIT: up to 7 hours
COST: $920* plus transportation
DEADLINE: March 10, 1979
ussr
CREDIT: 8 hours
COST: $2624*
yugoslavia
CREDIT: 6 hours
COST: $950* plus transportation
FOR MORE INFORMATION: contact the Office of Study
Abroad 864-3477
*Cost subject to changes necessitated by fluctuations
olch
travel abroad
The Student Union Activities Travel Committee has gathered information to help you plan your adventures to other countries. We have information in the ISIC (International Student Identity Card) which makes you eligible for many discounts at museums, student restaurants, and on student charter flights in Europe; AYH (American Youth Hostels) Passes which allow you to stay in inexpensive youth hostels around the world; SATA (Student Air Travel Association) Flights within Europe and from Europe to Asia and Africa; Student and Public Charters to Europe and Israel; EURAILPASSES and EURAIL YOUTHPASSES which allow unlimited rail travel in 13 European Countries; as well as information on WORK IN BRITAIN and ENCOUNTER IRELAND.
For more information contact
SUN TRAVEL
Kansas Union
University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas 66041
913-864-3477
8
Thursday, March 1, 1979
University Daily Kansan
SKI UTAH
SKI UTAH ASK JOHN KAMBRIGHT 841-8852
Nothing speaks a woman's language like a bouquet of flowers!
Love. Remembrance. Happiness. Flowers say all this and more. Call or visit us today for a wide selection at many different prices. Let our flowers speak for you.
FTD
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Texas
Campus Interviews for Engineers
For TI in Sherman, Texas What You Need
You need to be innovative with in i tive. Your degree should be in one the following:
Electrical Engineering
Engineering Science
Chemical Engineering
Engineering Physics
Mechanical Engineering
Industrial Engineering
Plastics Engineering
Material Science
Chemistry
Physics
What We Do
Texas Instruments in Sherman designs, develops and manufactures advanced integrated circuits, memory components, chemical materials, electronic equipment, missile guidance systems, air traffic control radars and indicators, plastic parts and transformers.
Where We Do It
Sherman, Texas, offers both the stimulus of a big city and the comfortable pace of a small one. In Sherman, home is five minutes from work. Dallas is 60 minutes from home.Not a suburb, Sherman is an independent city of 35,000 people completely surrounded by wooded hills and farmlands.It's the gateway to Lake Texoma,the sixth biggest man-made lake in the world. Sherman offers sophisticated mall shopping; fine colleges and plenty of cultural attractions.With even more of everything available a short drive away in Dallas.There's good weather year round.And you have the time and facilities to enjoy it.
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS March 7-8
If unable to interview at this time,
send your resume in confidence to:
Staffing Manager/P.O. Box 84/
Sherman, TX 75090.
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
INCORPORATED
An equal opportunity employer M/F
Women seeded fourth in regional
By NANCY DRESSLER
Kansas has accepted an at-large bid to the Region VI Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women basketball tournaments which will be next weekend in Minneapolis.
Sports Editor
The Jawhaws, one of two at-large teams in the eight-tournament, have been selected to host the team.
KU coach Marian Washington said yesterday that she was pleased with the progress of the U.S. team on Brazil.
"It's not always that you have to assume
you have to lose a ballgame to get a
better outcome."
KU, the only nationally-ranked team in the tournament, is in the same bracket with two teams it has beaten at least twice this season—Missouri and Nebraska.
Nebraska got into the tournament last night by winning a playoff with the University of Nebraska-Omaha 75-98 for the national title. The Nebraska team entered in an opening round game Friday, March 9.
KANSAS COULD have gone into the tournament as the Kansas state champion but failed in its bid to upset Kansas State Monday night. The Wildcats are the Kansas entry and they have been seeded second in the tournament.
But K-State's higher seed, which KU might have had, gives the Wildcats a potentially more difficult tournament than KU's. The Wildcats face Minnesota in their opening round game. The Gophers have beaten K-State this season.
K-State's second game, if the team beats the Gophers, would be against either Drake, the No. 3 seed, or Central Missouri State University, the tournament's other at-large entry. K-State has beaten CMS but has not played Drake.
However, CMS and Drake are two of the five teams that have beaten KIT this season.
KU PROBABLY got its lower seeding
but it has the *status* But the
Jawahirva complex
If Kansas can get past Nebraska, for what would be the fourth time this season, it would probably face Missouri. KU has won the Tigers twice this season 63-61 and 97-48.
Missouri will meet South Dakota State in Friday's opening round.
A KU victory over the Tigers would put Kansas in the tournament finals, probably against K-State or Drake. But Washington said she wouldn't mind playing either team.
SUA and Schon Productions present . . .
in concert
1014637295782
judy collins
march 30,1979
9:00 pm
hoch auditorium
all seats reserved: $6.50 & $7.50
TICKETS GO ON SALE THURS, MARCH 1 AT
12:00 NOON AT THE SUA BOX OFFICE
- limit of 10 tickets per person
- bloc seating available for living groups
and community activities.
and campus organizations
tickets available at: SUA Box Office, Kief's and usual locations in K.C., Topeka and Manhattan.
"There's plenty of closet space—I like that!"
WHERE'S MONEY?
Diane Van Beber
Columbus, Kansas Freshman
Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 84:
Nais Hall
Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features
won't have to see them right away but I hope we face one of them eventually."
THE TOP two teams from Region VI probably will advance to the sectional playoff in Carbondale, III., March 16-17. The team is expected to the national four-team tournament.
"Regardless of where we place, we'll
have to play good ball." Washington said,
"One thing I have to check on is whether for
him to be a top player, he has to
Kansas, 29-6 and ranked 14th this week, finished fourth last year in the regional behind the same three teams that have been ranked by the NCAA's tourney: Missouri, K-State and Drake.
MISSOURI (17-10)
1 p.m., Fri., March 9
SOUTH DAKOTA ST. (17-6)
NEBRASKA (22-12)
3 p.m., Sat., March 10
3 p.m., Fri., March 9
KANSAS (26-6)
DRAKE (24-3)
5:30 p.m., Fri., March 9
CENTRAL MO. ST. (16-9)
MINNESOTA (15-13)
7:30 p.m., Fri., March 9
KANSAS STATE (18-8)
AIAW Region VI Tournament
March 9-11
Minneapolis, Minn.
films sua
Presents
Robert Altman presents
Welcome to L.A.
Robert Aitman presents
Welcome to L.A.
a film by Alan Rudolph
THANK THE TOTAL OF
FUNDED FOR THE PICTURE
DEVELOPMENT OF THE FILM
WHERE A CINEMA IS DEFINED
WHERE A SCREEN IS MADE
WHERE A WEB IS CREATED
WHERE A MOVIE IS MADE
WHERE A PRODUCTION IS MADE
WHERE A PRODUCTION IS MADE
Keith Carradine
Sally Kellerman
Geraldine Chaplin
Harvey Keitel
Lauren Hutton
Sissy Spreek
John Conndine
Virgin Lindford
Richard Baskin
Dewey Pyle
City of the One Night Stands
Dewen Ryle
City of the One Night Stands
written and edited by
Richard Baskin
produced by
Robert Alman
Alan Rudolph
Friday & Saturday March 2 & 3
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 ADM $1.50 Woodruff Aud.
newest sporting
for the straight 'n' narrow
It's a path being followed by pants everywhere today, straight 'n'
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especially with their laced and
nail-head designs uptop! Rich pottery-toned uppers. #24.
unmade beauty
connie*
Arensberg's
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Where styles happen
819 Mass.
Thursday, March 1. 1979
q
Spring camp nears for Gilmore
Sports Writer
By TONY FITTS
Last year at this time, Andy Glimour was preaching with the KU baseball team, preaching that they would win.
This year, he is still practicing with the ten
ten-second season he is preparing for will be a little difficult.
Gilmore, whose final year as a Jayhawk
"I've been catchin' in organized ball
was one was eight," the "6-2 Gilmore said
Crawford uses basics
John Crawford, KU's 6-7 forward, says that when he was in high school he thought that he would not be successful in college basketball.
Now he's KU's number three scoreer,
averaging just more than 11 points a game.
When Crawford was in high school in Kansas, Mr. He, he says, never watched a Big Eight match.
Now he's on the way to playing in a Big Eight post season tournament there.
Success came to the rubber band man this season. Crawford has started each of KU's 27 games for a chance to be the third leading receiver in the league. Darnell Valentine. Not bad for a virtual rookie who played in only nine games last before becoming an academic casualty.
This season, Crawford says, he's got a course load he can handle—15 hours—and he's progressed through what he says to be well-played basketball—fundamentals.
"I TAID OFF, sticking to the basics," Crawford says, running a brush through his short cropped black hair. "I found out I'm getting by with the basics, so I'll stick it in."
Fundamentals were foreign to Crawford until he started playing organized basketball as a high school sophomore. Before that, he says, he was a freemance ball player, pursuing the sport on outside courts since he was nine years old. Now, he plays in his team's game of his profession Chuck Sanger, still with him, has learned more than what he calls the basics of freedom ball—dribbling, shooting and guarding.
baseball player ended last April 29 when he injured his thumb in a game against Missouri, signed a minor-league contract with the New York Yankees organization and was suspended for two weeks before he goes to training camp this month.
He's learned well, too, as evidenced by his improvements in defense. Against Iowa State he had four steals. For the season, he leads KU in blocked shots, with 54, the second best in the conference. He's ranked fourth on the team in conference game scoring, the second leading rebounder, averaging just more than five a game, behind Mokeski.
CRAWFORD ALSO IS the best pure shooter KU has, hitting a team-high 54.4 percent of his attempts from the field. There's more to that figure than accuracy. It's patience, something the KU squad has had a hard time acquiring this season.
"I like to take good shots," Crawford
说. "I like to square off, I open
ake shots."
"I'm just being natural."
SHORTS and LONGS
John P. Tharp
So, naturally, Crawford hits a combination of 15-footers, dunks, tips and turnaround jumpers—every game. He probably is the best follow-through shooter Kansas has. Not only does he successfully follow on his misses, but also on his teammates'.
If I cease, 175-pound fluid forward has a problem, it will be his temper. And he thinks he has it litched. Following an ejection in last week's Colorado game on his fifth foul for some shoving, Crawford was on his way to the Cycles and their villainous Dean Uthoff. A reputation for losing his cool with any given team in the league in any given town.
University Daily Kansan
"I've been trying to cool out lately," he says. "I just want to keep my cool.
BUT HE SAYS it won't happen again.
"I can't understand why somebody would try to cause harm to me or my body else, but hitting and pushing underneath, and I just will not stop," she added. "After all, we're all brothers in a sense."
Now, Crawford says, he will concentrate on good defense and the blocked shot, his favorite move in the game, instead of fistfuchs to settle scores.
"I like the crowd loving the block, and the plumber, well. I have him worried the time," he says.
This season, the second time around for Crawford, he has plenty of opponents worried about his improved play and fun with him. He doesn't need to bother them with his fists.
recently. "My dad, who played a little minor league ball, told me and my brother that our best chance to make it in baseball would be as catchers."
Gilmore led the 1978 Jayhawks in homers with eight, and had a 321 batting average, even though he missed the last 10 games of the season.
ACCOUNTING TO Russ Sehon, the Yankee scout who signed Gilmore, his left-handed power will be an advantage if he makes it to the Yankees.
"Center and right field are about nine miles deep in Yankee Stadium," he said.
Gilmore hasn't set his sights quite that high for his first professional season. He hopes to be assigned to Fort Lauderdale in the League, the Yankees' Class A team.
"I want to go somewhere where I'll be able to play," he said. "And I can't complain about it."
Another possibility would be one of the Yankees' two rookie league teams. But Gilmore doesn't look forward to that prospect.
"Because of my age," he said, "they'd probably cut me before they assigned me to
GLMORE IS 22, about four years older than most of the players on a rookie team.
He is assigned to the Yankees' cookie league team in Oneonta, N.Y., but this is only a temporary assignment, necessary because he was signed as a free agent. Final assignments will be made later in spring training.
Gilmore suffers another possible disadvantage besides his age. His injured thumb has kept him from playing for almost a year.
"I'm not used to that much time off," Glimore said. "Usually I play baseball from January to October or November, depending on the weather.
"WHEN I FIRST hurt the thumb, I went back and caught the rest of the nanking. I was scared."
"I went to the doctor, and he worked it around—he laid it back up along my forearm. I didn't want him to operate, but when he asked me if I ever wanted to open a car door with my left hand, let alone catch a baseball. I decided to let him cut."
"I since I got the cast off, I've been working on my hand—squeezing balls and hand exercisers—and it's back to 100 percent, as far as I can tell."
The time off can affect a player as much as the actual injury, according to Sehon.
"AFTER A YEAR off, he said," Andy will have to work to regain his timing, rather than any loss of skills. It's like typing or riding a bicycle—you never really forget the skills, but the timing isn't as good after time off."
"Last summer," Gilmore said, "after they took the cast off and I had a while to work on the hand. I tried to play a little baseball in a league out in Hays.
"I got jammed really bad one day during practice, and the hand swelled up to where it hurt."
"But this winter, I've been taking batting practice off a pitching machine, and it hasn't bothered me at all—and the machine has jammed me as bad as any pitcher."
Gilmore has been spending most of his time for the last few weeks in Allen Field House, running, lifting weights and taking batting practice with Lee Ice.
ICE WAS THE Jayhawk third baseman last year. He will be going to training camp with the Kansas City Royals organization this month.
"Ron MacDonald has been coming over twice a week and working out with us," Glumare said. "He's one of those guys who's had a lot of fun, and he's spun Lee and I—make us run step by step."
Macdonald joined the Jayhawks from 1975 through 1977. He signed with the Nets in 1980 and was a member of the
Sebon said that Gilmore would be doing a lot of running when he gets to camp, along with a lot of throwing, and a lot of batting practice.
"Andy will be able to show his potential in batting practice," he said. "In the past, he has lacked consistency in hitting, which is something he needs to develop.
"He also needs to develop a quick release from behind the plate with runners on base."
GILMORE SAID, "I need to go down there and relax. I've always been a slow starter. If I go 0 for 19 at the beginning of camp like I did at the beginning of last season, I won't get much of a chance to prove I can do better.
"Right now, I'm just getting totally prepared so I can relax and play when I get ready."
MAKING A BREAK THIS SPRING?
Maupintour
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THE MAILS
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"If I go down there in shape, I think I can make it."
Greenbriar's
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEM
Cheese Emporium
Eat In or Carry Out
Sandwiches
Meats
Soups
Cheeses
Holiday Place - 25th & 8th
PARKS
Staff photo by CHRIS TODD
Engineering & Computer Science Majors
DON'T MISS TALKING TO THE HUGHES RECRUITER VISITING YOUR CAMPUS SOON.
Contact your placement office for interview dates.
HUGHES
Creating a new word with electron 2
HUGHES Creating a new world with excitement
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F
GRAMOPHONE
the audio division of KIEF'S RECORDS & STEREO SUPPLY INC shop
STEREO DISCOUNTERS
SALE 3 DAYS ONLY $158.88
TOSHIBA
Hi-Fi
Components
Stereo Cassette Tape Deck
PIONEER
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FRONT LOADER FOR BASIC REQUIREMENTS
*Dubby' B1ose Controlled Circuitry Minimizing Internal Noise
*Service Enforced Motor Drive for Smooth Tape Transport
*Solar Powered Tape Transmitter
*Specially designed, oil-damped door for Easy Cassette Latch
*2-level/4-way Separate BIAS and EO Controls for Tape Matching (Normal/Chrome)
*For Quick, Positive Reaction
*Wide range, Extra Large Peak Level Meters
*Larger Range, Extreme Level Meters
*Mechanism for Auto stop Bike Protection Tapes and Unit
*Record Lamps in to Assure Non-record
*Record Lamps in Jacks Built into Front Panel for Extra Convenience
*Flower & Fletcher D1 on Chrome
*Frequency Response: 30-14kHz (1.3dB, Chromite)
*Frequency Response: 30-14kHz (1.3dB, Chromite)
*4 Weight: 5kg (9.9 lbs)
*4 Skew: 5kg (9.9 lbs)
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
Fashions Change, Taste Remains
... Spring '79 from Mister Guy ...
Madras Shirts in short or long sleeves
Khakis in plain or pleated front
Styles . . . exclusively at Mister Guy of Lawrence. . .
New Hours to serve 'You' better . . .
After March 4th . . . Mon, Tues, Wed, & Sat Open 10-6
Thurs & Fri open 10 am to 9 pm
842-2700
MISTER GUY
920 MSSACHUSETTS
P. O. BOX 2 / 2100A W. 25th St. / 913 842 1811 / LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
(Photo by Mark Gilliam)
MISTER GUY 920 MSSACHUSETTS
MISTER
GUY
10
Thursday, March 1, 1979
University Daily Kansan
" 99
"The inherent virtue of socialism is the equal sharing of miseries; the inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of Budweiser."
AB
AMERICAN BREWING CO., INC.
D.R. OZ. (355 ML.)
Budweiser
LAGER BEER
Tamed by the original process from the
Munster Rapid Rice and Best Barley, Malt
Anheuser-Busch, 8
BROWN AND CANNED BY ANHEUSER-BUSCH
OF ST LOUIS, MO AT ST LOUIS MILK
OR 10Z (35 ML)
Budweiser
LAGER BEER
Brewed by our original process from the
Mineral Kegs Rice and Best Barley Milk
Inkeuser-Busch II
METRO AND GAMES BY ANNIE HOFFMAN
MADE IN MICHIGAN
-Winston A. Churchill
Misquoted without permission by Anheuser-Busch, Inc., St. Louis
1
Thursday, March 1. 1979
KANSAN
11
On Campus
TODAY: A SEMINAR ON ENERGY ALTERNATIVES, including a film and discussion, will be at 9:30 a.m. in 4033 Wesco Hall, VISTA AND PEACE CORPS recruitors will talk to KU students from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 223 Carruth-O'Leary Hall and 210 Strong Hall and also at booths in the Kansas Union Lobby and Lyesb
TONIGHT: "Last Grave at Dimbaza," a documentary film, sponsored by SUA and the KU COMMITTEE ON SOUTH AFRICA, will be shown at 7:30 in the Forum Room of the Union. Columnist George Will is to
deliver the J.A. VICKERS MEMORIAL LECTURE at 8 in Woodruff Auditorium in the Union. A FRE LECTURE by Hanno Weber, "Programming vs. Designing: An Appeal for Integration through Typology," will be at 8 in 3140 Wescoe, "HOMEO AND JULIET" will be performed at 8 in the University Theater, Murphy Hall.
TOMORROW; VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be provided for elderly, non-English speaking and low in income individuals from 2 to 4 p.m. in the legal aid office in New Green Hall. "ROMEO AND JULIET" will be performed at 8 in the University Theater in Murphy Hall.
Police Beat
Lawrence police and the Douglas County sherrif's office originally had investigated a reported shooting, but later listed the incident as an assault. Charles Bryant Jr., 20, 706 Maple St., Endora, sustained head injuries that required two stitches.
Lawrence police and the Douglas County sheriff's office said yesterday that they had investigated Tuesday night. Lawrence police said the two had investigated aburgery Tuesday.
Come Celebrate our 2nd Anniversary!
University Daily Kansan
Buy one get one Freshwater Fish FREE reg. under $5
The sheriff's office said Bryant had said he could early Tuesday on night at 13th St.
Friday thru Sunday March 2-4
1/3 off-Saltwater fish
whether Bryant's injury came from a gunshot or a blow to the head. But he did say he couldn't find any metal fragments in the wound."
However, Douglas County Sheriff Rex Johnson said, "The doctor would not say
20% off all complete aquarium set-ups
40% off-Aquatronics medications
receipt policy not applicable on sale items
tropaquaria
Holiday Plaza
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SCHAFFEN
Daily 11-7 Thurs. till 8 Sun. 12-6
Johnson said Bryant was treated Tuesday night at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. BURGLARY
Lawrence police said three handcuffs at $600 were stolen from a home in east ATLanta at $800.
Police said a 22-callier resolver valued at $50, a 380-automatic pistol valued at $300 and a 38-callier resolver valued at $200 were stolen from the residence of Lawrence Miller, 1629 Barker Ave., Tuesday.
TASTE THE COUNTRY
IN THIS MOUTHWATERING INNKEEPER'S SPECIAL
CHICKEN FRIED STEAK
CREAM GRAVY
COLE SLAW
HOMEMADE ROLLS AND BUTTER
$2.95
SERVED DAILY FROM 5 - 10 PM.
Holiday Inn
2309 IOWA
Holiday Inn
8
8- ball tournament Saturday March 3 Best 3 of 5 Entry fee $3.00
KANSAN WANT ADS
Deadline Friday, March 2
For more Information call 864-3545
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to students at the University of Nairobi to visit. The campus is a national origin, PLEASE HALL ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FIRST HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
.01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
one two three four five time times times times times
time times times times times
15 words or
lower $2.00 $2.55 $2.50 $3.00
Additional text
word 01 02 03 04 05
Jaybowl
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
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 id.
864-4358
*round items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. Those ads can be placed in person or by calling the VOKI offices at 864-358-2191 or calling the VOKI offices at 864-358-2191.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
E expand your horizon. Come to the International Night. Let KU's foreign students entertain you!
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Spend an afternoon with ECKANKAR Mute
speakers, and film - 14-30 March. P. Iris Bosek
8
Needed: Squirrel-breed riders to Sun Diego or
Garvey Beach; Call Sandra: 841-210-6341
841-614-614
USCF CHESS TOURNAMENT
$550 prize fund, March 10-11
Special entry fees for
new members and youngsters.
Info. 842-8992
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
FIRST FLOOR APARTMENT UNDER
unfurnished from $70. Two laundry
rooms. On OKU bus route.
INDOOR HEATED POOL. NEXT DW
$444 for 3rd Floor Room. Next door
to the pool.
Zen practice daily 1 p.m. introductory talks
at the school's Zen Center, 120 W. College Ave.
in March 2018 at Lawrence Chapel.
Finally a Lawrence landlord who cares!
Call Mark Schneider for apartments and rentals, 843-3212 or 842-4411.
NEW THOAT YOUR MONEY ISN'T WHAT IT USED TO BE. DON't it make sense to buy books that don't含 what they used to buy. Quantity, Fax Marker, Market 10-5 3-4
Give yourself a Great Vacation 36.5 Snow
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5-12
Band with, well-known, reputation needs new drummer. Wages negotiable. Only full-time professionals need apply. (See this band at One Air 415-8598, Tues., Frid., & Sat., 3-2:30, 815-8598 or 81-081-694.)
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most
needed. KU and KU near town. 12
Phones. Phone: 856-7077
FOR RENT
04. Ibr 2B and efficiency. Close to campus Utill-
care. Clean, quiet. Compassable, 843.
9579-9799
Still looking for a place to call home? Nationals' Nathan Edythe (951) 837-2040, the manager of the year. Stay by and look on over the staff. The team will give you with a great gift to give you the detail you need. NATIONALS HILL HALL • 1609 National Avenue, 843-8559
On March 1, Avalon Apcs will have a two-boot
package of Unix units available. Call for an
invoice 812-394-5067 or www.avalon.com
Beautiful 7 day room aid 3 bedroom ranch avail-
tion. 3 dresser and kitchen appliance aquaporite. 4
eating area. c. 8 bedrooms.
Best new Hue, beautiful 2 BR HR in yard,
1920-1123. Free laundry. 811-620-5000
or 811-3223
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
Visit our display units today.
You'll see a Touch of Class
814-5235 812-4155
Need to add in 2 bedrooms apartment $185 per
month. Contact Gatehouse 843-644-644
Liberal attitudes and clean male pride promote to
liberal values in society. Employers should
compete for landlord-except your
employer's position.
Roammate provided for 2 berm, furnished home; if interested contact Dion or Tom: 841-6814-3124
Housemate needed to share furnished, clean
room with you. 802.35.1 month 1,
Call 843-8455
Room with kitchen privacy. 2 blocks south of
Indiana. Private home. No smoking $157.19
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make series out of Western Civilization! Make terms to be used in presentation (tion 3). For exam preparation. "New Analysis" for Western Civilization is available now at Town Crier, Maita Bookstore.
Alternator, starter and generator. Speculates
charge voltage units, BATTERY AUTOS
ELECTRIC VACUUMS
Pender Mooring Music Guitar with strings, accords,
packages, mounting brackets and accessories.
Mountains, cards and covers. Very good condition.
80-220 mm lens, Beadier 4MCRXR with
80-220 mm lens, Beadier 4MCRXR with
6-220 mm lens, Beadier 4MCRXR with
All as of 31 August 2014 after 6-220
One set "Great Books of the Western World," by
Encyclopedia Britannica. Call 913-2658-2628
Integrated amp. Kenwood 7100. Low, low distribution 60 watts per channel> 28V. Directive Kenwood 2930 turntable with cartridge Concrete resin box 5200. Call 414-879-3280 for Joe.
Moving-Must self-util Kit AA-1640 amp 200 channel, Nikkei ligh i pre-1 amp, Nikkei EQJ series. Sonai TU-TUf turer Phone Linear 11) Mikasa lockers boxes & warranty, GARAGE M4, 843-2019
Sunspots - Sun glauces are our specialty, rescuing
1021 Masi 941-5700
1021 Masi 841-5700
Batteries .30
SAVE! on
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
SAVE! on
Cheaper than rent. two BR Bungalow was no-carpet. Perfect for young couple. VA approved, payment and affordable monthly payments. Enrich - 843-0994. Rachel Reston - 843-6326. Cindy Enrich - 843-0994.
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
Typewriter, Smith-Corona Manual. Bookcase, 3
4. sturdy 843-8892
Hiway 40 N. Lawrence Across from icabod's
Motorcycle-1970 RSA 750 CC Excellent condition
wheelies or early wetlands
mail-sk64-87974
THE BATTERY SHOP
1971 Opel in good condition $500.00 864-6320. 3-5
Such a dual read model 472 The ultimate in very portable microphone. Mk841-834-5-3
*
69e Schooners at Louise's every Friday from 2
till 5 4-5
Trompet for sale High quality top condition $550 To see and play it 824-725-6836 3-4
Brown beef shoulder jacket, Men's size 40. Excellent
quality. Previously pizzed. Price at 60 g/ppm
843-1604
Need three or wheeled? An associate with us will be able to help you find a wheel. Good luck and Dartington at the elevator lobby, who also availabie at wholesale prices and brine ware. Don’t forget that we don’t spare a driver more than you need. Call
72 LTD, treads body work, PS, PR, AC, Best
Call Al: A1-61062
3-2
HIARTS Antique Furniture Racks, Sale, Sunday
from 7-10 books to Bottle 80T Mini Deliver
AVAILABLE
Parish Trail, 108 down parka, novy mary XI-
perfect condition, 45 trigonal, 119-26
Rocky Mountain Park, 108 down parka, novy mary XI-
perfect condition, 45 trigonal, 119-26
FOUND
Set of keys at 12th & Tenth, Friday, Feb 23rd
Snoopy key ring: C41 841-7089
3-4
Small, gray, sheep dog near Fraser. Call between 3-2
85-1, 864-3501
Gold Ring Call 841-2681. Female's wedding band
with inscription 3-5
Found at the entrance to campus of Southwestern
Found a leather teacher. Call 862-5311
e-mail: teehanson@southwest.edu
e-mail:
EXOTIC JOB LAKE TAISE, CALIFORNIA
little expense, fantastic talent $1790-$1600
downtime, excellent amenities, sunny,
ranchers, cruisers, river rafts, & more
$6429 Sacramento 85660 3-23
60129 Sacramento 85660 3-23
JOBS
MEN WOMEN MAILBOATS
NORWEST
SNIPPS No experience. High pay! New
employer. Send $35 to Europe, World! Summer
cashout. Send $125 to USA.
www.norwestsnipps.com, Caernarfón, SA 4248
4/24
Free lense photographer in interviewing intimate subjects for various photo projects. Experience in field lab and no need access. Paid by session. Reference #130495. Box RD 503, Lowertown, K6044 607-4
Delivery needs needed -Salary plus commission.
Delivery must be done by 4:00 p.m. or call 843-3228. Personal fee per ship.
WORK IN JAPAN Tweenth English conversation.
No experience, degree, or Japanese required.
Large started self-educated envelope for work.
98531-38, P.O. Box 293, Central Ward,
98531
TEACH OVERSAKER] For details, send self-
mail to: TEACH@teach.us. For teaching,
box 109, San Diego, CA 92123
OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer year round, Europe,
Australia, Australia, Arena, Etc. fields 560-
490, Australia, hospitals paid Sightseeing Free
Write, ILC, Inc. 490-RA, Berkley, K.
94704
HELP WANTED
Industrious young adults
to fill positions as
WAITRESSES
Part time & full time
Call 842-6930
Apply at The
Laurence
Open House
and 7th Spirit Club
Inspection Ladder Normal. Huge. In acceptance.
All airways normal. Except for sinus. All airways normal.
Except for sinus. Inspection Ladder normal.
All airways normal. Except for sinus. Inspection Ladder normal.
Part time cocktail waitresses 21 or older. Agree.
Part in Ramada Inn, IDM 2023, W 6th.
Student Research Assistant, Conduct studies with preschool children. 10-15 leagues. Must be available (1.00-12.99). McFarris. Please refer to our website: J.J. Schimmel, 604-4-38, Haworth Awnes C.
Buckley's Drive-In is now taking applications for
the new location, which will be located behind the
wheel of W. and S. Buckley's Drive-In. **319 W.**
Part three: maintenance, person needed. Starting
at $20 per hour. Must be available at a farm.
Must have clean house and clean
cleaning required, also mechanical feed,
application in apron, kitchen food, 128
Mons.
Picture tells how Kitty helps wanted at Dana Sharknake inpatient inpatient at 216. E 320. Ed
Bamana Inc. is now working front desk, center with experiences on NCR 600, Plaidant and ample room to good benches. Apply to Mr. Money. front office. Numéro de Agent. Employer. 3-6
Mindset is looking for experienced bartenders,
dressers, waitresses, food staff, office
officers, and other employees.
Equal Opportunity Employer
Business Analyst, Colorado Dual岗 Bunch Experimental
Rocky Mountain Lab
Write Software, Box 109, Grand Canyon
College of Arts and Sciences
J B. H big box now taking applications for full and part time jobs. Apply in 149 regions. 704-238-5680
Help Wanted. Gilbert's, Lawyers' new rel. shift includes in town taking applications. Position requires a Bachelor's degree in business or related and assistance for instaguests. We are looking for people to help operate the finest 21 persons in our office. Requires a bachelor's degree in 1:00 m. p.m. & 3:00 m. p.m. daily of Gilbert's (5) locations and (1) H- in Hilfert Park Shopping Center.
LOST
Linhua Akim, Little, Culeu, Malta, Colourful Mon
Kathryn Mackenzie, Color Mark Emotion, 481-320
@ 964-841-400
EVAIR Couture) concert tour multiple student exhibitions
EVAIR Couture) concert tour multiple student exhibitions
PLEASE RELIKE KASH, M1-1396-
Pair of gold wine glass fixtures in black case.
Lost from Summerfield. Found call 614.646.3-23
Keyes, Stevany灯. 1969-81, 10th January. Please
repeat Lt. Addison, or Maclean Hall, Rd. 854.
(2)
Last, Women beaver set with are different.
Last, Women beaver set with are different.
Before I found phone 864-603-1200.
Beaver set with are different.
Pair of Sunglasses and contact lenses case in
flowered lenses on Feb. 22d. 528-346-5-4
Olive miniature TideAke Clock with care in
circumference of March Hill Reward Call 1-800-346-1400
MISCELLANEOUS
Cork come a year with the International Club
of Cork. We have four showrooms, five exhibitions,
two exhibitors and culture liaison from all of
the exhibitions.
THEIS, BINDING. COPYING The House of Ubisha's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for office holding and empluing in Lawrence. Let us fee you at 838.756 or phone 403.700. Let us
NOTICE
DEADLY. WHY BOTHER? 824-632-8121
JOURNAL INSURANCE OF BOAT TRUST 824-632-8121
International banquet in running March 4, 1979
3-1
Fatima Mussawi is based for IBM in Imprenta de
Mujer en Madrid, Spain. She is a Consultant at IBM,
working as an Associate at IBM in Madrid, Spain.
She graduated from the University of Madrid with
a degree in Computer Science.
If you observed an auto accident at 19th and
lawn on the 14th, please call 81-8239. 9-1-1
PERSONAL
BREW: BREW SHOP is now open 300. Rajkishan,
Patty & Cochran, 215 West 48th Street, NYC
917-468-1044, BREW48TH, MN-1624, FI
Gray Leduc containing referrals now handled
through WL Info 861-356 or Headquarters 845-
356.
.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Ahorburs up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing, Birth Control. Total Ligation Award for appointment call 9. 580-472-3260. 400-118 St. Owenland Park. KS
Prinella. Am I invited to your graduation Or-
gether? Yes.
Bookstores: Bookstore, Marion & Bud Unit
Bookstores: Barnett, Marion & Bud Unit
51 PICKERS every Friday afternoon from 2.4 to
the Harbour if
GARDEN SPECIALS: 4 to 6pm. Mon, Tues, and Fri.
5 to 7pm. Wed, Thurs, and Fridays
10AM-3PM. SUN, SAT, MON, TUE,
MAY 1-5 $10 per person
$40 per vehicle
Jump to the Kansas Union Bookstores for their Fantastic Record & Cassette Salel
Moving to Calif. Tournay Canyon takes a hike between Rancho Santa Margarita and Bakersfield, leaving room for Calling Santa Barbara or Mt. Shasta.
Thank you District 5 for your support. If you
would like to contact the Student Nurse,
please contact me Kim Fink.
FORT HILL, SURGERY CLINIC Aberrations up to 17 weeks. Pre-pregnancy tests, Birth Control Consult. Tiptip Ligation. For appointment refer to [899] 340-2530 or [899] 340-4030. HI Overland Park, Ks
CONTACT LENR, WEATHERS, based on brand
information provided by the manufacturer.
Illustrated content. Contact Lenr Suppliers.
www.lenr.com.au.
The foreign students at KU would like to play basketball to you during international Night. There will be good food,篮球队 and cultural performances from the local clubs. Come to the Night. March. 31. 2-1
Free to everyone
Short courses in businesstechnical writing. Every Thursday evening 6/7 p.m., 4pm, Summerfield; Topics for BusinessTechnology, March 1; Effective Paragraphs
Remember
Thursday evening, 6-7 p.m.
408 Summerfield
TWO $390.00 NICHILOARMS available to full-time undergraduate women's details and applications at Delta Delta 1830 Oxford 423-610-6799 for completed applications March 3-1979
Delhiflex homebound CHILD, DILH and dessert
Delhiflex CAN $475 ADMIN (March 2)
4-8-7-60
666 Schooners and 150 Pitchers every Friday
(2-5) at Louisville's bar
4-3
Bothlandness Courts every Monday night (up to
Wednesday) W7th A. Michigan $2,50; G. 12
$18.
Thought for the day The heat door to a closet is a woman. 3-1
SALLY LOU I got the greatest last week at a brand new shop with really reasonable prices. We were very happy to want to go with me for this week! Bowlzets 23rd and Sunday's Pizza Plaza Open evenings and Sunday afternoon
Attention: Need your car in top running condition for spring break. Teacher be hard on your car. Bring it to school. Call 855-234-6791 for $10 plus parts this Saturday and Call 855-234-6791 for an app. Ask for "BILL."
Don't miss the DTX spring film festival;
Saturday, March 3. Peen, 12. 3-2
SERVICES OFFERED
Wanted to be Zionstorm furnished Apartment at 2175 W. 38th St., Suite 401, New York City, NY 10026 since summer and call before spring break. Ask for contact information.
Need help in math or CS Get a father who can
help you with your math or CS problem. Cust.
HI 841-745-2690
REWRITING. EDITING. Your manuscript, then or term paper collated into an excellent, grant-level work. You can also train with preface and smoothness. Offers workshops and articles also available. Offers 843-1251.
EXPIRT TUCKERS MATH. 100-122,叫 645-782; MATH 123-129,叫 645-782; PHYSICS 100-722,叫 645-782; CHEM 100-722,叫 645-782; CHEM 100-722,叫 645-782; STATISTICS,叫 645-782; QUALIFICATIONS, B.S.
STATISTICS,叫 645-782; QUALIFICATIONS, B.S.
FLAth, in Math. 2 years experience in computer programing. For general problems call 645-782.
MATTHY TIPHOT MA in media, postures. Buses
for professional learning experience 842-3411.
Tried of feeding yourself? Naiatha Hall is 10:30 am for the first time ever a boarding plan can be your choice. You can be your choice if you choose this plan. Plan #1 HA11, 1669 Naiatha Hall, 843-5555 IF
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available at
Akiens of the House at Upper/Quick Center,
Cayman Islands, from 4 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
to Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday
at Mass.
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476.
Typist/Editor IBM PCS Elite Quality work
description. Send your brief description.
Welcome BM 821-927
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE: 811-459-1800
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Rat on customers. Law papers, term papers. Ms.
Wed., 8/27/2014
Experienced Typist; begin training, thesis, masters.
Specializing in writing, spelling, speaking elicitation,
SD1502. Ms. W. H., 202.
Experimental, typical-theory, dissipations, power
sources, spectral diagrams, selective light
843-1311, 843-2310, 843-2510
Reports, abbreviations, legal forms, shields,
report cards, select solicitors, Call Elena on
Jamalia 341-272
Discount typing -75c page Call 842-0745 after 5:2
P.M.
I do dwarf quick typing. Under 28 pts, I nightwish. The new paper. Pages. Interpretation with machine learning. In progress.
COMPUTERIZED THEM TYPING. Have you typeset them for CP9000 and you can have them typed on your computer or all original engines. Call PROFESSIONALS or the web for help with the software advanced typing system available.
Trying on EFI electric power supply. Prompt answer:
poor reading. No hoses. Mr. Boots. Hex. 835
010234567890
WANTED
**Delivery drivers for Pizza Pedder. Must have own car. Apply in person after 2:00 p.m. 2-14**
Routines wanted to share 3 bedroom house for $8,995.1111 $10,111 $10,111 rooms. 814-528-6000 6:00-9:00
Female routines wanted to share large mobile 72 per month + 12 utilities Call Robbie 841-8299
Responsible roommate wanted to share 3 bedrooms. Please reschedule your visit plus a month plus 15 hours of cell phone calls and 250 after it is over. Call 817-496-2222.
Would offer for two years, 4 & 6 month workdays.
Workday requirements: $150/month;
partition required for position; start $150/month.
Salary: $199/week.
Two reimburses in Jayhawker Tower, $90.00 per
month. 822-6253
Roommate to share 3 bedroom. Apt. on bus route.
Negotiate terms. 840-7227
3-2
Routermate needed to share large 2 bedroom unit:
bibs from kfm. Call 841-4512. Martinez - 64
Roommate wanted. Central air weather,洗衣
2 bath/ dishwasher $125.00 monthly 1-2 lbs.
Dishwasher $149.00 monthly
12
Thursday, March 1, 1979
University Dally Kansan
House leaders begin spending lid negotiations
From Staff and Wire Reports
TOPEKA-Kansas. House leaders said yesterday that they were negotiating with Gov. John Carlin's staff about his substitute bill, did bill, but said that it might not move out of committee unless the governor agreed to a compromise.
Carlin proposed the bill as an alternative to a 7 percent spending limit that he vetoed last week. The limit was backed by Republicans.
A hearing was held yesterday for Carlin's bill by the House Ways and Means Committee.
Chairman Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, said after the hearing that he might not bring the bill to a committee vote unless compromises were made.
House Speaker Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, said that discussion on the bill was under way with Carlin aides, but that no agreement had been reached.
The vetosed bill would have a minimum 8 percent end-of-year balance, with any
surplus to be used for tax relief. It also would have set a 1 percent limit on年利率
LADY SAID LAST week that he did not consider the 7 percent limit negotiable.
Carlin's bill does not set a specific limit on spending increases, but requires the state to set limits on the level limit and ending balance would be appropriate for existing economic conditions.
Buf State Rep. John Tailley, R-Wichita, said he questioned whether the governor's approval to pass the bill.
Carlin aide Sue Millstein, in testimony before the committee, said the governor's bill would meet all the objectives of the state to respond to changing fiscal needs.
"IT APPEARS TO ME that the procedure outlined in this bill is more similar to the process we use now than to the original," he said.
State Budget Director James Bibb told
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Further discussion and possible final action are scheduled for tomorrow.
Carlin's bill would allow the Legislature to annually determine what tax relief would be applied.
Aan's, Women's, & Children's
Woves, & Accessories
I Ski Equipment
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committee members that they might strain the Legislature's credibility by mandating
first serve
If the bill is not passed out of committee, Lady said he assumed House Democrats would try to introduce the proposal as an amendment during floor debate.
"People are tired of hearing promises," Bibb said. "If you set a specific lid and then you find yourselves having to change it, the business will look it will look like just another broken promise."
LADY SAID THE TWO sides' greatest disagreement was about the definition of spending. The speaker said that aid to local governments, used as property tax relief, would be better spent. Under the vetoed bill, such spending have been subject to the spending limit.
Holiday Plaza TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE 25th & Iowa
FREE! Thick Crust and Extra Cheese
On any Thursday . . .
On any large pizza with one or more items All you have to do is ask! No coupons accepted.
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
1445 W. 23rd
841-7900
610 Florida 841-8002
Fast Free Delivery
THIS WEEKEND!
FRIDAY
J.T.Cooke
Popular Contemporary Rockers
2.00 Gen. Adm. 1.50 for members
SATURDAY
FAST BREAK
The
Lawrence
Opera House
and 7th Sport Club
7th & Mass.
The Lawrence Opera House and 7th Spirit Club
7th & Mass.
TICKETS NOW ON SALE FOR
JOHN HARTFORD
March 7
GATEMOUTH BROWN
March 10
(
Fried Chicken Cole Slaw
Mashed Potatoes Rolls & Butter
Gravy Coffee or Tea
Creamed Corn
Are the Kitches Always Closed on Sundays?
The Eldridge Has The Answer.
SUNDAY
Special Fraternity and Sorority offer.
Dinner $4.90 including Drinks.
Wine
Serving 5-9 pm Served Family Style
All You Can EAT
BRUNCH $445 per person
For Parties/Groups, 15 or more 10% OFF,
30 or more 15% OFF
3 Days Advanced notice to receive Discount
The Eldridge House
FRIED CHICKEN only $4.45
DINNER
DINNER
K
渔民
Independent Coin-up
The Eldridge House
701 Massachusetts
(913)841-4666
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Attendant on Duty.
Lawrence's Newest Self-Service Laundromat, Complete With Dry Cleaning Drop-Off.
2105 West 26th Street
---
Gabriel's
Watch for Grand Opening Coupon. For Your FREE WASH.
OPENING SOON
---
All's Fair in Love and
Gabriel's Loves
Everybody!
Rock Chalk Special
Bring your loved one in for
A FREE DRAW with KUID
Friday, March 2nd
Gabriel's
Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842-5824
Litwins
DOWNTOWN 831 MASS.
LEVI'S
DENIM
AND CORDUROY REGULAR BELLS
$12^{50}
master charge
QUALITY NEVER GOES OUT OF STYLE
VISA'
NOW THRU SUNDAY EVENING
OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 pm
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
- $A \subseteq B$ if and only if $AB = BA$.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
MKU
KU
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
Vol. 89, No.106
Rock Chalk a KU tradition
Friday, March 2, 1979
Lawrence, Kansas
See story page seven
Columnist urges conservativism for government
PETER HENRY BURTON
By BILL RIGGINS
Staff Reporter
George Will, nationally syndicated columnist, last night charged that liberalism had made the U.S. government the "servant of consumption" and urged a return to conservative doctrines to offset trend.
Conservative speaker
"The judgement of small minorities, in government and out, is almost decisive,"
Will, delivering the second lecture of the 1979 J.A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture Serse, told about 250 people in Woodruff and Chelsea and mounted a "miniunt of very small, organized minorities."
"The great majority of the people"
"generally do not decide issue they decide,
but only those who have issued issue"
"are."
"BECAUSE OF the scale of modern government, the great majority of the people in our country are government is doing, at least until it has done it, and generally not even," he said.
speech last night in Woodruff Auditorium. Will was the second speaker of the 1979 A.J. Vickers Memorial Lecture series.
Conservatism was the main theme of columnist George Will's
The duty of conservatism, according to Will, is to change that situation.
"If conservatism until now has failed to engage itself with the way we live now, the time is ripe for a conservatism that does so," he said.
He said one of his goals was to make the welfare state more compatible with governmental values and more responsive to social values.
"Conservatives are leading the right for a welfare system that supports poor people and low-income families."
"To give one example, a conservative welfare state would give to individuals tax
See WILL back page
Graduate senators plan strategy
Staff Renorter
BvCAROL BEIER
A cluttered office in the bowels of Lindley Hall may not look like the headquarters of a potentially powerful student organization.
But that office is the gathering place for the Red and Black Cadre, made up of 21 of the 24 graduate student senators elected two weeks ago. All 21 students are in the department of geology.
Tim SALTER, chairman of the Cadre, said yesterday that the group intended to push for programs to benefit all families.
"If we can work within the system," he said, "we want to do it.
"If we can't work within the system, we have Phase II." Salter defined Phase II as programs that range from
FOR EXAMPLE, Salter said mild Phase II legislation would provide for a student dress code.
"What happens if we really mess everything up? People will come out against us," he said. "That's participation."
The apathetic graduate students put us in office, but we're very energetic. All of this political force is suddenly under attack.
Salter said the Cadre intended to take the Senate seriously unless nothing was accomplished.
"Phase II is designed to provide a little entertainment while we're in the Senate." he said
Sailer told Cader members and two other graduate student senators at a meeting yesterday that Phase II had
Meanwhile, the Cadre is down to the business at hand. Members appointed two graduate representatives to the University Council yesterday and discussed applications for Senate committees. The applications are due at 5 p.m.
RON MCDOWELL, minister of propanola for the
engagement, encouraged members to apply to the Finance and
Development Bank.
"My personal feeling is that we should try and pack the Finance and Auditing Committee because that seems to be what we need."
Other Cade members and they thought membership on the Sports, Academic Affairs and Student Rights community.
"We need to learn how to make the rules work for us—not instead of apauln us." Said she. "We're going to have to
The Cadre's unity was questioned, however, by Jim Bimber, one of the Cadre members selected to serve on University
"RIGHT AFTER the elections—we were giddy with power—everyone assumed that we would all think alike. We're finding out now that's not true. It depends on the issues." he said.
Berg said the Cadre was particularly concerned in Phase I with Senate spending.
"As a student without any power, it didn't bother me," he said. "It was just a few dollars out of my pocket. As a senator with some power, I'm beginning to think I can make a difference."
Margaret Berger and George Gonze, student body president and vice president, also said they favored critical thinking.
Berlin said yesterday that she was unaware of the Cedrus' Phase II plan.
"I don't feel that I know enough about this," Bernin said, "but I would object more to a group of seniors trying to block legislation just to form a seat of opposition than I would to a group that was trying to add the Student to
"However, I also hate to waste time with stuff like that."
Travel, teaching attract volunteers
By ROBIN SMITH
Staff Reporter
Diane Cronn works in a village water supply program in Kenya. Women often spend their time cleaning the streets.
Charles Crissman's job is in a tuberculosis control center in Korea, a nation trying to reduce the incidence of TB by two-thirds by 1980.
Robert Dira travels in Malaysia by riverboat, or motorcycle to reach rural farmers who, the government hopes, will join cooperative society.
A University of Kansas student might join these volunteers in a similar situation if he tells out an application and talks to one of the volunteers. They are also who have been on campus since Tuesday.
"Peace Corps is strictly a volunteer service for international jobs which provide underdeveloped countries with assistance," he said. "We are the Vistas representative, said yesterday."
THE PEACE CORPS, founded in 1961, was joined with Vista and other federal volunteer agencies in 1971 under an umbrella agency called Action.
"Most of the students who have come in for an interview have an idea about Peace Corps but more information about specific jobs and job openings," *Lotgens骑
Peace Corps volunteers teach, farm,
provide health services and do various types
of jobs to help countries develop. The
volunteers sign up for two-year terms.
“It’s kind of hard to judge a good volunteer during an interview.” Lokeng said. “I guess for a student who has a sense of justice, it helps give a few years of his life to help others.”
Susan Jones, a Peace Corps and Vista
Representative, agreed with Lokengamid
a judge.
"I LOOK FOR a student who would be committed to serving and helping other people," Jones said. "Also, I try to see how you interact with a student interested in Peer Pressure."
Kathy Gordon, Kansas City, Mo. senior,
talked with Jones about teaching in a
school in the city.
"I have been stuck in the Midwest for a long time," Gorton said. "Now I want to try out the things that I have learned—I want a job, I want to work in a community that I want to become involved in a community."
"My parents know that I plan to leave the Midwest. But I don't know if they thought that I would go as far as another country, or that I would help them; that they would support me, no matter what."
The Peace Corps has more than 6,000 volunteers serving in more than 60 countries. However, Jones said, the dropout rate is high.
"ABOUT ONE-THIRD of all accepted
volunteers drop out before they travel to
a location."
not sure why they drop out, I don't think that the Peace Corps ever follows that up. But at least 15 to 20 percent of the volunteers in the country sign up for another year to help him.
Loksenkard said, "The dropout rate varies from country to country. I think that 25 percent of the volunteers drop out within the first six months of training."
After a volunteer is accepted into the Peace Corps, he receives eight to 14 weeks of training, often in the assigned country. He then takes part in an effort to help to adapt their skills to the assignment.
"The training can be intense if you have to learn a foreign language that is completely new to you within nine weeks," Lokensgard said.
"A VOLUNTERER has to be flexible and be able to roll with the punches in the training. If you are used to having dinner at 6:30 and can't think of rearranging that time element--forget it. The Peace Corps isn't for you."
Lokengsdag said there were other reasons for the dropout rate among volunteers. Among the reasons she listed were medical problems, family problems and emotional drawbacks.
Although volunteers commit themselves to a two-year term in the Peace Corps, Lokengsard said, volunteers may pull out of their assignments at any time.
According to Jones, Peace Corps volunteers are chosen from applications and evaluation sheets that are sent to the main office in Washington, D.C. The Washington office tries to match a volunteer's skills and experience to a job that is requested by a foreign country.
*BESIDES BEING a lot of hard work and
hardship, the Peace Corps can also have
a lot of benefits.
“There is a lot of personal growth in Peace Corps. It also allows you to readjust your values and your career decision. And it helps you realize that, most important, it forces you to grow up.”
Peace Corps volunteers receive a monthly living allowance while they are working in a country. According to the United Nations, an equivalent to the country's standard of living and will vary from $80 to $500 a month. When a volunteer completes Peace Corps service, he will receive $12 for every meal he served, as a readjustment allowance.
Medical and dental care is provided and during Peace Corps service, a 48-day paid vacation also is offered to the volunteer. From the country is paid by the organization.
Lokengandr the majority of students inquire about working somewhere near the capital.
KU student audited; 1978 grant delayed
See PEACE CORPS back page
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
To be chosen out of a group of 1.8 million could make you feel special, but for one KU student, it cost five months of school to complete Basic Educational Opportunity Grant.
Randy O'Boyle, Topeka senior, was one of the 1.8 million students who attended the University of Kansas, including O'Boyle, were audited by the Office of Education in Waco.
Because O'Boyle was being audited, his BEOG for 1976 was withdrawn until the year he took one year, which delayed his receiving his BEOG from last year's language exam.
O'Boyle said the delay forced him to borrow $400 from the short-term loan program at the University of Kansas to pay his fall tuition.
"There are so many variables involved," she said. "It's really hard to find an average. But if the student sends the requested information right after receiving a letter telling him of the audit, he can be processed in a month a time."
Jean Saunders, branch chief of the Office of Education in Washington, said this week that the normal time for an audit was one to two months.
"EVEN WITH my Direct Student Loan, I didn't have the money for enrollment fees." he said. "So I borrowed from KU."
Saunders said the information usually requested was tax returns, income and family statistics or statements of financial need. She said that students were able for providing the information and that if they did not, no more BEOG
applications from them would be considered.
She said students who did not comply with the audit could be fined or sentenced by a federal court. The Office of Finance has a two-year backlog of audits.
O'BOYLE said his grant was delayed because of mail delays and a mix-up with the internal Revenue Service. And, he requested that information HEW needed for his audit.
He said HEW requested a copy of his 1976 income tax statement by Jan. 1, 1978. O'Boyle was given a one-month extension to his tax return, a copy from the IRS in Austin, Texas.
"That's what really upset me," he said, "I had understood that I had the right to refuse information requesting the tax information right away. In that letter, they not only said that I would not receive my 1972 BEGO, but that I would be fined or prosecuted."
O'Boyle said he was notified of the audit in December 1977, by mail. But he said, the letter was sent to his home address, and it is not a two-week address, which caused a two-week delay.
"The office at KU called HEW and straightened out the mess," he said. "They were able to clarify that I did have the extension."
Meanwhile, O'Boyle said, he received a threatening letter from HFW.
O'BROYLE SAID that with the help of KU's office of financial aid, he received the extension.
O'Boyle said the IRS sent him his 1976 tax return statement instead of his 1976 return. It took him until July to get the correct return sent to HEW.
See O'BOYLE back page
Group to renovate Eldridge home
Rv SHIRLEY SHOUP
Staff Reporter
John Knapp gets excited when he talks about renovating the old Eldridge-Topham house.
Knapp, Shawnee Mission junior in architecture, and his two partners plan to renovate the structure partly as a demonstration project. They are forming a coalition of local preservation Society to encourage the preservation of older buildings in east Lawrence.
Knapp said the renovation work, which is to begin within the next couple of months, could demonstrate what could be done to an apartment that is legitimate, contractor would want to handle.
The city also has shown an interest in the project by approving a $2,000 grant of Community Development funds as an interest subsidy for the project.
The Eldridge-Topharm home, 945 Bluete Island St., was built in 1857 by Colonel S.W. Eldridge, whom Knapp called "a real townbuilder."
THE HOUSE has been used for the past few years by both the local Jaycee chapter and the Frontersmen Drum and Bugle Corps of Olathe and as Dr. Demento's Haunted House during the week of Halloween.
Eldridge also bought and renovated the Free State Hotel after Sheriff Sam Jones burned it in 1856. He rebuilt the hotel again after Quantrill's Raid in 1863.
Eldridge also was the general contractor or Fraser Hall and built the Costes House in 1926.
The renovators' partnership was initiated when Knapp learned that John Morris, KU assistant professor of architecture and urban design, wanted to renovate the house.
"We were looking for a house to rehabilitate and Morris was looking for a
CHAN HORNER, a local builder, is the third partner in the group.
Knapp said Morris had trouble finding a contractor for the renovation.
"They came in with real ridiculous pries." he said.
So to keep the cost of the project down the three men plan to do the work themselves.
Knapp said the East Lawrence Improvement Association had been interested in developing a program.
"The ELIA sees it as a key demonstration rehabilitation house," he said. "If we can rehabilitate that house, we can rehabilitate any home."
He said the association liked the house and thought it could improve the area.
The house was sold by the Eldrider family in about 1890 to Joseph and Emma Tophm. Their daughter, Laura, lived in the house after she died to the Salvation Army after she died in 1794.
"The house is a real trash heap at this point," he said.
SINCE THEN it has been empty and becomes a blight on the area, Knapp said.
The house has been condemned and the Salvation Army had considered tearing it to make room for a new church since the land is directly behind the Salvation Army Church, 946 New Hamp-
But when Morris was looking for an old
The Eldridge home
Staff Photo by BILL FRAKF
103
home, Knapp said, "That house reached out and grabbed him."
One of the reasons the men decided to renovate the old building was to provide Morris and his family with a nice place to live. Knan said.
He said he thought the renovation was a good move for the house, east Lawrence and the downtown area since the house was so close to downtown.
"The renovation will eliminate a blight," he said.
the renovation the house
he had said the house had been the victim
BUT ONE of the first things the renovators put to do is clean out what is left in the house. Although some of the inside wood molding remains, Knapp said, it is not a problem.
"That's about all that's left," he said.
Krapp said the unique feature of the house was the proportion of the rooms.
The crucial repair will be on the walls of the house, which Knapp would require repair.
"If we can't do that, we won't be able to rehabilitate it," he said.
Eldridge built the house, but Knaps said Morris, who has spent some time in New Orleans, thought the house was designed by his great-grandmother, Anne. The decorative work on the front of the house.
KNAPP SAID, "The wrap-around porches caught mrw eye."
The partners are completing the final details of the paperwork for closing the real estate transaction and for obtaining financing for the project.
They said they planned to have the house completed in one year. Knapp said he hoped to have Morris and his family moved in by next Christmas.
2
Friday, March 2, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansas's Wire Services
U.S. base in Iran evacuated
TEHRAN, Iran - A group of 22 American Air Force men, evacuated from a top-secret U.S. electronic monitoring unit near the Soviet border, left behind in Ukraine by the United States.
Diplomatic sources said the Americans were forced to abandon the base but U.S. officials denied there was any attack or loss of secret equipment.
The their departure came as Ayatolil Ruhollah Khomeini, leader of the Islamic revolution that swept the shah from power, left Tehran to retire to the holy city
revolution that swept the shah from power, left Tehrain to retire to the holy city of Oman when asked he would devote the rest of his life to teaching religion
Iran's revolutionary radio announced yesterday that three more people had been executed following their convictions by revolutionary courts.
The courts have condemned to death at least 15 people, including eight top generals, since the fall of the shub 20 days ago.
Begin seeks attitude changes
WASHINGTON—President Carter and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem
Brown began talks last night amid strained U.S.-Israel relations.
Carter has expressed frustration over the deadlock in negotiations between Israel and Egypt. The Israelis do not agree with the U.S. support of key
Before boarding his plane yesterday in Israel Begin said "the American delegation should think again and change its attitude."
He said it was the duty of the United States to persuade the Egyptians to change their attitude because Israel already had made "great sacraments" for them.
Begin did not say what U.S. proposals for resolving the deadlock between the two countries he found unacceptable.
The U.S. peace package was presented to the Egyptian and Israeli delegations by Secretary of State Cyrus Vance last week during secret talks at
Diaas case to ao to committee
wASHINGTON - The House turned back an attempt yesterday to outvote Rep. Charles Diggs, D-Mich., from office. Members voted instead to
convince the Republicans to lift a trade ban.
House members voted 322-77 to accept a proposal to send the case to the House, which already has authorized an investigation of Diggs, a 13-term governor.
Rep. Charles Bennett, D-Fla., chairman of the ethics committee, said the panel had hired an attorney and he hoped the inquiry could be completed within six months.
Diggs, who sat in the House during the debate but did not speak, cast his vote in favor of handing his case to the ethics committee. He is appealing a three-year jail sentence and conviction on charges of accepting kickbacks from employees.
Chief Justice disputes audit
TOPEKA - The Kansas Supreme Court Chief Justice yesterday angrily challenged the accuracy of an audit alleging that thousands of dollars were lost to fraud.
Cain Justice Alfred Schroeder said the audit, which focused on the transition from county to state funding of the court payoffs, distorted the facts and misled the public about the fairness of the case.
The audit, ordered after the Kansas Legislature last year required the state to take over funding of non-judicial court personnel salaries, reported that almost $500,000 was paid to employees in violation of a 1978 freeze on local court hiring and pay raises.
The Legislature had invoked the freeze to prevent local officials from padding budgets before the state assumed local court costs Jan. 1.
The audit estimated that $21,446 was spent statewide for 79 new, unauthorized positions last year and that $27,858 was paid in unauthorized positions.
The report also said $5.9 million spent last year on salaries in 10 counties was technically unauthorized because those counties' court budgets were drafted earlier.
Error stalls remapping bill
TOPEKA - An error in a hastily drawn amendment to the bill reappointment, the 125 districts of the Kansas House apparently will give Democrats another chance.
State Rep. John Sites, R-Manhattan, said, "Yesterday, I was in Ivan Sand's district, Today, I am in both districts."
Sites offered the amendment, intending to correct boundaries in Riley County districts so that he and Sand, a Riley Republican, would no longer be in the same district. But the way the amendment was drawn resulted in Sites' home area being included in both districts.
The House, which passed the reappointment bill yesterday, asked that the Kansas Senate correct the error. If the Senate makes the necessary correction, it will be corrected.
During debate of the bill earlier this week in the House, Republicans pushed through an amendment altering lines in Lawrence to divide a predominately white district into two groups.
Democrats reapportion the reappointment amendment as GOP perry-mandering to knock off Glover and State Rep. John Solbach, also a Democrat, in the
New liuor proposals made
TEOPEA- In another development in a week of controversy concerning liqueur, a Kansas Senate committee yesterday introduced two proposed concessions.
One proposal would permit the sale of liquor by the drink in restaurants. The other would prohibit the sale of cocktails in private clubs.
State Sen. Torn Reform, D-Kansas City, asked the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee to introduce both resolutions for simultaneous considerations.
However, after the committee's decision was made, Rehnar said he had not fully read the second resolution, which he apparently thought prohibited all of them.
He said he had not known it would allow liquor sales in clubs and he might amend the proposal once it was returned to the committee for study.
The resolution's provisions would prohibit all sale or serving of liquor by the drink except in religious ceremonies, in a person's private home to his family and friends, or in a so-called, fraternal and veterans organization to members and their personal guests.
Rabin predicts treaty by May
Rabin's remarks were made at Wichita State University's Elsenbower Lecture Series just hours before before Prime Minister Monachen Beg was sworn in. He said: "We will never forget that moment."
WICHTA-Former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in Wichita yesterday that Middle East peace talks in Washington might not bear immediate fruit, but he was optimistic that a treaty would be signed between Egypt and Israel by May.
"Don't be discouraged if the few coming days will look bleak with no great achievement," Rabin told about 300 people.
The former prime minister, now a member of the Israeli parliament and a leading member of the opposition Labor Party, said he believed the discussions would not produce major results until Egyptian President Anwar Sadat were present.
Rabin's presence on the WSU campus sparked a demonstration by 30 students, many of them Iranian, outside the auditorium where he spoke. The president said that he wanted to show how the
This was in sharp contrast to Rabin's appearance last April at the University of Kansas, where more than 200 demonstrators disrupted his speech with a rant about the Iraq war.
Weather...
It will be mostly cloudy today with a high in the low 50s. There is a 50 percent chance of showers today and a 70 percent chance of rain mixed with sleet tonight. Winds will be 15-25 mph. The low tonight will be in the mid to upper 30s. During the weekend will be in the mid 40s and lows will be in the low to mid 20s.
China calls for talks to end border fighting
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)—While Chinese troops fought indiscreative battles around a strategic Vietnamese provincial capital yesterday, Chinese leaders in Peking proposed peace talks to end the two-week-old war.
The message apparently did not mention China's earlier demands that Hanoi pull its forces out of Cambodia in exchange for a freeze withdrawal from the northern Vietnam.
The Chinese proposal to negotiate was made in a note to the Vietnamese Embassy in Peking, according to Hsinhun, the official Chinese news agency.
Haishin reported that China proposed that both governments appoint a vice minister of foreign affairs as a representative for the group at an agreed place for concrete negotiations.
In its latest battle communique, the government in Hanoi said its troops had killed or wounded 27,000 Chinese troops since the Chinese invasion force drove into
No immediate Vietnamese response to the peace overture was reported.
These claims could not be independently verified, but intelligence analysts say the casualty figures given by Vietnam are exaggerated.
Vietnam Feb. 17. It also claimed to have knocked out 200 Chinese tanks.
The Soviet Union yesterday issued another strong warning to China.
Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin accused Peking of a "brutal act of international brigandage," and vowed that Soviet-allied "men" will not be abandoned in a time of trial."
Kosygin rejected China's call for a mutual withdrawal of Vietnamese troops from Cambodia and Chinese troops from Vietnam.
Japanese Foreign Minister Sunao Sunao, in his country's first expression of opposition to the Chinese invasion of Vietnam, said on Wednesday that China's actions were "unjust."
Bangkok sources said Vietnam forces in the key Lang Son province, 80 miles northeast of Hanoi, had repulsed Chinese troops near the city of Lang Son and nearby Loc Binh.
Free University
BASICS OF TOUCH DISCO
BEGINNING CROCHET
BEGINNING NEEDLEPOINT
DOG OBEIDENCE TRAINING
(WHOLISTIC MEDICINE
SOCIETY FOR CREATIVE ANACHRISM
BACKGAMMON FOR BEGINNERS
BACKPACKERS OF KANSAS
PERSONAL INSURANCE INFORMATION
YOBA: UNION
ECKANKAR: "ANCIENT SCIENCE OF SOU
TRAVEL"
INTENSOUT ZEN MEDITATION RETREAT
USEFUL WILD PLANTS
APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY
INTRODUCTION TO SUIFM
PLUMBING REPAIR
MONEY
THE HARD ROCK BALLET
(TECHNICAL ROCK CLIMBING)
TUMBLING
SOFT SOLAR ENERGY
CLOTHING AND TEXTILES IN PURPLE
CHINA—WHAT WE AIN'T GOT
A SCAULPTOR'S BARN-PLANNING
REDUCING UTILITY BILLS
DNA vs. OMNA
NATURE WAGON
INTRODUCTION TO SPEED READING
BELLY DANCING
BASIC HOME MAINTENANCE
BEGINNING EMBRIDERY
MICROCOMPUTER PLANNING
---
ENROLLMENT
IS MONDAY, TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 6, & 7 IN THE STUDENT UNION AT THE S.U.A. OFFICE BETWEEN 9 A.M.-5 P.M. OR BY PHONE: 864-3477
WASHINGTON (AP)—The government's economic barometer fell for the third straight month in January, pointing to economic slowdown later in the year.
Economy shows slowdown
However, economists disagree over whether there will be an orderly decline or a deep recession at the end of 1979.
President Carter was still confident there would be no recession.
January's 1.2 percent drop in the Commerce Department's index of local stores steeper than a 3 percent decline in January 1975, toward the end of the year.
The 1.2 percent decline followed decreases of 0.4 percent in November and 0.1 percent in December.
The index also declined for three months in a row in the summer of 1977
White House Press secretary Jody Powell said yesterday's report was consistent with the White House view that the rate of growth would slow this year. But, he said the new figures didn't signal a recession.
but the economy maintained rapid growth.
William Cox, a Commerce Department economist, went one step further. Cox predicted the economy would stay news. He said the economy must show down from the haptic pace of last fall if it stagnates.
Nonetheless, many private forecasters are sticking to their predictions or a recession late this year or early next year.
Economists for the Business Council, composed of corporate leaders, say that as many as 1 million people may be thrown out of work next year.
PETROGONIA
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 2, 1979
3
2nd spinal surgery planned for Egyptian
A surgeon at the University of Kansas Medical Center will perform a second operation on the curved spine of a 15-year-old Egyptian boy next week.
The surgeon, Mac Ashar, partially corrected the boy's spine in an operation
Fawzi is suffering from scoliosis, the lateral, or sideways, curvature of the spine.
The boy, Mohammed Fawzi, had been flown to the United States two weeks ago in a plane bound to Egypt President Anwar Al-Sisi arrived at the airport arranged for the operation at the Med Center.
The operation, which lasted nine hours,
corrected the condition of Fawizi's spine by
at 60 percent. Asher said two weeks ago
was the right time to probably would correct
the condition by 50 percent.
DURING THE operation, Asher hooked
A combination workshop and panel program, "People at Work," will present speakers representing more than 30 oceans. The program is free and open to the public.
Career center to offer advice on job hunting
Students who are unaware of their future careers will have an opportunity tomorrow to talk to some people who have already made career decisions.
Barbara Bloom, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource and Career Center at KU and one of the sponsors of the program, said, "The program is for anyone who wants to hear what it's really like in the field."
Participants can listen to workers and professionals in fields including health, law, business, public relations, social welfare and engineering.
Participants can also help with resume writing and interviewing in a workplace.
The career panels will meet in several rooms of the Queens Union from 10.30 a.m.
Carol Nalandian, acting director of the Adult Life Resource Center, said she would be leading another workshop. "What to do if I don't Know What I Want to Do."
"I will be helping those people who are undecided about a career. I can show them the career planning process and how to get started," Nalbandian said.
films sua
Friday & Saturday
March 2 & 3
WELCOME TO LA
Dir. Alan Rudolph; with Kelth Carrion, Gerald Calpine, Harvey Kahn, Sally Kellerman, Sissy Spacex, Altman, Henson, Produced by Robert Altman.
Midnight Movie JABBERWOCKY
17/17
Dir. Terry Gillies with Michael Palin, Max Wall, Mike Jones. Another hilarious epic made by members of Monty Python's Flying Circus.
Monday, March 5
CHRISTOPHER STRONG
Dir. Dorothy Arzner, with Katherine Hepburn, Billie Burke, Written by Zoe Akins. Hepburn in her first major role as a wealthy availer. PLUS: The "Little Prince" upon the recovered literary piece by Charlotte Perkins Glimson.
Tuesday, March 6
THE DAY THE EARTH
STOOD STU
STOOD STILL
/1951
Dir. Robert Wise; with Michael Rennell, Patricia Nekla, Sam Jaffie, Music by Bernard Herrmann. One of the most intelligent science-fiction films ever made, "Gott! Klaatu, barada nikto."
*Forum Room
Wednesday, March 7
SUNSET BOULEVARD
Dir. Billy Wilder, with William Hollen, Gloria Swanson, Erich von Stroheim, Cecil B. DeMille, Busser Keaton, D. deKlerk, of a dark and decadely Hollywood
All films M.R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
two stainless steel rods on the vertebrae of Fawni's spine. The rods are used to hold the back straight so that the patient can undergo physical therapy.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted; up to 150 admission
Asher removed the rods the day after the operation, however, because they were affecting the nerves that lead to Fawzi's different vertebrae in the operation next week.
A Med Center spokesman said it was not unusual for the roach to affect the nerves in a person.
The rods probably will remain on Fawzi's spine for about a year, the spokesman said.
Maher el Ashri, an Egyptian physician who came to the Med Center with Fawzi,
Ashi said through an interpreter that he来到了 the United States to learn how to treat scoliosis. He said that only one hospital in Egypt had performed operations on patients. He also said that the Med Center was well-known for its orthopedic surgery.
FAWZI PROBABLY will remain at the Med Center for two and a half to four weeks after the second operation. He will be fitted with a ventilator and he will receive physical therapy while he's there.
Fawaii lives in faith and Hope Village in
Kabul, where she was baptized by her
Satire's wife for handicapped children.
Fawzi had five brothers. No member of his family came to the United States with him.
Heaven comes to your door
Gabriel's Delivery Offer Giant 22 oz. Soft Drink 20c with any pizza delivered (Limit four)
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ASK JOHN HAMBRIGHT 841-6852
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
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Saturday March 3
Best 3 of 5
Entry fee $3.00
Deadline Friday, March 2 For more information call 864-3545
You didn't get the courses you wanted.
But you got Fridays off.
Now comes Miller time.
Miller
©1978 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
MARCH 2,1979
No to education division
As a rule, Washington can be counted on periodically to flood over with a number of awful ideas. This year, of course, is no exception.
One of those awful ideas is a proposal to create a Cabinet-level Department of Education. Vice President Walter Mondale said recently that education suffered "because its highest official is not at that Cabinet table speaking directly to the President."
While Mondale's statement is indisputable, it seems doubtful that the lack of a Cabinet-level Secretary of Education is at the heart of the educational problem in the United States.
MUCH MORE likely is the possibility that a Department of Education would serve only to worsen the situation by expanding federal influence in local and state educational programs, eventually miring the educational system in the kind of bureaucratic quicksand that is so prevalent in Washington.
WHILE MONDALE bemoans the fact that the United States is the "only major industrialized democracy in the world that does not have a department or ministry of education," he overlooks the fact that a national minister of
education has never been needed, or wanted, in this country.
EDUCATION traditionally has been the province of city and county municipalities, which allows the local educational systems to blend with the communities and bend to their needs.
And anyone who seriously thinks that a Department of Education would cut waste and inefficiency in the distribution of federal funds need look no further than the Department of Labor, or the Department of Commerce, or any department you care to choose, to see the fallacy in that argument. Fighting the bureaucracy with more bureaucracy is an idea that only a bureaucrat could appreciate, and it is hoped that there are still some left in government who don't fall into that category.
A federal department governing education would exert an oppressive and narrow-minded influence on education in this country. Anyone who cares about the quality of our education must hope that the time has not yet come for a Department of Education.
City's action on tavern arbitrary, inexcusable
Of course, there has been an increase in federal funding and involvement in public education in recent years, but there is still a need to adequate for governing that influence.
In typically arbitrary fashion, the Lawrence City Commission recently acted beyond the jurisdiction of city ordinances in passing a mall bailment license of Uncle Milt's Cafe.
Apparently, the revocation, ordered on the basis that the cafe, at 2246 Barker St., was a public nuisance, was illegal and openly arbitrary.
Uncle Mily's license was revoked in June 1974 by the urging of members and officials of Haiti to amend its commission voted unanimously to revoke the license solely because the cafe was a
KING THEN directed City Clerk Vera Murray into the cafe's license to the owner, Milton Cole.
But, Ralph King Jr., Douglas County District Court judge, surprised the commission last Friday by stating that "A search of the ordinances of the city of Lawrence reveals no provision for the revocation of a cereal malt beverage license on the basis of public health conditions," and the court prove a public nuisance existed even if this was a proper ground for revocation.
So the commission acted on the basis of complaints instead of city ordinances, essentially twisting the law to solve the problem. And the problem was that residents around Uclem Milyt's were tired of students having a bar door to the campus.
Following King's decision, City Commissioner Barkley Clark defended the commission's actions and said, "What we were talking about was that people who complains about the establishment."
So what was the commission's response to King's charge that they had no legal right to revoke a license on the basis of public nuisance? Change the law.
In his ruling he added that "investigation of the city rather clearly shows that Uncle Milly's was not a public nuisance or it would never have been approved for licensing on Jan. 1, 1979, by the Health Department, the police department, the Inspector and the Police Department."
THE COMMISSION's solution was to revoke Milton Collins' cereal malt beverage license, forcing him out of business. But they were caught overstepping their jurisdiction.
City Manager Buford Watson acknowledged the veracity of King's claim, but Clark said, "If that's the case, perhaps we can tighten the ordinance to tighten up that loophole."
Jake
Thompson
PENGUIN
The commission has made attempts to tighten its licensing laws since revoking Collins' license, but it also has had to backpeck on those.
The commission changed the alcohol and cereal malt beverage ordinance to state that alcohol could not be sold within 400 feet of a school, but quickly had to exempt colleges and universities to allow the sale of alcohol in the Kansas Union. Then it had to redefine 400-foot distance from "as the cloud flies" to measurement by sidewalks and streets.
THESE CHANGES seem trivial but demonstrate that complaints by a small segment of the public can be action by the commission which may translate into new laws for the city. And all of this
The commission's actions in the Uncle Mitty's case have been haplocked and have laundered people for the benefit of others.
Unfortunately, a number of the city's ordinances have been generated by the city commission in this arbitrary manner. It is not only that it makes thinks it can make up whatever law it wants.
In the future, if the commission alters city ordinances to exclude Collins from operating his business, it also will legally have the power to exclude others.
As the city's governing body, the city commission should move with more care and responsibility than it has in Uncle Milty's case.
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 affiliciated with the letter should include the writer's chaperone town or home or faculty staff. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
Letters Policy
NO
NO
BUTCHER
Academia shuns the mention of truth
Alexander Solzenytin reminded Harvard last spring that its motto is Veritas—truth. History may well judge that she dared devilly courage this act ranks above defiance of Soviet communism. It may be doubted that anyone at Harvard, or anywhere in academe, cares much whether a student is given cowards. But to speak of Virtals! I mean it is not done.
By DENNIS QUINN
Guest Writer
One may speak publicly in obsessions, one may chatter freely about sex of any kind and one may coolly debate the merits of homosexuality, cannibalism and abortion. But Vertas is unmentionable, especially in that naked way—with no quotation marks of apology and without a thicket of qualifiers. It's a sort of metaphysical streaking.
My own experience indicates that there are large numbers of American academicians who really regard truth as an obsolete term, designating some quaint anachronism that may have once existed or have been erased. I have received a call from the System. In the recent Report of the Integrated Humanities Program Advisory Committee, one finds the following sentence: 'But the criteria which have been established for active participation (in HIP) by other faculty has the semblance of an ideological test with the condition that paraphrasing them to a strict philosophy and a given view of truth.'
(the mind open at both ends) or contentlessness for its own sake or hypochore, and ultimately it produces pious love.
There are paradoxes in the phenomenon, of course. One is that academic pluralism is usually thought of as the policy that permits and encourages all points of view to flourish and compete. Something has happened to the policy, however, what was previously permitted is now presolved, and pluralism is as exclusive and partisan as the Nicene Creed.
THOSE QUOTATION marks - ironic, apologetic, Plateau-like - say more than the whole report. They identify the authors as naive pluralists. This mentality, it hardly matters to me, has made their quite putting it, has become the orthodoxy of academia.
Compulsory pluralism in high schools and in the media have led to policies concerning the treatment of controversial subjects. When dealing with such matters, one is required to be aware that the program's steady diet of this procedure produces isisual neutrality
ANOTHER PARADOX is that whereas pluralism is supposed to promote controversy and clash of ideas, real communities have little right to all, if everybody has his own "truth", and if all are ideas equally valid, why bother to quarrel? In the pluralistic universe everything is negotiable, subject to infinite compromise. Consequently, one gets very little clash and a real deal of reason probably transient community. All matters remain properly transient communal, just matters of "wording," as administrators love to say.
Window-shoppers in the marketplace of books, tourists of the world of thought who know the names of everything and the significance of nothing, their transcripts read like little black books. But what's it all about, Alife? Woed by experts, seduced by specialists, to whom does one give one's heart?
Such intellectual dispatches as do occur in academe are restricted by the unwritten code of pluralism. It is not good form to raise the big questions. Moral issues evaporate in hot, gaseous rap sessions; the significance of Keats or Kant or Christ is mooted in excruciating consideration of how variously they have been interrupted.
MENTAL DETENTE has overtaken the university intellectual, and he works out his aggressions in raucatellity and interminable squabbles about internal politics. The much-praised open mind may deter dermatism, but when open-mindedness becomes dogma, debate becomes the most academic of academic exercises.
flirts, permanently adolescent sons who have "been around," who have had affairs with existentialism, laisons with transactional analysis, brief encounters with Karl Marx and summer romances with Fortran.
IT APPEARS that plurialism as an ideology is entering the inquisitorial stage. One simply cannot teach, for example, that anything is inferior or superior to anything else. This is the case of the imperative verb another paradox. No "value judgments"; the favorite buzzphrase may be made. Those are first principles, and norsers not teachers may dissent and remain respectable.
Prelistial biography is such that anyone who says that anything at all is true or false is assumed to be dogmatic. In reality, the truth of any statement is not all those who have rejected pluralism in favor of a unified idea of truth are philosophical fascists who will not tolerate opposing views. The dogma that those who concur in the truth may be known are dogmatic is not open to dispute.
I have said it is a naive doctrine, scarcely rising above such platitudes as, "There are many truths" or "many paths to truth" or "Everyone has his own truth." No doubt I have given the impression that the current vulgarization of his ideas; but the most extreme and articulate of recent pluralists, Bertrand Russell, expresses the main idea rather crudely himself. "I think the universe is all spots and jumps, without unity and without order. It is all possibilities of business or any of the other properties that governs life."
THIS MAY or may not describe the universe, but it seems an accurate enough account of the university today. The complex theory of James has become the pragma of Professor Smatterter, and education is identical with exposure to "alternatives." To this dogma, however, there are no alternatives, such as unity and order and coherence, those pedestrian properties which Russell scorned and without which liberal education becomes merely promiscuous.
ACTUALLY, extreme pluralists such as the ancient Sophists, the enemies of Socrates, are strongly disposed to becoming monopolists. If man, the measure of all things, can establish as “true” whatever he wishes, then education becomes a matter of some strong will prevailing, and the intellect pursues a truth loses its place.
The pluralistic university typically graduates intellectual
One consequence of substituting Voluntas—will, for vertas, is that the university becomes a rudderless riffler ship. Another consequence is that the student and slager. Another consequence is that the lover of truth becomes as the leader of a rival faction hungry for monopoly, a dangerous revolutionary who is out to bet the whole world on their momentum. There can be but one solution: Socrates must die.
Dennis Quinn is director of the Integrated Humanities Program at KU.
THINK DAMN IT!
SOMETHING HAS TO BE
DONE ON THIS ASIAN
WAR THING TO SHOW
PEOPLE WE CAN
HANDLE A CRISIS!
I'VE GOT
IT, CHIEF!
WE NEED TO ESTABLISH
OUR NEUTRALITY WITH
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STARKLY DRAMATIC
STROKE,
RIGHT? RIGHT!
SO WE RUSH THE PEPSI
FRANCHISE TO
VIETNAM!
THE CHINESE GOT
COCA-COLA, RIGHT?
RIGHT!
WILLIY
I LIKE IT!
I LIKE IT!
To the editor:
Support of South Africa a disgrace
The support of South Africa, however indirectly, by funds from this university is far below that of most other countries.
The recent decision by the Endowment Association to continue to support the racist police state in South Africa displays a lack of regard for human rights.
That American business firms exert a liberalizing effect has been repudiated by actual events and by civil rights leaders in South Africa.
The men and women who control the funds of the Endowment Association have a responsibility to see that the money does not in any way become involved in the perishable items anywhere: an awesome and seemingly impossible task, but one that cannot be shirked.
Lawrence special student
1, for one, do not care to receive blood money
Chainv J. Folsom
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Gun control laws help prevent crime
To the editor:
Talk about figures with figures—I wonder if Greg Errzenn (the Feb. 23 Kanan) has done more than look at a map? He compares Ohio with New York to justify his anti-gun law stance, presumably hoping that no one would notice that the population of New York City alone is just slightly less than that of the entire state of Ohio.
In addition, most of the crimes with a gun
in New York state are committed in the Big Apple, where gun control was just too little too late. I assume Ernzen isn't trying to require that New York City is typical of the country or that the reason New York has such stiff laws has nothing to do with the horrendous gun crime rate in the city. His rationale might have been valid had the law been passed before the enormous use of firearms and that this result did not was done after the fact and negated a method of dealing with an already existing problem.
The point of supporting gun laws now is to prevent such a devastating problem from
occurring elsewhere. Gun laws are not a cure but a preventative, and Erzsen falls to
I have no problems with his own a rifle or shotgun for sport. Handguns are another matter. Try walking into a bar with a rifle or shotgun, and get out when he's been drinking walking in with a concealed handgun. And check the crime figures about incidents like this while you're
As far as his remark "Remember, the West wasn't won with a registered gun"1—he is suggesting a return to that sort of lawlessness and insecurity? Hopefully, we've become a bit more civilized since then. On the other hand, I saw a nice piece of rangeland the other day that I'd really like. Maybe I should get myself a couple of guns
Kendall Simmons
Kendall Simmons Lawrence graduate student
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
(USPS 650-640) Published at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill August through May and Monday through July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday Monday. Karen 650-2978 Subscriptions by mail are $13. Karen 650-2978 Subscriptions by mail are $13. County and $1 for six months or $2 a year at a summer auditorium, paid through the student ac-
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan. Flint Hall. The University of Kansas Lawrence. KS 60455
Editor
Barry Massey
Business Manager
Karen Wenderton
Rick Musse
STATE U.
MASKED MANAGER/PER-MAP HOW YOU CANKEANPLAIN TO MARK UP THE CASE FOR INCOMPETENT CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEE (ISN'T FIRED,
V
FIRE A CIVIL SERVICE
PERSON? YOU HAVE ANY
TAPE TO BE REPLACED?
RED TAPE THAT WOULD
INVOLVE? IMPOSSIBLE?
A. R. G. S. M. P. S.
ONLY WAY TO GET RIP OF A BAP APPEAR IS TO AID HIM IN FINDING A JOB IN ANOTHER DEPARTMENT
BY T. M. ASLA
JACK THE RINGTON
BY T. M. ASLA
DOESN'T THAT JUST
PERPETUATE THE
PROBLEM?
ITS EITHER THAT
OR HIRE A HITMAN!
h
Friday, March 2, 1979
University Daily Kansan
5
a rifle
nasty with a
nasty
you're the
"is" of
art
since
since
like of
guns
Second computer ordered for county recordkeeping
cure ils to
SLA
The memory in Douglas County's record-keeping computer will be full by late 1980, but a new computer that processes information on the capacity should be available by then.
The current computer stores records for Lawrence, Douglas County and the Lawrence Unified School District. The computer's user is overseen by a three-member Computer Services Association team. Representatives from each of the three groups.
The Computer Services Association signed a letter of intent yesterday with the IBM Corporation that will guarantee that the new computer will be available to the
association in a year and a half. However, the order can be set back or canceled by the association up to one day before the computer arrives.
The association's action came just before a deadline, set by IBM, to allow the association to get the computer within the year and a half.
Bob Neise, county commissioner, said that the county had the potential to expand its computer use by as much as 13 percent. The county is poorest and the city did not need expanded use.
"The county's computer use is just in its infancy," Neise said. "There are so many things we could do with computers and right now we have just scratched the surface."
the county appraisal office, treasurer's
office, and clerk's office on the computer.
The county would like to put the records of
Neise said a third shift of programmers would have to be added if the county expanded its use into those areas with the highest population is now used in two shifts, 16 hours a day.
"We would have to hire a third shift and pay as much as $40,000 a year in additional salaries. A new computer could do the work then adding a third shift," Neisse said.
The cost of the new computer will be about $250,000, about half of what the present computer cost in 1975. The county, the city and the school district will pay for use of the new computer in proportion to the amount of time they use it.
Work on dam misses deadline; city's unruffled
Repair work on the dam is being done by the Anderson Construction Co., Holton, which is also building the two-span bridge crossing the Kansas River in Lawrence.
The deadline for completion of the Bowersock Dam was yesterday, but the job is not finished and the city does not plan to press the issue.
Brent McFall, an assistant to the city manager, said yesterday that the delay was caused by a power failure.
"Rain which fell late last week and melted snow rose the level of the river and flooded
"They were on schedule and it appeared the project would be completed on time, so at this point we're not prepared to charge them. You definitely fines for missing the deadline."
KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: THE HEART OF AMERICA
DEBATE TOURNAMENT will be at 8 a.m.
in the Kansas Union. A SHOWCASE OF
THE ARTS, for members of the Kansas Arts
Arts Council, will be held in
munity Arts Councils of Kansas, will be
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Murphy Hall.
VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE
by the American Bar Association and Law
Student Division will be from 2 p.m. to
4 a.m. at the legal aid office in New Green
Hall.
TONIGHT: KUF LOK DANCE CLUB will meet at 3:30 in Room 172 Robinson, "LAST GRAVE AT DINBAZA" will be shown at 3:03 in the West Alcove of McColm Hall cafeteria, "ROMEO AND JULIET" will be performed at 8 in the University Theatre.
TOMORROW: The KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 8 a.m. in Room 173 Robinson. VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the legal aid office in New Green Hall. A PEOPLE AT WORK CONFERENCE will be from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. A THRIVE CLINIC will be from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. in Robinson North Gymnast "ROMEO AND JULLET" will be performed at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre.
SUNDAY: "LAST GRAVE AT DINBAZA" will be shown at 11 a.m. at the Catholic Center, SUA CHESH will be at 1 a.m. at the Union Workshops on HOMEMADE MUSIC will be at 2 p.m. in the museum of Art Central Court. CARLILON RECITAL will be at 3 p.m. UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORGANIZED BY THE 9:30 p.m. University Theatre in Murphy Hall, SUA BACKGAMMON will be at 1 p.m. in the Union Parliars.
sua films
MIDNIGHT MOVIE
sua films
MIDNIGHT MOVIE
"Funnier than 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail'..."...LA Times
Makes King Kong
Look like an ape!
JARBERE WOCKY
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
March 2 & 3
Woodruff Auditorium
ADM $1.50
10:00 midnight
Makes King Kong
Look like an ape!
JABBER
WOCKS
Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority Presents Sigma Weekend Friday, March 2, 1979
All Greek Marchdown & Disco
Time: 10 pm-2 am
Kansas Union Ballroom
Admission: $1.00
Saturday, March 3,1979
Blue & Gold Benefit Ball
Time: 10 ppm-2 am
Ramada lmh. 6th & Iowa
Admission: $2.50
Music furnished by Disco Dukes
All proceeds will go to Audio-Read
the international club presents
INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL 79
sunday, march 4 cafeteria and ballroom kansas union
5 to 7 pm the banquet dishes from africa, china, india, iran, europe, mideast, thailand
T.G.I.F.
AT THE HAWK
7 to 9 pm cultural performances from around the globe
admission 3.50 children under 12 2.00 international club members 3.00
Tickets at SUA and Foreign Student Service
Lawrence Clog Headquarters
J. J. Angelas
Holiday Plaza 9th & Iowa
GREENBIRD'S OLD WORLD BELICATESEM County Charity
Eat In or Carry Out Sandwiches Soups Cheeses Meats Holidays Places 25th Ave.
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The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series Presents The American String Quartet
THE BLOODBIRD
Friday, March 2 & Sunday, March 4
8:00 p.m.
Swarthout Recital Hall/Murphy Hall
All Seats General Admission: $4
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
Call 913/864-3982 for reservations
(Limited seating available for Sunday concert)
Bottom Dollar CAR STEREO SALE
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Feb. 27th Thru Mar. 3rd!
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Admission only *6-includes Free Beer.
Peanuts, Popcorn & Soft Drinks
Bring this Ad. in for *2.00 OFF!
Call 843-8575 for Reservations
6
Friday, March 2, 1979
University Dally Kansan
MAKING A BREAK M
MAKING A BREAK THIS SPRING?
Maupintour
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can make your travel air
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and at NO CHARGE to you.
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The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
Presents
THE UNIVERSITY
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Conducted by George Lawner
in its
Spring Concert
With David Wehr, Piano Soloist
Sunday, March 4 3:30 p.m.
University Theatre/Murphy Hall
**** ADMISSION CHARGE ****
Abnormally high snowfalls and cold temperatures have tripled Facilities Operations' snow removal and fuel costs this winter.
Fuel, snow removal costs triple
Dewey Alaire, associate director of Facilities Operations, said yesterday that snow removal had cost $60,000 this year and that the amount would continue to rise as crews cleaned up the sand used on the streets and sidewalks this winter.
"Last year $19,000 was spent on snow removal," Alaire said. "Assuming this is the end of the snow, we will have spent more than three times the amount spent last winter."
Alaïla said that the high snow removal costs had not been budgeted, and that this would affect the amount of money Facilities Operations had this fiscal year.
spending," he said. "We weren't budgeted on the basis having $40,000 extra in snow
Allaire said the department was making its cutbacks in supplies rather than in labor.
"WE'VE ALREADY been cutting back on
"We're only buying what we need, and supplies are not being replaced when they are used," Allaire said. "Our supply induction is new, and will not be replaced right away."
Richard Perkins, associate director of plant maintenance, said fuel oil costs and gasoline costs are increasing.
"Last year KU used 340,000 gallons of fuel oil because it was not off gas for the extended periods it was this winter," Perkins said. "The University burned 968,788 gallons of fuel oil this winter and that is three times more than any year on our records."
KU WAS cut off from natural gas service
Jan. 1 under the terms of its interruptible contract with the Kansas Public Service Gas Company. The contract allowed for service to be discontinued when demand for natural gas was high. The cold temperatures in January forced KU to be without natural gas for 38 days, the longest period ever.
Perkins said fuel oil costs would go as high as $400,000 for the winter.
"The first 35,000 gallons of fuel oil KU bought this winter were bought at 28 cents a gallon," he said. "Since the beginning of the year, fuel oil has risen to 37 to 40 cents a gallon. That is quite a spread over the winter."
Fuel oil costs, however, do not affect the Facilities Operations budget. Utility costs are picked up by the Kansas Legislature and are therefore not increased. Increased costs will have on the KU budget.
PERKINS SAID KU's fuel oil storage tank was now full. The tank holds 230,900 gallons of oil and provides the University a 14 to 16 day supply of oil for heat.
"We have two more bids out for fuel oil but these bids probably will be canceled." Perkins said. "The tanks can't hold any more than 10 percent of oil again, no more orders will be placed."
Perkins said that despite the high fuel costs, KU did not use any more energy than would be expected in a winter of comparable coldness.
"Our highest daily output of heat was no greater than it has been in the past," he said. "We used the oil we burned more efficiently this winter."
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Marcum and Del Brinkman, KU's faculty representative to the Big Eight, are attending bi-annual conference meetings this weekend in Kansas City, Mo. The meetings began yesterday and will continue today and tomorrow.
Big 8 will try to keep control at sports events
The Big Eight Athletic Conference will try to maintain better crowd control and bench conduct at athletic events, Bob Marcum, KU men's athletic director, said last night.
Marcum said that yesterday's meetings yielded few major decisions, but officials had expressed concern about crowd cheers at some games.
Agenda items for today's meetings include a review of a case involving Jim Stanley, former Oklahoma State University head football coach who was fired last season and accused of using slush funds for the football team; a review of Kansas State University's football probation; and a report on women's athletics and Title IX.
DO YOU WANT TO FLY?
N158924
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 are in luck. Air Force ROTC Flight Instruction Program (FIP) is available to you designed to teach the basics of flight through finessing lessons in small aircraft of 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.
AIR FORCE
ROTC
Gateway to a great way of life.
This is all reserved for the coder who wants to get the wings! With Air Force wings you check Wing 1 out toda
"Sophomores and Juniors. Apply now for the 2 year ROTC Program. Get a commission when you graduate. See you later. Call Capt. John Macke, 844-6476, or stop by the Military Science Building, Room 108."
MINORITIES AND THE LAW
Saturday, March 3
Registration 8:45-9:00
University of Kansas New Green Hall
Here is a schedule of events:
8:45 9:00 REGISTRATION
9:00 9:15 INTRODUCTIONS AND WELCOME
9:15-10:00 MORNING SPEAKER
Mr. G. Edmond Hayes
Wichita Attorney and member Kansas Board of Law Examiners
10:15-11:00 CAREER WORKSHOPS—conducted by minority attorneys working in these fields:
Criminal Law
Business Law
Agency Law
11:00-11:45 CAREER WORKSHOPS—conducted by minority attorneys working in these fields:
Private Practice
Legal Aid
Politics
12:00-1:00 MOCK TRIAL—conducted by trial practice and procedure students under the direction o
Associate Professor of Law Laurence M. Rose
1:00-2:00 LUNCH
Informal tours of New Green Hall
2:00-2:45 AFTERNOON AND KEYNOTE SPEAKER
Ms. Sallyanne Payton
Associate Professor, University of Michigan Law School former Staff Assistant to the Presi
det of U.S. White House Domestic Council, DC
2:45-3:15 FORMAL LAW SCHOOL PRESENTATION—Admissions, Financial Aid and Curriculum
3:30-4:00 MOCK CLASSROOM EXPERIENCE—conducted in traditional Socratic method by Raymond A
Goetz, Professor of Law
4:00-5:00 INFORMAL "RAP" SESSION AND WRAP-UP-Current law students answer your "special
questions
Prospects, Problems and Issues Facing Minority Students & The Law. . .
Presented by KU's Black American Law Student Association
Funded by an ABA/LSD grant, the KU Law School and KU Student Senate
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 2. 1979
7
1979 Rock Chalk Revue carries 28-year tradition
By MARK L. OLSON
Staff Reporter
For the past 28 years, the Rock Chalk Revue has entertained audiences who filled Hoch Auditorium to hear the performers poke fun at everything from the chancellor to spring break. This year's show should be no different.
The Rock Chalk Revue will go on stage at 8 tonight and tomorrow night in Roch.
The extravaganza began in 1950 with a senior in business named Roy Wonder. Until that time, there had been "College Daze," which was a variety show composed of akty
When Rock Chalk first started, it was a one-night affair, where you were grouped by women or groups.
WONDER BEGAN with a contest to give the show a name, and Kathie Larson Raney won a $10 first prize with her entry—Rock Chalk Revenue.
Wonder, who lived in Manhattan, borrowed the idea for the new show from Kansas State University, which had a show called "Y-Orphium." The profits from the K-State were used to fund its campus YMCA.
In 1957, variety acts were added to the show to fill the gap between skirts and in 1960 men and women were paired in skirts for the first time.
The format of the show involved one group giving its performance on one half of the stage, while the next group was setting up on the other half.
The process for this year's Rock Chalk was set into motion just three weeks after the last curtain fell on Rock Chalk in 1978. The manager was a producer and business manager were
Although Rock Chalk participants are usually fraternities and sororites, occasionally a residence hall or scholarshipoup will break the pattern by entering.
There were 13 groups formed during the pairing.
Last year Hashinger Hall not only entered the competition, but won the award for best overall performance with its kit "Where Cairn Tails Are Few."
To be a part of the show, an entrant must be an organized living group, and that group or pair of groups must have both men and women.
After the groups had been paired, the next step did not come until the swelling heat of last summer had become the swelling heat of last fall, and students returned to KU. At that time O'Neal chose the room for Rock Chalk 1798 — "All's Fair in Love."
O'NEAL HAS since been replaced by Vicki Anderson, Evergreen Green, senior, because of conflicts he encountered after he worked at his job. He now acts as assistant producer.
With the theme "All's Fair In Love" in mind, the groups turned their creative energies to coming up with the elements of a music book, lyrics, songs, sets, costumes, lighting and more.
The groups' final scripts were turned in Nov. 15, and the fate of a semester's worth
of work by each of the groups was left in the hands of the scritt iudges.
The judges critiqued the scripts usbm several criteria, such as the show's continuity within the theme, the quality of the dialogue and the appropriateness of the dialogue.
The scoring of tonight and tomorrow night's competition will be done by 12 judges scattered throughout the audience. The groups will be scored for six awards.
Those awards are for best technical work, best performer, best original song, best production number, best script and best overallproduction.
THE FOUR groups who will perform tonight were announced on Nov. 25, after interview with the team.
The winning pairs are:
- Pi Beta Phi and Beta Theta Pi—I their show, “You Can’t Keep a Good Diver Down is Like Oxygen” is the story of a deep-sea diver water-breathing mermaid on one of his expeditions. He almost loses his life trying to overcome a prophecy and the physical challenges of a real-life marathon.
- Delta Delta Delta and Phi Gamma Delta - Ancient Egypt is the setting for their show "Till the Pyramids Fall, or It Nile or Never." The young King Kut is ready to turn 18 years old and be married, but an unmarried man has him doomed to marry a girl he abhors.
- Chi Omega and Delta Upsition—Students at Gallica University are matched by computer for marriage by an evil man in "B.E. Sees DeLight" in this show.
"All the scripts that were submitted last semester, 12 or 13 of them, were very good," Anderson said. "They're getting better every year."
Anderson is in her fifth year with Rock Calk, and has been an assistant producer, co-director of "In Between Acts," and a member of the stair crew in previous years.
She said the time she devoted to Rock took away from time for other things, and she didn't.
Anderson said most of the people involved with Rock Chalk find they have to rearrange their priorities when it comes to schoolwork and their social life.
"Second semester is the worst for grades," she said. "They go down the
According to Scafe, there is a trick to most Chalks to manage a bicker with wires from a wall.
"PEOPLE ARE learnin' there is a formula to Rock Challeng," he said. "You keep it nice and simple and clean. If you keep it nice and simple and clean, then the judges like it and you set it."
Scafe said the jokes in the shows have less of a campus slant than in the past.
"The jokes are a lot more clever this year," he said. "It's almost past campus humor anymore. People will disagree whether that is good."
FUJIYAMA
Lovers Lament
Juliette Beeler, Overland Park sophomore, and Scott Bradley, Greensberg junior, sing a song from the Alpha Kappa Lambda-Delta Gamma Rock Chalk Revue skit, "20,000 Legs Under the Skirt or 50 Ways to Lose Your Lover."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Arts & Leisure
Traditional dating hit by inflation
By ROBIN SMITH Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
It has been a long, rough school week,
five tests, three themes and one book report
from last week.
But where will a KU student go on a Friday or Saturday night with a member of the team?
And how much money will KU students have to spend for a night out on the town as compared to how much alumni spent years ago?
Ronald McGregor, professor of botany,
who graduated from the University of
Kansas with a Ph.D. in 1844, said he
had often taken a date to the movies.
"During the mid-1930s, you could go on a pretty fair date for a dollar—but that's not what you're going to do."
Singer hams it up for audience
Staff Reporter
Elmer Fudpacker is billed as "an act that dares to be different." Before he started his act Saturday at the Hideout Club, 330 Wisconsin St. , Fudpacker suite and listen to the Gene Hill group, and listen to the western band that later would back him up.
As he waited to be called to the stage, Fuducker talked to members of the audience and drank Coke from the bar. He doesn't drink liquor before his act.
By DOUG HITCHCOCK
After his name was called, Fudpacker stopped wringing his hands and bounded up to the stage, under the glare of a single spotlight.
"Hey, we're going to let it all hang out tonight," he said.
"Iimagine if Lawrence was named Fuduckersville."
The audience tittered at the thought, not quite prepared for what they were seeing.
But, the act was well-rehearsed,
calculated to bring a laugh. Fuducker has been in show business for many years. He was named Comedian of the Year in 1988 and received a gold record from comedy album of the same year, he said.
He recently released a country and western album, "Elmer Fudpacker Sings Songs that contains many of his band during one of his 'Las Vezas-style' songs."
WHEN HE STARTED as a performer, Fudpucker used his real name, Hollis Champion. "But, that didn't work too well," he said.
"For a long time, people wouldn't hire Eimer Fudpucker. They didn't know what was going to be done." he said.
But after he changed his name, he still had some problems.
Before his show began, Fuducker said, "I'm going to do a Las Vegas show tonight." It's a sicher than other shows I do. Still, I'll have to tone it down some here.
"I've always said it takes three things to put on a show: lighting, material and talent. I always try to give 'em two."
With that, he turned and retreated to his dressing room to change out of his doubleblanks and yellow Fudpucker jacket into his stage clothes.
During the show, Fudpacker wore a red sequined suit that sparkled almost as much as his blue eyes. He cracked jokes and plays, always moving around the stage.
"IVE BEEN IN this business for 20 years and there hasn't been a stage I walked out on that I wasn't scared to death. The smaller the crowd, the scareder I get. But, it only lasts for five seconds," he said.
He walks out on all sorts of stages, including country fairs, conventions and nightclubs. He plays Las Vegas, too, open for acts like Jerry Lee Lewis.
He has been in Lawrence twice, once at the Eagles Club and another at the American Legion. He also plays in Tonek twice a year.
"I work some show, but my biggest business is novellies. Fudpacker business is comedy. Fudpacker business. No wait, you'd better make that a quarter million, they might check
"The next night you play in a club and you have 75 to 100 people. You have to fit the show to the night," he said.
"It's a crazy business. One night you work a crowd, a convention or something and you have a lot of people."
The T-shirts bear one of Fudpacker's slogans and wild mutations of animals. The Swamp Root Potton which is colored water, he said. "sells" "like hot cakes."
FUDPUCKER'S劲畅 novelties include T-shirts, jackets, bottles of Dr. Fudpucker's Swamp Root Potion and Fudpucker Boozer Britches.
But the Elmer Fudpucker show is just a small part of his life.
"I don't know why they buy that stuff. It's not what I buy, but they buy more of that than nearly anything else," he said.
He gave pairs of Boogie Britches away to members of the audience during his show. The lacey, pastel bikini pants be Feducker's name and slogans.
During his break, Fudpucker autographed a pair of Britches for an elderly woman who was in the audience.
Besides loking and handing out Boogie
"That makes my night," he said. "I'll even go out and give her a big kiss, if she doesn't mind too much."
Britches, Fudpacker sang country and western favorites that brought the house together in mass sing-alongs.
To start each song, Fudpacker called,
"Fellows, give me an E," and the Hill
band began to roll, playing unrehearsed.
"You've got to hire the band to fit the night. Now, this band won't work in some situations I work in. But, here, they're fine," he said.
Fudpacker's songs ranged from Hank Williams-style yodels to spoofs of songs like "Big. Bad John."
Today, when he comes to a new town,
Fudupacker may not draw a full house.
But, he doesn't seem to mind.
"You got to work hard to get people to enjoy themselves. When the crowd is smaller, like this one, you have to work harder to make them laugh," he said.
And, if the crowds disappoint him,
Fudpacker can go back to Nashville to
the Elmer Fudpacker Pub to watch acts
Jennings or John Mennis or Johnny
Paychev
"Sometimes, it kills you, and I've died a few times. But, if you've got what they want, people will wade through the snow to see you."
"You know what a UFO is?" he asked. "It’s an unidentified Fudrucker怒。When you all get ready to leave, we’ll all rush in and strike him, or he strikes the band for another son."
BUT, DESPITE THE small size of his crowd at the Hideout, Fudpucker seemed to keep everybody off guard with his jokes and songs.
"I'm going to do one more song. This one's a hit. Lawrence Wek had it out before they made him put it away," he said.
Fudpucker is an entertainer. He works hard to give his audience what he thinks is a good time.
"It's the biggest night club in Nashville. It seats 680 people. We get a lot of the bigger acts to come in," Fudpucker said.
The audience at the Hideout Club seemed to revel in the show. Fudupcker's jokes, songs and non-stop one-inners received riotous laughter.
And they responded. Nobody was worrying about inflation or the war in southeast Asia. They were too busy having a good time.
James Akagi, chairman of microbiology, who graduated from KU with a Ph.D. in 1959, also said that he took dates to the 1960s and 1970s when rades had risen to 75 by the mid-1960s.
To a movie ticket in Lawrence ranges from $2.75 to $3.
"I think that dating was a lot more conservative during the '50s," Akagi said.
"I had to put myself through college, so I spent hours at my job thinking I would think many students had too much money to pay for it."
Akagi said he also took dates howling
THE MOST inexpensive place to bowl in
Lawrence today is the Jayhawk Bowl in the
Union. On a weekend night at the Jayhawk
a student can bowl for 60 cents a line and 25s
The Hillcrest Bowl, 9th and Iowa Streets, and Royal Lanes, 3300 Iowa St., charge 95 cents and 97 cents on weekend nights and shoe rental ranges from 30 cents to 35 cents.
"We also used to go down to the Wagon Wheel and the Jayhawk Cafe," Akagi said. "But there wasn't as much drinking going on in town." Mr. Akagi said one that I knew really had the money.
Francis Prosser, professor of physics and astronomy, who graduated from KU with a Ph.D. in 1955, also said he took dates to a movie.
"Eut talk to anyone who was in Lawrence during my time and they will tell you about it."
"The Dynamite, which was on 23rd Street, just about where the entrance to the Malls now is, was a hot spot in my days. They served 3.2 beer, had a jekebos and a shot of whiskey. It was now the Sanctuary Club, was also built around them and that was a hot spot also."
THE SANCTUARY, 1401 W. 7th St, is now a private club with a $15 membership charge. Guests pay $1.50 on weekend nights unless they are with members.
James Gunn, professor of English, who graduated from KU with a Ph.D. in 1951, also commented about the shortage of cars to use for dating.
"in general." Prosser said, "there was a lot of double dating because very few students."
"We didn't go to the bars too often because it wasn't convenient," Guhn said.
"BUT I DO remember that we used to go on 'Coke dates' a lot. That's when you would take a girl to the Union for a Coke. Plays, like the KU sport games were also a highlight.
"No one had cars. Before World War II, not many of us had cars and after the war there was a car shortage. We had to walk to work and drive to work again, going tougo again, though it's hard for me to need you."
"But going into Kansas City, Mo., was the big time. We used to be able to take a train into K.C. in the morning and then come back on a train to Cleveland for cheap back then; no one had any money."
Prosser said that after he took a date to the movies, they often would go out for something to eat. He said that it was usually just a snack, not an entire dinner.
Today many KU students often taken their dates out for dinner. Russell's East, 3400 W. 6th St., and Don't Steak House, 2170 N. 5th St. are popular places that a KU student takes a date.
At Russell's the most expensive item on the menu is the Alaskan Krab leg, stuffed with salmon and crabmeat.
According to Sharon Hackel, Littleshute, Wis., senior, who works at Russell's, the most popular items sold are the stocks, the brine and the prune, and the prune rib, which ranges from $9.95 to $9.99.
THE MOST expensive item listed on the menu at Don's Steak House, is the prine rib at $10.75, which also includes an entire dinner.
According to Carla Holder, a hostess at Don's, the most popular item sold is the 10-cm mug.
And even before disco, dancing was also a place to take a date.
MegGreger said, "We used to have 'hour dances' at the old Union every Wednesday
Today, some students take their dates dancing at Shenanigan's 901 Wissamusic st., and pay a $2 cover charge to listen and dance to disco music.
Gunn agreed with McGregor. "We used to dance a back left back, guess the kids still do today for that matter." he said. "But, back left was when you used to dance together."
Spare Time
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Night Life
Lawrence Opera House, 644 Massachus
sits ST
- Fast Break, March 3.
- John Hartford, March 7
* Bluebeard, March 9
- Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, March 10
- Norman Blake and the New Grass Revival, March 21
- Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts St
St.
- Jim Stringer, guitarist, with the Gaslight
Gang, March 2-3
- Willie Thomas and Rich Maddeson March 10.
- Clark Terry, March 9
- Off the Wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St
* Stopper. March 2.
- Stropper, Milton Z.*
* Benefit for Kansas Natural Guard, March
- Old Time Fiddlers Gathering, March 4.
Theatre
- Romeo and Juliet March 2, 3; 8 p.m. University Theatre.
- Rock Chalk Revue, March 2-3, 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium.
Concerts
- American String Quartet, March 2 and 4
8 o.m. Swantouth Recital Hall
- KU Symphonic Orchestra, March 4, 3.30 p.m., University Theatre.
KU Percussion Ensemble, March 6, 8 p.m.
Swarthout.
Recitals
- Pheobe Snow, March 15, 8 p.m., Lyric Carii Theatre.
- Dire Straits, March 19, 8 p.m., Memorial Hall
Dena Gordy Berquit, cello, March 5, 8
p.m. Swarthout
Jayhawk Invitational Jazz Festival, March 10, all day.
Susan K. Smith, trombone, and Alan Mar
in Joha March 7 on 8. Swarth凋
Helen Hoffmeister, organ, March 8, 8 p.m.
Swarthwuit
Chamber ensemble at KU for concert
The American String Quartet, one of the nation's youngest professional chamber music ensembles, will present concertats at 2 p.m. in Sawthorpe at Recital Hall in Murray Hall.
The quartet members, Martin Foster and Laurie Carney, violins; Daniel Avshalomov, viola; and David Geber, cello, met at the Julliland School of Music in New York City and made their New York debut in 1875. The quartet also performed for the Mannes College of Music in New York.
In its KU performances, the group will play a Beethoven quartet and two quintets with piano by Shostakovich and Schumann. The music will be the pianist for the quintet works.
The quartet is performing 11 concerts and presenting master classes in the Midwest this semester on a grant from the National Education Association.
The group performed at KU last summer in the Summer Concert Series and will be making its third appearance on the Chamber Music Series this weekend.
Tickets for the two concerts are on sale at the Murphy Hall Flat Office. All seats are free.
Union exhibition spans 32 years of prof's works
A print that appeared in a KU professor's first exhibition in 1994 will be included in a show of his works from March 1 to March 23 in the Kansas Union Gallery.
The exhibition, sponsored by Student Union Activities, consists of 47 prints that John Talleur, professor of art, made from 1947 to 1979.
The prints show changes in Taleur's style during 32 years.
He used Christian images and symbols to explore the mysteries of existence and death in his early prints, Betsy Bray, curator of prints and drawings at the Spencer Museum of Art, said. Most of the prints were black and white.
She said his recent work, much of which is abstract, would be emphasized in the book.
“There is a bold, dynamic quality to his later work,” she said. “This is new. He uses larger forms that are more brightly colored, perhaps because themselves are not necessarily larger.
"Not all of his later work is abstract, but a lot of it."
TALLEUR SAID he did not consciously change themes, although he often used color
"I do whatever happens to interest me at the moment." he said.
Talluer's prints have been exhibited in the United States and Europe. They are included in the collections of more than 50 art museums in London and the United States.
Broun said she suggested that SUA exhibit Taller's work.
I felt it would be important to see the work of someone who has been making prints for more than 25 years in Lawrence, "A Workman" for a full-scale review of Talent's work.
Taller, 53, earned his bachelor's degree from the University of Chicago and his master's from the University of Iowa. He joined the KU faculty in 1953.
The artist studied in France from 1952 to 1953 on a Fultbright Fellowship. He said he did not think the styles he saw in France were his own, but he said he first made a woodcut print there.
Taller said he was excited about the exhibit.
"I really think it'll be a good show," he said.
8
Friday, March 2. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Jayhawks face Tigers in semifinal tonight
Associate Sports Editor
Bv.JOHN P. THARP
Kansas plays Missouri in the Big Eight post season tournament semifinal game at 7:05 tonight in Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo.
Last year, Kansas, the Big Eight regular season champion, didn't get past the semifinal game because Kansas State won it. They did not, and Kansas went on after beating KState to win the tournament.
This year, KU coach Ted Owens, who still says he's against the post season tournament even though it's KU's only chance for a trip to the regional in Dallas, is wary of the "Tigers," 13-14, and their prior successes in Kemper and during this season.
“Our competition with Missouri has been very close this year,” Owens said. “We know a lot about each other. There won’t be a tie, but we are going to starters back from the team that won it last
year and we won the Holiday Tournament this year.
"The thing is wide open. I don't think either of the games are predictable."
IN TONIGHT'S second game, regular season champion Oklahoma faces Kansas State at 9:05. The tournament championship game is tomorrow at 7:45.
KU split its two games with the Tigers this season, MU won 58-55 in Lawrence and KU won 88-83 in Columbia. In that game, MU scored for 27 points, more than his career high.
Valentine, who slightly renipered his ankle in practice Wednesday, is expected to start tonight, with Tony Guy, John Crawford. Booty Neal and Paul Mokeski.
Kemper Arena has turned Valentine on this season. He was the most valuable player in the Holiday Tournament with a 21.7 point scoring average.
Wilmor Fowler has produced 25 points coming off the bench in the past two games.
KANSAN Sports
In Columbia, he is second leading scorer for KU with 19 points. He says he's ready for the challenge.
"ITLL BE a good challenge for us to play them again." he said.
In the past two post season tournaments, KU has finished third each year. KU hopes to break that jinx. Kemper, which always has plenty of screaming KU fans on hand, should sell out because the three Kansas City area schools are competing.
We've got tough games ahead," reserve Mac 'Staillock said, "but we like playing at Kemer. We're keyed to play. We can't think that that's deep in everybody's mind."
It's probably deep in the minds of the Missouri squad also. Norm Stewart,
Missouri coach, is expected to have Mark Dressler and Brad Droy starting at forward, Curtis Berry at center and Steve Wallace and Larry Drew at guard.
Berry is expected to be the biggest threat, and his match up with Mokeski will be exciting. In the first round game against Oklahoma State, Berry scored two dozen points and got a dozen rebounds. In MU's first game against KU this year, Berry got 24 rebounds and 20 points. In Columbia, he was hampered by an ankle injury and had to sit out 18 games. Rounds. He well now, and Owens sees him as the same threat he was early in the season.
"Missouri poses some problems defensively and Berry is one of the biggest problems."
TOURNAMENT NOTES: More than 14,000 tickets have already been sold for the semifinal and championship rounds of the post season tournament, the Big Eight office announced yesterday. All $7.40 tickets have been sold, but some $6.30 and $3.00 tickets
remain. A sellout crowd of 16,925 is projected for both nights.
Nancy Week, KU ticket manager, said that fewer than 100 tickets, at $8.35 each, remained for tonight's game, but only until 10:30 this morning. There are a few more tickets left, including the game, but also only until 10:30. After that, tickets must be purchased in Kansas City.
Roland Blackman from Kansas State is the only player returning from the 1978 all-time list.
Missouri and K-State have alternated as champions and runners-up in the first two
There may be some talk in the Big Eight meetings to move all rounds of the post season tournament to Kemper Arena in April, but to top out the top four finishers' courts.
The Big Eight post season tournament champion receives an automatic bye in the NCAA bracket, and advances to the second round in Dallas March 10.
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"Colorado has been ranked just ahead of us all year and they scored 209.35 last weekend at home against Iowa State." Lockwood, men's gymnastics coach, "we're a team we are going to have best if we want to move up in the Big Eight."
If KU 34, loses to Colorado, it will be the first losing season for the team in six years. Lockwood said he was uncertain whether Bill Harris and Brad Foerch compete. Harmis dislocated a shoulder last week and Foerch bruised both feet.
KU will try to repeat last week's school record 209.7 performance when the men's gymnastics team faces the women's 5.0 p.m. tomorrow in Robinson Gymnasium.
ATTENTION
FINAL SALE DAYS
Fall and Winter Stock
ALL SALE SHOES
Dress
Sport 9.90
Casual
M'Coy's
SHOES
813 Mass.
KU Chamber Music Series Season Ticket Holders The Sunday, March 4, Concert by the
AMERICAN STRING QUARTET
is at 8:00 p.m.
in Swarthout Recital Hall
not 3:30 p.m. as printed on your tickets
Place an ad
Call 864-4358
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
"TO TEACH A CHILD TO LOVE THE TRUTH AND HATE A LIE; TO LOEVE PURITY, AND HATE VICE, IS GREATER THAN INVENTING A MACHINE that WILL TAKE YOU INTO CONSOLIDATION. WE SET UP CONSOLIDATION CONSUSLY YOU SET IN MOTION INFLUENCES THAT WILL DAMN OR BLESS ON UNIVERSE AND BIND NEW WORLD'S OUT OF CHAOS AND TRANSFORM THEM FOR GOD." —The late William A. (Bilby) Sunday. There is a world in our world that we need demand from—is not it?
"TELL THE TRUTH, BOYS, IF YOU NEW IT WOULD CARE THE SUN TO FALL OUT OF THE HEAVENS ON JOB," she began by a school teacher to his class many years ago. Don't rehearse this for the man except he looked, and this quotation, and if it had not been for these forcible words his memory would have gone out of mind. "How forcible are right words." Job. 625
Some years ago there was a military preparatory school at Ashleine, N.C. called Bingham. Colonel Bingham would put an instructor in charge of the criplining, and correcting, and striving to straighten them out to do and go right. If they wanted to fight he would let them do so under supervision, make a ring on their on the lawn, throw a sword at them, and naked fists, and then let them go to it until one or the other had enough! One boy told me that the and another boy were still fighting and no more, and such light such as above and then became friends the rest of the day.
time, time and again The Colonel told us the caught a boy in a deliberate lie he was done with, him did not want him on the hill and in the barracks; he would be immediately ex- frightened the lie he had was more or less frightened the time he was the lie he helped in a tight place and momentarily thinking 'a lie a very present help in time of trouble', call on the lie to help him, tell it, and get sent home in disregard We have the idea that day is like a day or your life, unless it does not immediately 'pay off'.
School boys and girls, college boys and girls, do you ever hear anything like the above these days: in your home, Sun's weather, in your pupil, or in day school? Parents, preachers, teachers, hashtags, social media, continually in the minds and hearts of those committed to your care, or perhaps do you feel "an exercise in futility"? A young woman is an abumination unto Him. A proud look, a LYING TONGUE, etc." Here is a quote that appears near the close of God's Word: "I am an abumination to Commandments, that they might have a right to The Tree Life, and may enter in through the gates into the city. For life, and may enter in through the gates into the city. FOR WHOSOEVER LOEVER TH AND MAKETH A LIE! AUREV"
Surely it is "no" in exercise in futility; but a great thing to teach a child and an older person to "love purity, hate vice," and a great thing to teach a child and an older person to love sacrifice. And this truth if it caused the sun to fall out of the heavens on you!
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Fridav. March 2. 1979
9
University Daily Kansan
Women seek upset of 10th-ranked Rebels
By NANCY DRESSLER
Sports Editor
Kansas will try to upset the No. 10 women's basketball team tomorrow night in Las Vegas when the Jayhawks meet the final regular season game for both teams.
KU, 26-6 and ranked 14th, will have a challenge to break. The Rebels have 13 points in the first round.
In fact, UNLV was one of two nationallyranked, undefeated teams until it lost twice on the road earlier this week. The Rebels' record is 22-2.
But the home court advantage, which has to have been a boost to the Rebels, who have only one returning player and nine freshmen, might not be as strong tomorrow.
Kansas coach marion Washington said yesterday that she had been notified of a court scheduled problem that threatened to postpone the game until Sunday.
BUT SHE SAID the game could not be delayed because KU's flight plans had already been made and could not be changed.
So the game is still on for tomorrow, but it might be moved from the Rebels' arena to a new one.
Nevertheless, Washington said she considered the home court to be a factor and did not offer him.
"I think it adds excitement," she said,
the fact they have been beaten at baseball.
Kansas probably will meet a mirror image in the Rebels of the type of game it likes to play - a fast-paced, running offense and intense pressure defense.
However, KU will have to be a bit cautious not to sustain injuries this close to the regional tournament, which is next weekend in Minneapolis, Washington said.
AT LEAST THREE players already have harmsome problems and Kathy Cullen, who was injured in a practice before the game, is still out with a sprained ankle.
Four years later, Mitchell is still a top scorer for KU along with Lynwood. Woodruff and Mitchell were one of the highest scorers in the
The Jawahares have not played UNLV since the 1975-78 season. In that game in Las Vegas, the Rebels won 99-49. Adrian Mitter, who led the team, scored 24 points to lead Kansas' attack.
UNLV is led by junior college transfer
Uresia Willis, a 5-9 forward who averages
16.2 points per game.
Valentine chosen to all-star teams AP Big Eight Basketball writers
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Here is the complete list of the Associated Press 79-79 All-Big Eight basketball team as chosen by a panel of sportswriters and sportscasters:
First Team
John McCallough, Oklahoma, Sr., 6-4, 195.
Lima, Ohio.
Roland Blackman, Kansas State, Soph,
6.10 190 Revelon, N V
Darnell Valentine, Kansas, soph. 6-2, 185,
Wichita.
Andrew Parker, Iowa State, Sr., 6-5, 195. Fort Laundry, Fla.
Emnett Lewis, Colorado, Sr., 6-0, 174,
Gary, In.
Second Team
Al Beal, Oklahoma, Jr., 6-9, 215, Deerfield Beach, Fla.
Terry Stats, Oklahoma, Jr., 6-8, 215,
Bloomington, Ind.
Paul Mokesi, Kansas, Sr., 7-1, 250, Encino, Calif.
Mark Tucker, Oklahoma State, 6-4,
175. SusanOkla. Okla.
Larry Drew, Missouri, Jr., 6-1, 178, Kansas City, Kan.
WICHITA (UP1)—Larry Bird of Indiana State leads the list of 10 collegiate basketball stars named yesterday to the 1978-79 All-America team selected by the United States Basketball Writers Association.
Other seniors named were center Bill Cartwright of San Francisco, forward Sidney Moncrief of Arkansas, forward Louisiana and guard Bill Paxton of Davenport.
The juniors selected by the writers were center Mike Grimski of Dyke, forward Mike O'Koren of North Carolina and forward Sly Williams of Rhode Island. Notre Dame forward Kelly Tripuqua and Michigan State frontervin Johnson were the sophomores.
In District Five, Bird was the best-of-district player. KU's Darrell Valentine and Nebraska's Carl McPhee, both picked from the top four, will be Eight players to be chosen to a district team.
The writer's association also selected nine All-District teams.
1
Staff Photo by BILL +RAKES
Beam balance
KU$'s Jackie DIPinto works on the balance beam in last weekend's women's gymnastics team. The daybreaks to do as well this weekend against four other teams in the state championships.
Hoping to improve on its dismal performance, the team will compete tomorrow in the Association of Intercollegiate Women national indoor meet at Columbia.
Snorts Writer
Kansas to national indoor
By CARLQS MURGUIA
Two weeks ago, the Jayhawks finished a disappointing sixth in the conference meet. This weekend, they will compete against some of the nation's finest collegiate teams on a goal of improved performances. RU track coach Ted Anderson said yesterday.
"If we can get the performance I know we’re capable of, then I expect to finish in the top five." Anderson said. "There’s going to be a lot of work, and we’ll need a total team effort to do well."
Last year was the first year of the national indoor, and the inaugural winner was Wisconsin. Kansas finished second. It was at last year's meet that Sheila Calmeet set the American record in the 300-yard run with a time of 25.26.
"At the last indoor meet, I didn't have the acceleration I normally do, but my leg didn't feel as sore after the race," Calmese said. "I'm just going to try and run to my
CALMSEE ONLY recently has recovered from a hamstring injury that kept her out of most of the indoor season. She is expected to compete in both the 60-yard-dash and the
potential and hope my leg doesn't bother me."
If Calmese should failer, KU's Lori Green probably will pick up the slack. Green is coming off an impressive performance at the Big Eight meet where she defeated the top-ranked team in the both 60, with a time of 7.02, and with a Big Eight record time of 35.35.
"WELL BE competitive in every event we're entered in," Anderson said. "We're not going to lose to everyone to have a good chance against the tough competition they'll face in their next game."
The mile run should be very competitive. The Jayhawks' entrants will be Maureen Finholm and Michelle Brown. Last year, finished ninth in the mile with a time of 4:56.
KU could receive some points in the 60- yard hardies from either Gwen Poss or Lori Lowey. Lowey finished third last year with a time of 8.1.
Other team members who placed last year at nationalists and who also will be competing this year are Debbie Hertzog, Dan Frost, and John M. Corwin, who finished second in the high jump with a leap of 5-7. This time Corwin will compete in the long jump and high jump events.
Completing the team will be Bev Fuller in the pentathlon, Vicki Simpson and Denise Homa in the 600 and Amy Miles and Corwin in the long jump.
Men want more qualifiers
Several KU cinderdem bypass competition this weekend to prepare for the NCAA Indoor Championships, but the rest of the team will try to qualify for the national meet.
In the last weekend for qualifying before the national meet, March 9-10 in Detroit, KU is sending athletes to tomorrow's State Basketball Tournament. The meet will be in Ahern Field House.
Jeff Buckingham, Anthony Coleman,
Jimmy Little, Lester Mickens, Sanya
Owolabi and Stan Whitaker, all national
qualifiers, probably will take the weekend off, head coach Bob Timmons, said yesterday.
MICKENS, WHO successfully defended his Big Eight Indoor 900-yard dash title last weekend in Oklahoma City, has qualified in the New York and 604, Joining him in the 410 for Newell.
Buckingham has qualified with the third best pole vault in the nation. Coleman has met the NCAA standard in the 60-yard high hurdles.
The latest to join the select group is
Owaliwa, who set a KU indoor triple jump record of 32-8.4 when he finished second at the U.S. Nationals.
The mile relay team of Little, Mickens, Newell and Whitaker also has met the Nike team.
Because no team scoring will be kept in the State Federal Indoor, KU will have to wait until the NCAA Indoor or the outdoor second place finish in the Big Eight Indoor.
Two Jayhawks had the best chance to qualify this weekend. One of them, distance man David Bauer, is .57 second off the ground and he gets a last chance to lower his time.
"I DON'T THINK there will be any let down after last week's meet," Timmons said. "Actually, I think there will be a build up before nationals."
However, the other team member who could have qualified, spinner Dee Hogan, probably won't get a chance because of a harmless injury that has hampered him all the way. He is one out of the Big Eight Indoor Hogan is in the second sly of the NCAA standard in the 440.
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Police Beat
— Compiled by David Edds
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
A Eudora man was arrested Wednesday on charges that he had been dismantling a stolen 799 pickup truck and bringing to the Douglas County sheriff's office.
Ryan C. Bishop, 20, Route 2, Eudora, was arrested at his home, about one-half mile east of Eudora. Officers from the Douglas County sheriff's office, the Eudora police department and the Eudora coroner's office took part in the arrest, authorities said.
The sheriff's office said Bishop was in front of his garage using a hoist to remove the top of the cab of the truck when authorities arrived Wednesday.
County jail Wednesday after posting $1,500 bond.
Bishop was released from the Douglas
Lawrence police said a Lawrence man was arrested Wednesday and charged with felony theft in connection with a shoplifting incident.
Police arrested Rawlston D. Poole, 23,
2806 Ridge Court in connection with
a theft from Montgomery Ward & Company.
1721 W. 32rd St.
A rocker valued at $139 was stolen from the store by a man who entered the vehicle, left with the rocker and drove in of a vehicle parked outside, police said.
Poole was released Wednesday from the Douglas County jail after posting $1,500 bond, according to police.
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2 art works bought for Spencer museum
The Friends of Art bought two works of art for the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art at a purchase party in the central court of the museum recently.
About 100 people attended the party, which featured eight works from galleries in New York City and the Kansas City area. The friends of Art chose two of the eight works to become permanent items in the museum's collection.
One of the works chosen was a one-color lithorhane by George Tooker.
The other work selected for the collection was a print by Jim Dime, "Dartmouth Still."
The two new works will be on display for three weeks in the fourth-floor lounge of the
"We already had two Dine prints, but this work is one of his strongest," Broun said. "I'm very thrilled to have both works in the collection."
"Tooker was not previously represented in our Collection," Hysteria Brow, curator of the collection.
A show titled "Nabis Prints" will be on away in the White Gallery from March 1 through April.
The show consists of 63 prints by members
of Les Nabis art book and several works by the "precursors of the Nabis style,"
Broun; Jeanne Stump, associate professor of art history; Ann Wiklund, Lawrence graduate student; and Deborah Kawai, a graduate student, helped to organize the show.
Broun said, "The Nabis were late 19th century artists who banded together because of 'a shared concern for symbolism.'"
The group's name, Nabis, which means a state of prophetic enthusiasm, comes from ancient Hebrew. The name was used to describe the nature of a symbolism and in creating a new art style.
Another show in the Balcony Gallery, "Juxtapositions," contains selections from KU's permanent collection, placed in "a museum setting," acting director of the museum, said.
Black Student Union Election Results
"Juxtapositions" will be on display until March 25.
"The idea was to take a couple of themes and place works that express those themes together to see what they do or do not say to each other." Hennessy said.
Vice-President Tanya Ivory
President John Meredith
Secretary
Corresponding/Sherri Redo
Recording/Vicki Walton
Treasurer
Pamela Robinson
Parliamentarian Stuart Keeler
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Speaker promotes nuke energy
Nuclear energy will be a cheaper source of electricity than coal in the next few years, Bill Perkins, a nuclear energy expert at Duke University, said yesterday at the University of Kansas.
allery, is from in "a director
Perkins, whose lecture in Wesco Hall was sponsored by the Students for the Peaceful Use of Radiation, said that the cost of producing electricity from coal rose in 1978, but that the cost of producing electricity from power plants remained about the same.
Perkins said electricity from nuclear plants was 15 percent cheaper than coal-produced electricity.
"Predictions for nuclear plants in the future seem to hold that pretty well." Perkins said. "It looks as though nuclear power will stay a little cheaper than coal."
However, the nuclear power industry is facing opposition from anti-nuclear groups and the government, he said.
"THERE are two basic problems with the government right now: one, of course, is the breeder reactor, which is the next step in nuclear power. It's the kind of reactor that will create its own fuel as it uses fuel," he said.
Perkins said many other countries were moving ahead of the United States in breeder reactor development. He said the Carter administration was opposed to a breeder reactor under construction in Tennessee because it might add to the nuclear waste problem, which was manufactured by breeder reactors and can be used to make nuclear weapons.
Perkins said another problem the
nuclear industry faced was the lengthy licensing procedure the government required for building nuclear power plants and the procedure could take up to14 years.
Nuclear waste disposal is another problem facing the nuclear industry. Perkins said nuclear wastes currently used to power plants or power plants where they were produced.
THE GOVERNMENT not decided how to safely dispose of nuclear wastes after producing the wastes for 30 years. Perkins said.
'Right now the government wants to store it permanently, as spent fuel, in salt deposits, probably in New Mexico,' he said.
in 1970 as a site for permanent nuclear waste disposal, but a government atomic agency rejected the Lyons proposal after hearing testimony from William Hambleton, director of the Kansas Geological Survey.
However, Perkins said he thought putting the wastes in salt deposits was one of several safe ways to store nuclear wastes.
"We've been handling nuclear materials for 80 years," Perkins said. "Even if you didn't learn about nuclear operations in the war-time years, when they were throwing things together under war-time pressures, there hasn't been a problem with a nuclear waste, yet."
Hambleton told the Atomic Energy Commission there were too many potential leaks at the Lyons site.
Salt mines in Lyons had been considered
Sixty debate teams from 33 states compete for the honor of the "heart curse" this weekend as the KU Debate Club hosts an annual Heart of America Debate Tournament.
Coveted 'heart curse' sought by debaters
Last year Northwestern almost broke the curse by winning both tournaments. But, a judge in the national tournament changed his vote, makingood the heart curse.
"It was that way from 1957 to 1977," Williams said.
David Williams, KU public director for the Tournament and the winner of the first round had to be the Heart of America Debate Tournament had ever won the National Debate Tournament.
The Heart of America tournament will begin at 8 a.m. today in the Kansas Union. The final round of debate will be at 2:15 p.m. Sunday.
Schools participating in the tournament include Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Northwestern, Georgetown, Houston State and the University of California.
Because the KU Debate Club is sponsoring the tournament, it has declared itself ineligible for any of the elimination rounds of the tournament. But, three teams from KU will participate in the preliminary rounds.
The KU team of Steve Griffin and Kevin Fowler, both Lawrence seniors, has already qualified for the National Debate Tournament, Williams said.
The national tournament will be April 19-23 in Lexington, Ky.
We usually manage to get at least two terms qualified each year. Williams said this is due to a lack of
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Attacker, starter and generator. Specialist-
s in electrical automation. AUTO-MOTOR
ELECTRIC, 423-895-7000, W. Jenkins,
Foxborough, MA.
Ferret Modelling Rake Gait with sticks, rocks,
clay and sand. Frequently used for creating rocks and stones. Very good condition.
SunSpecs SunPlanes are our specialty. No processor needed. SunSpecs are essential, rewarmed, seasonized and 1024 MHz. 841-7479
Moving--Must sell Health KI-164 AA-100 228
channel. Nikko KI-163 already 1 pre-purchased. Nikko KI-
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One set "Great Books of the Western World" by
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- 3
Nikon 80-250 zoom lens. Besides the SMCRX cox with
a flexible rubber grip, it has a small metal tail.
with 80-250, 830-2470, after 6
Integrated amp. Kenned 7100. Low, low distortion. 60 watts per channel = $29.90. Devot Drive Kenned 3000 trimmers with cartridge. Kenned max = $390.00. Call 414-8700 for ask for Joe.
Typewriter, Smith-Corona Manual Bootcake, 3-2
4-1, Study 832-8992
Maturity: 1970 USA 750 TC. Excellent condition.
Battery: 1970 USA 825 TC or an older wrecker.
825-097
1971 Opel in good condition $500.60 804-6220 3-5
Chicago, Mich., print firm TUI Bank December with new
address at 320 N. Rushmore Drive, Chicago, IL 60611.
Chicago, Mich., print firm Mackenzie Goldman II 345-866-5868.
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SNAV3T body level toolbox 1842, 1843, the following in very particular toolboxes. Male, AH-914-2-3.
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Trompet for sale. High quality, top condition.
£590 to buy and ship for £37,569.00
Brown leather jacket Men's size 40 Excellent
Richly lined. Richly padded Gilt after 6,000 miles
813-424-060
Need life or wheels? An association with a local business that offers wheelchair rentals, Goadschrift and Dodsworth lives at the absinthium. You can also availability at wholesale prices and below. Don't miss a chance to win a pair of wheels! You don't need a license than you need to call 615-203-7800.
T3 LTD, needs body work, PS PB, ACB 2-2
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WILLIHARTS Antique Furniture. Sale, Sunday
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Pacific Trail 109, down parks marry mary's X-
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Clarion PS-6212 citizen radio stand-in radio 30 ch CB-8 Tech AM-FM radio in bus.
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New listing registration for Fontainebleau & Gartner
LLP in position of Vice President, Legal
Angela in position of VP Legal Management.
HELP WANTED
Found at the entrance to ramps at Sunflower
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2-2
One pair dimpled jeans fitted, 1970
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OVERSEASMAN 2015 Announces New Airport Portsmouth, NH
Airport in Portsmouth, NH. Flights to Portsmouth will be
arriving at DFW International Airport, DFW, IA, KC-131,
KC-132, KC-134, KC-136, KC-138, KC-140, KC-142,
KC-144, KC-146, KC-148, KC-150, KC-152, KC-154, KC-156,
KC-158, KC-160, KC-162, KC-164, KC-166, KC-168, KC-
170, KC-172, KC-174, KC-176, KC-178, KC-180, KC-182, KC-184, KC-186, KC-188, KC-190, KC-192, KC-194, KC-196, KC-198, KC-200, KC-202, KC-204, KC-206, KC-208, KC-210, KC-212, KC-214, KC-216, KC-218, KC-220, KC-222, KC-224, KC-226, KC-228, KC-230, KC-232, KC-234, KC-236, KC-238, KC-240, KC-242, KC-244, KC-246, KC-248, KC-250, KC-252, KC-254, KC-256, KC-258, KC-260, KC-262, KC-264, KC-266, KC-268, KC-270, KC-272, KC-274, KC-276, KC-278, KC-280, KC-282, KC-284, KC-286, KC-288, KC-290, KC-292, KC-294, KC-296, KC-298, KC-300, KC-302, KC-304, KC-306, KC-308, KC-310, KC-312, KC-314, KC-316, KC-318, KC-320, KC-322, KC-324, KC-326, KC-328, KC-330, KC-332, KC-334, KC-336, KC-338, KC-340, KC-342, KC-344, KC-346, KC-348, KC-350, KC-352, KC-354, KC-356, KC-358, KC-360, KC-362, KC-364, KC-366, KC-368, KC-370, KC-372, KC-374, KC-376, KC-378, KC-380, KC-382, KC-384, KC-386, KC-388, KC-390, KC-392, KC-394, KC-396, KC-398, KC-400, KC-402, KC-404, KC-406, KC-408, KC-410, KC-412, KC-414, KC-416, KC-418, KC-420, KC-422, KC-424, KC-426, KC-428, KC-430, KC-432, KC-434, KC-436, KC-438, KC-440, KC-442, KC-444, KC-446, KC-448, KC-450, KC-452, KC-454, KC-456, KC-458, KC-460, KC-462, KC-464, KC-466, KC-468, KC-470, KC-472, KC-474, KC-476, KC-478, KC-480, KC-482, KC-484, KC-486, KC-488, KC-490, KC-492, KC-494, KC-496, KC-498, KC-500, KC-502, KC-504, KC-506, KC-508, KC-510, KC-512, KC-514, KC-516, KC-518, KC-520, KC-522, KC-524, KC-526, KC-528, KC-530, KC-532, KC-534, KC-536, KC-538, KC-540, KC-542, KC-544, KC-546, KC-548, KC-550, KC-552, KC-554, KC-556, KC-558, KC-560, KC-562, KC-564, KC-566, KC-568, KC-570, KC-572, KC-574, KC-576, KC-578, KC-580, KC-582, KC-584, KC-586, KC-588, KC-590, KC-592, KC-594, KC-596, KC-598, KC-600, KC-602, KC-604, KC-606, KC-608, KC-610, KC-612, KC-614, KC-616, KC-618, KC-620, KC-622, KC-624, KC-626, KC-628, KC-630, KC-632, KC-634, KC-636, KC-638, KC-640, KC-642, KC-644, KC-646, KC-648, KC-650, KC-652, KC-654, KC-656, KC-658, KC-660, KC-662, KC-664, KC-666, KC-668, KC-670, KC-672, KC-674, KC-676, KC-678, KC-680, KC-682, KC-684, KC-686, KC-688, KC-690, KC-692, KC-694, KC-696, KC-698, KC-700, KC-702, KC-704, KC-706, KC-708, KC-710, KC-712, KC-714, KC-716, KC-718, KC-720, KC-722, KC-724, KC-726, KC-728, KC-730, KC-732, KC-734, KC-736, KC-738, KC-740, KC-742, KC-744, KC-746, KC-748, KC-750, KC-752, KC-754, KC-756, KC-758, KC-760, KC-762, KC-764, KC-766, KC-768, KC-770, KC-772, KC-774, KC-776, KC-778, KC-780, KC-782, KC-784, KC-786, KC-788, KC-790, KC-792, KC-794, KC-796, KC-798, KC-800, KC-802, KC-804, KC-806, KC-808, KC-810, KC-812, KC-814, KC-816, KC-818, KC-820, KC-822, KC-824, KC-826, KC-828, KC-830, KC-832, KC-834, KC-836, KC-838, KC-840, KC-842, KC-844, KC-846, KC-848, KC-850, KC-852, KC-854, KC-856, KC-858, KC-860, KC-862, KC-864, KC-866, KC-868, KC-870, KC-872, KC-874, KC-876, KC-878, KC-880, KC-882, KC-884, KC-886, KC-888, KC-890, KC-892, KC-894, KC-896, KC-898, KC-900, KC-902, KC-904, KC-906, KC-908, KC-910, KC-912, KC-914, KC-916, KC-918, KC-920, KC-922, KC-924, KC-926, KC-928, KC-930, KC-932, KC-934, KC-936, KC-938, KC-940, KC-942, KC-944, KC-946, KC-948, KC-950, KC-952, KC-954, KC-956, KC-958, KC-960, KC-962, KC-964, KC-966, KC-968, KC-970, KC-972, KC-974, KC-976, KC-978, KC-980, KC-982, KC-984, KC-986, KC-988, KC-990, KC-992, KC-994, KC-996, KC-998, KC-1000, KC-1002, KC-1004, KC-1006, KC-1008, KC-1010, KC-1012, KC-1014, KC-1016, KC-1018, KC-1020, KC-1022, KC-1024, KC-1026, KC-1028, KC-1030, KC-1032, KC-1034, KC-1036, KC-1038, KC-1040, KC-1042, KC-1044, KC-1046, KC-1048, KC-1050, KC-1052, KC-1054, KC-1056, KC-1058, KC-1060, KC-1062, KC-1064, KC-1066, KC-1068, KC-1070, KC-1072, KC-1074, KC-1076, KC-1078, KC-1080, KC-1082, KC-1084, KC-1086, KC-1088, KC-1090, KC-1092, KC-1094, KC-1096, KC-1098, KC-1100, KC-1102, KC-1104, KC-1106, KC-1108, KC-1110, KC-1112, KC-1114, KC-1116, KC-1118, KC-1120, KC-1122, KC-1124, KC-1126, KC-1128, KC-1130, KC-1132, KC-1134, KC-1136, KC-1138, KC-1140, KC-1142, KC-1144, KC-1146, KC-1148, KC-1150, KC-1152, KC-1154, KC-1156, KC-1158, KC-1160, KC-1162, KC-1164, KC-1166, KC-1168, KC-1170, KC-1172, KC-1174, KC-1176, KC-1178, KC-1180, KC-1182, KC-1184, KC-1186, KC-1188, KC-1190, KC-1192, KC-1194, KC-1196, KC-1198, KC-1200, KC-1202, KC-1204, KC-1206, KC-1208, KC-1210, KC-1212, KC-1214, KC-1216, KC-1218, KC-1220, KC-1222, KC-1224, KC-1226, KC-1228, KC-1230, KC-1232, KC-1234, KC-1236, KC-1238, KC-1240, KC-1242, KC-1244, KC-1246, KC-1248, KC-1250, KC-1252, KC-1254, KC-1256, KC-1258, KC-1260, KC-1262, KC-1264, KC-1266, KC-1268, KC-1270, KC-1272, KC-1274, KC-1276, KC-1278, KC-1280, KC-1282, KC-1284, KC-1286, KC-1288, KC-1290, KC-1292, KC-1294, KC-1296, KC-1298, KC-1300, KC-1302, KC-1304, KC-1306, KC-1308, KC-1310, KC-1312, KC-1314, KC-1316, KC-1318, KC-1320, KC-1322, KC-1324, KC-1326, KC-1328, KC-1330, KC-1332, KC-1334, KC-1336, KC-1338, KC-1340, KC-1342, KC-1344, KC-1346, KC-1348, KC-1350, KC-1352, KC-1354, KC-1356, KC-1358, KC-1360, KC-1362, KC-1364, KC-1366, KC-1368, KC-1370, KC-1372, KC-1374, KC-1376, KC-1378, KC-1380, KC-1382, KC-1384, KC-1386, KC-1388, KC-1390, KC-1392, KC-1394, KC-1396, KC-1398, KC-1400, KC-1402, KC-1404, KC-1406, KC-1408, KC-1410, KC-1412, KC-1414, KC-1416, KC-1418, KC-1420, KC-1422, KC-1424, KC-1426, KC-1428, KC-1430, KC-1432, KC-1434, KC-1436, KC-1438, KC-1440, KC-1442, KC-1444, KC-1446, KC-1448, KC-1450, KC-1452, KC-1454, KC-1456, KC-1458, KC-1460, KC-1462, KC-1464, KC-1466, KC-1468, KC-1470, KC-1472, KC-1474, KC-1476, KC-1478, KC-1480, KC-1482, KC-1484, KC-1486, KC-1488, KC-1490, KC-1492, KC-1494, KC-1496, KC-1498, KC-1500, KC-1502, KC-1504, KC-1506, KC-1508, KC-1510, KC-1512, KC-1514, KC-1516, KC-1518, KC-1520, KC-1522, KC-1524, KC-1526, KC-1528, KC-1530, KC-1532, KC-1534, KC-1536, KC-1538, KC-1540, KC-1542, KC-1544, KC-1546, KC-1548, KC-1550, KC-1552, KC-1554, KC-1556, KC-1558, KC-1560, KC-1562, KC-1564, KC-1566, KC-1568, KC-1570, KC-1572, KC-1574, KC-1576, KC-1578, KC-1580, KC-1582, KC-1584, KC-1586, KC-1588, KC-1590, KC-1592, KC-1594, KC-1596, KC-1598, KC-1600, KC-1602, KC-1604, KC-1606, KC-1608, KC-1610, KC-1612, KC-1614, KC-1616, KC-1618, KC-1620, KC-1622, KC-1624, KC-1626, KC-1628, KC-1630, KC-1632, KC-1634, KC-1636, KC-1638, KC-1640, KC-1642, KC-1644, KC-1646, KC-1648, KC-1650, KC-1652, KC-1654, KC-1656, KC-1658, KC-1660, KC-1662, KC-1664, KC-1666, KC-1668, KC-1670, KC-1672, KC-1674, KC-1676, KC-1678, KC-1680, KC-1682, KC-1684, KC-1686, KC-1688, KC-1690, KC-1692, KC-1694, KC-1696, KC-1698, KC-1700, KC-1702, KC-1704, KC-1706, KC-1708, KC-1710, KC-1712, KC-1714, KC-1716, KC-1718, KC-1720, KC-1722, KC-1724, KC-1726, KC-1728, KC-1730, KC-1732, KC-1734, KC-1736, KC-1738, KC-1740, KC-1742, KC-1744, KC-1746, KC-1748, KC-1750, KC-1752, KC-1754, KC-1756, KC-1758, KC-1760, KC-1762, KC-1764, KC-1766, KC-1768, KC-1770, KC-1772, KC-1774, KC-1776, KC-1778, KC-1780, KC-1782, KC-1784, KC-1786, KC-1788, KC-1790, KC-1792, KC-1794, KC-1796, KC-1798, KC-1800, KC-1802, KC-1804, KC-1806, KC-1808, KC-1810, KC-1812, KC-1814, KC-1816, KC-1818, KC-1820, KC-1822, KC-1824, KC-1826, KC-1828, KC-1830, KC-1832, KC-1834, KC-1836, KC-1838, KC-1840, KC-1842, KC-1844, KC-1846, KC-1848, KC-1850, KC-1852, KC-1854, KC-1856, KC-1858, KC-1860, KC-1862, KC-1864, KC-1866, KC-1868, KC-1870, KC-1872, KC-1874, KC-1876, KC-1878, KC-1880, KC-1882, KC-1884, KC-1886, KC-1888, KC-1890, KC-1892, KC-1894, KC-1896, KC-1898, KC-1900, KC-1902, KC-1904, KC-1906, KC-1908, KC-1910, KC-1912, KC-1914, KC-1916, KC-1918, KC-1920, KC-1922, KC-1924, KC-1926, KC-1928, KC-1930, KC-1932, KC-1934, KC-1936, KC-1938, KC-1940, KC-1942, KC-1944, KC-1946, KC-1948, KC-1950, KC-1952, KC-1954, KC-1956, KC-1958, KC-1960, KC-1962, KC-1964, KC-1966, KC-1968, KC-1970, KC-1972, KC-1974, KC-1976, KC-1978, KC-1980, KC-1982, KC-1984, KC-1986, KC-1988, KC-1990, KC-1992, KC-1994, KC-1996, KC-199
First, we perform phytochemical and in vitro heterozygous hybridization studies. The results of this study indicate that the BFH1 gene is highly homozygous for the BFH2 gene. Further, we conducted food- and water-based mutagenesis experiments to investigate the effect of BFH2 on growth and quality.
WORK IN JAPAN: Teach English; conversation.
No experience, degree, or Japanese required;
seed land, stained oil, self-addressed envelope for
9851. SHINJU-36, PO Box 208, Centrals 2,
9851.
Diekley firm developed *Solar plus concreti-
fied电池器* applied to solar panels for the $450,000
launch of a new 1.2 MW solar power plant.
Samuraien Leiden Nurnburg In accepting
employment in Samuraien Leiden, you will
All rights reserved. Equal opportunity employer
contact info
Part time cocktail waitresses 21 or older. Applies to an appointment at Rancho Inn, I222 W. 6th. 5-28
TRACH OVERSEAS! For details, send self-maps.
TEACHERS TEACHERS TEACHERS for teacher at Teacher Box 0195 San Diego, Ca 92134
Summer John, Colorado. Dust Ranch. Experienced
writer. Write for Books. Flaub 1876, Gary. Cary,
Gilbert.
Part 3: maintenance person needed. Starting pay $2.50 per hour. You will be available 8 am to 10 pm. Req. A bachelor's degree and cleaning required, also a mechanical aptitude necessary. Apply in person, Scholomach Foods, T12 W220-649-8767.
HELP WANTED
Industrious young adults
to fill positions as
WAITRESSES
Part time & full time
Call 842-6930
Apply at The
laurence
Open house
and 7th Spirit Club
Parttime Job: Kishen India负责接待于Delhi, Bengaluru和Mumbai的客户。提供餐厅服务。Ramdaun India在新西兰 dock掌柜 with experience (nQ) XNII Pregnant and old women。Ramdaun India在Missouri泊点 Opportunity Manager (after office). Manage POS Opportunity
Minister is looking for experimental hostholder,
working in the IT industry. Offer of
Affirmation (Employer)
E-mail: info@microsoft.com
J B I - Bay has now taken applications for full and new time help. Apply in profile 9820.
Hope Watters of Gainesville, Louisiana, interested in career development, business consulting and management. Hardworking, communicative, business oriented individual with strong analytical skills. Applicants must be at least 25 years old and reside in Gainesville. Apply to Hope Watters of Gainesville, Hainesville, IL in the Hilton Garden Inn.
LOST
Typed 20-30 wk to help property maintenance of Wall William for publication, 6.80 hours per week, in affluence, $2.50 per hour. Must be bachelor's degree or equivalent. Call Prof. Johnson at 2747-2747 if you are 9 a.m.
Prepare office offers available full time. All amounts
provided are non-refundable. To receive phone calls,
you must contact prepaid phone 812-7301.
SUMMER OBTENATION STUDENT STAFF INVESTIGATIONS
for the Summer Orientation Student staff for
© Council Youth, Rainbow Kids, matron-in-charge
couple for all activities, learning programs, a key
member of the council, and is part of the
Council Advisory Board.
Elias Cordially consent to release student, student information and personal data from his cell phone. Please contact PLEASE.NEWS.ORG at 815-269-0110.
Diane Aypel Little, Cute Multi-Coded Map
Col. Mark Marmot 802-553-7491
nmc.802-553-7491
Last Woman, bearded, set with are different
warm-treated shirts. If found please 864-822-
7309.
Keys, Snowbee 120 bp. 32-50. 10-11 January. Please re-
visit L. Addison, or in Maviny Hall, Houlstown.
Pair of gold ware from France in black cloth.
Lost near Numfoster镇. Found call 640-636-123
and 640-636-128.
MISCELLANEOUS
TOWER BINDING, COPYING. The Home of
the Building and Copying Industry. Get in
building and copying at Tower Bindin.
Get in building and copying at Tower
Bindin.
Pierce of glance and enticing smile at flourished
garden. Pleasant, warm, and friendly. Great
generosity. Thank you Clay, nice smile,
warmth, and kindness.
On Tuesday I lost my RUD, but pain & disarray! It required a team of people to help me recover. But I never got around to it.
NOTICE
DEATH NAVY BOTHER?
ECKANMAN
Amount of Seal Travel 842-3432 813-
2763 10
If you observed an auto accident at 10 a.m. and focus
on the 14th avenue, call K128.PRZ.
5-6
ENTHUSIA MUSEUM is being bid for by incorporating an existing museum, with a planned opening date of March 16, 2015. The Museum is located at 930-250-2480, by the Numbers: http://www.museumenthusia.com/archives.
PERSONAL
City Lynx insuring, referral, new hand-
drawn RMU. BU 861-254-3020 or Headquarters: 861-254-3020.
BIRKIN BIRK SHOP is now open 290 Burbank
Street, Birkin, CA 91705. (866) 432-6800,
small招租 917-823-6800, medium招租 917-823-6800
HAIRDOUR SPECIALS 49$ Min. Ticket $39$ Max.
MARA'S DOWNSET NIGHT 59$ Min. Ticket $199$ Max.
Preliminary. Are invited to your graduation "Off"
your announcement now, at the Oklahoma Univ.
School of Law.
FAN THIEU NURGY CURE
Abstracts and discussions of
the surgical treatment of
fractures. 100 pages. 400 gsm.
$85.00
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY FROM 1 to 7 PM
at
BIGK'S
BIGK'S
708 Mass.
Guys $3 Girls $2
Meeting in Gold, Tampa, Annapolis to take a house tour with your family. Meet Mickey, Mike, Michael and Miky. Meet Danny, David and Danny.
FOX HILL, SURFING CENTER. Alternate for 1st floor.
Address: 1140 MAIN ST, FOX HILL, FL 32956. (855) 755-2222. www.foxhillsurfingcenter.com
--additional words:
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col x 1 Inch - $3.50
classified words:
?FREE BEER?
almost
50c cans/bottles
and those famous
$1 pitchers
today from 2.6
The Harbour Lites
"A First Class Dive"
CONTACT LENSE WEARERS. Save on brand
and color options. Available in Black,
Half- and Half-Tone Instant Color Contact lenses. Boxed
and pre-owned. No taxes. 800-253-1614.
TWO $306.80 SCHOOLSHIPS available for full-time education on desktop and applications at Delta Dellta. 1629 Oxford. 413-636-8700 for computer applEcations. May 2, 1979
Dilhara International CHILR, drink and dessert
BUSINESS TAXY LAY-145 ABP HOUSE Mira-
lo 3-4, L. 699-7988
Baltimore Coves, every Monday night 6-12 at
Lewis West (7th & 8th) Atlantic $9.50 fly
out
SALY LOU IGU and the greatest soul! last week in a great new deal with really reasonable prices. We go to go with you for this week? Bedford, 28th dept., Southwest Plaza. Open 9am-5pm. 3-734-600-6100.
606 Schenckers and $1,000 Pleasure every Friday afternoon (2:55) at Louisa's bar 4-5
Battleship (from Galathea?) Clown and Hot Ninja.
INSTRUCTIONS: In the United Forces for
Arabia, enter "BATTLESHIP" in the Union Field for
the first time.
Attention. Need joint ear in top running condition for spring跑步. Winter be hard on your ears and back. Bring a warm time use app for $5 plus piece this Saturday and call Call 611-8200 on april at W. For W-32
Don't miss the DFX spring event film festival
Saturday, March 3, Peep, 12, 3-9
REMINDER
FROM: THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS TO: ALL UNDERGRADUALE STUDENTS
Beginning March 7th, it becomes necessary to petition to drop any course within the college. Apparval of petitions will not normally be granted for merely lack of interest or poor performance in a course, but may be obtained under conditions of difficulty, or a heavy work schedule. Documentary support is required.
Wanted a 2-bedroom furnished Apartment at
1000 East 8th Street, NYC. Please email
to bartle@nyc.gov. Call toll-free 212-634-9555.
Apply online now at www.bartle.com. Not
available for short-term rentals.
Jelly Bean Zionism, Heap Birthday to our favorite
on the KKK. Your Yearful Birthday. 3-2
Lady Cathcart Hanny 2019! Our apprentice
bachyard today! Get cart! Inbundy your
wish list?
THE ATOMIC STORM Bovedel convert for Kansas Natural Guard Joe Obovich. Joey's Bar & Bistro, Jerry's Cafe, Coyotes, Mot 227 New Hampshire, Saturday, Jan. 16, 12pm - 1pm. Non-Nicholas 8:30am - BPK
We're not Dismantling Armies and the way the enemy uses them is better. For example, God CIRKS IN HEAVEN THERE IS NO BURDEN.
We pay full Friends, Ann Barr, Grandchildren in lieu of cash.
We pay half Friends, Ann Barr, Grandchildren in lieu of cash.
We pay half Friends, Ann Barr, Grandchildren in lieu of cash.
We accept any amount if it is marked with a check.
Happy 12 Spinons—Remainder the green place, happy 13 Spinons—remainder the green place. Keep Chris' eye chip on. The contests will run until 'play as me' or 'play as you are'. 1-2 Titan Man-No one believes me. I think we can win!
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTOR MA in math, patience, three years professional tutoring experience. M2-M31.
REWRITING. EDITING. Your memoir, treasure of term paper collated into an effective, gamified project, should be thought with precision and smoothness. Outlining your thoughts and articles also available. EB978-0423-8423-50
Tired of feeding yourself? National Hall is offering for the first time ever a booking package. You can book your stay to be with you if you choose this plan. Shop at National Hall, 100 National Hall, 842-6535, ASHIRI HALL, 100 National Hall, 842-6535.
EXPAND TUTORIES. MATH 1007 (322) call 864-35722
TUTORIALS. MATH 1008 (322) call 864-35722
TUTORIALS. COMPUTER SCIENCE 1008 (322) call 864-35722
TUTORIALS. COMPUTER SCIENCE 1009 (322) call 864-35722
TUTORIALS. QUALIFICATIONS. B.S. ENGINEERING
(US) program for general problem solving.
Programming for General Problem Solving.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with
A住 at the House of Ubiqui/Quick Cone Court;
B住 is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
to Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday
at Mount
New help in math or CSI GS1 when you can
help with your math or CSI problems.
841-617-4977
841-617-4978
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476 tt
PROFESSIONAL, TYPING SERVICE, 841-4900
Travel Editor - IBM Pricile Elite. Quality now,
accessible to all. Enjoy an excellent welcome
journey.
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Master's degree. Law papers, term papers. M.S.
WD. #01229.
Famed expert, Typical term papers, dense, nuis-
cle, elastic textiles. Proofreading, applying cep-
tion.
Experiment of hybrid-theory, dimerization, termo-
dynamics and selectivity in selective bifurcation
84-231 (CEV). www.ibm.com/84-231
Quality testing guaranteed: IBM Servec Termite
insects, dissolutions, nano cards. Cardio 100
mils
Direcional typing - 736 page, Call: 842-0755, after 5
*M*
Req. Disp. dissertation, legal form, simile,
research, research selective, Citil Eilen 62-
Jonathan 841-717.
COMPUTERIZED THESIS TYPEING. Have you typeset these typed on CPP 1000 and you can have them published on the Web? Have all natural copies Call PROFESSIONAL and submit your work. We will most advanced typing system available. If not, please contact us.
Taping on Elec shear typewriter. Prompt service.
Read reading. No sheets. Mrs Hayes 8-9
340 123 456 789
I did the switch tying. Under 28 paid a 1 night fee. Call RSVP at 610-635-4794 for 2-14 or call Cell RSVP at 610-635-4795 for 2-14
TVPING. Over 30,000 people screened.
Mooreau short-shift wedding webcast on Hairy Harry.
Live studio stream for a few more days.
WANTED
Bemore wanted to begin 5 bison homes for
619,100 cattle. Mr. Bemore paid $412,500 after 6.99
years.
Responsible, reasonably wanted to share 3 beds;
bathing facilities; 80% per month unless 1.5
beds are required.
Formally wanted to share large mobile
network (25 per month) utilities Cable 2
41.811.850
Two commutes in Jayhawk Tower, $80.00 per
mile. 427-6253
Would alert for tenames, age 4, & 6 year old weekdays
and would remind me to put my phone on position 1309
providing the reception for position 1309 for 8 hours.
Resemble to show 3 bedrooms Apt. on house run.
Nondesirable form? 843-7272
3-2
Remainstaff - unaccounted to share large 2 bedrooms 14th
floor. From: Office Call 811-4512 Marlton 3-6
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
Roommate wanted. Central air. Weather. dryer.
Clean. Air conditioner. $1250 per month. 1/2 acre
Call Nile 634-768-1219
O
--additional words:
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col x 1 Inch - $3.50
classified words:
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 20,550 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kansan
Classifieds sells it. Just mail
in this form with check or
money order to 111 Flint
Below below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
AD DREADELINES
to run:
Monday ... Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm
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KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD.
12
Friday, March 2, 1979
University Daily Kansan
O'Boyle...
From page one
"By the time they received the information in August, I was beginning to worry about getting my money in time for enrollment," O'Boyle said. "If I had the money, I think I would have flown to Washington to straighten the road."
O'Boyle said he was then informed that HEW also needed a copy of his Student Eligibility Report, which HEW uses to determine financial need.
"THAT COPY had to be sent from Iowa City, where it is computerized," he said. "And it was another three months until HEIWED received it."
O'Boyle said he received his BEOG check before enrollment in January.
He said he thought he was audited because he miscalculated his income for the original application. He had not noted the actual figures by the BEOG deadline.
"I figured I made about $2,000, but when I received my W-2 Forms, but only made about $1,000, he said, "So the new contract should tell HEW about the difference."
O'Boyle said that by the time he knew his actual earnings, he had already been categorized by HEW and assigned an index number.
The index number, O'Boyle said, tells HEW the amount of money that can be awarded to the applicant.
"I was really a borderline case with my number," he said. "So I think after I
O'Boyle said HEW would not tell him the reason for the audit.
changed my income statement, HEW probably thought there was a reason to audit me."
"I VEE BEEN told that KU can make suggestions on possible applicants to audit." "O Bowie said, "But even if you have been you're being audited, they won't tell you."
"No suggestions or lists are supplied by us," he said.
Jeff Wembon, associate director of the office of financial aid at KU, said students who underwent verification audits were selected by HEW.
Saunders also said all students who were verified were selected by HEW.
She said that because of cases like O'Boyle's and because of the two-year backlog in auditing, the Office of Finance switched in 1978 to campus audits.
"We still select the students to be audited," she said. "But the audits are done on the individual campuses by financial aid offices."
She said the change made the program more efficient.
"The audits can be done in much less time now, because the students are right there to answer the information needed," she said.
HOWEVER, O'Boyle said even though he planned to apply for another BEGG next fail, he would not comply with another audit.
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THE ATTIC
927 Massachusetts
Peace Corps . . .
From page one
"MOST OF THE TIME, these students think that they will have two years of experience before they like that at all. There are some pretty small places around the South Pacific—very isolated. Like a boat comes with mail only when it's the right time to deliver different story from the vacation routine."
Physical health is important for Peace Corps services, she said, and a volunteer must pass a medical physical before he is sent to the assigned country.
Lokengand said the average age of Peace Corps volunteers was 27 and the raio was usually 60 percent male and 40 percent female.
Steven Smith, Belleville senior, also signed up for an interview with the
"I think the Peace Corps is a unique opportunity to use your skills and learn while you teach someone else," Smith said. "I'm not worried about the time. Hell, it's only a minute." And it will be something to teach someone who is trying to put food into his stomach."
BILL FUGUA Lawrence graduate student, said he was interested in joining the
"A person needs to be productive in his environment, I haven't found that here so I want to try in mother country," he said. "I have been learning in school for so long that we need to find a way to best use my knowledge and pass it on. I Corps offers this to me."
Peace Corps to "change my life in a good way."
S Smith said he was motivated to join the Peace Corps because it would give him a chance to experience life.
However, Jay Long, a peace Corps and Vista representative, said he had doubts about the interview if a student mentioned that he just wanted to travel.
"This is not a travel agency." Long said.
We are here to help people, and along the way we have helped many.
JONES SAID jobs in agriculture and skilled trades were in the most demand. Jobs in home economics, nutrition, science and other areas also are open to college graduates.
"There are some people that we refuse to take intoake Corps," Jones said, "but basically anyone can volunteer. It's a good cause and I don't know of any former Peace Corps volunteer who ever regretted his service."
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From page one
credits — a tax subsidy — to offset tuition payments to private schools," he said.
Will...
Will said such tax credits would stimulate competition against "the nation's most powerful lobby and strongest monopoly, public education."
films sua
ONE SIGN that the liberal movement in the United States has become is the power of regulatory agencies to prevent laws made by legislators, he said.
"Congress recently stipulated that there shall be equal treatment of the sexes in education and left it to the
"Legislators are too busy with details; too busy to say what they mean," he said.
a film by Alan Rudolph
"IT HAS BEEN a long time since the theme of American life has been that expressed in the song 'America' thy soul thy side; in self-control.'" he said.
guideline writers at HEW to say what that means. Then some mania in the bowels of HEW decided that a father-son affection was irritated as a federal offense." Will said.
"But it must be the theme of the American future."
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Democrats, Vogel burn over redistricting
By GENE LINN
Staff Reporter It was a bit embarrassing
The Kansas House had sailed through the first 42 House districts in its new redistricting bill last Wednesday with hardly a word of debate.
Then it got to Douglas County and the fireworks began, with the biggest battle being waged over the KU student vote in Lawrence.
The dispute over the KU vote is not just a local matter. It could be serious enough to cause either Democratic Gov. John Carlin or Republican Gov. Joseph tainted the entire state redistricting plan.
The struggle erupted when State Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, offered an amendment that would tear the heart out of the Rep. in favor of KU student support in the 44th District.
VOGEL SAID the amendment was needed to unify the half of west
Germany and eastern Poland.
Glover and State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, engaged in a long, heated debate on whether the state should apologize twice to the other representatives for involving the whole House in the debate.
Vogel's amendment finally passed on a party line vote. The bill was tentatively
On Friday, Carlin said Vogel's amendment was "pure politics" and threatened to "kill him."
Analysis
did not rework the Douglas County districts.
The House will get a chance to do that this week; the House must discuss the bill again because of a technical error in an amendment concerning Riley County districts.
ALL OF THIS fuss over Lawrence redistricting could be seen as an overblown local squabble except for one fact—the only state representation to be presented is a WRITTEN
The total number of House districts in Kansas will stay at 125.
However, because of a recent rapid growth in population, the area of the Douglas county districts has decreased and the county to pick up one more district.
THE POTENTIAL IMPORTANCE of that one vote is magnified because the leadership of the House has changed hands in the past two elections.
That change put a House seat up for grabs. The party that wins the seat will have one more vote in the House and in several house committees.
Former Districts
43rd
6th Street
9th Street
44th
KU
Massachusetts St.
Haskell Ave.
15th Street
Iowa St.
43rd
Kasold Dr.
Staff Illustration by JAYNE SCHELL
Former Districts
Original Proposal
Amended Proposal
43rd
6th Street
9th Street
44th
KU
Massachusetts St.
Haskell Ave.
45th
15th Street
6th Street
9th Street
44th
15th Street
KU
Massachusetts St.
Haskell Ave.
43rd
Kasold Dr.
Iowa St.
Staff illustration by JAYNE SCHELL
45th
6th Street
9th Street
44th
15th Street
KU
Massachusetts St.
Haskell Ave.
43rd
Kasold Dr.
Iowa St.
45th
46th
43rd
Massachusetts St.
Haskell Ave.
Staff illustration by DAN MARTIN
After the 1976 election, Carlin took advantage of Democratic control of the House.
Vogel's 43rd District was moved slightly to the east and Glover's 44th District to the west to make a new district in east Lawrence.
from 1976-1978 to become Speaker of the House and launch his successful campaign
Partisan wrangling over Lawrence redistricting broke out about a week ago after the state legislature rejected the proposal.
Republican Party in Douglas County, churped that of some Carolin's aides had helped Solbach, who represents the 48th District, draw up the Lawrence districts in the House reapportionment bill to benefit Democrats.
Original Proposal Amended Proposal
45th
46th
43rd
6th Street
9th Street
44th
15th Street
KU
Massachusetts St.
Haskell Ave.
Kasold Dr.
Iowa St.
45th
43rd
Staff Illustration by DAN MARTIN
Langsturm said he did not know the identities of those Carolin aides.
SOME DEMOCRATS or Muria Kerry, a Lawrence resident who recently won chosen to lead the Democrats, said.
was involved in Vogel's amendment to the House bill.
The original House bill placed all of Glover's district to the west of Massachusetts Street, but kept most of his See REAPPORTMENT back page
OKLAHOMA
10
"V" for victory
Aaron Curry, a member of the 1979 Big Eight champion Oklahoma Sooners, holds the game ball and two fingers in a victory salute after OU beat Kansas 80-65 in the championship game of the Big Eight conference post season tournament Saturday in Kansas City.
'Hawks shun bid not offered by NIT
By JOHN P. THARP
Shortly after 5 last night, a majority of 10 members of KU's basketball team voted to not accept an invitation to the All-Southern Tournament if they were offered.
Sanders said the meeting, called by KU coach Ted Owens, occurred before the vote was taken. Out of 12 team members, 10 were present. No coaches were present when the players cast their ballots.
Accointe Sports Editor
"We had a meeting on that, and we voted, and the majority of the people decided not to go," Brad Sander, counselor for the night last about the possible NIT bid.
Some players contacted didn't talk about the vote, while others who did discuss it requested that their names not be mentioned.
About two hours later, the NIT list of 24 teams failed to include Kansas.
However, Sanders talked about the vote and the possibility of getting a berth in the NIT.
"IM SORRY to hear that we didn't make it," Sanders said and "we didn't know what to expect and we just hoped for the
best. We thought our chances were pretty good. It's a good tournament, especially if you make the final four."
The NIT, the oldest of the post-season affairs, will begin at various sites around the country before the semifinals and the Madison Square Garden in New York City.
AFTER THE Oklahoma defeat, several team members mentioned the possibility of an at-large NCAA bid or a shot at the NIT. Owens said Saturday the players would have had statistics, which had the players hoping they would have a longer season.
See JAYHAWKS page seven
Also, the season itself, which KU, 18-11, ended Saturday by losing 80-65 to Oklahoma in the Big Eight post-season championship game, affected the team's
Sanders said some discussion centered on the possibility that KU would have to play on the road in an early round.
But yesterday, neither the NCAA nor theormo announced 15-large teams on its roster. KU, signaling the end of the season for the Jayhawks, who finished second in the
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Lawrence, Kansas
The University of Kansas
Monday, March 5. 1979
KANSAN
Vol. 89. No.107
Many fines notices mailed for books already returned
By DOUG HITCHCOCK Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Many of the more than 17,000 fines notice that Watt Library sent out last month were for library-related fines and returned their books. Mary Marshall, fines clerk at Watson, said
"We've been having some real funny things happen with the computer terminals lately. I have a feeling that a lot of it happened there," she said.
The notices were the result of a cleanup, made three times a year, of the library's collection. When the collection was returned at the end of last semester, increased the number of notices that were posted.
"There are always lots of notices sent out. But, it seems like more students are complaining," she said. "The past few days have been incredible."
Some of the confusion resulted from the fused system, Bob Malinowski, associate director.
The large number of fines that needed to be collected last month almost caused an
"THE CURRENT system is very unfair. Students don't receive notices until their books are already overdue. Fines are not posted. Students back to the library, anewy," he said.
overload of the computers used to compile fines data. This may have caused some of the notices to be printed incorrectly, Marshall said.
However, errors within the system could not be blamed solely on the computers because there is also a human element in the process.
"IF STUDENT assistants forget to run a card through the computer, or if they run it through incorrectly, our records won't change or they might be changed incorrectly. Books that have been returned may still be on record as lost or overdue."
Last week was Marshall's first as finis-
clerk. Previously, she ran the computers
For fiscal year 1978, the library collected $26,414 in overdue book fines. Watson receives no direct revenues from the money.
Occasionally, a fine is paid but the library's records don't get changed.
Poison said that she had been involved in a similar incident in the fall of 1977.
JUDI POLSON, Rock Port, Mo. senior, received notices for two overdue books she had returned and on which she had paid fines. The error was corrected when she found the books in the stacks and proved to the library staff that she had returned them.
Then, she received notices for books that had been returned before the due date.
The fine system uses computers both at wation and at the Academic Computer Lab.
When they are taken to the computer center, the data have been recorded on the server.
The computer center uses diskettes to get information printed on paper, which are sent in as data. The computer is a last warning before enrollment holds are put on the files of those who have not
Three times a year, the files are turned over to the comptroller's office in Carruthro'O'Leary Hall. At the office, the files get enrolment until they are paid.
JOHN HACK, accountant at the controller's office, said the library was supposed to try to collect the fines before they were turned over to his office.
"Once the accounts are paid, they automatically released from enrollment
However, some students have paid their bills but still had a hold on them.
Bob Butcher, Coldwater graduate student, said, "I had an overdue book last semester. When I got the notice, I returned the book and paid the fine. But when it came
time to enrol, there was a library hold on my cards. Lackily, I still had my receipt, but I ended up going through everything twice before I got enrolled."
"IF STUDENTS don't have a receipt or a canned check, we can look it up in the back of the school's sections. But if they wrote a check and didn't ask for a receipt, there's no record of
Marsial said it was possible for a fine to be nailed without being recorded.
"Once we send them to the business office, it's out of our hands," Marshall said.
Ciff Hoka, circulation librarian, said the library would drop fines in cases where the books were stolen.
The circulation system, which is now a manual process, will be a computerized system.
The whole circulation system will be revamped this summer to relieve some of the stress.
"By August, we'll have a fair system that does not employ fences as extensively as the present one. Students will receive notices before the books are actually over," he said. Then, after the due date, they will lose their library privileges during those 30 days if they didn't return the book."
Funding anticipated for hospital
By PATRICIA MANSON
Staff Renorters
TOPEKA—Members of the Kansas Board of Regents and the KU administration seemed confident this weekend that the Kansas Legislature would appropriate money for the $1.2 million in grants the Wichita branch of the University of Kansas Medical Center.
In a budget report released Friday, however, the House Ways and Means Committee did not recommend any action.
"I just didn't feel we could make the best decision this morning." State Rep. William Bunten, O'Reepta, took a turn on the floor.
The committee met to consider Med Center budget requests.
Committee members said they needed more time to consider a recommendation by the Regents that the state buy the hospital from Sedgwick County and use it as the permanent home of the Wichita branch.
GLEE SMITH JR., A Regent, said, "I wouldn't view the committee's report as a final decision. I'm sure before the session is over the money will be provided. Everyone who works for realities we need an expanded branch at Wichita."
The Board of Regents voted last month to request money from the Legislature to expand and renovate B.E. Allen. The cost of expanding the hospital and running it for 20 years has been estimated at $172 million by KU officials.
B. Bernard Franklin, another Regent, also said he thought the Legislature would appropriate the money for education.
"I would imagine it would require some additional education of members of the Legislature of the importance of renovating E.B. Alen Hospital," Franklin said. "I think the members who are for it will educate other members."
"I THINK we'll get the money eventually. It will pass because there is considerable pressure to get more doctors."
Richard Von Ende, KU executive secretary, said members of the Legislature had said they would appropriate the money. The legislators are waiting for more information from KU about the exhansion, he said.
State Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, said the decision about the hospital would be made this session. Several options were available for housing the Wichita branch.
THE BUILDING could be leased on a long-term basis or bought and renovated. Another site for the branch could be built.
Banten said, "It's not the all-time, great, slam-dunk building. But everyone seems to think it's the best one available. We just want to think about it awhile before we make a decision."
In its budget report, the committee also recommended that $2.9 million be provided for the Kansas Medical Scholarship Program for the 1979-80 school year, even the full program in the Kansas Senate would abolish the program.
The scholarship program allows medical students to waive a year's tuition for each year they agree to practice in Kansas. There are 428 students enrolled in the program, about four times the number the legislature had expected.
Smith said he thought the Legislature should not limit the number of scholarships.
A SENATE committee voted three weeks ago to allow those now enrolled in the program to continue with the scholarships, but to abstain the program for all other students. The full Senate has not voted on the bill yet.
"The reason more money was requested was that the Legislature didn't put a limit on the amount of scholarships." Smith said. "I think if they have the program, scholarships should be provided for everyone who wants
The Ways and Means Committee also recommended that the number of students receiving scholarships be limited beginning in the 1980-81 school year. Under the program now, any student at the Med Center is eligible.
them. If we want to help the doctor shortage in Kansas, we should make scholarships available for everyone."
BOTH VON ENDE and David Waxman, executive vice chancellor of the Med Center, said the scholarships probably would be awarded on a competitive basis if the Legislature limited the scholarship money.
In other business, the committee approved a $235,000 request of planning money for a new library building at the
The request was questioned by State Rep. Ruth Lazzati, D-Wichita, who said that the University had not shown that the new building was needed. She said the area now housing the library could be expanded.
However, State Rep. Phil Martin, D-Larned, the recommendation included the requirement that funds for the new building could not be approved until plans for the use of the vacated space were provided.
THE COMMITTEE also recommended that hospital income projections be increased by $2,988,000, which would bring the total to about $37 million. The increase was based on an estimated increase in the number of hospital fees that will be collected. This projection would lower requests for state aid by about $2.6 million.
Other recommendations included $1.15 million for salaries for 62 additional faculty members at the Med Center; $135,066 for medical school faculty salaries to offset a loss of federal funding; $898,947 in supplemental funding for hospital equipment; and $27,892 for two physical plant positions.
The Committee denied requests for $3,654 to replace
payments from the University of North Carolina at Chapel
field at E.B. Allen and $129,071 for regional health care.
For the Wichita branch, the committee recommended $81,710 for the addition of two clinical faculty positions.
HAYDEN SAID that because of a limited amount of money, the regional health centers would have to wait.
"It is not that we don't buy the concept," he said. "It will just have to come into being in a stage-by-stage process."
2
Monday, March 5, 1979
University Daily Kansan
VERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansas Wire Services
BANGKOK, Thailand--China reportedly told foreign diplomats yesterday it would withdraw from Vietnam as soon as possible. However, Hanoi said that Chinese troops had launched new attacks and that there had been fierce fighting near Jong Son.
It is not too late to look at the Ministry spokesman in Tokyo which Chinese Foreign Minister Huang Hui had told Japanese Ambassador Sato Sin in Beijing that the country was ready to host a United Nations meeting.
troop with whom we will train the Chinese Vice Premier I. Kumunian (I. Lisianmien) as saying, "We have already decided to withdraw from Viet-
cong".
Our pupils in Chinese schools in Peking said some Chinese troops already were returning to China. Schools reported.
to China. Kyushu, the island where Mr. Wu gave no indication of a downwair in fighting. The country's Communist Party Central Committee declared that "every village in Vietnam was under attack."
The Chinese have said from the outset of the invasion two weeks ago they wanted only to "punish" Vietnam for alleged provocations and not plan a war.
Carter injects peace proposal
WASHINGTON - President Carter, in an effort to salvage Midean peace proposals, gave Israel Prime Minister Menachem begin new peace proposals
The proposals were described by an Israeli official as "important and interesting." The contents were kept secret, but Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., said the proposals were in the nature of "pragmatic guarantees" designed to build trust between Egypt and Israel.
"It may be the cement that binds this treaty." Javits said. He refused to provide further details.
Begined referred the proposals to his government in Jerusalem and told Carter he hoped to have a response before he left the United States this week.
A White House statement said Carter would review the situation with Foundation President Anwar Sadat.
the White House statement, still not providing specific details, termed the proposals as "suggestions designed to help resolve some of the outstanding issues" (White House, 2018).
Silkwood juru selection begins
OKLAHOMA CITY — Jury selection begins today in the trial of a $1.5 million law alleging that nuclear worker Kenny Woolsey been contaminated with radioactive water. The Kerr-McGee Case
Silkwood's lawyers said the plutonium contamination of her apartment may have been caused intentionally by Kerr-McGee because she had been active in the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union. The company repeatedly has denied the allegations.
Silkwood was an employee of the now closed Kerr-McGee nuclear fuel rod manufacturing operation near Crescent, OK. She was in a one-car enterprise.
Kerr-McGee lawyers said that any personal injury Silkwood sustained had been caused by her own negligence. They also said she might have smuggled plutonium from the plant and contaminated herself to dramatize her allegations that the plant was unsafe.
New Orleans cons end strike
NEW ORLEANS—Police returned to work yesterday, ending a 15-day strike that had forced the cancellation of this year's Mardi Gras festivities.
The officers, who are paid every two months, had missed one paycheck.
"It just became too much of a financial burden," Vincent Bruno, president of the police union, said. "The men couldn't hold out any longer. It was stricty a
The officers, who are paid every two months, had missed one paycheck. The team was able to contact the Board of the Teammaster-officiled Police Association of New Orleans after the strike collapsed. However, he said, improved benefits, such as more holidays and a $25 clothing allowance, would be implemented despite the absence of a signed contract.
The strike collapsed after the union voted 447-173 to reject the city's offer. The rejection hung on the strikers' demand for unconditional amnesty.
Moral said, "At this point in time we're not recognizing anyone. Moreover, we are not convinced that the Police Association of Louisiana or the Teamsters have any involvement."
Deputy Chef Louis Turner said the police department had had a full weekday complement of officers on duty yesterday even though it was a Sunday.
Kahn denies mandatory plans
WASHINGTON—President Carter's chief inflation fighter, Alfred Kahn, chairman of the Council on Wage and Price Council, said yesterday the administration was not considering mandatory wage and price controls in case the president's voluntary program fails.
"There is nobody in the administration that I know of who is talking at all about mandatory controls," Kahn, said.
He conceded that price rises in January, if continued through the year, would mean inflation of more than 10 percent for the year. But, he said, the president's
program for Vollumy was huge. It created a campus that was visible to Kahn was interviewed on the CBS television program "Face the Nation."
Oil crisis here, economist says
NEW YORK—Economist Walter J. Levy said yesterday that the loss of Japanese oil had brought an inevitable energy crisis to the United States five years ago.
"I believe we have an energy crunch right now, caused by Iran," Levy said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
as our oil is concerned, we are living dangerously," he said. "As the Iranian example showed, the shutdown in Iran changed a period of reasonable tolerance."
Levy, an international oil consultant, also said that if the price of oil rose to $18 or $20 a barrel at the end of the year, the consequences on the world economy would be severe.
The United States, he said, should be developing other sources of energy, particularly nuclear.
Nuclear energy "is perhaps the only certain source we know of which could supply us with a substantial large new source of energy," he said.
Giscard facing sharp attacks
While Giscard d'Estalinguet visited Mexico last week, his leftist opponents joined forces with conservative Gaullists in his own center-right coalition to demand a special National Assembly session. The session would deal with growing violence in France's six-month-old steel crisis.
PARIS—French President Valery Giscard d'Estang is coming under increasingly sharp attack as France plunges deeper into labor unrest, unemployment.
Organized labor is fighting the government's plan to modernize the aling French steel industry because it would mean the layoff of an estimated 35,000 workers.
Bills would back up Taiwan
WASHINGTON—Opponents of President China's policy are mounting efforts to win Senate and House approval this week of stronger U.S. defense and security.
According to a poll published Saturday in the weekly magazine of the newspaper Le Figaro, only 51 percent of the French have confidence in the president, representing a drop of six points in a month and 11 points since Jan. 1.
The Senate will start work tomorrow on bills that would declare any forceful China takeover of Taiwan a threat to peace in the Pacific and "of grave danger."
Opponents of Carter's policy in both chambers have amendments raising the threat of U.S. military assistance for Taiwan if Peking tries to take it over.
Weather ..
It will be clear today with a high in the mid to upper 40s, according to the National Weather Service. Winds will be light and westerly. The low tonight will be warm.
ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AP) - The head of the OPEC oil cartel said yesterday that future oil sales to consumer nations should depend on whether the
Cartel wants treaty to favor PLO
nations help bring about a Midwest settlement favorable to the Palestinians.
Mana Saeed al-Otaiba, president of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Wires adopt new spellings of Chinese places, names
NEW YORK (AP) - The Associated Press and United Press International have begun to use the new, official Peking-government spelling of most Chinese names and places along with the old form familiar to Americans.
The change follows a decision by the Chinese to adopt Pinyin, a new method of transliterating Chinese written characters that closely resembles approximate Chinese pronunciation.
Traditional spellings will be retained in an effort to make the new spellings un-obsolete.
As a result, readers of the Kansas' wire service dispatches now will see the name of China's vice premier, who visited the United States last month, in Pinyin followed by the American spelling: Deng Xioping (Teng Hsiao-pung).
few well-known place names because they are deeply rooted in American usage—China, Peking, Canton, Shanghai, Tibet, Inner Mongolia.
Place names also will have dual spellings: Zhejiang Province (Chekiang Province).
The spellings of well-known dead person—Miao Tse-tung, Sun Yat-sen and Chou Kuo.
and the Pinyin spellings will not be used
for the non-mainland places like Hong Kong and
Taiwan.
The familiar forms will be retained for a
The Chinese hope their Pinyin system will replace more than a dozen systems now being used to render Chinese ideograns into Roman alphabet characters.
The spellings used in the United States were developed in the 1800s by two British scholars, Sir Thomas Wade and Herbert A. Romansh alphabet uses other systems. Roman-alphabet names use other systems.
The Chinese introduced Pinyin, which means "transcription," on the mainland more than 20 years ago as a teaching and learning tool. This was part of its principal spoken language, Mandarin.
Countries, brandished the Arab "oil weapon" in another way. He threatened a "black listing" of foreign oil companies that have raised prices sharply because of market disruptions caused by the Iranian oil shutdown.
MEANWHILE, the OPEC countries' own price boosts continued. Library announced it was raising its prices an additional 3 per cent and adding 5 percent like imposed just two weeks ago.
VOTE: Jay L. Smith President
VOTE: Mark B. Fouts Vice President
VOTE: Parvesh Kumar Treasurer
The Association of University Residence Halls (AURH)
ELECTIONS
FRENCH FRIES 20¢ WITH ANY SANDWICH
VOTE Monday and Tuesday, March 5th and 6th in your hall cafeteria.
You will need your KUID to vote.
Such a solution would include the "liberation of the Palestinian people and the freedom of Jerusalem," he said. Otaiba is oil minister of the Syrian Gulf nation.
MON TUES WED
FRENCH
FRIES
20¢
WITH ANY SANDWICH
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Great Service ...
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'Most of the major petroleum companies have abused the current market situation by making claims to a vast majority.'
"Countries that expect us to maintain our supplies of petroleum should help us to arrive at a rightful solution for the Palestine crisis. We have received a session of an Arab Energy Conference here."
THE ARABS want an independent Palestinian state in territories now occupied
MAKE THE Vista RUN VISTA RESTAURANTS
HE SAID some oil companies had tried to boost prices by 80 percent for refined products sold to the United Arab Emirates, the U.A.E. refused to pay the higher cost.
Some OPEC members have begun adding their own surcharge to the base price. They said it was unfair for the companies to cash out the surcharge from their countries stuck by their previous prices.
Otaiba said the sharp reduction in Iran's oil output, caused by anti-government strikes, and severe winter weather in North Korea, has made oil supplies had combined to stretch oil supplies thin.
842-4311
by Israel and want an end to Israeli control of Jerusalem.
Oil-producing nations say some producers are selling oil on the short-term, or "spot" market for about $20 to 42-gallon barrel. The basic OPEC price is $13.35.
Free University
BASICS OF TOUCH DISCO
BEGINNING CROCHET
BEGINNING NEEDLEPOINT
DOG OBDIEDENCE TRAINING
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SOCIETY FOR CREATIVE ANACRONISM
BACKGAMMON FOR BEGINNERS
BACKPACKERS OF KANSAK
PERSONAL INSURANCE INFORMATION
YOGA JUNION
ECKANKAR: "ANCIENT SCIENCE OF SOUL
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ECKANKAR: "ANCIENT SCIENCE OF S TRAVEL"
INTENSOF ZEN MEDITATION RETREAT
USEFUL WILD PLANTS
APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY
INTRODUCTION TO SUFISM
PLUMBING REPAIR
THE HARD ROCK BALLET
(TECHNICAL ROCK CLIMBING)
TUMBLING
SOFT SOLAR ENERGY
CLOTHING AND TEXTILES IN PURPLE
CHINA—WHAT WE AIN'T GOT
A SCULPTOR'S BARN-PLANNING
REDUCING UTILITY BILLS
ONA vs. OMNA
NATURE WAGON
INTRODUCTION TO SPEED READING
BELLY DANCING
BASIC HOUSE MAINTENANCE
BEGINNING EMBRIDERY
MICROCOMPUTER PLANNING
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 5.1979
Generic drug trend grows
KU students and Lawrence area residents are joining a statewide trend of requesting generic drugs to save money, three local pharmacists said recently.
Pharmacists at Watkins Hospital, SuperX Drugs and Raney Hillcrest Drug said more Lawrence residents and physicians have had their drugs be exchanged for brand-name drugs.
Randolph Cox, pharmacist at Super-X Drugs, 23rd Street and Naihtush Drive, said more of his customers were requesting that he stop prescribing generic drugs instead of brand-name drugs.
"Customers have many questions concerning the use of generic drugs," Cox said. "But that is not affecting the use of them in a negative way. I've seen a large increase in the use of generic drugs in the last six months."
Keizer leads SUA board
SUA officers for next year were selected by members of the executive board of the Kansas Union Memorial Corporation recently.
They are Clair Kearl, Lawrence junior,
president; Julie Gilman, Springfield, III.
minor vice president; Debra Lewis,
president; Linda Forsyth, Topping,
Topping, St. Francis sophomore, treasurer,
The board members chosen to lead SU'A nine programs are Steve Howard, Lawrence graduate student, films; Mark Rexrat, Spring Hill graduate student, fine arts; John Sutcliffe, junior, intern; forums; Steven Cramer, Lawrence sophomore, Free University; Tiana Haskell, Hutchinson junior; indoor recreation; Hitchock Hitchock, Russell sophomore outdoor recreation; Rick Kasher, Wanhe sophomore, public special events; Dana Latyque senior, special events; John Reskus, Pitwin sophomore, travel.
The new officers' one-year terms begin July 1. Until then the new officers will be held in the regular office until May 31.
This year's SUA budget was $25,000. The budget for next year will be determined in the fall.
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
sua films
Monday, March 5 CHRISTOPHER STRONG
(1933)
Dir. Dorothy Azmer, with katherine Hepburn, Billie Burke, Written by Zoe Akins. Hepburn in her first major role as a wealthy aviator, PLUS: The Yellow Wallpaper, a short film based on the novella of the tepiece by Charlotte Penguin Glimson.
Tuesday, March 6
THE DAY THE EARTH
STOOD STILL
(1951)
Dir. Robert Wise; with Michael Rennan, Patricia Neal, Sam Jaffie, Music by Bernard Herrmann. One of the most intelligent science-fiction films ever made. "Gorl! Klaatu barada nikto." Music.
Wednesday, March 7
SUNSET BOULEVARD
Dir, Billy Dirley; with William Holden,
Gloria Swanson; Erich von Stroheim;
Cecil B DeMille; Buster Keaton.
The book is of a dark and decadely Hollywood.
Thursday, March 8
Director's Showcases
An evening of short films by six of the world's most renowned directors. The Showcase includes Roman Polanin's absurdist "Two Men and a Wardrobe" directed by David Mamet "Night and Fog," and the first film by a very young Orwell Welles, "Hearts of Age." Other director represented by their early films are Duncan Jones, Scrooge and Francis Truffaut. "The History Book," 4.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted $1.50 admission
Cox said the increase came because of a bill passed by the Kansas Legislature last year that allowed pharmacists to substitute chemical ingredients for a brand-name drug.
COX SAID most questions concerning generic drugs dealt with the cost differences
"People come in here thinking the generic drugs will greatly reduce the costs of their prescriptions," he said. "Sometimes it does." The doctor also said that prescribing lower-cost drugs laughed.
For example, Cox said, a tranquilizer named Equall could be substituted for the brand-name drug Meprobamate and the customer would save $4.79 on 100 tablets.
"Under the law now, a physician must check on the prescription blank whether a generic drug can be exchanged for the particular brand-name drug he was prescribed," Cox said. "If the physician does not want the exchange made, then he must request on the prescription that it be dispensed as written."
Cox also said a growing number of local physicians were allowing pharmacies to fill prescriptions with generic drugs instead of using brand-name drugs.
COX SAID exchange was sometimes not allowed by physicians because of particular medical disorders, such as diabetes or epilepsy.
Garnett Wrigley, director of the Consumer Affairs Association, B10 Vermont,
said consumers should be aware of their
complaints.
"The patient needs to know that they can ask the doctor to request a generic substitute." Wrigley said. "As a consumer, they should know that they are getting as good of a drug as they would be if they were buying a brand-name drug."
"The LAW would not be in effect if the drugs were not as good," she said. "The only difference to the consumer is that you can buy the drugs without a brand name. That is generic drugs' merit."
Wrigley said no complaints against generic drugs or pharmacies selling them had been filed in her office. She said, "She said she had had calls about generic drugs."
She said the differences in the drugs were restricted to price.
"People are now just at the stage of learning about the drugs," she said. "Soon they'll become comfortable about asking for the less-expensive type of drugs."
Martin Wollmann, director of Walkins Hospital, said doctors at Walkins prescribed
"WE BUY THE drugs that we dispense and that are sold by the pharmacy on state bid," be said. "So we usually are using drugs of generic types. If a student doesn't get his prescription filled here, then it becomes a matter for the doctor to discuss."
with the patient and to decide what drug will be used."
Wolmann said that the pharmacy stocked a limited amount of brand-name drugs. He said those drugs were used in specific situations when the doctor prescribed them.
John Baughman, a pharmacist for Watkins Hospital, said the use of generic drugs was not new for the pharmacy.
"Since we do buy on state bid, we have used the generic drugs for quite some time," he said. "However, we have had more students requesting them lately."
A PHARMACIST at Raney Hilcourt Drug, 98th and Iowa streets, said he had noticed an increase in the number of peroxidase generics drug, especially in the past month.
"I think people are becoming more aware of generic drugs," he said. "And that's increased their use a lot. The trend is definitely growing."
He said the difference in cost was the main reason why consumers choose generic
"ANY DRUG approved by the Federal Drug Administration is all right to be need if prescribed," he said. "And, any generic we would stock would be approved. So it's the cost that draws people to the generic drugs."
He said the savings on generic drugs varied according to the specific drug.
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ku
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826
KU
summer study abroad '79
britain
CREDIT: up to 8 hours undergraduate or graduate
CASH: $150
DAINNE: April 1, 1979
france
germany
CREDIT: up to 6 hours
COST: $1700*
DEADLINE: March 10, 1979
CREDIT: 6 hours
COST:$1590*
DEADLINE: March 10, 1979
italy
CREDIT: 5-10 hours
DEATHDATE: March 10, 1979
CHIP #: 31000 *1 year* for 2 month
mexico
CREDIT: up to 7 hours undergraduate or graduate
COST: $550* plus transportation
spain
CREDIT: up to 7 hours
COST:$920* plus transportation
DEADLINE: March 10, 1979
ussr
CREDIT: 8 hours
COST: $2624*
yugoslavia
CREDIT: 6 hours
COST: $950* plus transportation
FOR MORE INFORMATION: contact the Office of Study Abroad 864-3742
Cost subject to changes necessitated by fluctuations in air fares and/or currency valuations.
travel abroad
travel abroad
The Student Union Activities Travel Committee has gathered information to help you plan your adventures to other countries. We have information in the ISIC (International Student Identity Card) which makes you eligible for many discounts at museums, student restaurants, and on student charter flights in Europe; AYH (American Youth Hostels) Passes which allow you to stay in inexpensive youth hostels around the world; SATA (Student Air Travel Association) Flights within Europe and from Europe to Asia and Africa; Student and Public Charters to Europe and Israel; EURAILPASSES and EURAIL YOUTHPASSES which allow unlimited rail travel in 13 European Countries; as well as information on WORK IN BRITAIN and ENCOUNTER IRELAND.
For more information contact
SUN TRAVEL
SUN TRAVEL
Karamayev University,
Limassol, Karnataka 60401.
Lemmas, Karnataka 60401.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorslals
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editor's staff. Signed columns represent the views of
MARCH 5,1979
Student vote weakened
The Republican majority in the Kansas House delved deep into its bag of political tricks last week, and the big losers were students at the University
or Kansas:
By approving an amended reappointment bill that seriously weakens student voters' clout, Republican House members, including State Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, the amendment's sponsor, made it quite clear what they think of the student vote-
The amendment redefined the House voting districts in Douglas County, effectively dividing and diluting the student vote and seriously threatening the re-election chances of Democratic State Rep. Mike Glover.
THE NEW AMENDMENT would rip a large chunk of the student vote, including a large section of the Oread neighborhood, out of Glover's district and would push Glover's district farther west.
The original House bill would have created a new district in east Lawrence, while State Rep. John Solbach's district would still have included land on either side of Glover's district, dividing the vote of west Lawrence.
But, as far as Vogel was concerned,
it was far easier to divide up the student vote than the largely Republican vote of west Lawrence.
"WHO ARE WE going to disenfranchise," Vogel asked, "the permanent residents in west Lawrence who have been there for umpteen years or the
people in central Lawrence who are only going to be there two to six years?"
So in approving the amended bill down strict party lines—only four Republicans joined the Democrats in opposing the bill—the Republican majority student-stamped the idea of the student as a migrant worker—transitory, powerless and available to be pushed around at will.
In the process the bill has endangered Glover, who is a tireless worker in support of students and student-oriented issues.
AND ALL OF this in the name of petty politics. Ignoring the fact that western Lawrence is much newer and less cohesive than the areas of the Oread neighborhood that changed districts, the Republicans instead have moved to latch on to another Republican district in any way possible.
Fortunately, there still is hope. An error in the reapportionment bill will give the Democrats another chance to stop the bill in the House, and Gov. John Carlin will have the opportunity to veto the bill.
But it is unfortunate that those moves will be needed. The Republicans in the House have let their thirst for more political caches get the best of them, and in the process have seriously damaged the ability of students at KU to get a fair hearing in the Legislature.
That is a move that students should remember if those same Republicans ever come asking for their vote.
In a memorandum to President Carter last week, Schlesinger called for a five-year government program to promote the technology and use of power from the sun.
What common sense could not do, increasing oil prices worldwide did. Namely, move Energy Secretary James Schlesinger to increase the development of increased development of solar energy.
Carter holds power to tap the sun
Schlesinger, a former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission and a continuous lobbyist for oil and gas companies, recom- mented $3 billion be allocated to fund the program.
The money would be used to provide tax and credit assistance to producers and consumers of solar projects such as hot water systems and industrial project uses and industrial use projects.
If the program is implemented, it is estimated that U.S. reliance on solar power to meet energy needs would almost double from the current 5.4 percent to 10.6 percent.
But one should not be fooled into thinking the administration will advocate rapid development of solar energy. Indeed, before Schlesinger issued his memo, top officials in the Department of Energy argued about taking this new stance on energy policy.
SCHLESINGER'S sudden interest in solar energy ostensibly is the result of the halt in oil production by Iran, the continuous dwindling supplies and supplies increased fossil fuel prices.
Solar proponents both surprised and pleased by Schlesinger's enlightenment and belief in his action was a big step toward getting the power he wanted for the development of solar power. The surprise memo is expected to influence Carter greatly in his decisions on solar technology.
A LOOK at the facts reveals how long the acceptance of solar energy as a legitimate power source has taken and how far it has yet to go.
The energy department has projected that only 8 to 12 percent of U.S. energy needs could be met by solar power by the year 2000. But the *Press's* council on Environmental Quality has predicted that only 30 percent could meet 25 percent of our needs by then.
Of the $2.7 billion proposed by the energy department for research and development of nuclear energy, $1.3 billion was allocated for nuclear energy research while only $50 million was paged for exploration
---
Phillip Garcia
Jack O'Leary, Department of Energy deputy secretary, and said earlier that construction of nuclear power facilities would be delayed in 1979. "Moreover, in a speech last October to the American Public Power Association, Mr. O'Leary declared that solar energy had no place in this century.
PERHAPS MOST disturbing is the energy department's aburrd practice of awarding solar energy research contracts to energy companies. The agency is dealing with electricity and nuclear power.
In November, the Department of Energy awarded a utility and nuclear power company $500,000 to change electricity rates in Michigan. The company also received energy use. The company's executive committee chairman is a major shareholder in the Virginia Electric and Power Company.
Just as distressing is the ability of oil and gas companies, through the power of the almighty corporate dollar, to envelop more innovative solar energy firms.
Exxon was one of the top 10 companies earning largest revenues from solar sales in 2016 and leading the company. Tyco Laboratories and SES Systems are acquired by Mobil and Shell. Yet these same oil companies continue to run adverger relationships with the high cost of developing oil reserves.
THEME HAS not been a legitimate reason for the neglect of converting the sam's app to a web version.
The potential power from the sun is astounding.
It is estimated that 14 days of sunshine contain enough heat to equal the energy of a single cloud.
Unlike the high cost and potential dangers of waste from nuclear power plants, solar
energy is clean and provides a continuous supply of power.
It is also believed to be cheaper to supply 10,000 homes with solar water-heating facilities than to build generating plants to do the same thing electrically.
SOLAR ENERGY is being used more and more to supply power to homes. More than 50,000 solar-powered dwellings exist nationwide.
But there are problems in attaining solar power.
Solar energy has yet to be widely accepted as a legitimate energy source and thus there is no mass production of solar systems. The reason for this is that monopoly by corporate energy companies.
But the impetus for mass development and use of solar energy can be provided by the Carter administration. For too long rays from the sun have fallen untapped. There is a proposal to spend $4 billion by 1985 on the Carter need only review the current energy situation and his choice should be evident. Now is the time to develop solar energy.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
U.S. shouldn't encourage bilingualism
To the editor:
Both Phil Garcia and John Scott make good points in their discussions, but we believe that they have missed the most serious ramifications of bilingual education.
It is good to see that the intellectuals of this great institute of higher education have time to turn from the pressing issue of discord between the two cultures in important problems of bilingualism in America.
There are numerous nations on the map today—Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Finland, France, Italy, Spain, the United Kingdom and Germany. We know that a degree from being polyvictor political entities
Canada, as we now know it, may be coming to a sad end. Why should we en-
large our borders?
If there is a need for an extensive and expensive English-language program in the school, you can
No one objects to second languages or cultural diversity. We encourage both. We do object, however, to cultural separatism and to not likely outcome of bilateral education.
Like it or not, and we happen to, English is the working language of the United States. No American should be without the skills and function in an English-speaking society.
Let's prevent it while we can
Some of the authors of this letter own guns and some don't. But we all agree that law-abiding citizens have the right to own firearms, whether the reasons be for interest in their sport or protection. Restricting guns by registration or confiscation will in no way keep them out of the hands of the criminal element. Instead, the opportunity and incentive for black market operations will be created. The greater risk to our own safety is small in comparison to the personal loss that could suffer, whether we are gun owners or not.
Andy Warren Mission senior Robert Green Hays senior
Bilingual education sounds ornamente like separate but equal to us, and the last thing we need is to become a bilingual nation like Canada.
I's invest taxpayer money in it on our own citizens rather than here on campus. No one should begin studying anything but English until he is proficient in it.
Gun restriction laws infringement of rights To the attorney
In regard to the dramatic letter by Kevin Kennedy that was printed in the University Daily Kansan, in which he repeatedly was accused of stealing a $10 million salary, Kennedy, because a person possessing his narrow-minded and distorted views would not stand, but to the more reasonable majority.
It would be nice if criminals would turn in their guns, but no one realistically expects this to happen. The reasonable solution for reducing crime is to keep repeat criminal offenders locked up, rather than to make it more difficult for honest citizens to possess firearms than for criminals to. Confiscation of guns would do just that, and mandatory
KANSAN letters
registration could be the first step. When guns are outlawed, only outwalls will have guns. Think about it. We hope it won't happen—if it does our Constitution is good.
Robert Jackson
Topeka senior
and four others
Article about disco overly opinionated
To the editor.
In response to Doug Hitchcock's antidiscope article which appeared in the Feb. 23 issue of the University Daily Kanusan, I am aware that the photographer is totally and treasonously opposed.
Had Hitchcock taken time to investigate his story in earnest, he might have had a credible story. He didn't. His story speaks best for itself; "The formula melodies, absurd lyrics and computerized rhythms are impersonal, sterile and boring... The real substance is tables violating state and federal intoxication levels, staring. Staring at you, staring into space, staring at the dance floor . . . Lines of people jerk and twist their way through amazingly repetitive group dance steps . . . the sexually unpredictable undulating drum beats and waaling synthesizers, all at incredible volumes."
A reporter who blatantly judges his story subject should become an editorialist. He can be a music roller. The spasmity and personalism of artists is, in my opinion, fantastic. Yet I can honestly say that I've really enjoyed myself as a journalist and I enjoy release and libration of dancing is nothing
I believe that discos are not the irredeemable dens of inequity that Hitchcock painted them, and I resent his use of a supposedly credible medium for his unbelievably opionated and exaggerated "news" story.
to be sneered at, Hitchcock, no matter how it is performed. Funky, tight music is generally not meant to be taken too seriously, it is just plain fun.
These gross distortions and leaps of logic defy explanation.
I consider going to discos a type of recreation, just as going to rock concerts, art shows or even going to the zoo is. There are many places where I can go with discos and I remember the story's implications.
An allegiance to rock 'n' roll does not require a running battle with dissident black music. His paranoia over disco and what spurred his vindictive article. Wouldn't anyone dance to the same sounds?
Stacev Lane
Shawnee sophomore
Disco, rock 'n' roll can exist together
To the editor:
First, I must commend Conkey on an excellent job. As one letter to the editor sarcastically stated, her, piece was a "pierring insight," and it truly was. Conkey was right on the mark with every point she made concerning the backward state of Lawrence's disco establishments. Hopefully this will help us realize in this town and put Lawrence back in the rest of the country in supplying its populace with a colorful nightlife.
The minute I started reading Katherine Conkey's piece on Lawrence's disco establishments (Feb. 16 Kansan), I just knew that the Kansan would come through with this controversial and all-important subject of disco; enter Doug Hitchcock's voice of dissent in the following Friday's edition. After reading both pieces and carefully weighing all the facts put forth, I decided to show my two cents worth onto the dance floor.
I was also impressed with Hitchcock's article, which was also well-written and raised many well-taken points. However, Hitchcock is fighting a blind cause. Like so many other supporters of the soon-to-be legendary adage "disco suck," Hitchcock has written that disco's merits as a viable music against Compare disco to rock 'n' roll is like comparing the drumming of Buddy Rich to that of Keith Moon, or the dancing of
What Hitchcock and others like him fail to understand that is disco is nothing more than an entertainment medium, a welcome form of escapism - certainly not a threat to rock 'n' roll that it stands for. In the words of the Showman, "Il," meaning rock 'n' roll, "will stand." Disco is a harmless form of energy release, an opportunity to entertain, but a chance to tap our toes without it to sit and think about what we're tapping our toes to.
Disco serves its purpose and rock 'n' roll serves a purpose. There's no reason why disco and rock can't live side by side without one bothering the other.
Mikhail Baryshnik to, of that, dare I say, John Travolta. Disco and rock are such different and distinct forms that com-
panies are not possible, let alone necessary.
As for the so-called "decadence" that surrounds disco, there was a time when music fans had to buy their records in plain brown wrappers and sneak into dark, boisterous clubs with the favorite performers. These performers played a brand of music we now call "jazz."
I admit that when the Ramones record a disco track we may very well be in trouble, but in the meantime, Hitchcock (may I call you Doug?), I'll see you at the Opera House on Friday, and maybe I'll bump into you on dance floor at Shenanigan's on Saturday.
Irwin Brown
So. Orange, N.J. sophomore
Music Director, KJHK-FM
SIMPLE!
1930
*MASKED MANAGER* IF YOU CAN'T FIRE AN INCOMPETENT STATEEMPLOYEE, HOW DO YOU GET YOUR WORK DONE?
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 affluent, please include a portrait. The should include the writer's class and home or town faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
Letters Policy
STATE U.
WE TAKE AWAY PART OF
HIS DUTIES AND ADD 'EM
COMPETENT STAFFER OF
THE SAME CLASSIFICATION
PUBLIC LIBRARY
DOES THE COMPETENT ONE GET PAID MORE FOR DOING MORE WORK?
$ \mathrm{O H}, \mathrm {N O} _ {2} $
BY T. M. ASLA
A
SO,EFFECT THE
COMPETENT WORKER
IS PUNISHED FOR HIS
COMPETENCE!
THEY GET EXTRA BROWNIE POINTS
UU
BY MARSHALL GREEN
and ROBERT A. FEAREY
Features
Population rate a threat
WASHINGTON—A report by the United States Bureau of the Census and an earlier one by two University of Chicago demographers that say the world's population growth rate has been unfortunally misinterpretted.
It appears that the rate of growth of the world's population declined from 2 percent around 1970 to 1.8 to 1.9 percent by 1977. This is a welcome and important development. But it does not imply that the world population problem is significantly easing, or even over. the overwhelming reality, unfortunately, is that the present world population is growing at a rate pressing heavily on this planet's resources and environment, will certainly double, and may triple, barring horrendous disasters.
Since 40 to 45 percent of the developing world's population is under 15 years of age, the built-in momentum of future growth is enormous, even if fertility rates fall more widely and rapidly than they already have.
THE LEVEL at which world population ultimately will stabilize will depend heavily on the determination and the skill with which the world addresses the problem. The progress achieved since the early 1860s in awareness of populational problems and in reduction of births in some countries is highly welcome.
Nevertheless, population growth is far too rapid in too many developing countries, substantially offsetting economic gains, impairing the health of mothers and children. It's better life for generations to come. Aside from the dangers of famine and environmental deterioration, perhaps the most explosive consequence of continuing high population growth rates is large-scale development, especially in urban areas.
DEVELOPMENT IS proceeding slowly or not at all in most developing countries. Where it is occurring, it is frequently unbalanced, bringing little benefit to the population and reducing impact on fertility. Fertility reduction without the stimulus of widely shared development benefits is usually a protracted process, resulting in stabilization of populations in many developing countries after long delay and at very high levels.
Government programs are therefore a key factor in accelerating progress, and it is the consensus of our embassies around the world that in such programs the following factors deserve emphasis: leadership commitment; family planning; employment; and assistance pandued use of paramedics; improved status and decision involvement of women; research for better means of contraception; emphasis on population goals in social and economic development; a raise in the age of marriage, especially for women; and improved organ health. Government administration of population programs.
OF ALL, these factors, committing leaders and advancing the status of women are perhaps the most important. The need for proaches are being introduced or are under consideration, for example, in the field of community incentives, that offer greater benefits to women.
Those of us who regard excessive population growth as probably the most fundamental threat facing mankind reject unwarranted suggestions that the problem is resolving itself, just as we reject counsels of despair that nothing significant can be done about it. Much is being done by agencies and urgent expansion of effort if the world is to avoid unprecedented deprivation and turmoil.
Marshall Green is the State Department's coordinator of population affairs. Robert A. Farey is his special assistant.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(US$ 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August Through May Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday weekend. Students may pay $13 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $24 a year in Knoxville. Student tuition is fee only.
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 69045
Editor
Barry Massey
Managing Editor
Direk Steimel
Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Assistant Campus Editors
Editorial Editor
John Whitlesden
Mary Hoenk
Peter Mauwen
Carol Huntley
Caroil Huntley
Business Manager Karen Wenderott
Retail Sales Manager Bri Allman
Advertising Manager Bri Milton
Classified Advertising Manager Kitty McHannon
Assistant Classified Advertising Manager Duncan Butt
Advertising Manager Cup Manager
Staff Artist Dahlin Cavarozzi
Staff Photographer Gina Bridges
Personnel Manager Daria Delphi
Representatives Allen Bluth, Brian Kawl, Janice Knotha,
Brooks Parton, Cindy Ray, Allan Brodick
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
)
Monday, March 5. 1979
JOHN WILSON
Staff photo by CHRIS TODE
Between acts
Singer, Overland Park parkhomore, belts the refrain of Cabaret, one of the many songs performed by the In Between Acts players on Friday and Saturday nights at the Overland Park Civic Center. (Judy McGregor)
variety acts to entertain the audience while the next show set up, introduced the 1979 edition of Rock Chalk, sustained the entertainment and concluded the two evenings of
Story about mob wins best Rock Chalk performance
By MARK L. OLSON
Staff Reporter
A wall-sized computer, a gaudity-dressed Cupid and a gang of Chicago mobsters were some of the winners in the 1798 edition of Rock Chalk Revue.
Friday and Saturday night's performances in Hoch Auditorium represented six months of work that the four groups had put into their shows.
At the awards ceremony Saturday night, however, it was the Delta Gamma-Alpha team that won the Skirt, or 50 Years to Lose Your Lover," who won the award for the best overall
The DG-AKL performance was a 1920s story of a Chicago mob whose latest bank robber was an undercover mob leader's girlfriend, Charmagme, (Juliette) Overland Park (Kayla) turned in the mob.
The highlight of the DG-AKL show was the
anties of Tony's mother, Rosa (Trish Hoffman, Omaha, Neba, junior), who used her tent-like skirt to hide the escape-minded gang.
The Delta Gamma-Alpha Kappa Lambda team did not win any of the five awards
The most dynamic performance of the revue was given by John Hoffer, Medicine Lodge senior, who played the god of Love in "Jane," and Omega Cheng, "B.E. Sees De Light."
Hoffer won the best performer award for his zany role.
THE EVIL COMPUTER scientist, Dr.B.E. De Lighted, (Boo Hodges, Salina junior), had eliminated that emotion and replaced it with analytical thought after being jilted by the cleaning lady, Shauna Mahoney, Overland Park junior.
Mark Robinson, Kirkwood, Mo., senior,
won the award for the best original song
from his debut album *Punch* (2014).
Love." a tender love song performed by Robinson as the boy-king, Tut, and Anne Aylmer. Salisbury, Mo., sophomore, as the servant girl he wants to marry.
Robinson wrote the music for this year's Delta Delta Delta-Phi Gamma Delta show, "Till the Pyramids Fall, or It's Nile or Never."
THE AWARD FOR THE best technical show went to the DU-Ch O team for its wall-sized computer used by Dr. B.E. De Lightened Institute of Marriage Programming.
The DUCH-O show also won the award for the best production number with "B.E. De Lighted," set to the tune of the song "chorus from Handel's 'Messiah.'"
The adaptation for that number was done by Doug Ferguson, Wichita senior. Ferguson wrote the music for two previous DU shows, as well as this year's show.
The award for best script was given to the
Not to be forgotten were the lively performances of the In Between Acts players; choreographed by Sherry Anderson, Evergreen, Colo., junior.
University Daily Kansan
From the opening vailbarrage between Beaufort Woods, Lawrence senior, and conductor Dave Southern, Kemilworth III, Dr. Hancock, William III, Pierre, St. Charles, III, sophomore, and Jerome Dahane St. Louis sophomore; the song and special type of song and dance entertained.
Checks delayed for 15 veterans
The program is an EXTRA for cadets who can qualify to become Air Force pilots through Air Force units. "It during the senior year in college, FIP is the first step for the cadet who is going on to Air Force jet pilot training."
By LESLIE GUILD Staff Reporter
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 flight lessons in small aircraft of a civil operated aircraft.
DO YOU WANT TO FLY?
Fifteen KU students who receiv-
ebalanced benefits from the GI Bill did not
enter a job in the U.S.
This is all reserved for the caddie who wants to get his off the ground, with Air Force silver pilot wings or an ABS wing.
Face it you've always wanted to fly! Many of us have had the feeling and for some it has never gone away
**GAME ON K in our LOOP**
*Stephenson and Juniors* Apply now for the 2 year ROTC Program. Get an appointment when you graduate. See if you qualify Call Capt. John Mackenzie, 844-647-6019 or at the Military Science Building Room 128
Henry said he heard of the change last week after checking with the VA about the changes.
Henry said the change affected 15 students at KU who were receiving GI fill in training.
None of the 15 has received money since the seminar began, he said, and each person had been given cash.
"A COUPLE OF students came to my office to report that their checks hadn't come yet," be said, "So I checked with the regional office in Wichita and found out that students will have to submit original forms in order to comply with the change."
Henry said authentication would have to be done by the Lawrence VA office, 2323 E. 10th St.
DO YOU WANT TO FLY!
Jim Henry, director of veterans services for the University of Kansas, said Friday that he did not know when the checks would come.
"In the past, the VA has accepted copies of discharge form as proof of completion of service by the VA because of some押金 discharge certification the country, the VA now will accept only the original discharge form or a copy that is authenticated by a representative of the country."
Henry said the delay was caused by a change in the way the Veterans Administration processed requests for educational funds this year.
John Binder, a spokesman for the VA in Wichita, said he was not sure when the Wichita office had been informed of the procedural change. However, he said no checks had been processed after the interview. It ended on Friday, dated Feb. 7, was received from Washington.
"THE CIRCULAR informed us of the
change and of what could now be used as acceptable evidence of completion of the task.
AIR FORCE
"FOR THOSE students, I think this is a really serious matter," he said.
"I think it is really awful that the VA did not inform them affected," Fay said. "It is bad enough that they made a change in their care for the period and before the awarding of funds."
Fay said that he was not dependent on GI bill money to stay in school, but that he would be able to pay his bills.
Binder also said students affected by the change should have been notified.
"Although it hasn't been indicated in a number of cases, in some, students are told that they are expected to
Henry said he had made arrangements with the office of financial aid at KU for students to get short-term loans until their checks arrive.
Binder said special payment of benefits to students who showed an immediate need for money could be made through the VA office in Wichita.
However, Ted Fay. had not received any student, said he had not received any
"THE LENGTH of time involved will depend on how long it takes for us to get the correct information," he said. "Any student who is not receiving his check should send us an authenticated copy of the original document." The case can proceed with getting his check to him."
However, Fay said he originally had sent an acceptable copy and then called the VA in Wichita to find out the status of his request.
ROTC
"They told me they couldn't find my file and that they would call me back in a
Fay said he thought he would probably send another authenticated copy to Wichita, but he was not counting on getting a check for months.
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University Daily Kansan
Project to ease mainstreaming
By MARK GATES Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas is trying to make mainstreaming easier for teachers.
KU is directing a three-year project to train music in children and teach children who will be included in classical music classes.
Mainstreaming is the inclusion of handicapped children in regular classroom activities.
The law provides for:
Handicapped children are guaranteed a place in regular classrooms with their peers because of Public Law 941-82.
- Legal safeguards and due process in the evaluation of handicapped children
- Placement in the “least restrictive environment” allowing the handicapped child to stay in normal school.
- Development of an individual educational plan for each handicapped child.
- Formal plans to be made by every state and locality
so that handicapped children are included in regular classrooms.
IF SCHOOLS fail to comply, federal funding will be withheld.
George Duerkens, professor of music education, is in charge of an eight-person staff working on the federally funded Music Mainstreaming Project. Duerkens received a grant for the project last September.
KU provides between 10 and 20 percent of the project's $150 000 cost, he said.
"Many teachers feel inadequate because they do not understand the mind set of the handicapped student." Deuerken said recently. "We hope to bridge that communication gap by developing slide presentations to help teachers understand the child's world and to show how to meet their needs.
"Greater flexibility and adaptability is required of instructors. Handicapped children vary in needs. Some are crippled or blind or deaf or slightly retarded or have hearing impairments or limitations do not affect the child's academic potential."
KANSAS HAS had a law similar to the federal law since
compliance warten greatly among school district.
DISTRICT.
Lawrence schools have complied with the Kauai law for some time, said Don Herbel, director of special services at the school.
The federal law requires a committee to develop the child's educational plan, something not required by the state law. The committees are to include teachers, administrators, parents, and if possible, the child.
"H handicapped kids are placed in the classroom to whatever extent they are capable of functioning." Herbel said. "We try to integrate them into the mainstream as much as possible without hurting their education."
The project also will help music teachers deal with emotionally disturbed children in large classes.
"Traditional preparation for teachers has not involved working with handicapped children," he said. "What teachers are really asking for is a better means of teaching to students who are less experienced and setting will lead to the best education for them."
Carlin criticizes bill to realign districts
TOPEKA-Gov. John Carlin. Friday criticized legislation that would change voting districts throughout Kansas but stopped short of saying he would veto the bill.
The bill would change the boundaries of the 125 districts that comprise the Kansas State.
An amended form of the bill, which tentatively passed the House last week, would divide the KU student voting population, from the nonvoting support for Democratic State Rep. Mike Glover.
Glover has said the amendment represented an attempt to gerrymander students and would threaten his chances for reelection.
State Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, who proposed the amendment, said it would bring the western parts of Lawrence together in one district.
Carlin agreed with Glover that the amendment was a political move.
"I'm quite concerned with the changes made on the floor of the House," Carlin said. "It's pretty obvious there is nothing but pure politics involved."
Carlin said technical changes in the bill would have to be made before it would materialize.
"I hope the House will not assume it does with its map drawing," he said.
(1)
"Good food, good social life and it's right across the street from Quigley Field and Allen Field House."
John Spottswood Gladstone, Missouri Senior
Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith BUF
But Carlin said he had not made a decision on whether he would not the bill as it was.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"I just want the ball game fair and balanced," he said.
Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features
Lawrence police reported an armed robbery and two burglaries over the weekend. The Douglas County Sheriff's office responded to a double burglary at Douglas County State Lake Saturday.
Police Beat
BURGLARIES
Lawrence police said jewelry valued at $1,075 and coins valued at $219 had been stolen from a residence in the 2800 block of Schwartz Road late Friday.
ARMED ROBBERY
—Compiled by David Edds
The police said the occupants of the
residence had returned home early
Saturday morning and found a window
with a small porch.
Lawrence police and the Burns Retail liquor stores, 1917 W. 24th, had been searched.
They said a 35 mm camera valued at $200 and jewelry valued at $190 belonging to Sarah M. Sherman, Chagrin Falls, Ohio, been stolen from the unlocked apartment.
Lawrence police said an apartment at 145 Tennessee St., had been burglarized.
According to police, the men entered the score at about 11 p.m. and one of them held a rifle.
The two men got away with $60 in cash and a half pint of liquor.
The police said last night they had no one in custody in connection with the robbery.
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3 KU students plead not guilty
Three KU students were arraigned Friday in Douglas County District Court on charges stemming from several thefts in August and September.
The students are Philip Anderson and Paul O'Connor, Galesburg, Ill., sophomores, and Larry McNeil, Lawrence sophomore.
The three pleaded not guilty to the charges. Anderson will face trial in the Douglas County District Court March 14, OConnor and McNeill will be adjourned April 30.
Anderson is charged with two counts of burglary and two counts of theft in connection with a break-in at KU's design studio. The Dalary Bairn on West 19th Street last August.
He is accused also of stealing film equipment from Jolliffe Hall in September. O'Connor is charged with aiding in that theft.
O'Connor and McNeil are charged with the theft of a motorcycle in September in 2015.
The three are free on bail.
Jury trial set for 16-year-old
A 16-year-old youth, Charles Hunter, 1234 Tennessee St., will face a jury trial April 18. Hunter is charged with 14 felonies in contempt of court and arraignments, and sexual assaults in December.
Hunter stood mute to the charges during his formal arraignment Friday before Douglas County District Court Judge James Paddock.
The judge entered a plea of not guilty for Hunter for each charge.
Hunter is being tried as an adult
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University Daily Kansan
Mondav. March 5. 1979
7
OU is conference champ
Bv JOHN P. THARP.
KU's basketball season is over.
After losing the championship of the Big Eight Conference Post-Season Tournament to Oklahoma 80-45 Saturday, Kansas failed to get an NCAA at large bid yesterday.
KU didn't even get one of 24 bids offered yesterday by the National Invitation Committee.
Poor outside shooting—the abominable flaw that plagued KU through the first half of the season—returned unscheduled like a killer. Kansas City's KKer Pamera Saturday night.
"We couldn't get an outside shot down, KU coach Ted Owens said after failing to capture his first post-season tournament crown.
Kansas hat a miserable 33.7 percent from the field, hitting only 30 of 89 attempts. The Sooners, en route to Dallas at the NCAA playoffs, shot a respectable 52 percent.
FIVE OU PLAYERS were in double figures, led by big AI Beal, the tournament's most valuable player, who scored 23 points and caught 22 rebounds.
"Beal was the catalyst of a lot of things they did," Darnell Valentine said Saturday.
Valentine turned in one of his poorest performances of the season, hitting only three home runs.
But Paul Mokesi and David Magley, both selected to the all-tournament team, and Wilmore Fowler had good performances. Mokesi finished with 21 points and 14 rebounds. Magley had a career-high 16 steals in a season, which combined to make 50 percent of their attempts, unlike the rest of the team. Boost Neal, John Crawford, Tony Guy and
Valentine could only make seven of their 39 attempts.
Friday, Kansas beat Missouri 76-73 in the semifinal, shooting 44 percent from the field. In that contest, Mokeski and Valentine each had 19 points, but it was the 28 points by the bench—Magley, Power and Mac Skilchup—that kept KU in the contest.
'THE'S NOT that much difference between the starting line-up and the bench,' she said.
Without the bench, mainly Magley, KU wouldn't have made it to the finals of the tournament. Magley, Mr. Basketball last year in Indiana, combined a knack to score immediately upon entering the game with outside shooting and gun penetration.
But his impressive statistics and all-tournament selection didn't matter much to him. "I don't think I can handle it."
"All that is not much consolation when you lose the game," a solemn Magley said. We lost, that's the important thing. Personally, we didn't, if I did, it's a great way to end the season."
BUT OKLAHOMA'S season is still going.
The Sooners advance to NCAA play for the first time in 32 years. Oklahoma beat Utah 14-9, and fourth victory over the Wildcats this season.
Agreeing, Valentine said, "It was probably the toughest loss this year due to the fact that it might be the end of the season."
"We're really fortunate to beat that team four times,"OU coach Dave Dixel said."It's a quirk.We might play them six more times and they might win five of six."
But Oklahoma, 20-9, will be playing Texas
Saturday. With as balanced a performance against the Longhorns of the Sooners had against the Jayhawks, the game should be interesting.
Sooners Ray Whitley and John McCullough, the league's most valuable player, also were named to the all-tournament team. They combined for 32 points against Kansas. Beal was awesome in the two games. He collected 40 points, 32 goals and 8 shocks shot to help the Sooners gain respectability in a sport besides football.
"WERE A GOOD shooting队, "Bliss said, "but sometimes a team that lives by the sword dies by it. By sometimes, we go with the shooting and not get it."
"We just couldn't put anything down tonight, really couldn't," Valentine said.
Mokeski said he liked Oklahoma's chances in the NCAA.
"I think the whole team went out and played as hard as we could," Valentine said, "and we don't have anything to be ashamed of.
But Oklahoma got Saturday what KU couldn't get—the ball through the hoop.
"If they shoot as well as they did tonight,
'they'll go far.' Mokes said. 'They're a
male target.'
"Anytime you play hard and come up short, it's tough to lose."
Jayhawks . . .
From page one
"The season had a lot to do with the decision," Sanders said. "It's been disappointing in terms of results. We have盯 up the team as a constant effort by everybody involved.
"Some players said it was a disappointing season and would be tough to go on. You can't go to a tournament and try to win it when the people aren't behind it."
BOOTY NEAL, a sophomore who started in KU's 76-31 victory over Missouri in the semifinal game and also in the final contest, had to be moved when he learned KU didn't receive an NIT bid.
"That's crazy," he said. "I don't know what happened. It kind of hurts a little bit. It's been a long year and I thought we might have gotten an NIT bid."
"I'm not worried that much about the post-season," he said. "I have so much to work on for next year. Hopefully, the people in a much-improved ball team next year."
Starter Tony Guy, a member of United Press International's Conference All-Freshman team, said he was trying to get around any more post-season play out of his mind.
Reserve Mac Stallcup, who came off the bench against Missouri to tie his career-high nine points and six rebounds, said it was too much for him. But Stallcup put the NIT in perspective.
"THE NCAA—that's the national title," he said. "That that's what's everybody's shooting for. Everybody thought we were going to lose." And we thought we were going to Dallas."
The Big Eight representative to the NCAA plays its first game in Dallas.
Stallcup, eching Sanders said that the season had been long, with many ups and downs.
Some of the downs were close games. KU lost five games by three or fewer points.
"We were a couple of points away from getting the NCAA bid, and winning the Big Eight championship," Sanders said. "That just amplifies our disappointment."
Owens could not be reached for comment about the team meeting. One of the players said Owens had abused by a playervisionation had Kansas been offered an NIT bid
"It was a hard decision to make," Sanders said.
"It was just tough to make."
Tourney pairings bring Sycamores to KU Sunday
From Staff and Wire Reports
San Marcos, CA - Reporter
Indiana State No. 14637
the nation's chosen to ailen艾克垦房。
What has been speculation turned to fact yesterday when the NCAA selection committee finished its 41st annual tournament pairings by awarding 17 at-large berths.
The top-ranked Sycamores get an automatic bye for the Midwest Region.
In first round games, Virginia Tech, 21-8,
plays Jacksonville, 10-19 Indiana State.
In second round games, Florida State,
Missouri Valley Conference, plays the
winner of that game March 11 in the second
Weber State, 24-8, plays New Mexico State, 22-9, March 9 in the other first-round contest. Arkansas, seeded No. 2, plays the winner of that game March 11. The Razorbacks, 23-4, are ranked ninth in the nation.
Tickets for the games in Lawrence on sale on this morning at 8:30 in Allen Field House.The cost is $7 for each of the two nights.
THE TWO WINNING teams from the second round here join the two winning teams in a second round advance to Cincinnati for the Midwest Regional semifinals and finals March 15 and May 27.
From there the action goes to the National championship series March 24 and 28 in Salt Lake City.
The Sooners, 20-9, not only won the conference race outright by finishing with a 14- record, two games better than anyone else, but went on to win three straight games in the three-year old post season tournament. The Sooners defeated defeated Kansas 80-65 for the championship.
Two berthes remained to be filled, the Mid-American Conference. The contended state was the palachan State and Furniar in the Southern and Toledo and Central Michigan in the Mid-
Second teams from a conference were placed in the same half of the bracket as the champion to prevent two teams from one championship playing for the national championship.
Oklahoma, winner of the Big Eight's NCAA basketball playoff bid, will head to Dallas for a second-round game with football rival Texas Saturday.
The Longhorns finished with a 21-7 record under the expert and humorous guidance of Dr. William E. Brown, a longtime member of the team.
THIS IS THE first-time since 1947 that the football-oriented Sooners have sent a team to the NCAA. That team did well enough to win, but not enough to coach Bruce Brake, and had a 42-kr record.
SOUTHERN CAL, Detroit and Duke were among the 17 teams awarded at-large invitations Sunday to the expanded tournament.
North Carolina, winner of the Atlantic Coast Conference post-season tourney, was in second-place Notre Dame, an at-large entry, was given the top seeding in the tournament.
ference; Rutgers, the Eastern Eight champion; Connecticut, the New England ECAC winner; Penn, the Ivy League champion; Georgetown, the ECAC Souther-Upstate New York champion; Iona, ECAC Metro winner; Virginia Tech, Metro Conference winner; University of the pacific, Pacific Coast Athletic Association champion; Jacksonville, winner of the Sun Belt tournament, San Francisco, the West Coast Athletic conference champion, and Brigham Young the Western Athletic Conference titlist.
Last year's NCAA 32 team bracket has been expanded to 40 teams. All Division conferences received automatic qualifications. The 16 conferences, including the Big Eight, with the best nondose percentage in tournament play over the past five years, received first-round byes. The remaining automatic qualifying conferences, independent and second conference teams.
Automatic qualifiers in the tournament so far include: Michigan State of the Big Ten; Texas A&M; and Stanford.
Two of the most powerful teams from the Midwest Region DePaul and Marquette, who have been in the league since 2015.
KANSAN Sports
TIME OUT 2:26 SOOMERS
J HAWKS
63 PERIOD 73
PLAYER FOULS TEAM FOULS 7 PLAYER FOULS TEAM FOULS 5
KAWSAS
14
ERENCE
In the West Regional, Pac-10 champion and third-ranked UCLA was seeded No. 1.
First-round action begins Friday at four locations.
Determined Darnell
KU's Darnell Vernail sleeps into the air and slams into OU'%k John McCullough for an offensive foul on Saturday's Big Eight conference post season tournament championship game in Kansas City's Kemper Arena. KU beat Missouri 76-73 in the
NCAA Basketball Pairings
By United Press International
semifinals, and OU beat Kansas State 72-48. The Sooners, regular season champs, went on to a 86-45 victory over KU, which ended Kansas' basketball season and sentOU to the NCAA playoffs for a game Saturday with Texas in Dallas.
Numbers in parentheses indicate a team's seeding within a reign.
EAST REGIONAL.
Temple 25-3 (7) vs. St. John's 18-10 (10); Iona 23-4 (6) vs.
Penna 21-9
Georgetown 24-3 (2) vs. Rutgers 21-6 (6); Syracuse 25-3
vs. Connecticut 21-7 (6).
Ison-Pennerwitt v. North Carolina 32-5 (1); Temple-Sk.
Jon's winner v. Dukke 27-6 (1).
Tennessee, Tenn.
Detroit 21-5 (7) vs. Lamar 20-8 (10), Tennessee 30-1 (1)
vs. Eastern Kentucky 21-9 (7).
LRSI 23-8) vs. Southern Conference winner—ether Apple
Arizona game; euther Tokyo endgame—a conference竞接—ether Todosela endgame
Wether State 24-4 (7) vs. New Mexico State 22-9 (10)
Virginia Tech 21-6 (8) vs. Jacksonville 15-10 (9)
MIDEAST REGIONAL
Tennessee 108, Miami 72, Notre Dame
Tennessee 108, Detroit 74, Michigan 114 (12).
Detailed L-lane winner in Michigan 114 (12).
Louisville 28-3 (1) vs. Southern Alabama 20-6 (6); Texas 21-4 (1) vs. Oklahoma 20-9 (5).
March 11 at Murfreesboro, Tenn.
Virginia Tech-jacksonville winner vs. Indiana State 29-48
Walter State-Nevada State winners vs. Arkansas 31-45
Regional Semifinals and Finals March 15, 17 at Philadelphia
March 10 at Bloomington, Ind.
MIDWEST REGIONAL
LA Aggie Baskets
Southern Cal 194-197 (10), Utah State 194-198 (10), Utah 206-99
vs. Pepperdine 214-199 (9)
WEST REGIONAL
Ua-Ilu-Pepperson winner vs. UCLA 24-11 (1); Southern Cal-
Ua-IluState winner vs. DePaul 24-2(1).
Marquette 21-0 (3) vs. Pacific 18-1 (6); San Francisco
14-2 vs. Virginia Young 18-7 (5).
Regional Semifinals and Finals March 15-17 at Provo, Utah
Alcorn, Ohio State lead 24-team NIT
NEW YORK (UPI)—Undefeated Alcorn State, 17-ranked Ohio State and defending national champion Kentucky head the 24-team field announced yesterday for the upcoming National Invitation Tournament.
The only spot in the field still undecided is the representative from the Mid-American Conference. Toledo and Central Michigan still have to play Tuesday night for the title, with the NCAA to the NCAA and the looser to the NIT.
The tournament will feature three teams from the Big Ten - Ohio State, No. 18 Purdue and Indiana, three from the Atlantic Coast Conference - Maryland, Clemson and Virginia; three from the Southeast Conference - Kentucky, Alabama and two from the Soutwest Alabama; and two from the Soutwest Alabama and Texas Tech and Texas A&M
THE NIT, the oldest of the post-season tournaments, will begin at various sites around the country and finish up with the Madison Square Garden March 19 and 21, Madison Square Garden March 19 and 21.
The other teams selected were Rhode Island, Oregon State, Wagner, Old Dominion, St. Joseph's, St. Bonaventure, Dayton, New Mexico, and Nebraska-Robe.
Play begins Thursday night, with
seven first-round games being played. The remaining 10 teams will play their first-rounds Friday night.
Purdue was one of the three teams tied for the Big Ten lead with a 134 conference record. The NCAA, which has a championship in Iowa and in Michigan State, both with higher national rankings, and that led Purdue for the NIT, Otto State, which led the conference until the second-to-last season, finished fourth in the standings.
The NIT committee was said to have been counting on St. John's as a local selection, but the Redman, 18,100 were a clear target. The NCAC chose which elected to take part in the NIT after the snub. St. John's lost to Iona in the ECAC final after narrowly defeating
National Invitation Tournament Pairings By United Press International
Nevada-Reno, 18a to Oregon State, 18.9
Colorado, 18.9 to Oklahoma State, 18.9
Joseph, 19a to Ostate State, 17.4
Charleston, 16a to Kentucky, 18-11
Charlotte, 18-11 to Alabama, 18-11
Santa Barbara, 18a at Arizona, 18a
Bonaventure, 18a at Arizona, 18a
Acorn State, 20 at Michigan State, 19-6
Central Michigan, 19-7, or Tulsa, 14 at Furious,
19-8
Indiana, 18-12, at Texas Tech, 19-10.
Holy Cross, 17-10, at Dayton, 18-0
Texas A&M. 22-8, at New Mexico, 19/
Jayhawks lose to Rebels
Kansas let a victory slip in the final eight minutes of Saturday's women's basketball game against no. 10 University of Las Vegas. KU lost 96-81.
The Jayhaws led by as much as 40-25 in the first half on the strength of 10-of-14 field goal shooting by Adrian Mitchell, who ended with a career-high 41 points to lead all
But fools hurt Kansas in the second half and allowed the Rebels to catch up and gain the lead for the first time, 72-71, with eight minutes remaining.
A dispute by KU coach Marian Washington over a call with 6:51 left the coach the first two technical fouls she has been charged with in her coaching career at Kansas. The Rebels, who were on defense, threw four free throws given them in the situation.
The loss drops KU's record to 26-7.
Kansas, ranked No. 14,去es to Minneapolis which for the Region VI tournament.
Barnett FG FT REB PE TP PP
Goodwin, 34 10 2.9 3 5 2
Knox 0.6 2.2 1 1 2
Patterson 1.4 2.0 1 0 2
Mike 1.4 2.0 1 0 2
Sanders 0.2 2.0 2 4 4
Mitchell 19.33 3.5 6 4 41
Joseph 1.4 2.0 6 4 41
Woodland 8.20 1.1 24 4 17
Haleben 2.80 1.1 1 24 4
Staples 37.71 1.9 5 18 41
| | FG | FT | RES | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Hamilton | 6:12 | 4:4 | 3:5 | 16 | 16 |
| Calvayle | 6:13 | 4:3 | 3:5 | 16 | 16 |
| Carter | 1:0 | 1:4 | 8 | 0 | 4 |
| Glover | 1:0 | 1:4 | 8 | 0 | 4 |
| Ingram | 10:5 | 7:1 | 0 | 1 | 27 |
| Willis | 8:21 | 7:9 | 7 | 2 | 23 |
| Odhosa | 5:5 | 7:4 | 7 | 2 | 23 |
| Washburn | 5:5 | 7:4 | 7 | 2 | 23 |
| Totals | 26:76 | 20:21 | 35 | 16 | 96 |
| | FG | FT | RES | PF | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | | 46 | 35 | -- | 81 |
| Texas | | 6:12 | 4:3 | 3:5 | 16 |
Kings snap home streak with loss
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) - Clifford Fray hit two free throws with 14 seconds remaining to give Golden State a 111-104 overtime victory over Kansas City yesterday to snap the Kings' 15-game home-court winning streak.
Ray's tiny free throws gave the Warriors a 111-108 lead and a basket at Sam Lacey narrowed the margin to one 10 seconds later. The Kings forced a jump ball on the inbounds play and won the tap but could not get off a shot.
Jo Jo White scored a season-high 30 points and John Lucas added 25 for Golden State. Otis Birdsdon led the Kings with 22 and Bill Robinhunt chipped in 20, but it wasn't the fourth time Kansas City from losing its four second-round game, its longest loss streak of the season.
The Kings held a 13-point lead, 64-7, at the half and a six-point margin, 81-75, after three quarters. But the Warriors hit 12-18 last quarter shots to gain a 104-104 tie. The victory was only Golden State's second in its past 21 road games.
8
Monday, March 5, 1979
University Daily Kansan
China open to study tour
Since the United States' recognition of the People's Republic of China in January, the Chinese government has approved more American tours of that country, according to a report.
Because of this relaxation, the American Institute for Foreign Study is offering a course on Spanish at our students and faculty members. The 27-day trip will leave from San Francisco on July 13.
"THERE ARE 50 spaces for teachers and students but preference will probably be given to those who have some previous experience in teaching." An associate professor of history, said recently.
Students must be attending school at least part-time, Bays, the local sponsor of the trip, said. High school and junior college students also are eligible to apply.
"People who are totally cold on the China subject could apply," Bays said, "but probably would be required to read several books about it before the trip."
re said he must certify each application and make a recommendation for each student. The final selection will be made by the Chinese Embassy.
THE COST OF THE TIE is $2,756 per person, which Baed said was less than commiserate.
THE TENTATIVE plans for the trip include a five-day stay in Pekin and visits to four cities in central China. The group also will visit Japan and Hawaii.
In cooperation with this program, the KU department of East Asian languages and cultures is offering intensive Chinese summer that will emphasize conversation.
The four-week courses, Elementary Chinese I and Intermediate Chinese I, will begin June 11 and end June 29, three days before the trip to China begins.
CHAE JIN LEE, professor of East Asian studies, said, "This year we are going to emphasize the conversational part of the course because we are supporting the trip. We encourage students to take the course if we need a language background for the trip.
HOWEVER, STUDENTS are not required to take the courses. The courses can be continued for four more weeks in the Middle or Western Chinese II and Intermediate Chinese II.
In the four-week session, Lee said, the students would cover as much material as in a full semester. Each intensive course will include three hours and five hours of laboratory work each week.
- General office supplies
- Engineering supplies
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930 MASS
9:30 AM-9:00 MON.-SAT.
9:30 AM-5:30 PM SUN.
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THE TOWN CRIER
The application deadline for the language courses in May 25. Bays said application for the trip to China should be made by mid-March.
A four-year bridge-building spree in Douglas County may cost case that the county's original estimate of the project, Beverly Hills Bridge, is not far enough.
In 1974, Douglas county voters overwhelmingly passed an $11.74 million bridge bond issue. The bond issue was for the construction of 51 rural bridges and a two-span Kansas River bridge in Lawrence.
544 W. 23rd Open 4:00 pm daily 841-6181
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"I think every bid but one has been below the county's estimate," Bradley said. "I think we will come out quite a bit."
The other bridge, one of the largest rural bridges to be built in the project, is federally funded. The county must pay 30 percent of the cost.
Staff Reporter
Cost of county bridge building less than original plan estimate
He said the county had received construction bids that were lower than originally estimated because of low labor costs, and because there was less work available to bridge builders, making the bidding more competitive.
Mike Doley, public works director, said the bridge project was about 50 percent completed. He said 22 of the bridges had been completed, 11 were under construction and 18 had not received construction bids.
By BRUCE THOMAS
Tuesday 6 March
CHALLENGING CIVILIAN
ENGINEERING POSITIONS
WITH PROFESSIONAL GROWTH
Tuesday 6 March
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
The Kansas River Bridge in Lawrence, one of the two, probably will cost $1.2 million less than expected. Dooley said.
Excellent opportunities for advancement under the Merit System to Senior Engineer levels with pay in $19.80 million - $29.00 million. All Federal Civil Service Benefits—liberal vocational allowance, paid sick leave, partially employer funded life and health programs, excellent retirement plan, Relocation allowance for self and dependents.
HE SAID even though the cost of the entire bridge project had been favorable, the county had lost time on the project because
Sound Port Naval shipyard, with over 10,700 employees, has been established for over 85 years. Located in scenic Brentonment on a deep water arm of Paget Sound, is a semi-rural community, with a mild climate, only one hour from Seattle, recently cited by several publications as the city with the best "quality of life" in the country.
PUGET SOUND NAVAL SHIPYARD
(ATTN: C170.2C)
BREMERTON, WASH 98314
LOW CONSTRUCTION costs for two of the largest bridges have contributed to the project's cost being below the county's
County residents will be assessed 5% to 8 mills a year during a 20-year period to pay for the bridge bonds. A mill equals $1 of tax revenue.
Starting Salaries up to $18,044 depending on qualifications.
Contact your Placement Office for an interview on 6 March Tuesday. If this date is inconvenient, you may call toll free 1-800-426-5996; or if you wish, you may mail a resume to:
"We need to get all of the bridges under contract to protect ourselves from the rate of rising construction costs."
- Mechanical Engineers
- Electrical Engineers
ANEQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F
"I last winter used us down considerably, and I think we lost about a year on the project," he said. "We are making every
- Civil (Structural) Engineers
- U. S. Citizenship required
- Industrial Engineers
- Nuclear Engineers
Bradley said, "I'd like to go faster, but we have gone through two county commissions and a public works director since the bond was passed. I think it is moving rather well since Dooley has been handling it."
Dooley became public works director in July 1978.
Senate fills standing committees
The Student Senate Committee on Committees appointed members of seven standing committees and one subcommittee Saturday.
George Gomez, student body vice president, said yesterday that the committee had chosen the members from apposition turned in by senators and nonsenators.
The Academic Affairs Committee will try to increase cooperation between the student
governing bodies and the faculty, according to Senate policy.
THE STUDENT Rights Committee will evaluate Senate and administrative policies and monitor University compliance with Title IX. A subcommittee of the Student Rights Committee is the Minority Affairs Subcommittee.
The Communications Committee will work to communicate with the student body through public visits, newsletters, the University Daily Kansan and JKHJ radio.
Engineering & Computer Science Majors
DONT GRADUATE
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Contact your placement office for interview dates.
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POETS & WRITERS SERIES
presents
SOME THINGS THAT NEED DOING
Stretch--it is a little-used freedom.
Embark on a meadower walk, instead of eating lunch.
Stalk a wild cat or a forbidden dream.
Talk to strangers.
Peruse your eyes on a Van Gogh painting.
Take a shower in the rain.
Get yourself renewed at the library.
Find a dandelion in the snow.
Visit a tree.
Greet a demon.
Be still for a sunset, awake for a sunrise.
Crack a rock or look inside.
Open a window.
Build a fire with wood. Cook dinner over it.
Concentrate your light into a sphere.
Figure out the locations are shining on you:
In Summer Bottles, diamond Arturia his belt buckle,
ploughs the night, as Ariadne's crown shimmers beside him
In Autumn Poppies flies to the West as long-horned Taurus frogs rise from the ground.
In Winter Giant Orion, followed by his bright-eyed dog,
peruses the Pleiades.
In Spring the silent Lion arches overhead, his corpse and anyone you wake up, even though you think you are tired
Soil in the dirt grass.
Assassinate a TV commercial.
Bless your ancestors and their descendents.
Bress your ancestors and the Leave a picture.
Smile at the mutable Moon.
Make your own list of some things that need doing.
8PM MAR.6
COUNCIL ROOM, KANSAS UNION
The Student Services Committee will auction unclaimed articles from the KU Police Department, attempt to sell items, such as stereos, to students at low cost and attempt to have Kansas Union food and bookstore prices lowered.
The Culture Committee will attempt to set up an "All University Open House" and to increase foreign students' involvement with the University.
GOMEZ SAID the committees' chairmen would be elected at individual committee meetings.
Margaret Berlin, student body president,
said the committee lists were not final.
Old and new senators also elected three holdover senators at Wednesday's Student Senate meeting. They are Mark Bernstein, Chris Snyder and Steve Green, green former College of Liberal Arts and Green, former College of Liberal Arts and Green.
THE COMMITTEE memberships are:
Minority Affairs: eight members, five of whom are senators.
Student Rights: 27 members, 12 of whom are senators.
Finance and Auditing: 36 members, eight of whom are senators.
Academic Affairs; 32 members, 12 of whom are senators.
Sports: 16 members, three of whom are senators.
communications: 31 members, eight of whom are senators.
Student Services: 22 members, eight of whom are senators.
Culture: eight members, five of whom are senators.
March 6, starts between 9-10 o'clock BE THERE!
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STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
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... interpersonal communication skills
. . . enthusiasm about program
. . . student in good academic standing
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ADMISSIONS & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL APPLICATIONS DUE BY FRIDAY, MARCH 23
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---
Monday, March 5, 1979
9
re:
whom
eight
Staff Reporter
ight of
Birchers' strength is in ideology
om are
By DAVID EDDS
Ralph Munyan, Mission Hills senior, can be considered a typical student at the University of Kansas. Almost typical, that is.
Miyan, a history major, plans to go to law school or into business when he graduates. He is a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. He also has been active in campus politics, serving as student body leader from January 1977 to January 1978.
Manyan's political beliefs are not those of a typical KU student. He is a member of the John Birch Society, an anti-communist group.
It costs $48 per year for men to join the society and $24 for women. There are from 60,000 to 100,000 members nationwide.
"I don't try to keep my membership in the society a secret," Ralph Munyan said recently.
A handful of KU students are members of the John Birch Society, many hispanic, who teach in college and graduate student, and Larry Erickson, Lawrence graduate student, are mem-
"THE DECISIONS I made as student body vice president didn't have anything in the world to do with the Birch Society's views," he said.
"I got interested in the society because
of family contacts. My father has been a member for a long time."
Erickson said, "I"d laid a lot of reading for a year and asked to join the society in membership in the society was much more important than my parents, but they aren't Birchers."
John McManus, director of public relations for the John Birch Society, said he had instructed college students as members, but had made no effort to recruit members on his behalf.
The society has a plan to build John Birch University, but does not have a campus, site or faculty for the institution, he said.
SOME. YOUNG members of the Birch Society see no reason to subject themselves to an opposite point of view, McManus said, and because of that many young members of the society did not go to college.
The John Birch Society was founded in Indianapolis in December 1958, when Robert Willem, the founder, met with 11 communists to discuss the threat of communism.
The society was organized after that meeting, with the purpose of educating the American public about communism.
In 1965, Welch started to speak of wealth powerful individuals around the world, and it was this that led to the concept.
University Daily Kansan
ACCORDING TO the Encyclopedia of Associations, the Council on Foreign Relations studies the international aspects of foreign relations, economic and strategic problems.
The society says the United Nations and the Council on Foreign Relations are instruments of the insiders.
Ericickson said, "Some of the older members have worked hard for nothing. If you're in an organization for so long you can't afford a paranoid about the things that are harrowing."
Some society members say members sometimes become overly fearful.
Because some of the most influential members of the American press are members of the Council on Foreign Relations, according to the society, the Council of Internationals is a collage of the conspiracy of insiders, but is totally against the John Briert School.
them, as being the benefactors of communism. Welch said insiders were conspiring to take up a world government.
BECAUSE MANY society members do not trust the mass media, members of the National Academy of Medicine and the American Opinion and Review of the News, to explain the views of the John W. McGraw Foundation.
Stanley Scott Jr., editor of the magazines, attended KU as a freshman in 1961 he also attended KU in his junior year. He was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. Richmond graduated from Earth College in Richmond, Ind.
"WHEN I WAS at KU, the faculty was
literal, but the student body wasn’t."
Stanley said. "We had one of the largest
Republican chapters in the nation."
Robert L. Elder, 2630 Arkansas St., chapter leader of the Lawrence chapter of the John Birch Society, said it was difficult to get KU students to join the society.
"Anybody who is not authorized cannot speak for the John Birch Society. Members can speak for themselves, but not for the society."
"We need younger people in the society, but it's hard to get students to become Birchers.
"KUL is a real liberal school, Elder said.
"A few years ago everything we were for,
the students were against."
All Birchers have a bad habit; when we get someone to listen to us, we pour 50 gallons of water into their gallons run off. People don't want to believe what they tell them; it scores
'Review of the News' are not official voices of the society, but they express the Americanist view.
The tanks were installed Friday to provide hot water for residents of Miller and Watkins scholarship halls. They have been without hot water since last Tuesday.
Residents said the gas line to the halls was old and had deteriorated. Breaks in the line allowed gas to escape and water to condense and cloit it.
Carla Hanson, president of Watkins, said she was not sure the tanks were safe.
especially," she said yesterday. "I'm not reassured with their safety, but I don't. But they are very safe."
Two scholarship halls are using propane tanks this week to heat their water until a kitchen oven is ready.
Propane heat alleviates halls' hot water shortages
She said Facilities Operations ano housing maintenance crews had told her to watch the light closely if the light went out, she was to call the KU police, she said.
"I don't like the propane tanks
Hanson said the tanks had been installed outside with a thin copper tubing.
A request by residents of Joseph R. Pearson Hall for an extra steak dinner this semester has been turned down by J.J. Wilson, housing director.
The residents requested the steams a compensation for a hot water shortage Jan. 13.
Steak compensation denied
Freddie, resident director at JRP, said. "As far as I know, its impossible to give them a name," Wilson told me. The residents would have to give up some other services, like dessert, to
Kay Campbell, president of Miller, said she was not worried about the safety of the temporary arrangement and was satisfied with the propane tanks.
Frolik said he didn't know whether there would be an appeal.
KANSAN WANT ADS
"We went to housing with our proposal last week," Bill Thompson, hall president, said yesterday. "Mr. Wilson denied it because of budgetary reasons. To pay for the house, we had to take away from other areas of our budget, which would be defeating our purposes."
"I imagine some of the men in the hall will "I'll get compensation," he said. "I don't want to get补偿."
JRP was without hot water because of broken mixing valves.
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Found items can be advertised FREE of charge, for a period not exceeding three months. These cards can be placed in person or accessed via the DLR business office at 644-8358.
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Call M41-6448 after 5:30.
*
Orange Leaf Special 3-Weekend; IAM/ENT,
Ovation League 1-year $250 at Round Corner
Drug Store, 801 Mass
QuickGlide Brand Tie Closure H-15 tape .25¢. Cable
604-336-158 or 812-2966. 3-7
Engagement and wedding ring set 14, cvt. wom-
wings with chips. New and never worn 382-2
382-7
Spot your bird.-Reg. $29.5 bimaculis now $39.5
at Round Counter Drug Store.
FOUND
Gold Ring Call 841-7661 Female's wedding band with Inception
3-5
Flamingo's doing it again MALE DANCES
Wed. March 7 Starts between 8:00 to 12:00
350 HONDA? Mechanically perfect. Mike. 82-9.
438
I DADIES! GET READY FOR A CRAZY TIME!
Found at the entrance to campus at Burford Farm.
A lined leafy mulch. Call 643-8217-tx.
Wed. March 7, Starts between 9-10 o'clock
One pair draped gray knit hoodies, 1300
black Louisiana. Monday, Feb. 26. Call 841-7858.
501 N.9th N.Lawrence
Tiger kittens, stripped from 184 and Alabama
Call Jennifer. 841-895-841 or 841-2829. 3.75
HELP WANTED
--lost a green car accident part containing book
with law call N43-8274. Howard
JORIS MEN WOMEN SAILBOATS!
CRUISE SHIPS! No experience. High pay! See Caribbean, Indian, Europe, World! Summer camp can be scheduled.
60129, Box 6239, Canada. C95800 4-28
EXOTIC JOI! LORETA TAHOE, CALIFORNIA
Little apparel, fantastic tailor $750-$1,400 auto-
fashion, custom t-shirts, swimwear, mannequins,
ranchers, crushers, river rafts, & more.
Send $96 for info, to LORETA Weld, Box 20,
San Francisco, CA 94103.
New taking applications for Fountain & Gaiter
& Insect Control in Appalachia and Vermont
In apply to services of Vita Benton, Inc.
Freeance photographer is interviewing female subjects for various photo projects. Experience and photography best fit her need. Fax to 801-253-7469, email hbill@kawaii.com 515, Lawsuity, Kansas 6004. 2-7
San Bernardino Lodge Northern Hospital is accepting new patients with any of the following requirements: All chairs, formal hospital enclosures, and bedding. Apply online at san-bernardino-lodge.com.
Summer Jack, Colorado Dairy Branch, Experienced
Writing Work. Write Proofs, How to Use, Graded Cards.
www.brandingexperience.com
OVERSAS JOHN'S - Summer year round, Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia, Brit. All fields: B1
$120 monthly budget, paid, Sightseeing, Free
monthly budget, ICAP 409-834-KA, Berkeley
9470, W17th
Part time maintenance person needed. Starting pay $25 per hour. Must be available by telephone, email, or online cleaning required, also mechanical aptitude and ability in software, Spherical Mass 3-12
Part-time kitchen. Kitchen waited at wanton at
Stainhouse. Applied in person at 216th E. 34-8.
Call (718) 252-2900.
Hospitality Inc. is seeking a Travel Agent to stock desk computers, office equipment and supplies for hospitality travelers. Send resume to Hospitality Inc., 504 S. Broadway, New York, NY 10017. E-mail resume@hospitalityinc.com.
**Typ 20-54 wien) to help prepare monographies of Wolf Whitman for publication, 6.8 hours per week in afternoons. $3.20 per hour. Must be bachelor's degree or foreign professor at College Professor 2171 at 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. - 2:12**
Mingle is looking for experienced handlers
and sales representatives in New York, NY
Equity Opportunities Fee.
SUMMER OBTENTION NEW STAFF POSITIONS. Applicants are new being accepted as summer staff, see the ad for details; see the advertisement in her day's paper! 208 W. 47th St. 216 Bowling Green,
Girl Wanted: Grafitzscha, Lawrences, now patient at Greenwood Hospital. Req's bachelor's degree in psychology or related field. Burdickville, North Carolina, sought by Grafitzscha. Applicant must have a post-baccalaureate degree in psychology or related field. Apply on person listed. Contact for Walshs HI in Flickerridge County.
Provides office assistant. Full time. All around
city. Min 2 yrs exp required. Will accept
*if interested please call 817-5344 for a
meal voucher.*
Ji's Big Box new taking applications for,
and just time left. Apply in person, 709 loca
Graduate student assistant to ram statistical and other programming packages, write programs in C++. Req. Master's degree or equivalent with Honeywell system软件. Apply Professionally; 31 Birmingham, 864-358 before Mar. 7.
© Cornell Young Ranch needs mature married
couple for intimate teaching sessions. 48 hours
to apply. Email resume to ranch@cornell.edu.
Research Assistant - A student to work with preschool children. Two hrs per week, start-week immediately. Must be available 9:30-10:00 AM, 11:30-12:00 PM, 1:30-
NUMMER JOB: Counsel, litigant in the
Windsor County Family Court.
Prefect Council for Galloway Hills,
Baltimore and St. Marys.
Minority Law Attorney.
Portrait sterilized-marker warmed. Jewelry mum-
tered. Appliqué in pearl. Included 1655 Mussel, Warmed Garten.
LOST
Pair of glasses and contact lens vase in flower-shaped glass case on Feb. 22nd, 832-605-36
3-6
One miniature Towers Alarm Check with case in security of Martin Hair. Reward. Call 832-1900.
O. Tidnall I lost my KUID, but pain & deeper
pain. I lost my phone. You found it.
If you found it, call 612-573-826.
MISCELLANEOUS
THOMS BINNING • COPYING The House of
Thomas, at 100 West 49th Street, in New York,
becomes an exhibition, in Lansing, Michigan. Tix
are required to attend for free. For more info,
call 212-375-8616.
NOTICE
If you observed an auto accident at 90 and lows,
the 110hh call cell 843-8239 3.4
Ethan Moyer may be hired by Increasing an asst. director at his New York office or by Mr. Hofstra at his Milwaukee office at 605-216-8466 or by Mr. Browne at his Boston office at 605-216-8730.
PERSONAL
George Lehman reserves referees, new handed
KVB Inte. Info. 862-5360 or Headquarters
8215.
MISSISSIPPI
HIKS HIRE SHOP in its own town, 208 Brookhill,
Berkshire. Contact us at info@hiks-hire-shop.com
or visit www.hiks-hire-shop.com for details.
HIKS HIRE SHOP VENTURES WAREHOUSE 114
Crown Street, Berkshire, UK W3R 7XF
HARBOUR SHELL FAIRY 4-8 pm; TOWN CITY FAIRY 10 am & 4 pm
MADIS HEADS NIGHT 'BIG' Wed $10.99 gallon
BROOKLYN 'BIG' Wed $12.99 gallon
Priella... Am I invited to your graduation? Order your announcement now at the Kansas University Bookstore. Signed, Mom & Dad ... If
Free to everyone
Short courses in business/technical writing. Every Thursday evening 6:7 p.m. 408. Summerfield
Remember
Thursday evening, 6-7 p.m.
408 Summerfield
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing. Birth Control. Counseling. Total Ligation. For appointment. Pregnancy Tests. 42-316, 480 (19th, St. Orland Park, Ks.)
*Movie* in Calif. Team Consultant takes a house on the market and moves to California home. Call Caliber Shares at Midnight 9:30am PST or email info@calibershares.com.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC. Abortion up to it
12 weeks. Pregnancy tests. Birth Control. Counselling.
Total Ligation For appointment call: 9
(866) 553-0740 or (866) 4100-1000. Overland Park, Ks.
Bottleneck Caves, every Monday 6-12 at
Louisville's West (70) & Michigan. Gems $5.
Cave City (70) & Detroit. Gems $5.
66th Schenectady and 150th Pitchers every Friday (2-5) at Louisville's bar
4-3
Wanted a 2-bedroom furnished apartment at 1506 East 79th Street, NYC. Applicants must submit an online call for further information. Attn: Fannie Mae Financial Services, Inc., 345-772-4000.
Kilty Sanders, I've met you once but how do I
find you again? signed stick. 3-7
REMINDER
FROM: THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS TO ALL UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
Beginning March 7th, it becomes necessary to petition to drop any course within the College. Approval of petitions will not normally be based on the lack of interest or poor performance in a course, but rather for personal reasons of difficulty, or a heavy work schedule. Documentary support is required.
Ninie was laughing and . Toot! Toot! 3.5
Significant restoration, a lighting environmental
replacement, and an exterior renovation for
Friendship Towers at 7:08 am (1629 W.
Downtown)
WCC and Domestic Agents, and the way they
came to the aid of the people in CINA
HARMEN IS NO BLEEF.
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTOR MA in math, mathematics, three years professional tutoring experience: M2H-11, H3H-11
BIWITHIN EDITING. Your manuscript, then or two paper edited into an effective, printed book, will be written and thought with precision and smoothness. Outlines, chapters, and articles also available. 842-137
PRINTING WHILE YOU WATT is available wired at the Hawks at Ubiqui of Ulphair Quick Copy Center. Aki is available from 8 a.m. to 5 a.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mack.
Tired of feeding yourself? Nailah Hall is offering for the first time a boarding plan that can be tailored to your needs. You can be trained if you choose this than Ms. HAIL. 1060 Nailah Hall, 843-8250 AMSTERDAM HALL. 1060 Nailah Hall, 843-8250 AMSTERDAM HALL.
IMPORT TENNIS MAYH 009 1025, call 643-5723
INTEGRATION COMPUTER SCIENCE 009 1025, call 643-5723
COMPUTER SCIENCE 009 1025, call 643-5723
TENNIS 043-8030, QUALIFICATIONS, INTEGRATION
TENNIS 043-8030, QUALIFICATIONS, INTEGRATION
Programming for general tennis.
Need help in math or CS Gaia who can
help me with
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4176
TYPING
Type/Editor HM Place/Edit Quality, work
Type/Editor Dispatcher/editors
Job ID 813_9217
PROFESSIONAL, TYPING SERVICE, 841-520-1801
7 years experience. Quality work guarantee.
5 yrs exp in teaching, learn papers, MSc.
World, 812724
Powered by Tecplotform software, tissue micro-
graphs with magnification 40x-160x, spilling cell co-
llection at 40x-250x, Width 3mm.
Experimental hybrid types, illustrations, term
definitions, scientific data
4.216 cvoning, 842.216
Hospital district, resource, legal form, delivery
hospital. 861-3272
861-3272
I did the quick quiz. Pump up. Order 28 pack. I am a student.
I will wait until you finish. Call 411-277-5036 after 5:30 p.m. - 29-14
COMPUTERIZED THENS YETTING. Have you computerized thens typing, you can have them typed on TPC-4000 and you can have all natural voices. Call PROFESSIONALS with all natural voices for free; on the most advanced typing system.
Tapping on Eilee Klee's follow-up interview. Prompt answer:
Need to re-read No. 26. Mrs. Hays, RR.
1972
Quality testing guaranteed. IBM-Server, Termo
810, dissatisfaction. Carriage: 810.
**MOTHER-LOVE**
PPPPG Over 20,000 points served, Quality
and durability, valuable for Carrier or
student use.
WANTED
Winter later for two years, @ 6 & 9 each weekdays.
Saturday requires the position. Saturday £100;
Sunday £80; Monday £70.
2nd residence in Jayhawker Tower, $980 per
month. 822-6253
Broomstick or mast in brie box Jax 2 bedrooms +
1 bike hide. From CAH. Call 650-3275 Marriott,
Hotel Broomstick.
Beautiful woman. Great air weather dryer.
Beautiful room. Very quiet. 5 bedrooms plus 1 bath.
Tall Floor. 822-107-6197
North Shore, NJ Design to build with firewood tied
dog bag. Dog included (free). 812-355-6300.
Two female veterans wanted by char state
province to serve for the next year. Call
411-325-6900 after five.
www.airforce.gov
---
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 20,550 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
If you've got it, Kansan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint Hollow below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
SELL IT!
AD DEADLINES
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write ad here:___
to run
Monday ... Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm
Wednesday ... Monday 5 pm
Thursday ... Friday 5 pm
Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm
2
times
$2.25
.02
RATES:
15 words or less
3
times
$2.50
.03
additional words:
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col x 1 Inch - $3.50
Col x 1 Inch - $3.50
4 times
$2.75
04
DATES TO RUN:
4 times $2.75 .04 .05
5 times $3.00 .05
NAME: __
ADDRESS: __
PHONE: __
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
---
10
Monday, March 5. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Prof mixes music, math
Bv RHONDA HOLMAN
Staff Reporter
Zamir Bavel loves music—but only if it is not a full time job.
Bavel, professor of computer science and mathematics, is a full-time teacher and a part-time composer and violinist.
"I decided after being involved with music from an early age that this was not the way I wanted to make my living," said Bavel, whose symphony, "Israel Rhapsody," will be performed Wednesday by the Topena Symphony. "I knew I would买得起 that my attitude about music would守持—if I kept it as my profession."
Bavel, who has been composing since he was seven, wrote the symphony in 1960. It was first performed by the Southern Opera in Mozartia in Carbondale, III, the same year.
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{0123}
Bavel, a native of Israel, said last week that the melodies in "Israel Rhapsody" were in the style of contemporary Israeli music and were part of the piece depicted the Israelian way of life.
ISRAELI
DIVERSITY
"IN TITS WORLD premiere, it was played just before the intermission," he said. "When the conductor mounted the podium for the second half of the concert, he blew a horn long time, until it became clear that they want to hear deejay again. The conductor announced the repeat and proceeded to play another, a second oval." He stood atanding oval.
SUNDAY 23
UREA
"I'd forgotten how complex it was to write a symphonic piece so that the folk style can captivate the audience and the players," he said.
Bavel said the popularity of the composition had surprised him until he re-examined the score.
HEALTH
AND
DIAGNOSIS
HE SAID MUSICIANS who had played typically were usually responsible for its success. He was tempted to push the work was when he had lead it to Leonard Bernstein, then moved on to Paul Simon.
Bavel said that Bernstein had talked to him for 45 minutes about the symphony and had called it "charming and effective," saying the only thing he did not like was that Bavel was in mathematics instead of music.
Bavel, who came to the United States in 1862 as a scholarship student at Southern Illinois University, was the age of three or four and was writing pieces for an Israeli radio program when he was
Zamir Bavel
BAVEL LATER studied composition with RAY HARRIS in the United States. He said some of his songs had become popular in Israel and he had heard his melodies be whistled out of bus windows in Tel Aviv folk music records in the United States.
An Israeli composer's union distributes Bavel's work and he periodically gets royalty money from places such as South Africa and Holland.
Bavel estimates that the symphony has been performed 20 or 30 times. He said it also had been recorded by the Voice of the Symphony Orchestra in the early 1960s.
Bavel, who is working on a violin con-
certe and two symphonies, said that his musical activity did not interfere with his work.
"I like teaching math and computer science, don't get me wrong," he said. "These subjects are in the blood of my family. This in itself is a mission."
Parking violators may find wheels locked
Instead of towing some illegally parked cars this summer, KU Parking Services might make sure the drivers don't move, Don Blankenship, director of parking services, said last week.
Kearns said that probably starting this summer, wheel locks would be used on cars whose drivers had received five or more licenses. Such cars now are automatically towed.
Under the new provision, the violator would have to go to the parking services office in Hoch Auditorium to pay or appeal the fine before the lock would be removed.
24 hours a day at the office to unlock a wheel.
Kearns said an officer would be available
Parking Services is awaiting final approval of the Board of Regents to go ahead with the purchase of six locks for the Lawrence campus and six for the University of Kansas Medical Center. The proposal will be submitted to KU Parking Services Board in December.
KEARNS SAID that he had no idea how much the locks would cost, but that the keypad was too thick.
He said the idea was proposed to spare parking violators the inconvenience and hassle.
MAKING A BREAK THIS SPRING?
Maupintour
Travel Service
can make your travel ar-
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and at NO CHARGE to you.
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The wheel locks will not totally eliminate the need for towing, though.
"There will be times, such as when a car is blocking a fire lane, when we'll have to
Maupintour travel service
Strikes expected on the East Coast could further complicate the shortage.
However, Puckett said the University of Kansas had not had any shortages vet.
A nationwide paper shortage has put KU purchasing officials on edge, Gene Puckett, director of purchasing, said yesterday.
Chance of paper shortage at KU causing concern among officials
He said strikes on the West Coast last summer had caused a paper shortage that was depleting suppliers' inventories.
He said that if the shortage continued, products such as duplicator and minimeograph papers would be in short supply and could not be produced.
"The office supply store is having some trouble, but the situation is not critical," he said.
"So far we haven't had to restrict purchases by the departments."
Several years ago, a paper shortage resulted in limited supplies of products such as paper towels and office paper. Puckett said.
"It is a serious problem," he said. "We have five weeks supply of computer paper right now. But the company which supplies the paper has indicated it was having difficulty delivering our current order."
ALTHOUGH KU office paper supplies have not been depleted, the Academic Computer Center could have a computer paper shortage before the end of the semester, Paul Wolfe, director of the center, said.
Waile said he had ordered 1,500 cases of computer paper, a large enough supply for the rest of the semester and part of the summer. He was ready to ship them as soon as possible.
"I NEVER FEEL comfortable. I want to ensure that we have, enough paper supplies," Wolfe said.
emergency supplies if the state-contracted supplier was unable to deliver the center's order.
He said that if the center ran out of paper, the center would not shut down.
"Paper is critical, but we're not going to get caught short," he said.
if worse comes to worse, we will start using the backs or paper already printed on in the past."
Wolfe said the center also could share paper with other state institutions. KU shared paper four years ago, he said.
Ray Kramer, assistant director of business and office services at the computer center, is responsible for the supplies at the center.
"We are trying to find a different paper that has a larger supply," he said.
Kramer said that besides looking for an alternate supplier, the center could use other types of paper.
He said a state purchasing agent had told him that even if the West Coast attack ended immediately, paper inventories would not be affected.
Woife said the center would encourage students and other persons to conserve paper. He said one way a person could conserve paper was by putting many items on one page instead of a few items.
He was he was investigating different methods of computer programming that would use less paper.
Reapportionment . . .
From page one
The student area was replaced in Glover's district by Republican precincts in west
Funded by Student Senate and the Baptist Student Union
KU student support intact. Solbach retained the northwest and southeast corners of the city, and Glover picked up the center of the western part of Lawrence.
The 40th District was made up mostly of Democratic precincts east of Massachusetts.
Although Solbach still faces a tough fight for re-election in his traditionally Republican district, the score in Lawrence with Republicans 0 under the original House bill.
Vogel's amendment extended the new east Lawrence district across Massachusetts to pick up the KU campus and the student housing east of the campus. This made the eastern district even more accessible. The professor moved of much of his strong student summer.
VOGEL'S DISTRICT is completely outside of Lawrence.
The big loser in Vogel's amendment was Glover. However, Glover acknowledged that Vogel had given him a choice of being in the district or in district or in a heavily Republican district.
GLOVER SAID he had chosen the Republican district because, as an incumbent, he would have the best chance to win of any Democratic candidate. The incumbents may not need a particularly strong district in the new east Lawrence district, he said.
Lawrence, Democrat Solbach's district is
Republican. Democrat 2-Republicans.
1
A veto, or the threat of a veto, could force the House to work out a compromise between the original bill and Vogel's amendment this week.
Glover's decision could make Carlin more likely to veto the house redistricting bill, rather than put a Democratic incumbent in such a precarious position.
proposals had been worked out that would partially do away with the part of the 46th district that takes away much of Glover's student constitutency.
Solbach said last night that several
Glover also was unsure about a compromise.
HOWEVER, HE said neither proposal would help Glover very much.
"I have no idea where the district lines will be drawn downtown," he said.
He had drawn up two maps and had shown them to Glover before he presented his map.
Vogel said he wasn't sure how much chance there was for a compromise.
"Glover could have stayed winns me on district, and the district boundaries would be smaller."
TOOAY: AN ART EXHIBIT by John Blumb titled, "Illinois landscape," will be shown from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. this week at the Visual Arts Gallery. An MFA THEISIS EXHIBIT by sculptor Michael Gontesky also will be show this week from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Art and Design building Gallery. The EXECUTIVE COUNIL will meet at 11:45 a.m. in Albove B of the Kansas Union. The JHAWKY BASKETBALL Room of the Union. PSYCHOLYGIC CLUB meets at 4:30 in the basement of Fraser Hall. The KU COMMITTEE ON SOUTH
On Campus
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Bahai Fireside
Education and the Bahai' Faith KU Bahai Club
Operation Friendship
Building Bridges Between Cultures
Significant Conversation Learning Environment Good Friends
Tonite: 7:00 p.m.
1629 W. 19th
will meet on Monday, March 5 at 7:30 PM in the International Room of the Kansas Union
Operation Friendship
Everyone is welcome.
AUTUMN SONATA
Diana and Peggy.
INGMAR BERGMAN
with INGRID BERGMAN
LIV LILMANN
AFRICA will meet at 4 p.m. at the KU-Y
office, room 118 in the Union.
ACADEMY AWARD
"HALLOWEEN"
IT'LL SCARE YOUR SOCKS OFF!
Saturday & Sunday
Maintenance 2-40
Engineered
version
3111 & IOWA
842-6400
Evenings at 7:35 & 9:30 Now in
Saturday & Sunday English dubbed
Matines 2:40 version
TONIGHT: THE DISCUSSION CLUB DINNER will meet at 6 in the English Room ASSISTANCE will be available to the elderly, the non-English speaking and low-
PG
WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS'
BEST ACTRESS--
INGRID BERGMAN_
The NORTH AVENUE IBREGULARS
EVE 7:30 & 9:30
Sat Sun 2:30
income students from 6-8 in the legal aid office of new Green Hall. A STUDENT at Green Hall was by colleen Doldy Gordy Betermine at 8 in Swartwout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
"ICE CASTLES"
EVEAT 7.20 and 9.20
Sat/Sun
Mat 2:30
Cinema Twink
STLES!
"HEAVEN CAN WAIT"
Granada
PC
(911) 260-5780
Seguridad #1-3456
with LYNN HOLLY JOHNSON PR
Eve. 7:20 &
9:20
S.S Mat 1:45
Hillcrest
Eve. 7:35 & 9:30
S S Mal 2:00
Hillcrest
4 ACADEMY AWARI NOMINATIONS
"DAYS of HEAVEN"
9:25
S-S Mat1:50 Hillcrest
GABE KAPLAN'S
HAVING
A BALL!
NOW
EVE AT 7:30 & 9:30
SATURDAY & SUNDAY
MATINEES AT 2:30
FASTBREAK
Varsity
THEATER - INFORMATION 2:15 PM
PG
© 1974 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc.
Engineering & Computer Science Majors
Contact your placement office for interview dates.
WATCH FOR THE HUGHES RECRUITER VISITING YOUR CAMPUS SOON.
HUGHES
Create a new world with electronics
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F
Pizza Peddler
We are now Delivering!
544 W. 23rd Open 4:00 pm daily 841-6181
aid
DENT
t Dena
Recital
Staff Photo by ALAN ZLOTKY
THE STAR WARS SERIES
Electronic future
Gary Nemchok, professor of jewelry and silversmithing, creates electronic jewelry using solar cells, magnetic switches and light-emitting diodes. Nemchok hopes to have an array of solar cell-based devices on the market.
ASK opposes plan to redistrict county
State Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, may hear from angry KU students regarding his amendment for drawing new districts in County, a student libbist said yesterday.
The lobbyist, Steve Young, of the Associated Students of Kansas, said ASK members opposed Vogel's amendment because it would divide the student vote.
"We don't want to harass him. The purpose is not to change his mind, just to let him know we're unhappy." Young, the KU member of the ASK board of directors, said.
The amendment applies to a comprehensive reapportionment bill tentatively passed last week in the Kansas House. The bill would create a new voting district in east Lawrence, and would put the 44th district west of its present location.
The 4th district traditionally has been a stronghold for KU students, from whom State
Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, has drawn strong support.
GOV. JOHN Carlin said last week that Vogel's amendment was "pure politics" and threatened to veto the entire respite between the two countries, not revamp the Douglas County districts.
Young said, "Our best hope rests with Carlin. We plan to lobby him intensely."
"We are not campaigning for Mike Glover," Young said. "The issue at hand is division of the student voice and it's difficult to figure out how the House passed it. I guess that politics."
Glover, for example, has been an advocate of reducing the penalties for
During last week's meeting of the Faculty Executive Committee, a member of FacEs told Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, that the morale of the University's faculty was the lowest he had ever seen.
Faculty see their morale sinking
Although this view may not be shared universally, a number of KU faculty say they argue that morale is low.
Staff Reporter
By JOHN LOGAN
In an informal survey of 15 faculty members, most said they were dissatisfied, but many said they were confused with their options.
All agreed that an overall sense of uneasiness has pervaded KU, but they were divided as to its cause.
Some faculty members said they were disillusioned with teaching, saying that the teaching profession had become an endless maze of critiques and evaluations. Several faculty members said the evaluation procedures remained
Some professors alleged that because of the tight money situation, previously friendly competition for merit raises had degenerated to cut-throating and back-stabbing among faculty members.
OTHERS SAID they were upset with the failure of faculty salaries to keep in with inflation.
But other faculty members dismissed their colleagues' complaints, saying that the faculty traditionally is unhappy with them.
KANSAN Analysis
Meanwhile, University administrators say their hands are tied. The increasing number of evaluations are
necessary, they say, to comply with government regulation and that they have done all they can to raise salaries.
Both nationally and locally, the most common complaint voiced by the faculty concerns the dramatic drop in the enrollment.
THERE IS NO doubt that inflation has hit university professors hard. A recent Time magazine study indicated that of about 20 professions surveyed, university faculty had lost the most ground to inflation during the last decade.
The magazine article reported that the average professor had lost 17 percent of his salary's buying power between
Many KU faculty members are upset that there may not be an end in sight. a recent effect by Gov. John Carlin to give the faculty at Regent's institutions in Kansas a 7 house committee last month when a House committee cut the proposed line.
UNIVERSITY FACULTY were angered by the cut, FacEx responded by passing a resolution condemning it and asking that the full House restore the cut when the budget is reviewed later this year.
But some professors assert that even the 7 percent increase was inadequate to cover last year's inflation rate, which neared 10 percent.
Some faculty members think that the salary, problem is the primary cause of the slums in morale.
"There was an inevitable lewdness because the Legislature cut the increase," Gerhard Zuther, professor of English and president of the faculty council, said yesterday. It sounded to inflation is much of the reason for the depression."
Frances Heller, professor of political science and former vice chancellor for academic affairs, also said he thought
"FACULTY SAY ARE'T things great when enrolment is expanding and resources are pouring in," Heller said. "But when they are battling to hold their own and the op-portunity to continue a continuous提升, then the faculty are dissatisfied."
But other faculty members say they are concerned about more than money.
Eric M. Wright, professor of psychology, said the salary problem was only the latest of a number of concerns that have been raised about him.
"The salary is a meaningful consideration but it is not the most discouraging thing," Wright said.
KANSAN
He said that faculty were most upset about the administration's attitude toward education.
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.89.No.108
"The commitment to quality education has been lost by the administration of Wright said. "They are trying to run
Med scholarships may be limited
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
By PATRICIA MANSON
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas Senate tentatively approved a bill yesterday that would limit the number of scholarships available to Kansas students at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The Senate voted 20-16 to allow the Legislature to appropriate money for the scholarship program each year, beginning in the fall semester of the school year. A final vote is expected today.
State Sen. Michael Johnston, D-Parsons,
said that changing the number of
scholarships available each year would
create problems for students.
"The students need to know precisely what the rules are," Johnston said. "I don't think it's fair for the students to enroll and pay them. We have money there will be for the scholars."
UNDER A program established last year,
students receive a year's tuition for each
semester.
student at the Med Center is eligible to receive a scholarship.
There are 426 students enrolled in the scholarship program this year, about four times the number expected by the Legislature.
Richard Von Ende, executive secretary of KU, has estimated that the program will
The bill, which was sponsored by Johnston, originally called for abolishing the
Johnson said that the program was too expensive and would not keep enough
"It's my view that a substantial number of those doctors are going to pay their bills."
JOHNSTON'S BILL was amended by State Sen. Wini Winter, R-Otahoma, to limit
If a student does not practise in Kansas after he graduates, he must repay his学费 by making a payment to the school.
the scholarships available, rather than abolish the program.
Winter said that the program should be continued to help alleviate the shortage of teachers.
State Sen. Leroy Hayden, D-Satanta, said, "I think it can clearly be seen that any money spent on scholarships in Kansas is money well spent."
State Sen. Franklin Gaines, D-Augusta,
that more time was needed to see the
faults of the program.
"Have we already solved the doctor shortage problem in Kansas?" Games
Jim Hamilton, president of the Medical Student Assembly at the Med Center, said he would not be in attendance.
"I THINK it's very unfair to raise the students' tuition and then to tell them they need to work harder after the vote. " It seems we're in the middle of a political bailout. We're the pawns
Last March, the Kansas Board of Regents nearly tripped the medical school tuition, raising it from $1,125 to $3,000 a year for non-residents to $2,000 to $3,000 a year for non-residents.
Hamilton has said that a change in the scholarship program would not affect the lawsuit brought by 243 medical students and faculty, claiming the tution was illegal.
Winter said that if the number of scholarships were limited, the KU administration would set up guidelines for giving scholarships.
David Waxman, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said last week that the scholarships probably would be awarded on the basis of performance. Legislature limited the scholarship money
"The details would be established by the KU Med Center officials." Winter said. "Just as they control who they accept to attend, they will control who gets a scholarship."
Dykes outlines future of merger
By BARBARA JENSEN
Staff Renorter
Under a proposed merger of KU men's and women's athletic programs, travel arrangements, training table facilities and coaches' fringe benefits would be combined with the Women's Athletic Advisory Board last month.
Dykes met with the board to discuss the proposed merger, which would become effective July 1) if approved
But Anne Levinson, board member and a member of the field hockey team, questioned when the two programs met.
"It one's thing to say it and another thing to see it," she said.
Dykes he could not say when the benefits would become comparable because funding would be a problem.
"WE'RE GOING to have to raise funds," he said. "The
Dykes said the $1.50 now allocated to women's athletics from student fees would be allocated again next year.
only money we receive now for women's athletics is from the state Legislature and student fees, it isn't enough."
Marian Washington, women's athletic director, said she was concerned about the amount of scholarship money the university received.
Under a five-year program with the Williams
Educational Foundation, scholarships for women will be $150,000.
This year they received $67,500.
This Year we receive $100.
We'll need at least $500,000 to award the maximum
amount possible to a MAXI brand.
men's athletic director, would be director of intercollegiate
athletics. He would be directly responsible for football and
basketball, the business office, sports information, the
Williams Fund and special projects.
The AIAW is the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women.
WASHINGTON WOULD be associate director in charge of non-revenue sports and a sports mediciner program.
Mike Harper, former student body president and a member of the board, said he was concerned that only Marcum was responsible for the business aspects of the school, and that Washington would not share those responsibilities.
But Charles Oldfather, a board member, said that was why he approved the plan.
"It puts the monkey on one man's back," he said
Del Shankar, executive vice chancellor, announced plans for the merger last week. Under the plan, Bob Marcum,
Olfather said a past problem had been that women's abilities were the responsibility of the University administration, and not the students.
End of grant would cut Audio Reader worker
Gary Marshall, rehabilitation program director for Audio Reader at the University of Kansas, understands the handicapped people he works with.
See ATHLETICS back page
Marshall, blinded in a car accident when he was 20, works for Audio Reader, which helps him process news and entertainment for the visually and physically handicapped and elderly
Marshall said recently that the state and federal grants that had improved the system of texting during years may no longer be available. In 1977, Audio Reader was awarded an innovation grant.
The three people who would continue working at Audio Reader would be the director, the assistant director and the operations manager, she said.
"When that grant runs out, we will go
Because of this, Marshall and several other employees of Audio Reader may be required to register.
But Marshall, 33, may face another challenge in August—finding a new job.
ROSIE HURWITZ, director of Audio Reader, said, "Our budget is only big enough to pay three people."
The Audio Reader program, which broadcasts more than 90 hours a week, includes an early morning reading of the Topeka Daily Capital and the Kansas City Times and readings from the current best seller, mystery, fiction and nonfiction
forward, but we are not sure we can provide the same content in the future."
Audio Reader, the second oldest radio reading service in the country, began in
Marshall said, "The signal range is about a 65-mile radius from Lawrence."
Marshall said that when the service began, Audio Reader had about 1,000 listeners. However, since the service was overloaded, there are about 4,000 to 5,000 listeners.
Along with the receivers, Audio Reader also provides monthly program schedules to the handicapped.
JAN SUMMERS, secretary at Audio Reader, said of the 1,400 programs distributed, 150 were in braille.
Programs are broadcast to the houses of the handcapped free, using special radios supplied by Audio Reader. The broadcasts, based on a subcarrier of the KANU radio station.
However, Marshall said that there had been a tremendous growth in the service and that cable hook-ups allowed the programs to be broadcast to Kansas cities including Manhattan, Great Bend and Hays.
"I audition the volunteers and make sure that their reading ability is accurate."
VOLUNTEERS are responsible for recording taped passages from books. The tapes later are broadcast as a daily series on the radio.
Marshall said that part of his job was interviewing and selecting volunteers for Audio Reader.
Marshell said he was unemployed for a year before he was hired at Audio Reader. Marshell, a former baseball player for the Boston Astros, has a varied background.
He said he had received a teaching degree from Washburn University and a degree in social welfare from Wichita College. He worked as a salesman for two companies.
Marshall said he had no definite plans if his job were not continued at Audio Rock.
Blind Director
1983
Gary Marshall, who has been blind for thirteen years, is the rehabilitation program director for the Audio Reader
Staff photo by BARB KINNE
program at the University of Kansas. Marshall's seeing eye
course is next to him at the Audio Reader office on West Campus.
John W. Sloane
2
Tuesday. March 6. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Carlin interviews 3 for court
TOPEKA-Gov. John Carlin finished interviewing the nominees for an appointment to the Kansas Supreme Court yearling. Carlin's interviews are thought to be unprecedented since Kansas adopted the non-partisan system for selective listings.
A Carlin aide said the governor appeared to be close to naming a new justice, but would not predict how soon it would be announced.
The new justice would replace Perry Owsley of Pittsburg, who retired for health reasons last December.
Carrin talked with former State Sen. Harold Held of Coldwater, Sedwick County District Court Judge Tyler C. Lockett of Wichita and Johnson County Judge John L. Kernahan.
An aide said Carlin "just wanted to see them face-to-face, to know a little bit about who he was considering."
Senate to debate immunity bill
TOPEKA-The Kansas Senate Judiciary Committee completed work yesterday on a proposed tort claims act that would end the Kansas tradition of court-based jurisdiction.
The measure is expected to be debated by the Senate tomorrow, senate majority leader Norman Gaar, R-Westwood, said.
The purpose of the bill is to enable those injured by the negligence of state or local government employees to sue for damages suffered.
The bill currently sets a $30,000 limit for each occurrence on any claims for damage. The limit would be waived if another occurrence occurred without harm.
it was the third April and period or the five year limit it
italicized that there will be an amendment to raise the financial limit to
$500,000.
The measure also creates three standards of liability for government actions, depending on whether the act is classified as an intentional wrongdoing, "gross mistake," or "oversupply."
Raise in park fees opposed
WASHINGTON—President Carter's plan to raise national park fees as much as 70 percent met strong resistance in Congress yesterday.
National Park Service Director William Whalen, under orders from the federal budget office to raise the fees, said 14 parks would have higher entrance fees.
Members of the Senate Parks subcommittee noted that the proposed increases would be higher than the 7.3 percent price hike guideline Carter has set.
Whalen said that the president's inflation advisers approved the plan.
Sen. Dale Bumpers, D-Air, said charging new fees was a burden on families who looked upon the park system as an inexpensive vacation.
"They ought to be available as cheap vacations for people who can't afford to go to Europe, the Middle East or Japan or some exotic place on vacation," he
Trial for camp killings beains
PHYOR, Okla —The trial of Gene Leroy Hart, who is charged with the June 1977 slaying of three Girl Scouts, opened yesterday with the questioning of
Attorneys allowed five potential jurors to be seated and excused three others (one cause from a group of about 172 called to the courthouse yesterday). About two-thirds of those jurors did not attend.
District Judge William J. Whistler earlier dismissed three defense motions seeking delay of the trial. The defense had objected that it was not prepared.
Hart, 35, is charged with killing three girls from the Tusla area at a summer camp near Locust Grow, Okla. The bodies of Denise Milner, 10, Michele Guse, 9, and Lori Lee Farmer, 8, were found June 13, 1977, in sleeping bags about 50 yards from their tent.
MONROE, La. —Jury selection began yesterday in the trial of Otto Passman former Democratic congressman, on charges of bribery and income tax evasion.
Passman, T8 is accused of accepting $213,000 in bribes from South Korean businessman Tonsum Park and then evading federal income taxes.
Park, who will be the prosecution's chief witness, arrived in Monroe last night and said he planned to be in the city for at least a week.
The trial was moved to Monroe, Passman's home town, because of the former congressman's failing health. After being indicted by a federal grand jury in Washington last year, Passman was hospitalized twice for "severe mental depression."
Defense attorneys said they were unsure whether Passman would testify during the trial.
Amin plans military offensive
NAIROH, Kenya—Ugandan President Idil Amin abandoned his cease-fire efforts today and called on his army to "fight to the last man" in a major military campaign against extremists.
The Ugandan broadcast called on all citizens in the occupied areas to evacuate immediately before a major offensive is launched to liberate the country.
The Tanzanians, backed by Ugandan exiles and reportedly by dissident Ugandan soldiers, pressed on the town of Lakaya, which is 70 miles inside Kampala.
Amin's threat of a new offensive was a change from his efforts last week to seek peace through the United Nations and the Organization of African Unity.
Iran begins exporting oil again
TEHRAN, Iran—Iran began exporting oil again yesterday with a shipment bound for Japan.
However, the director of the oil company owned by Iran said the days of unlimited oil exports were over for Iran.
"We will export only enough to meet our financial needs," the director, Hassan Nazih, said.
He said that about 7.5 million barrels of oil would be exported this week and that exports would be limited to about 2.4 million barrels daily.
Mondale opposes budget idea
WASHINGTON- Vice President Wendle Mondale voiced the Carter administration's vigorous opposition to a balanced-budget amendment yesterday, saying that government needs flexibility in order to manage a sometimes contagious economy.
This is down from the 5.4 million barrel level maintained last year.
The government's economic responsibilities go far beyond developing a balanced budget, Mondale told the National League of Cities.
"Sometimes we need a deficit in order to stimulate the national economy," Mondale said.
"If you try to put that sort of thing in the Constitution, how would you write it?" Mondale asked. "Would you exempt times of war and international strife?" Willem said.
Correction
Mondale's speech to the 1,500 city officials was the administration's strongest argument yet against a proposed constitutional amendment to force new laws.
The date for the beginning of Elementary Chinese I and Intermediate Chinese II this summer was incorrectly reported as June 11 on page 8 of yesterday's *Kiddo* magazine.
Weather
The National Weather Service is calling for clear nights and sunny days through tomorrow. The high temperature today should reach the upper 80s with
Carter to Mideast in settlement effort
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Carter will fly to Egypt and Israel this week to try to remove remaining roadblocks to a settlement.
Egyptian Prime Minister Mustafa Khalil
in Carte that Carter's trist most likely
would win.
At this point, Powell said, there are no plans for a three-way meeting among the
And Israeli Prime Minister Menachem
begint told members of the U.S. Congress that
he was against a trade agreement.
White House Press Secretary Jody Powell said yesterday that Carter would arrive in Egypt Thursday afternoon for talks with the Arab League to go to Israel on Saturday for talks with Beinin.
He noted that Israel had accepted U.S. proposals for wrapping up a treaty and said, "Let us hope Egypt will join the effort. Then we will have it signed." At the time, we may have the certificate of signing.
Begin said he would fly home tomorrow to prepare for the visit.
KHALIL SAID in a telephone interview,
"When an American president puts down all his stakes, it is natural that it has to have a positive result."
Egypt and Israel have been stalemated since November about the future of the Palestinian Arabs and other controversial issues surrounding the treaty.
HE SAID that Israel's concern had been that it must be able to defend itself against other Arab countries if the peace does not last.
The U.S. mediation effort appeared to be headed toward defeat after a series of meetings that started last Thursday between Carter and Begin.
But late Sunday, after their fourth session, there was a sudden reversal.
Carter gave Begin new U.S. proposals for breaking the deadlock. They were submitted to the Israeli cabinet, which voted yesterday to accept them.
The principal stalemate point in negotiations has been Sadat's demand, backed by the Carter administration, that a timetable be included in the treaty package for establishing Palestinian self-rule on the West Bank of the Jordan River and in Gaza.
MAKING A BREAK
An informed source in Jerusalem said Israel made some movement on that demand.
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Vietnam disputes Chinese withdrawal
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)—China said yesterday that it was withdrawing its invasion army from Vietnam after a 16-day war of "punishment," but Vietnamese officials said the army was escalating and ordered a general mobilization "for national salvation."
Peking's official news agency said Chinese troops yesterday began pulling out after achieving their goal of "dealing devastating blows to Vietnamese armed forces." It warned Vietnam against new border provocations.
Several hours later, the newspaper of the Vietnamese Communist Party, DhanDan, said the Chinese an-
nounced the censure to the real situation in the battlefields."
THE NEWSPAPER said in a commentary reported by the Vietnamese News Agency that China "is stepping up its military involvement in militarily destroying Vietnamese villages."
Intelligence sources in Bangkok said they had no evidence of a Chinese pallout or signs that the Chinese were preparing new attacks.
But the reports by these sources have lagged behind events throughout the largely secret war.
Some observers say the Chinese troops might be following a "scorched-earth" policy in withdrawing from Vietnam.
Others said it was not untry
nighting would end abruptly but would
wind down to small-scale border
skirmishes.
Even if a Chinese withdrawal took place, it would not end the tensions in Southeast Asia.
Vietnam's rebel forces scored a new victory in Cambodia yesterday againstinese-backed guerrillas and thefinnish moved closer to theTaiwan border.
Tuesday Night's Chili Night! 99c
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Tuesday, March 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
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Oread association votes to oppose redistricting plan
The Oread Neighborhood Association passed a motion at last night's meeting opposing the current Kansas House restricting plan.
The association opposes the plan because it would put the neighborhood in two Legislative districts, the 46th and the 44th.
In other action, three representatives of the Downtown Lawrence Association, a merchants group, spoke to the Oread group about a proposed shopping mall south of Lawrence and the mall's effect on the downtown and the Oread neighborhood.
The association also passed a motion asking the Lawrence City Commission to allow a building with an estimated cost of which would limit future construction in the neighborhood to buildings containing more than 2,000 square feet.
Jack Arensberg, a representative of the merchants group, said, "We think it is in the best interest of downtown and the neighborhood to stop the mail."
Kathy Clark, president of the neighborhood association, said she expected that thousands of merchants before the association would decide to support the merchants against the scheme.
The motion to the city commission also asks that a historical district be set up in the neighborhood.
Midwestern Music and Art Camp
ANNOUNCES
MIDWESTERN
positions for RESIDENT ASSISTANTS
for the summer of 1979.
Room, board and stipend are furnished for the University Summer Session
Interested persons may apply at 214 Murphy Hall before March 9, 1979
Legal services board searches for office
By CAITLIN GOODWIN
Staff Reporter
The legal services program, scheduled to
open in two weeks, does not yet have a
branch.
Margaret Berlin, student body president,
said yesterday that the legal services board
was looking for office space for the
school to provide prepaid legal
services to KU students.
The program's office war to have been in the United Ministries building, 1240 Oread. Baucau will lead the building to the University of Kansas, forcing the legal services board to look
Bill Hogan, chairman of the University Space Committee; David Ambler, vice president of the College Rocha, a member of the legal services board, are looking for space in buildings on
"WE HAVE TO look at the student union first of all," Hogan said. "Bob was going to talk to Frank Burge about getting space there."
Hogan would not say which other buildings were being considered.
Bernal said it was possible that the Student
Senate, which is funding the legal services
of the U.S. Department of Justice.
"I think that would be a poor choice, though," Berlin said, "because there would be a problem of accessibility for the students."
Hogan said he would not want the office to be off the campus.
"That would be expensive for the Student senate," he said. "We'd like to see them mentally."
Hogan said he did not think the lack of space would cause a delay in the program's opening. Steve Ruddick, the legal services attorney, said he would be working March 19, but said he was not sure whether he would be ready to take clients by then.
"We might know within the next two weeks," Haogan said. "I'm sure we will have a good chance."
THE LACK of space is the most recent in a series of problems that have plagued the program since the Student Senate funded it last spring.
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Bill could cut delinquent taxes
Douglas County Commissioners are closely watching a bill in the Kansas that could reduce the amount of delinquent motor vehicle taxes in the county.
During the commissioners' meeting yesterday, Beverly Bradley, commissioner who received a call from State Rep. Katie Palford, said that the bill had been sent to the House with the endorsement of the assessment committee, of which he is a member.
The bill would require that owners or motor vehicles pay all of the property taxes on their vehicles when they register them each year. Taxpayers now pay more of their taxes at the time of registration and the half axe months later.
Bradley said the present system makes it possible for taxpayers to pay half of their taxes and receive the registration, which is good for one year, and then leave the county without paying the rest of their taxes.
THIS TAXATION system is costly to the county.
Hath Verdyrick, county treasurer, said the county had been able to collect only about $100,000 of $300,000 of delinquent motor vehicles on motor vehicles for the tax year 1977.
But this is not the only revenue the county loses. There also is the cost of keeping track of the delinquent taxes and the cost of trying to recover them.
Verdicken said that the county sends notices to delinquent taxpayers informing them that they are late with their taxes. When the county does not
Verdynck said her department spends about $20,000 a year to collect back taxes.
receive a response, warrants for collection are sent to the sheriff's office.
"Of course, the money we counted on collecting from all our taxes is budgeted and spend. What we don't get we have to pay in the year with a higher tax rate," she said.
Hinenan said the bill, which has the support of county officials across the state, has been in the House for at least six or seven years.
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"I think we have got a lot of the bugs worked out of the bill now," Hineman said.
The hill should be voted on by the House today or tomorrow, he said. If it does not come up for a vote it then may be sent to another committee.
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The Association of University Residence Halls (AURH)
ELECTIONS
VOTE Monday and Tuesday, March 5th and 6th in your hall cafeteria.
VOTE: Jay L. Smith President
VOTE: Richard A. Jenkins
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VOTE: Parveesh Kumar (Treasurer)
You will need your KUID to vote.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
MARCH 6,1979
Power display needless
Poor Kansas. The rural, conservative plains state has long been the butt of jokes, many of which have been directed at its archaic liquor laws.
Action last week within the Kansas Senate, no doubt, will subject the state to further ridicule and add to the folly of limour sales in Kansas.
The Senate recently defeated a resolution calling for a constitutional amendment that would have allowed voters, on a county basis, to decide whether they wanted liquor by the drink in restaurants.
Just hours before the Senate vote, Attorney General Robert Stephan ruled that private clubs could serve liquor by the drink because they have membership requirements and cannot be considered public or "open" saloons, which are forbidden by the state constitution.
Stephan's ruling reaffirmed the Kansas laws that allow liquor by the drink in private clubs but not in restaurants. But the contradictions do not end there.
TWO DAYS after the restaurant resolution was defeated, the Kansas Senate Federal and State Affairs committee introduced two proposed constitutional amendments. The first
resolution, which is similar to the one defeated earlier, would permit the sale of liquor by the drink in restaurants, or by the salesman, to the sale of cocktails in private clubs.
Ostensibly, the senate committee's action is designed to get both resolutions considered simultaneously by the Senate, thereby creating a difficult choice for liquor opponents: Pass the restaurant resolution allowing mixed drinks with meals or else outlaw the sale of mixed drinks in private clubs.
The legislation is an attempt to have liquor by the drink in clubs contingent on allowing restaurants the same option. This is nothing but a needless and coercive political tactic.
Members of the Senate should not be afraid to allow Kansans the choice of having liquor by the drink.
OBVIOUSLY, the Senate missed the opportunity to provide individuals with that choice when it defeated the first resolution.
The Senate would do well to pass a resolution similar to the initial resolution allowing an open vote on liquor by the drink in restaurants. It should do so with direct, definitive action, and without demonstrations in power politics.
There are already several candidates officially entered in the 1980 presidential race and dozens are preparing and working to make time to announce their entry to race official.
With the possibility of so many entrants, it has been tough to declare the favorite or to choose a winner.
And to make the situation more complicated, the Democratic team may have an unlikely entrant whose entry into the race could have interesting effects. Not the least of those effects would be injury to defending candidates, and not necessarily burting his chances for a second victory.
Stevenson may be spoiler in 1980
The unofficial entrant is Sen. Adal
Stevenson III of Illinois. The odd part of his entry is that he has, until recently, been one of Carter's biggest fans and supporters.
"IT'S GETTING more interesting." Stevenson said recently when reporters questioned him on the prospect of challenging Carter in the 1980 presidential
The first factor is Carter's performance. If Carter continues to display what he may consider his leadership he may mention a no agenda that says he 'going to make government run more smoothly'. Stevenson says. He attributes Carter's leadership vid to his own skills.
There are several factors that will contribute to Stevenson's deciding whether or not to enter the race, but Stevenson says he will have decided by late Anril.
A second factor affecting Stevenson's decision, he says, is whether the most unofficial of the unofficial candidates, Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, and the most official of the unofficial candidates, Gov. Mitt Romney, enter the primaries. If either decides to, Stevenson says, "it could turn me into an enthusiastic sponsor of Carter."
BUT BOTH BROWN and Kennedy appear likely to enter the race, although Kennedy may do it without even filling out the applications because of the prospects of a
Since the mid-1960s, the music industry has taken a terrific beating from those who have slanderized the mere existence of black musicians. For many minority leaders, flower children, hippies, etc., were all victims of maligning actions and statements from those who wished to destroy the many subcultures that have shaped their music to improve the people of our society as a whole.
To the editor:
Defaemation of any widespread and popular alteration in culture is not only an act of murder, but something entirely different from the norm of society is detrimental to the existence of our culture.
Music has fine entertainment quality, and it has a special place in society. It evolves as people learn new things and beings, can experience, then judge for ourselves. That judgment should not entail
Just because certain types of music, films, books and plays don't meet our entertainment qualifications, does not mean they aren't enjoyed and loved by others. Disco, funk, rock, rhythm and blues, jazz music all fill up the lives in music of lovers.
The articles written by Buchanan, Hitchcock, Helmell and him on "discomania" have been this type of libel. I agree with Kathleen Conkey on a few points, but her article, as well as those that followed, were misleading and defeated their own purposes. Conkey's statements on the subject were not in line with their establishments as being sexually, gayly and narcotically abusing to the public are utterly disgusting.
Byron M. Howard East St. Louis, Ill. junior
We all have our own opinions on controversial topics, but we should not run this debate because it is wrong.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
These statements are closed-minded, saying that what's right for me is right for you; there is no reason not to fail. Failing Coneky for saying, "You can't beat the disco beat. Why not dance to it?" But that phrase elicits only fear from those followers of non-disco music.
Buchanan continued his 'onslaught on disco' by ending his article with the words 'Disco is cheap beer, obnovous music and dark smoke-filled rooms. Disco is boring.' He is stooping to the opinionated, information that he chastised Conkey for.
Buchanan attacked the disco argument by slyly stabbing Conkey in the back for the grammatical misuse of two words. She called Conkey's attack on the provoke more anger from those who enjoy dancing and listening to disco music. If he feels that disco is mindless, dehumanizing, and offensive, she rejects and verbss that the followers of disco can use to describe other forms of music. But engaging in an endless battle of the form is not the way one should handle the argument.
Disco debate lacks logic and objectivity.
To the editor:
I love disco, (major premise), therefore disco is good, (conclusion). I hate disco, (major premise), therefore disco sucks, (conclusion). Primary fallacy—no minor premise. Secondary fallacy—possible minor premise. I love disco, what I love is good, (minor premise), therefore disco is good. I hate disco, what I hate sucks, (minor premise), therefore disco sucks. Other fallacies: the sylastic structure is good, the sylvatic structure is good, and sucks are vague and abstract.
The structure is weak and the terms are vague because they express opinions and little fact. The recently recognized articles questioned whether a questionable composite of objectivity and subjectivity. It is the little supported objectivity and exaggerated subjectivity that questions the credibility of angered responses. Disco is obviously an issue that craves discussion, but the real issue at stake in most of the articles that reach the paper is the slander that is tossed aside.
He even briefly recognizes disco's excellent danceability. Why must he then shake up the party, and have him disco sucks and employing a tone that provokes further angered discussion. Why don't he simply say that his opinion differs from them than employing such a derogatory phrase.
Acceptable objectivity is welcome. Mark Buchanan effectively refutes Kathleen Conkey in his paragraph describing how she was insulted by the misperfections. He continues in fine fashion by recognizing that her conclusion was written in poor tone. He then, however, defeats his own cause by responding to her “it’s the wrong way to do it,” a brand of mud throwing. “Disco is boring.”
Unfortunately, anger consistently sets logic aside in editorsors in the Kansen, Yan. it's true that part of the purpose of editorsors is to show their anger. But at KU, simple issues that could be
The only answer must be that he wants to set his validity aside and engage in nothing more than bandying. Irvocable logic and institute a far better argument than slander.
Similarly, Doug Hitchcock employs substantial objectivity in his statements about the music industry upon studio mixing and overdubbing. And he is supported by fact when he says "The formula melodies, absurd lyrics and impersonal rhythms are impersonal." . . .
discussed on a professional level are continually blown out of proportion by uncontrolled disgust. And the advocates of this practice allow tread water to urge the issue drowned.
Rick Hellman limits his disgust to satir a subtlety. His article is concise and accurate. And he begins his concluding paragraph with a true and effective comparison of the two cultures, but then he likens disco-manias—no intended slander—to the army and the Moonies. This satire is clever and even enjoyable to some, but carries the potential to provoke more responses from disco mediums or simply some from the army and the Moonies.
1, like so many others, do not appreciate disco. I do, however, recognize and enjoy its舞姿ability and will not condemn others for doing so. Even the environment can be acceptable when people enter it unmasked by personas that hide their true selves.
All discussions have pros and cons, and all sides have advantages and disadvantages. Can we editorialize these without personal slander? Can we, as intelligent people, resort to logic rather than primal aggressive ventions?
Kevan Myers
Ravtown, Mo. sophomore
Sharks are terrible creatures. They bite, maill, kill and prey on poor, helpless, weak, unhealthy, or injured creatures. The fact that by eating those poor, helpless, weak and injured creatures they help keep the oceans free of epidemic diseases and making as garbage disposals is unimportant. Sharks are mean and should be destroyed.
My point is that whether or not we nonhunters like the sport, it is a fact that if deer hunting were illegalized, the number of animals that would slowly starve to death each winter, and the numbers that would die off from disease, would outnumber the yearly take of the hunters. The sport of hunting provides a service to the forest that nature now has difficulty providing, due to the imbalance created by man's presence. Kennedy will never convince informed readers that a dislike for deer is a legitimate reason for gun control.
Hunter, like shark beneficial to nature
To the editor:
I found Kevin Kennedy's letter of Feb. 28 interesting with its reference to sharks. "His work was not only a great achievement, but
Stevenson must realize that both Brown and Kennedy are going to be there in the primaries, yet he still acts as if he also will be an entrant no matter who else runs.
Stevenson's ability to gain wider support nationwide is a third factor in his decision. He is considering television appearances, but the calm nature he inherited from his father seems to make his appearance on TV less than impressive. He is counting on
Unfortunately though, there are "hunters" who tramp into the forest shootings at everything in sight. There are also laws to punish those people when they are caught. Committees have been formed to commit crimes. And again, there are laws to punish those people. Apparently, an increasingly large number of people are choosing to disobey those laws. So should we alleviate the problem by taking away the freedom of the person which is guaranteed in the Second Amendment?
(USPS 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and June. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence; Kansas 6049. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for money 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.
THE UNIVERSITY BAY KANSAN
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Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanaan, Flint Hall. The University of Kanaan, Lawrence, KS 60453
Editor Barry Massey
Business Manager Karen Wenderott
massive New Hampshire write-in campaign.
Winning may not be important to Stevenson, but there is some doubt as to whether his desire to provide an alternative strategy is more crucial than his desire to win the nomination.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
However, long shots have a tendency to play an unusual role in many races—the spoiler. Indeed, the emergence of Stevenson as a presidential hopeful raised quite a few eyebrows—and quite a few questions for the rest of the field.
General Manager Rick Musser
INDEED, HE SAYS that "winning is not important. What is important is that the people who made it are good. And Stevenson has toyed with the idea of offering the American people an even larger alternative in 1984 if he goes ahead with his idea of running on a third party ticket that is more professional."
Mary
Ernst
Although he chastises his old ally, Carter, for undefined agendas for the nation, Stevenson has not provided much of an agenda either. His proposals seem to lack the originality that he seeks, and they often can be as vague as Carter's. However, he is quick to reply that he will soon have a plan, or at least not have it. He said if he can bring "enlightened" to the American people with it, he will seek the presidency.
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
As with most late-comers and semi-
unknowners, Stevenson is unlikely to wit the
dialect.
Although these factors may spur Stevenson to join the race for the Democratic nomination, his odds are still low. The best one can do is label a turn insensitive.
No. In this country we like to think that a person buying a gun will not put it on an evil use. Perhaps the idea of assumed innocence until guilt is proven will ring a bell with that sound, and it's this far. I wouldn't apply that idea to business, but people with it's a pretty sound concept.
people being ready, he says, to accept him his common sense ideas, not his TV appearance.
Michael R. McDermott Leavenworth sophomore
MARNEY ARGHANISTAN Vietnam CAMBODIA IRAN MIDDLE EAST New Hampshire TAIWAN PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA SITUATION ROOM
Quebec independence far from fact
N. Y. Times Feature
By RICHARD HAMILTON
MONTREAL. The government of Quebec has expended much effort to convince people of the inevitability of Quebec's independence. More precisely, the government says that Quebec will be politically independent and will link links to a stronger federal association.
When Premier Reine Leveque and his ministers travel throughout Canada and the United States, their message is one of
The Parti Quebecois, founded in October 1968, made its first electoral bid in 1970 and took 23 percent of the popular vote. In 1973 it took 30 percent, and in November 1976 it received 41 percent and became the provincial government. Given these figures, it is evident that the party is "on the move" and that it is only a question of time before it gains an absolute majority.
THERE IS ALSO an age factor. One recent study found 69 percent of young French Canadians supporting the Parti Francois, compared with a mere 11 percent among those 65 and over. For the party's ardent supporters, it follows that the "future is ours." These arguments sound so compelling that the only reasonable course appears to be acceptance of the forthcoming fact.
NOT ALL WHO voted for the party were voting for independence, the party's "social democratic" program no doubt attracting some voters. In 1978, moreover, the party played down its own theme; that, it said, would be decided in a general referendum.
But public opinion polls conducted over the last 15 years tell a different story. Of course, one can never be sure that experience will predict the future. The recently published report of the Task Force on federal budget consolidation and centralization of federal powers, could have some effect on outlooks.
A forthcoming national election, which could topple the Trudeau government, might change things significantly. But Quebec opinion has been rather immune to the major events of recent Canadian history, suggesting that it is based on a different perspective.
Instead, it campaigned on the issue of "good government," its point being that the reigning仁官 had offered little but scandal and mismanagement of provincial affairs. With independence and self-governance, it became a party either for its other offspring or as a law to punish the liberals.
Since 1962 about 20 published polls have asked about independence. They have shown a very slow change, with independence sentiment going from 8 percent in 1962 to just under 20 percent in 1977. The results of 14 published polls from 1977 to 1979 showed that opposition that independence sentiment has stopped growing, that opposition has increased somewhat and that indecision has declined.
THE PARTY program, to be sure, calls for sovereignty association—that is, for political independence together with maintenance of present economic ties. Twelve studies in the public domain have asked for opinions on sovereignty association. While this possibility gains greater support than the opposition, there are instances of plurality for the proposal (Gallup's, in January, based on some 300 respondents). Some of the larger 1978 studies suggest a decline in support for this possibility.
A LARGE PART of the minority favoring sovereignty association is only weakly committed to it. Many initial supporters say that if, at the time of a referendum on that question, economic association appears to be in doubt, they will not vote for
Many people fear the economic effects of independence, feeling that Quebec would be lost if left to fend for itself. The association option, which suggests the continued economic advantages of the province, is a sensible option. It allows the assurance that allows the anxious to approve this alternative.
Some recent polls have asked whether people would give the government a "mandate to negotiate" sovereignty association.
In other words, a significant part of the current support for sovereignity association is vulnerable.
These give the Parti Quebecois its best showing yet, with slight majorities favoring that possibility. Not too surprising, the party's leaders declare that they will be asking for just a mandate. These results, however, are undercut by the responses to other questions, some of them in the very same students, they believe, to show only minority support for sovereignty association.
SOME PEOPLE, it appears, are saying that they oppose the option, but rather generously would allow negotiation of the question. The party's leaders, nevertheless, have declared that a majority on the mandate question would be taken as authorizing realization of the option, not just its discussion. It seems likely that voters who expressly will disappear when the meaning of those votes becomes clear.
Independence for Quebec, in short, does not appear to be "in the cards" or "just around the corner." Majority sentiment in Quebec is very much opposed to independence, to dissolution of the Canadian union. Even the somewhat more appealing something that has gained just another self-additional bit, to date, apart from the recent Gallup study, has also fallen short of a plurality.
HOW CAN ONE account for the widespread sense that independence is practically accomplished, as opposed to the majority opposition delinqued here? Part of the answer stems from the character of the movement itself. The party's activists
Among the teachers and professionals, among the journalists, writers, television commentators, artists, support for the Parti Quebecus runs between 80 and 160 percent, nearly a half-third of all students in the province, and independence is very high, and their "voices" are heard every day in the street, in the classrooms and through the news media. And their voices are the voices of journalists and commentators, by coming from outside Quebec.
The available opinion polls, however, indicate that in-
ference for Quebec is by no means as certain as their con-
fident and objective.
Richard Hamilton is professor of sociology at McGill University, Montreal. He and a colleague, Maurice Pinceau, have done a study on the gender pay gap.
STATE U.
CHANCELLOR, DO YOU THINK IT'S FAIR OF US TO KICK OUT THE BLACK AFRICAN STUDENTS WHO CAN'T PAY THEIR TUITION...
CHANCELLOR, DO YOU THINK IT'S FAIR OF US TO KICK OUT THE BLACK AFRICAN STUDENTS WHO CAN'T PAY THEIR TUITION...
WHILE OUR ENDUMENT FUND INVESTS MONEY IN WHITE SOUTH AFRICA? THAT'S RACIAL DISCRIMINATION!
OH, BLACK OR WHITE — IT'S A QUESTION OF GOLD!
HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH IT.
STATE UNIVERSITY'S FUND RAISING GALA
A PUBLIC HEARING
BY T. M. ASLA
= 17
WITH IT
STATE UNIVERSITY'S
FUND RAISING GALA
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
5
KANSAN On Campus
Z
SLA
TODAY: Today is the LAST DAY TO DROP LIBRAL Arts and Sciences undergraduate courses and receive a "W" from the Department of Landscapes," by John Blumb, is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. this week in the Visual Arts Building Gallery. THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 a.m. the Forum Room in the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be available to elderly, non-English speaking and low income individuals from 6 to 8 in the legal aid office in new Green Hall. The KU room 173 in Robinson Gymnasium. THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM SERIES will show "The Hero as Artist" at 7:30 in room 3 in new Green Hall. The perform at 8 in SWarthwout Rectal Hall in Murphy Hall. The SUA POETRY HOUR, featuring Jim Eaton, will be at 8 in the Council Room in the Union. The perform presents a talk by Rosey Wokke on "China: Politics of Cultural Revolution" at 8 in Woodruff Auditorium in the Union.
TOMORROW: The WEDNESDAY FORUM will feature Richard Wright speaking on "Styles of Jazz" at 11:45 a.m. in the MEC Center, 1204 Aroad. THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlors A and B in the Inunion. A STUDENT RECTAL, featuring Susan Alan and Alan Martin on Tuba, will be at 7:30 p.m. in KU HANG GLIDING CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 2002 Learned Hall. The KU FENCING CLUB will meet at 8:30 p.m. in room 173 in Robinson.
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Language enrollment best in Big 8
Staff Reporter
By MARK GATES
Bucking a trend of declining enrollments in foreign language classes at other Big Eight schools, participation in KU's foreign language programs is increasing slightly, Robert Cobb, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said yesterday.
Enrollment in foreign languages began to drop at most Big Eight universities five or six years ago. Cobb said, but KU's enrollment has slowed as the school has increased in the past two years.
More students are enrolled in foreign language classes at KU than at any other Big Eight school. About 5,000 KU students are enrolled in foreign language classes, Cobb said.
The University of Colorado has about 4,500 students in their foreign language program, followed by 3,112 at the University of Missouri-Columbia.
THE UNIVERSITY OF Nebraska has 1,931 students enrolled in foreign languages. Kansas State University has about 1,350, followed by Iowa State University with 1,084 and the University of Oklahoma with 1,032. The smallest number in the Big East, with 761.
"Historically, KU has had a very strong foreign language program and a very good teaching tradition."
"One of the strongest inducements to learn a language is the opportunity to study
Norris Lacy, chairman of the French and Italian department, said, "I feel strongly that learning another language opens another culture to you.
abroad. Soon, lots of students may wish to study Chinese."
"It is a very liberating experience. The other institutions might do better to have a language requirement or more vigorous programs."
However, two schools in the Big Eight have dropped the foreign language requirement for a bachelor's degree in arts and sciences.
Since last fall, Iowa State has required proficiency in a foreign language for only about 25 percent of the degrees available in their sciences and humanities department.
THREE YEARS AGO, Oklahoma dropped the foreign language requirement for a bachelor's degree.
Lacy said, "Five to seven years ago, universities were eliminating the language requirement. Now, in the last year or two, that trend has reversed."
"I think that is unfortunate." Cobb said.
"Interest in languages is cyclical. I don't
think we'll drop the foreign language
requirement in the foreseeable future."
KU's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences requires proficiency or the completion of 16 credit hours in a foreign language for a Bachelor of Science degree. KU also offers sciences. However, a bachelor of general
"The presence of the BGS has relieved pressure to modify specific requirements, like the foreign language or the math," Cobb said.
studies degree in liberal arts and sciences has no language requirement.
THERE ALSO ARE foreign language requirements at the other Bic Education.
"The people in arts and sciences would roll over in their graves if we dropped the language requirement," Gary Smith, of the University of Missouri-Columbian said.
becoming more and more important because we're increasingly becoming citizens of the world as much as citizens of a particular country."
In a survey by the Mid-America State Universities Association, KU had the largest number of students pursuing degrees in a foreign language. All Big Eight schools except Colorado were included in the survey.
According to Newsweek magazine, 61 percent of American colleges and universities require some language study for a bachelor's degree.
Cobb said, "Foreign language study is
JIM BOGAN
SUA
at KU, 363 students are pursuing
bachelor's or doctoral degrees in
one of seven majors compared with
148 students at Nebraska, 125 at Okaidamun, 118
at Missouri, 88 at Iowa State, 77 at
Michigan, and 69 at Penn.
SOME THINGS THAT NEED DOING
The languages surveyed by the association were French, Spanish, German, and English.
POETS & WRITERS SERIES presents
Stretch--it is a little-used freedom.
Surprise it is a little more freedom,
Saturday. Enjoy the afternoon of eating lunch,
Safari a wild animal or a forbidden dream,
Talk to strangers,
everyone on your phone a Van Gees gantt painting,
everyone in a shower in the rain,
Take a shower in the rain.
Get yourself removed at the library,
find a laptop on the snow,
Visit a tree,
Grab a book,
Be still for a sunset, awake for a sunrise,
Crack a rock and look inside...
Build a fire with wood. Cook dinner over it.
out where you can dance and congratulate are adoring on you. In Summer Breeze, Adriana performs his bellow music, the night, as Adriana's crown shimmer beside him. In Winter Glow, the West is lion-born Tatar man ascends from the East. In Winter Giant Orchid, followed by his bright red dog, he ascends from the Park. In Spring the Lion Loon covers overhead. His
Wake up, even though you think you are tired
Load in the tall carrier
Assassinate a TV commercial.
Bless your ancestors and their descendants.
Smile at the invitable man.
Make your own list of some things that need done.
8PM MAR.6
COUNCIL ROOM, KANSAS UNION
UNLESS YOU PRINT YOUR OWN . . .
I sense you are student here comes us with enough money to cover school expenses and have your tuition to pay soon.
If you're the most people who has learned too much time giving movies to Air Force Office of Public Relations (OPR) staff, you may be in the minority. If you're the most people who have learned too much time giving movies to Air Force Office of Public Relations (OPR) staff, you may be in the minority. When you are working on your movie, you are also working on a commission in the Air Force Office of Public Relations (OPR). You are creating content for your movie and communicating it to your audience.
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over the ARTIFICIAL LABEL. And when you all get your hands on the Air Force way of
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of doing the ARTIFICIAL LABEL.
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The Hawk presents No. 3 in a series of Glassware Specials,
The Hawk presents No. 3 in a series of Glassware Specials
Introducing the Budweiser
BOMBSHELL
A 10 ounce footed pilsner glass with 2-color "BUD" emblem
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Starts at 7 p.m.
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Joe'
Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble
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Kansas University Dance Company
Present a
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University Theatre
March 7, 8 & 9
8 p.m.
Tickets ava
Adults $2 or...
Students free with n...
paid for by Student Activity Fees
Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads Call 864-4358
sua films
STOOD STILL
Tuesday, March 6
THE DAY THE EARTH
(1950)
Thursday, March 8 Director's Showcase:
Wednesday, March 7 SUNSET BOULEVARD
Dir. Robert Wise; with Marian Rehn-
m, Patricia Neale, Sam Jaffa, Music
by Bernard Herrmann. One of the
most intelligent science-fiction films
ever made. "Gort! Klaatbar barada
nikto." Room Broom.
Dr. Billy Wilder, with William Holden, Gloria Swanson, Erich von Stroheim, Cecili B. Dellmei, Buster Kaeton, Dr. Billy Wilder, of a dark and decadely Hollywood
An evening of short films by six of the world's most renowned directors. The Showcase includes Polanski's absurdist "Two Men and a Warrior" and the comedic "Night and Fog," and the first film by a very young Orson Welles, "Hearts of Age." Other directors represented by their early films are Winnetka Scorese and the Francois Truffaut, II. The Book History, v. 4.
Our annual festival this year includes 15 award winning short animated films of fiction and fantasy from around the world including the Academy Award film "Sand Castle" and the National Film Awards "The Fight."
(1978)
Friday & Saturday, March 9 & 1
THE 13TH INTERNATIONAL
TOURNEE OF ANIMATION
Starts between 9:00 - 10:00
BF THERFI
All films M R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
GET READY! PRO-TOPLESS NIGHT TONIGHT!
It's a wild, crazy time when everyone gets absolutely NUTSI
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless
otherwise noted w/150 admission
Only at Flamingo 501 N. 9th N. Lawrence
PICK ANY ONE OF
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711 W. 23rd Street • Lawrence • Phone: 843-6282
6
Tuesday, March 6. 1979
University Daily Kansan
A
Protected pitcher
Staff photo by CHRIS TODD
KU'S Terry Sutliffe throws batting in Memorial Stadium from behind a protected screen to shield pitchers from line drive. Sutliffe is one of two pitchers who have been key contributors in the first two games.
Smith cage Coach of the Year
WICHTA (UPI)-North Carolina head basketball coach Dean Smith, who also coached the victorious 1976 U.S. Olympic basketball team, was named 1979-20 Coach of the Year yesterday by the U.S. Basketball Writers' Association.
Smith was a member of the KU national championship team of 1952, which finished 28-3. The Emperor native coached the Tar Heel offense in their first season at the Atlantic Coast Conference Post-Season
Tournament and a spot in the NCAA tournament, which is to begin this week.
The success, came despite pre-season predictions that his North Carolina team was playing theACC. The ACC. The writers attended at the time that the loss of All-America guard Phil Ford
IT WAS THE first time the collegiate basketball writers had given the honor to Smith, who in 18 years at North Carolina has compiled a 386-126 win-loss record.
Weather delays baseball opener
By TONY FITTS
KU's baseball team is scheduled to open its 1979 season at 1:30 tomorrow afternoon with a doubleheader against William Jewell College of Liberty, Mo., on KU's Quigley
sports writer
The games have been postponed from today because of the condition of the field. Quigley, just south of Allen Field House, is too wet to play on.
"I'd push it back to Thursday," coach Paid Temple said yesterday, "but I can't
William Jewell has another game scheduled on Thursday.
Even with the postponement, Temple said, there is only about a 28 percent chance that a new temple will be built.
But Temple is pleased with one aspect of the season that far improves the team's practice and the overall mood of the time and has had a few days of the practice on the artificial turf of Memorial
"And being able to go to the football field and get in some fly balls, and some long jumps."
"ALL OF OUR PITCHERS have gone seven innings in practice. Temple said, 'They're really good.'"
The 'Hawks' lineup is pretty well set. Dell Graham will start as catcher, replacing graduated Andy Glimcore. Brian Gray and Jason Kidd alternate at first base and designated hitter.
Steve Jelts returns at second, and Roger Riley will take over at third from Lee Ice, who graduated last year. Monty Marlin will cover shortstop.
Outfielders will be Vie Harris in left, Bob Balaskik in center and Job Sportswood in right.
Harris led the team in batting last year with a .344 average. Spottswood was second
KANSAN Sports
at 340, and set a team record with 17 stolen
bases. Jelt hit 381 and stole 12 bases.
LEON VICKERS would be playing center, but he broke a finger in his throwing hand and will be out of the lineup until the end of March.
The loss of Vickers, who had a .283
average last year, should not hurt the team.
It would be better to play with them.
Pitching should be a strong point for the Jayhawks this year. Returning starters Terry Sutcliffe and Dan St. Clair accounted for 17 of the team's 34 victories last year.
"We have a lot of depth in the outfield," he said.
Sutcliffe led the staff with a 10-4 record and a l.72 ERA last season. SK, Claired the team in strikeouts, with 73, and compiled a 55-50 record for all games. They will start KU's first two games.
OTHER RETURNERS include Galen "Catfish" Worley, who led last year's relievers with five saves and was second only to Sutcliffe with a 1.98 ERA; Kevin Cobb, who led on the squid; and Clay Christiansen, a 6-4, Ternola said, had had an excellent spring.
The pitchers have been throwing from a portable mound during practice. When they begin throwing games, their pitching may change by the change to a real mound, Temple said.
Junior college transfer Clayton Fleeman and freshman Mike Watt will also be on the pitching staff. Another transfer, Dave Lombard, will be for the season because of monogamous relationships.
"I LAST YEAR we were surprised at how our pitches did with only one day on the field."
Because of the weather, the first game Kansas played last year was with Dallas University in Dallas, at the beginning of its spring trip. The team returned from the week-long roadtrip with a 7-4-1 record, its best ever in the annual trip.
Because of the weather, Kansas may open against Dallas, the first game of the spring trip, again this year. The Jayhawks then won in Tulsa, Texas, to compete in the Citrus Tournament.
"Most of the teams in the tournament will also be from up north," Temple said. "I won't be so much of a disadvantage for us in not being able to get out."
"We're going to stop off in Norman and work out at Oklahoma's field on the way down."
KU IS ONE of seven teams in this year's Citrus Tournament. On March 12, KU will have two games, against Northern Illinois and Central Michigan universities.
Men tankers defend Big 8 championship
By MIKE EARLE
Sports Writer
The Jayhawks amassed 405 points and runner-up Iowa State tailed 343.
Steve Graves broke three records in leading Kansas to its second straight Big Eight Conference swimming and diving championship title during weekend competition at the Bob Daveney Sports Center in Lincoln, Neb.
Graves, unanimously selected by the seven league coaches as the meet's most valuable swimmer, qualified for the NCAA meet in Cleveland March 22-24. He also in the in the 200-yard breaststroke, the 200-yard medley and the 400-yard individual medley.
"He had a great meet," said KU coach Bill Spahn. "He swear great last year, but he didn't win the MVP, so he wanted to prove he deserved it this year."
Spahn said Graves had yet to realize his potential.
"When he goes to the NCAA, he improves his times there," Spahn said. "He has not."
completely ready for this meet, not all the way paused.
GRAVES SAID his goal at nationals would be to finish in the top 12 in six events.
Although Graves had a standout performance, depth won the title for the Jets.
The 40-yard medley relay team of Rick Jenkins, Jim Sauer, Brent Barnes and Graves knocked almost two seconds off the old record set by Missouri in the 1978. The time of 3:25.55 was good enough to qualify for the Olympics as U.S' first victory in the event in twelve years.
this big kit in his rationals would be to finish in the top 10 in his three events. He broke his record last record this season Saturday in winning the 200-yard breaststroke in a time of 2:05.04.
KU got a first-place finish from Sauer in the 108-inch butterfly Teammate Bill Crawford.
Missouri came on strong Saturday to finish third with 314 points, leaving Nebraska in fourth. Oklahoma, Colorado, and Oklahoma State rounded out the league.
Women third in track nationals
Kansas Placings
40 mctery联动 - Kaiwa (Rick Jenkins, Jim Sauer
Steve Graves, Brent Barnes) 3 25.5
BVUAKLOS MURGUIA
2.2.5.35
Gravimetric analysis — I-1
200 individual media — I-1
152.384 (meet record) : 6
Mark Cole : 16.50
300 Individual metery 1 — Gravies 1: 52.88 (metre record) 6 Mark Cole 1: 56.99
7 Mark Dudley 1: 47.99
Sports Writer
Kansas redeemed itself from a six-place conference finish two weeks ago by placing third in this weekend's Association of International Women for women National meeting at Columbia, Mo.
Big Eight champion Iowa State added another title by capturing first with 57 points. The University of Texas at El Paso bound with 47 and Kansas was made with 44.
500 freestyle - 6: Dave Killen 4:37.67
500 freestyle - 5: Burnes 21:32, 6: Jay Kuratis 21:25
KU track coach Teri Anderson said the third-place finish was the result of a team effort and some outstanding individual performances.
LAST YEAR at this meet, Calmese set an American record in the 300-meter dash with a time of 2:59.7. He was the first to win.
Calmshe was KU's only national winner. She won the 60-yard dash with a time of 6.9. Teammate Lori Green also contributed finishing a strong second with a time of 7.04.
record, but so did two individuals with faster times than Calmese's.
The new American record holder in the 300 is Elizabeth Young from the District of Columbia with a time of 34.5 Calmness and Green fushed a time of 38.7 and Green fushed a time of 38.7.
Throughout the indoor season, Corwin has been struggling in the high jump. But this weekend she exploded for her best jump and that was good enough for third and a KU record.
Brantley 20, Armstrong 14, Alba 12, Kelby 12, Kelby 12,
One-meter dive - 2. Kit Anneliese 12.4, Tom Anagnon
839.47.
Corwin and the second-place winner both cleared 5-10 but Corwin had to settle for third because of more missed attempts at that height. Nebraska's Sharon Burrill set a meet record in the high jump by clearing 6-1.
"I knew we could do this well," Anderson said. "We knew we were better than what they did." We know we believe our efforts at this meet proved it. Individually, Sheila Calmese and Shawn Fischer delivered.
TWO OTHER contributors to the team's point total were Dib Hertzog in the 1,000 and 2,500 yards, Ben Doyle in the Hertzog finished sixth in the 800-yard run. This year he placed sixth in the 1,000 with a score of 69.7.
Brown repeated her placement of last year by again finishing sixth in the mile run with a time of 2:53.
Kansas did have one unfortunate accident, in the preliminaries of the 600. Vickie Simpson got tangled in a qualifying heat with three other runners, and all four fell. Simpson was the only one to get up and run, but that time wasn't good enough to make the finals.
10w 1st=1 GrassV4.0 4.01|4mfeeFeadj | 2. Cole4: 07
20freefly =Brian Collins 1.2.7 |
21freefly =Brian Collins 1.2.7 |
Other Jayhawk finishers and their times were: Lori Lowry, seventh in the 60-yard hurdles, 8.19; and Maureen Finholm, ninth in the mile run, 5.03.
100 butterfly-1, Sauer 50.4, B. Bill Crampton 50.9.
100 backstroke-1, Jenkins 33.7.
The only other KU record was set in the pentathlon event by Bev Fuller. Fuller
100 breaststroke--4 Jed Blackkship 39.1; 6 Kris Flaska
39.2
1. 650 freenyle - 5. Killen 18:06:46
Blankenship2: 10.67; G. Plaska2: 12.27.
Meet Records.
200 backstroke- 2 Jenkins 1:56:0. 4 Peter Baker-Ahrera-
15:17. 1
000 breastcase-1, Graves 2.056 (meet record); S
Blinkhorn8 2.076; S Blinkhorn10 2.232; S
400 freestyle relay - 3. Collins, Gray, Jenkins, and Barnes 3.5
Three-meter diving—2. Anagnos; 3. Anselmi.
KU gymnasts capture state title
Kathy Ross and Jackie DiPinto led the KU women's gymnastics队 past Wichita State for the second week in a row as KU won the Championship meet Saturday in Topeka.
KU won with 128.5 points and WSU finished second with 125.5, followed by Fort Hays State University with 102.75 and Emporia State University with 94.05.
Ross won the all-around competition with 92.85 points and Dipinto finished second with 92.61.
"Jackie probably won the meet for us," Kren snow, woman in gymnastics coach, said. "I don't think I had to."
exercise, but we were behind WSU going into the last event and we needed outscore
Dipinto didn't practice until Friday because of a thigh injury. Snow said,
"I didn't expect to win," Snow said. "We were really hurting going into the meet."
Ross and DiPinto tied for first place in the floor exercise with scores of 8.5 and Kim Danlue won the uneven parallel bars with a score of 8.1.
Results for KU were:
Balance beam, 2- Rams, 8- Bats, 3- DPitcher, 5- Bases. Balance beam, 2- Rams, 8- Bats, 3- DPitcher, 5- Bases.
Balance beam, 1- Dawson, 2- Bats, 2- DPitcher, 2- Bases.
Balance beam, 1- Dawson, 2- Bats, 2- DPitcher, 2- Bases.
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Aztec Inn
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807 Vermont
842-9455
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Special Luncheon Menus.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
7
Sycamores stay at top; Irish drop to fifth spot
From Kansan Wire Services
Indiana State's Syracuses, who will play here Saturday, the consensus pick of both wire services as the No. 1 college basketball team in the nation. The AP media poll and the UPI coaches owl were released yesterday.
The Top Twenty teams in the Associated Press college basketball poll, with first-place votes in paren
league baseball poll, with first-place vote in parenthesis.
1. Indiana St. N 29.0
2. North Carolina N 29.5
3. Minnesota St. N 29.5
4. Notre Dame N 29.5
5. Duke N 29.5
6. Washington N 29.4
7. Michigan St. N 29.4
8. Joliet St. N 29.4
9. Syracuse N 29.4
10. Geneva St., D.C. N 29.4
11. Marquette N 29.4
12. Tampa N 29.4
13. Iowa N 29.7
14. Texas N 29.7
15. Purdue N 29.7
16. Detroit N 29.7
17. Jacksonville N 29.7
18. San Francisco N 29.4
19. Tampa N 29.4
Notre Dame, ranked No. 2 last week in both polls, slipped to the No. 5 spot after losing to DePaul and Michigan.
UCLA, the Pac-10 champion, moved to the second place slot. The Bruins are seeded first in the NCAA's West Regional.
The Top Twenty teams in The United Press International college basketball poll, with first-place votes in narcissism and season records.
PACIFIC STATES
College football team rosters for the season
UCLA (A)
1. Tampa Bay (N, 30) 29.0
2. San Diego (N, 48) 29.4
Virginia Tech (B)
1. Maryland N. (1) 21.8
2. North Carolina N. (1) 21.8
3. Arkansas N. (1) 23.4
Duke (E)
1. Duke (N, 30) 22.7
2. Jeffield (N, 30) 22.7
3. Louisiana St. (N, 30) 22.7
Syracuse (D)
1. Syracuse (N, 30) 22.7
2. Iowa (N, 30) 22.7
3. Gonzalezville D.C. (N, 30) 24.7
Marquette (F)
1. Marquette (F, 30) 26.1
2. Purdue (F, 30) 26.1
3. Texas (F, 30) 26.1
4. Temple (F, 30) 26.3
San Francisco (G)
1. San Francisco (G, 30) 26.1
2. Tennessee (G, 30) 26.1
3. Louisville (G, 30) 25.3
4. Detroit (G, 30) 25.3
State basketball domination ends
Oklahoma, the Big Eight champ with a 10-4 conference record this season, captured its first uncontested championship in 32 years. In 1947, when the league was the Big Six, the Sooners, coached by Bruce Drake, went 8-2 in their last four, overall, finishing second in the nation.
The Sunflower State's domination of $^{12}$H
Eight conference basketball has ended.
Ironically, the members of that Sooner squad were the idols of KU coach Ted Owens, who was in high school when they played for a team at West Virginia later played for UO and Drake from 1949-51.
"I was a great Oklahoma fan." Owens said recently. "Those guys--Dick Reich, Gerald Tucker, Paul Court and Jack Landon—were my idols."
But it was this year's idols from OU, Al Beal, John McCullough and Ray Whitley, not football idols, who marked the end of the season in a dominant demation of conference basketball.
ONLY A HALF dozen times in the last 30
---
years has a school other than Kansas or Kansas State grabbed possession of the league crown. Missouri was the first in 1976. Colorado was the champ in 1955, 1962 and 1969 and Oklahoma State, coached by the legendary Hank Iba, won in 1965.
KU alone held the crown nine times in that period and K-State has had it 11 years. So out of 30 years, 20 of the championships have been captured by the Kansas schools, six crowns by other league schools and there have been four ties.
John P.
Tharp
From now on, the league winners will be a balanced group. The first sign of this is KU's finish at second with 18-11 overall and K-State third with 16-12 overall. Six conference teams finished above .500 percent. OSU and Iowa State did not.
ANOTHER INDICATOR, the talent of the league's coaching, shows that a change is taking place. Many writers in Kansas City last week for the conference post-season tournament indicated that Norm Stewart of Missouri replaced Jack Hartman of K-State and James D. Burke of United Press International tabbed OU's Dave Blass as conference Coach of the Year.
SHORTS and LONGS
In the Topeka Capital-Journal's pre-season basketball poll, conference writers picked Missouri to finish last in the league. The Tigers were last in the holiday journey, and that embarrassment to fourth in the league. 14-3. Out with the poll and in with the Stewart.
Conference coaches themselves indicated often during the season that a change was needed. In 2014, Kansas state dominated the league. Joe Cipriano, Nebraska coach and the dean of the league, and Hartman, Stewart and McClain were the key players in "international national collegiate basketball
rating board. As members of that, UPI rightfully expects them to be knowledgeable about basketball all over the country. They are. They also are experts on the Big Eight. The other coaches have only 12 years of experience in the Big Eight including this season.
Throughout the season, the four elders each said they were surprised at the balance in the league. They said any队 could win the league. They said KU and KA were better than They longer, was the conference a two or three (counting Missouri) team league.
At the tournament last week, the writers were saying the same, that the league was going to be wide open. Recruiting, new gyms, a taller cut of players and a change in the format of play will lead the league that will truthfully be the "Big Eight" instead of the "Big Two plus Six."
Too bad it takes time to change. If it had happened this year, maybe more conference teams besides Oklahoma would be involved in playoff action.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Acommodations, books, services and employment
for adults. Bursary for students.
ACCEPTS CAREER AND EMPLOYMENT
INTERESTS ONLY. SCHOOL DISTRICT:
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The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days as they can be placed in person on simply called the URB business office at 864-1258.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
USCF Chip Tournament $550 prize fund March 16-11. Special entry fees for new members and alumni.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ENTERTAINMENT
Zen meditation daily 8 p.m. Introductory talks
Wednesday 10 am and 3 pm. Introductory talks
event November 30 at 10 am. Lawrence Chapel
event November 26 at 10 am.
FOR RENT
SOUND WAVE PRODUCTIONS - The ultimate in sound design and production. Upcoming classes. Our professional services include scripting, audio design, signed audio system and experienced DJ lockers plus a low price. Call for information 862-1030.
Apt. 2 BR and efficiency Close to campus UU1-13
paid clean, quiet, and comfortable; 843-765-8000.
Pay rent. Register in a very small $3 bureau, close to the street and pay monthly. If you do not rent, register at 1000. Rent rates vary by location. Offers: Call 822-641-5111 for room reservations. Call 822-641-5112 for assistance.
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most
well. Phone 865-707-6717 and rear look out.
Phone. Phones 865-707-6717
Room with kitchen privacy 2 blocks south of campus in private home. No smoking. 850-1796
For Rent A room for rent at 1309 Tennessee
Available now. Call 842-8912
3-96
FRONTIER HIDE APARTMENTS NOW PENT-RITE
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2 & 3床 room apt. & duplexes available im-
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Need to subdue Meadowbrook studio. Call 841-2014 or 843-4218 @ 6 p.m.
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Beautiful 7 month old 3 bedroom rancher;
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Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists in motor drive systems. MOTIVE ELECTRIC, electric vehicle. W. 4th St.
Bender Mourning Bass Guitar with strings, cordsthrough bridge and tailpiece. Made in USA. Scratchy sound, lovely vibration, very good condition.
SunSeren® Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-
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66e Schooners at Louise's every Friday from 2
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Trompet for sale. High quality, top condition.
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Brown leather jacket. Men's size 40. Excellent
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811-4644
Need tarts or wheats? An association with a bakery will help you find a good Goodrich and Dactyra teas at the absolute low end. They also are available at wholesale prices and below. Don't speed a dainty more than your need to Call them directly.
Pacific Trail, 1976, down parkas, naves, men's-41-40,
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Clarion PE-212E citizen radio in-dash radios, db ch. CB - 8-Track AM-FM radio in dash radios
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Engagement and wedding ring set, 1c. wt. container with chips. New and never wear. 841-3827-3-8
***
Oneway-ear Coty Special-Enermade, 1 Alarm,
Female, Dual Battery, $9.50 at Round Court
Dodge Body Mk4. 800 Watt.
Spot your bird.-Reg. $95.95 binoculars now $9.95
At Round Corner Drug Store- 30
Blue. Woman's. Schiwan Continental 10-speed.
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Carnival portfolio bag, 20 by 21, B7 beige with brown
zipper. Hipper brand new never use.
Call 643-895-1828
Basket-Warthen B-14, excellent condition. In-
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Quick-Grip Brand Trouches II-15 size, $25; Call
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WITH HEY! when you could own this beautiful room, you'll be able to do a lot more. Like new appliances, diagonal ceiling air ducts, modern bathrooms, waterdryer area, $100 flower bed, weather dryer area, $30 kitchen island, skirted island, storage building, river house, tree tuff garden, storage building, cross floor, tree tuff garden.
Integrated amp. Kenwood 7100. Low, low distortion. 60 watts per channel> Direct Drive Kenwood 2010mw with cartridge. 800 watt base> $190.00. Call 414-879-38 for a job for Jeeve.
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Part time maintenance person needed. Blararting
about 8am, Monday through Friday, Heavy lifting &
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HELP WANTED
Free lice, photogrammetry, iCT invertebrate female
lice, zooplankton, reptiles, fish. Photosynthesis, respiration,
Rifflenscope photography, the Frodshaw, Ford &
Dorris. Photographs published in *The Ecology Journal*.
Photography by Mark Hemsley.
KU IDE, driver's license, keva billiards, cheek-
bone, and a pair of diving goggles can be claimed at Level 4. Level 4 Union Infirmary
One pair draped grey, knitted 1360, block Leonis Monday, Feb. 26, Bc. 841-7845.
Tiger kitten, striped, found at 181 and Alabama.
Call Jennifer, 645-490 or 815-2529. 3-7
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Sensation Locks Nursing Home. In accepting
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Part-time work. Kitchen help wanted at Dartmouth
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Regina Tran is a homeowner of Front door decks, a carport and a poolside bar. Regina offers office space, kitchen and office office,Kernel Office,Organizational Office,
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JJ's Big Box now taking applications for and part time job. Apply in person, 704 lines.
Help Wanted: Gilbrath, L. Lawrencs, a nowcast pro-
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Previews offer admission. Full time. An ground floor suite. 300 square feet. Interested calls please call 817-3574 for details.
O'Connell Youth Ranch needs mature married
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SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF POINT
for the SUMMER Orientation student staff
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more information, see the advertisement in lo-
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Part-time charmer-stencil wanted. Jewelry making and ordering ability helpful. Apply in part-time job offered by the company.
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LOST
MISCELLANEOUS
Pair of glasses and熠烫手袋 in flowerbed
Pair of sunglasses and handbags in one
One miniature Tissue Alarm Clock with case in vicinity of Martin Hall, Howard. CALL 812-9800.
On Tuesday to Monday KID has buid a driver's license in order to give my driver's license back. Listen to a green army back pack containing books on tin law Call 453-8374. Toward 2-9
Three piece screen in 501 Sonderman, on eastern Montclair Park. Gold antique bracelet on 2/27 between 501 Sunmer and 501 Toward. Please place in Pictures.
**THEISIS BINDING COPYING** This House of Commons passed a motion to bind copies by 325 MHz or 454 MHz. This House now passes a motion to bind copies by 325 MHz or 454 MHz.
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Short courses in business/technical writing. Every Thursday evening 6-7 p.m. 408ummerfield Topic for spring, March 8, Effective Sentences
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FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortion up to
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Gay Lakesun counseling referrals now handbound to KU Info 844-306-200 or headquarters 841-
Spring Break
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Beginning March 7th, it becomes necessary to petition to drop any course within the College. Approval of petitions will not normally be granted for merely lack of interest or poor performance in a course, but a good work schedule, or a combination of difficulty, or a heavy work schedule. Documentary support is required.
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8
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
A. B. C. D.
Flashcard
Morale...
From page one
the University like a business. They want to show the Legislature 'look how many eggs
"THEE IS A general feeling of being in a corporate system where things are manufactured and produced, rather than created."
Wright said the administration had instilled a corporate atmosphere in the faculty through continual evaluations and competition for benefits.
"The dehumanization of people by audits and evaluations fits a business and commercial world rather than a university," he said.
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies, supported Wright's
"We have an administration concerned more with economic efficiency rather than academic excellence." Leban said. "That is not true," she said, running a supermarket near a university.
T. P. SRINIVASAN, professor of mathematics and a member of FacEx, said that evaluations of faculty by students, teachers, and staff had the worst effect on faculty morale.
"The faculty are made to evaluate each other constantly," Srinivasan said. "They don't see evaluation leading to anything except to create more friction."
Anno Knapper, professor of business and a member of FacEx, said he thought another negative aspect of the evaluations was that the members were prevented from creative work.
"Because student evaluations are used in tenure evaluations, the instructor has to test students for certain competencies rated too low," Knapper said. "Faculty members have to be careful not to offend them."
LEBAN SAID the evaluations—combined with the bad economics situation—had resulted in an ugly trend. The application and evaluation process for merit salary
increases awarded by the departments had turned into backstabbing sessions, he said, where faculty tried to out-justify each other for the wage increases.
"Every spring the members of the departments compete for the merit salary money." Leban said. "This is one of the most important aspects of morale and cooperative element."
Leban said many faculty members would not apply for the raises because they did not want them.
Wright also said that the almost constant demand for documentation of ability through evaluations had made the faculty almost paranoid about demonstrating their skills.
"In a corporate structure this may be legitimate, but not in a University."
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he agreed that there were increasing bureaucratic controls over the University's airity, but he said there was little he could do.
"YOU HAVE ALMOST constant feedback asking are you good enough." Wright said. "Faculty members, especially those looking at your email, may be able to turn out the product demanded of them."
"There are an increasing amount of federal and state regulations that force the University to engage in monitoring activities and procedures." Dykes said.
Dykes said he spends one-third of his day working on business involving government regulations. More rules seem to be passed each day, he said.
"THEY SEEM to be inevitable, but it has gotten to the point where the institutions of higher education no longer control their own houses." Dykes said.
"Faculty are legitimately concerned by the growing bureaucracy, but a lot of the faculty don't realize that it's not coming from us." he said.
Dykes said he knew that education had been hurt by the growing bureaucracy, but not the lack of knowledge.
"Over-regulation threatens the University's existence." Dykes said.
try to prevent more regulations from appearing on the books.
Faculty members said they agreed that over-regulation harmed the University but they offered their own solutions to the faculty morale problem.
Srinivasan and Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction and chairman of FacEx, said that more faculty involvement in administrative functions was needed.
"MANY FACULTY members want more involvement in making the budget," Swartz said. "Having confidence in the budget allocations would boost morale."
Srinivasan said that the faculty needed to be assured by the administration that they were working well.
Leban said, "You have to think of the academic mission first. We need an administration that can provide academic leadership."
From page one
men's athletic director, who was not responsible for women's athletics.
Tracy Spellman, a board member, said the effectiveness of the merger would depend on the attitudes of the administration.
Sahkelak will a male athlete and a female athlete might fill the K Club board position
The new board would comprise 15 members, three of whom would be students. One of the students would be a member of K a proposed group of athletes who earn tickets.
Athletics...
KUAC has 21 members and the women's advisory board has 16 members.
"IF IT WILL do what it says it will do, I think it will be very effective," she said. "But I have some reservations about attitudes concerning funding and the costs."
“It’s not the day any longer where a university president can go around gatting people on the back.” Heller said. “The role of administrator today is to acquire resources.”
Under the plan, the Women's Advisory Board and the University of Kansas Athletic Council.
But Heller said it no longer was possible for the administrative head of a large university to manage the student body.
"Hopefully after a few years, nature will take its course and we can just elect a state legislator."
if the two boards merged, women's athletics would lose their emphasis on academics.
"It's the women who are having to make the biggest changes," she said. "And I'm afraid if the boards merge, we might lose our philosophy."
Dykes said he wanted to emphasize that the board would advise the athletic director to keep his voice low.
"KUAC has always been an advisory board," he said, "although sometimes it has become an emergency."
A "memorandum of understanding" was attached to the plan that listed commitments made by Dykes, Shankel, Washington and Marcum.
Included were $10,000, in addition to the state-funded merit salary increase, to work toward equitable salary levels for personnel in the women's program. In fiscal year 1981, salaries will be based on merit, level of education, and market pressures, the memorandum stated.
TOPEKA-Funding for women's athletics and libraries could be restored to the KU budget if the recommendations of a Kansas House Ways and Means subcommittee are approved.
The memorandum also said that under the proposal recruiting would be the responsibility of individual coaches. Practice times for men's and women's soccer teams must be equitable basis that might require alternating practice times from year to year.
Approval of funding could aid KU budget
In addition, the three-member subcommittee has made a recommendation to sell $277,500 from an allocation for Marvin Hall to renovate LindenHall.
Under Gov. John Carlin's budget recommendation, under the new welfare system were given. The system was given. The subcommittee is scheduled to make its entire presentation to Gov. Carlin.
Yesterday, subcommittee members met with Marlon Rein, director of legislative research, to refine their recommendations on the KU budget.
IN HIS INITIAL budget proposal, the governor recommended that $1,275,500 be
deployed.
City, subcommittee chairman, said he favored splitting the money in order to get both construction projects off the ground next year.
Among the subcommittee's recommendations were the restoration to the budget of $1,850 for miscellaneous costs and $2,675 for $10,000 for the library security system.
LEVINSON SAID she was concerned that
"We're going to have to finish both buildings sooner or later anyway, and the longer we put off starting on Lindley, the more it will cost in the long run." he said.
However, subcommittee members broke that figure down, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $277,500 for the renovation of Lindley.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden
Heinemann said the funds to finish the renovation of both buildings should be funded. The company would take about $1,555,000 to finish Marvin Hall and about $1,650,000 to finish Lindley.
Despite the high cost of renovation, which is about $50 a square foot, he said renovation would still be cheaper than building a new building.
Because of the value of the books in the KU libraries, subcommittee members said that restoration of funding for a library security system would pay for itself.
"The book system is very important because of all the moving they'll be doing." "I think they will help Heimemand said." Besides, the reduction in book thefts will make the system pay for
The $16,600 that would be restored to women's athletics is less than half of $40,000 request by KU. Subcommittee members said the money would be used for travel to athletic events and for an athletic training room.
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. . . leadership abilities
STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
. . . knowledge of University programs & activities
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ADMISSIONS & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL APPLICATIONS DUE BY FRIDAY, MARCH 23
. . student in good academic standing
. . . Interpersonal communication skills
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KU artist combines electronics, jewelry
Student Organizations!
Treasurers Training Session Tuesday, March 6
The brooches, belts and rings Gary Nernchock design look more modern for women. The pieces are made of silver.
★ You must do this before you can use your money.
7:30 p.m., Walnut Room
Paid for by Student Activity Fees
But Nernchock's designs, which incorporate items such as solar cells, magnetic switches, fiber optics and light diodes, may be the jewelry of the future.
By RHONDA HOLMAN Staff Reports
Staff Renarter
"About three years ago, I started thinking about putting some electronics with jewelry," Nernchom, professor of jewelry and silversmithing, said. "I'm just working with the artists of new materials. The tools of the art, and designer are just expanding."
Nernchock's, "bodonic jewelry," as he calls it, combines traditional metals in geometric designs with tiny flashing bulbs and pinpoints of light—all powered by a tiny battery and a sensor that activates the lights when the pieces are worn.
Nernchock said the materials he used came from campus departments and research departments in space, telephone laboratories and military country. He said because much of the material was given to him, he could not purchase jewelry might cost if it were on the market.
"THEME MIGHT BE $0 in one piece but I don't really know," he said. "They're very easy to get and they only limited production so far. I want to get enough pieces together to do an album."
Nemchock said he was working with a
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Nernchock, who grew up in Chicago and studied jewelry design in Denmark, said he always had an interest in electronics, physics and metallurgy. He said the work he was doing would be much more difficult away from a university campus.
new metal, titanium, which can be changed to any color. He said he also had hopes of making jewelry that could emit sounds and light movement by light, temperature and movement.
Nernichow, who came to the University of Kansas in 1972 from the art institute in Cleveland, said he was in contact with English, German and West Coast designers working with electronic jewelry. He said the work was too new to be profitable.
"I AUDITED SOME courses in the science and I hang around the engineering building and Malott Hall a lot," he said. "The research materials are here and I think KU has really been supportive of research in the arts."
WEDNESDAY EVENING SERIES
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“It’s just basic research now.” he said. “There are no guide books on how to do it and these are just experimental pieces. I think it’s good for both students and professors to do both traditional and futuristic designing.”
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
[Blank page]
Vol. 89, No.100
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, March 7.1979
KU budget items approved
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA- As expected, the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee yesterday approved the addition of $116,500 for women's athletics and a library security system to the fiscal 1980 KU budget.
Committee members also approved a transfer of $777,000 from an allocation for renovation of Marvin Hall to
Unexpected to the budget were $20,000 to the Kansas State scholarship fund, $35,000 for the development of sandstone aquifers in western Kansas and $20,000 for the Juniper Gardens Children's Project. a cooperative effort
athletics is less than one-tenth of $267,396 requested by KU. The money would be used for travel to athletic events and
Also part of the governor's budget recommendations was a $1,277,500 allocation for the renovation of Marvin Hall.
However, committee members split that figure, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and the other buildings.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden City, said he splitting the money to get ibs project started this week.
Committee members said the funds to finish both Legislature next year.
finish Marvin and $1.65
Life on the hill
Life on the hill
eling, which is about be cheaper than con-
said, are maintaining a 9.5 percent increase in student wages for next year, increasing the Kansas Scholarship program from $750,000 to $830,000 and raising a recommended faculty salary increase from 6 to 10 percent.
beard testimony from or of the Associated nt lobbying group. mberbs about funding of Iregrets schools. the group. Zacharias
ZACHARIAS SAID the governor's recommended increase in student salaries would bring them in compliance with state law.
Both the scholarship and faculty salary funding are needed, he said, to keep teachers and students at Karasan
"Faculty and students should not be enticed out of the state." he said.
OF THOSE REQUESTS, Zacharias said, the graduate fee waiver, improvements to make buildings accessible to the handicapped and Regents salary increases are most important.
ASK's other funding priorities, Zacharias said, are more increase in the fee waivers for graduate students from 60 to 100 percent, full reimbursement to universities for student union rentals, allocation of money for the removal of buildings, student students, greater use of the formula funding budget material, and the salaries of the regiments Staff members from 2 to 7 percent.
its snack sales
e Union, said the Union had exclusive to the concessions on campus because Union was organized to provide service agents. The Union does not pay for the
said that if small snack bars began ating across campus, it would be hard hit their number.
**REST JOLLY, director of vending he Union, said concessions could be sold to him directly in person. He said the profit from the verminmaster was deposited in the Union account.**
t Prownt said the McCollum senate
have the right to sell concessions
don't mind KU concessions having a act, but I want to get the exclusive contract repaled," he said. "KU
But Jolly said competition would raise the food prices and cause a reduction of service.
concessions has no reason to improve its products because it doesn't have a compete
"No one will drink soft drinks for 25 cents. That's as cheap as a grocery store will get."
JOLLY SAID machines in MCollum were serviced three times a day on Sunday.
*McCollim is always serviced three times because it is a large dorm. We pamper McCollim because it is such a large room, but we also send one cold food machine but it holds 130 units.
"We have 12-hour service on the machines, so they really should be emptied."
See VENDING back page
Staff Reporter
KU schools losing n battle for students
By BILL RIGGINS
though most schools within the university of Kansas had slight enrollment cases compared with a year ago, four oils had decreases, figures released last *x* by the office of admissions and rds indicate.
tree of the four schools have limits on number of students they accept. The schools with decreasing enrollments are Education, Pharmacy and Social Welfare- school of Education, the only school out an enrolment limit that recorded a case, had the most severe decrease. School has 180 fewer students than a ago.
EN EWNOLLMENT decrease reflects
ide publicity given to the lack of jobs in
action. Dale Scannell, dean of education,
westerday
/e make sure we all to students who sit in the school and inform them of the payment limitations," he said. "We are not here to advise or criticise her or not to stay in the school."
e School of Architecture, which has rolled enrollment, experienced the largest loss, 17 students. Dennis assistant, assisted to the dean, said he gled the decrease was due to the way he lent was figure. He said the total ent hours in the school had risen from in the spring of 1978 to 6,135 this spring. The increase was due to additional engineering in technical engineering were listed under School of Engineering but were also antes in the School of Architecture and in Design.
**D. SCHOOL OF Social Welfare had a case of 13 students. Edith Black, tant dean, said the school's practicum arm limited the number of students could be admitted. The school requires that all teachers and workers in inception with their class work.
e School of Pharmacy, the other school doing a decline, had one less student during than last spring.
hick Cotton, associate dean, said lack of 'atory space prevented the school from pting more students. The school usually yes 120 to 156 applicants each year.
rollment increased in the Graduate ol. the College of Liberal Arts and nces the schools Business, the education Journalism, Law he College of Health Sciences.
E TOTAL enrollment at the Lawrence
will this spring increased by 244
units, and will this spring increase
this spring and this spring,
at the schools recording increases doe
not limit the number of students they accept. Exceptions are some departments of the Graduate School and the School of Law and the College of Health Sciences.
The Graduate School had the largest increase, 101 students. Dorothy Hagland, assistant to the dean of liberal arts, said the Graduate School's admissions process was more rigorous than a number, but some departments had to limit admissions because of space and staff restrictions.
The second largest gain was in the School of Fine Arts, which had an increase of 46 students.
"We've had a very steady rise," Don Scheid, associate dean, said. "We haven't experienced any drastic rises or falls. I think enrolment is leveling off."
THE SCHOOL OF Business had the next highest increase, 36 students, and the School
Enrollment for Schools Spring 1978 Spring 1979
Graduate 5,104 5,205
Liberal Arts 9,114 9,132
Architecture 421 404
Retention 918
Education 1,660 1,291
Engineering 1,528 1,561
Education 1,431 1,477
Journalism 612 615
Law 454 473
Pharmacy 340 282
Social Welfare 496 480
Health Sciences 1,565 1,506
of Engineering followed with an increase of 33 students.
David Kraft, dean of engineering, attributed the growth of the school to a strong job market and an increase in enrollment by women and minorities.
Although the School of Law enrollment increased by 19, Martin Dickinson, dean of the school, said he expected the school's enrolment to remain fairly stable.
This year, the school accepted 190 students out of 650 who applied.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which had an increase of 18 students, has had slight increases during the past few years, according to Bob Adams, associate professor.
Enrollment in the School of Journalism, which had an increase of three students, has also had only slight increases in the past few years. Lee Young, acting associate dean,
The College of Health Sciences had an increase, but a small one. It had one more doctor.
8
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Morale . . .
From nave one
the university like a business. They want to show the legislature 'look how many eggs
"THERE is a general feeling of being in a corporate system where things are manufactured and produced, rather than created."
Wright said the administration had instilled a corporate atmosphere in the faculty through continual evaluations and competition for benefits.
"The dehumanization of people by audits and evaluations fits a business and commercial world rather than a university," he said.
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asia's studies, supported Wright Horn's research.
"We have an administration concerned more with economic efficiency rather than academic excellence." Leban said. "That is why we are running a supermarket than a university."
T. P. SRINIVASAN, professor of mathematics and a member of FacEx, said that evaluations of faculty by students, the teachers and the students had the worst effect on faculty morale.
"The faculty are made to evaluate each other constantly," Srivinasan said. "They don't see evaluation leading to anything except to create more friction."
Anno Knaper, professor of business and a member of FacEx, said he thought another negative aspect of the evaluations was that new faculty members were prevented from newly hiring.
"Because student evaluations are used in tenure evaluations, the instructor has to test students on their performance rated too low." Knapper said. "Faculty members have to be careful not to offend them."
LEBAN SAID the evaluations—combined with the bad economics situation—had resulted in an ugly trend. The application and evaluation process for merit salary
increases awarded by the departments had turned into backstabbing sessions, he said, where faculty tried to out-justify each other i for the wage increases.
Wright also said that the almost constant demand for documentation of ability through evaluations had made the faculty almost paranoid about demonstrating their competence.
Leban said many faculty members would not apply for the raises because they did not want them.
"Every spring the members of the departments compete for the merit salary money," Leban said. "This is one of the most destructive elements of morale and damage."
"In a corporate structure this may be leitimate, but not in a University."
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he agreed that there were increasing bureaucatalic controls over the University's faculty, but he said there was little he could
"YOU HAVE ALMOST constant feedback asking are you good enough." Wright said. "Faculty members, especially those looking for tenure, will turn to umbrella rules to get an undiscounted product offered of them."
"There are an increasing amount of federal and state regulations that force the University to engage in monitoring tivities and procedures." Dykes said.
Dykes said he spends one-third of his working on business involving govern regulations. More rules seem to be pr each day, he said.
"THEY SEEM to be inevitable, but I gotten to the point where the institute higher education no longer control their houses." Dykes said.
"Faculty are legitimately concerne the growing bureaucracy, but a lot of faculty don't realize that it's not co from us," he said.
Dykes said he knew that education been hurt by the growing bureaucracy; that the only thing that could be done v
Approval of funding could aid KU budget
TOPEKA-Funding for women's athletics and libraries could be restored to the KU budget if the recommendations of a Kansas Board of Means subcommittee are approved today.
In addition, the three-member sub-committee has made a recommendation to shell $277,500 from an allocation for Marvin Hall to renovate Langehall Law.
Under Gov. John Carlin's budget request, women areathletic or a library security system were given. The subcommittee is scheduled to make its entire presentation to Gov. Carlino on Tuesday.
Yesterday, subcommittee members met with Marlon Rein, director of legislative research, to refine their recommendations on the KU budget.
Among the subcommittee's recommendations were the restoration to the budget of $16,500 for miscellaneous costs. The library received a $10,000 for the library security system.
IN HIS INITIAL budget proposal, the U.S. announced the imminent allocation of the money for Marinah Park.
However, subcommittee members broke that figure down, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $277,500 for the renovation of Lindley.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden
"We're going to have to finish buildings soone or later anyway, alr longer we put off starting on Linda move it will cost in the long run "he says
City, subcommittee chairman, sal favored splitting the money in order both construction projects off the g nextyear.
Heinemann said the funds to fini-
mation, both buildings shown in
the image, would be about $1,555,000 to finish
Hall and add to $1,650,000 to finish L
Despite the high cost of renovation, is about $50 a square foot, he said reno would still be cheaper than building building.
Because of the value of the books KU libraries, subcommittee member that restoration of funding for a I security system would pay for itself.
"The book detection system is ve
portant because of all the moving the
book. The system knows where he
Heinemann said." Besides, the reduc
book thefts will make the system p
The $16,660 that would be resto women's athletics is less than half of a request by KU. Subcommittee said the money would be used for athletic events and for an athletic trroom.
Engineering & Computer Science Majors
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try to prevent more regulations from appearing on the books.
"Over-regulation threatens the University's existence," Dykes said.
Faculty members said they agreed that over-regulation harmed the University but they offered their own solutions to the faculty morale problem.
Srinivasan and Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction and chairman of FacEx, said that more faculty involvement in administrative functions was needed
"MANY FACULTY members want more involvement in making the budget," Swartz said. "Having confidence in the budget allocations would boost morale."
Leban said, "You have to think of the academic mission first. We need an administration that can provide academic leadership."
But Heller said it no longer was possible for the administrative head of a large corporation to have such control.
Srivamvaan said that the faculty needed to be assured by the administration that the student will perform well.
"It's not the day any longer where a university president can go around patting people on the back," Heller said. "The role of the administrator today is to acquire resources."
men's athletic director, who was not responsible for women's athletics.
Athletics...
Fram nae ane
Tracy Spellman, a board member, said the effectiveness of the merger would depend on the attitudes of the administration.
if the two boards merged, women's athletics would lose their emphasis on academics.
do what it needs it will do.
KU artist combines electronics, jewelry
"It's the women who are having to make the biggest changes," she said. "And I'm afraid if the boards merge, we might lose our philosohov."
Dykes said he wanted to emphasize that the board would advise the athletic director
new metal, titanium, which can be changed to any color. He said he also had hopes of making jewelry that could emit sounds and light, and that could be detected by light, temperature and movement.
Nernchock, who grew up in Chicago and studied jewelry design in Denmark, said he always had an interest in electronics, physics and metallurgy. He said the work he was doing would be much more difficult a way from a university campus.
By RHONDA HOLMAN
The brooches, belts and rings Gary Nenchock design look more like props for the movie *Hangover*.
"I AUDITED SOME courses in the sciences and I hang around the engineering building and Malotl Hall a lot," he said. "The research materials are here and I think KU has really been supportive of research in the arts."
Staff Reporter
Nernchock, who came to the University of Kansas in 1972 from the art institute in Cleveland, said he was in contact with English, German and West Coast designers were working with electronic jewelry. He said the work was too new to be profitable.
But Nernchock's designs, which incorporate items such as solar cells, magnetic switches, fiber optics and light disks, may be the jewelery of disks.
"About three years ago, I started thinking about putting some electronics with jewelry," Nernchok, professor of jewelry and silversmithing, said. "I'm just working with different applications of new materials, an artist and designer are just expanding."
Nernchomk "bodonic jewelry," as he calls it, combines traditional metals in geometric designs with tiny fishing bulbs and pinpoints of light—all powered by a tiny battery and a sensor that activates the lights when the pieces are worn.
"It's just basic research now," he said.
There are no guide books on how to do it and you can learn all the basics from them.
Nerncock said the materials he used came from campus departments and research departments in space, telephone and computer country. He said because much of the
By SHIRLEY SHOUP Staff Renorter
Controversy within the Oread Neighborhood Association last fall has faded but has not disappeared.
Kathy Clark, ONA president, said the disagreement between Oread residents and landlords has been clarified and the new issue is zoning.
Last fall the association was split on officer elections when resident homeowners and tenants accused landowners of their representatives would be egged.
Three of four offices were filled by
Harper said the ONA favored RM-3 zoning, which would allow triplexes. She said RM-3 zoning would prevent the construction of four-plexes in the area and force developers to move to another part of the city.
"But other areas don't want them either," she said.
INSTEAD OF replacing them, the ONA would like the existing house brought up to the new floor.
"We don't want to limit the number of
enrollments but, but we, we think
enrollment has hit it."
"We think Oread is the place to live and
Problems linger in Oread district
landlords, but the dispute calmed after new officers were elected.
NANCY HARPER, coordinator of the ONA Anti-Crime Program, said the residential-dormitory zoning would allow population to increase from 3,000 to 10,000.
Now, tenants and resident property owners oppose the current residential-dormitory zoning, which allows the highest number of occupants in the area oppose any change in the zoning.
The ONA has about 200 members, including landlords, tenants and resident homeowners. It was founded almost two years ago to help put together the neighborhood plan and implement improvements.
"In reality the area isn't high density," she said.
Only the area nearest the KU campus is densely populated, she said, and the rest of the university is remote.
Harper said the ONA supported the planning department's recommendation, which would allow diverse zoning in the city to support higher densities to where they now are.
"Every available lot is being saarfed up in the plurces are being put up in two weeks."
"No one hopes this area will ever be all single-family," she said.
we can't understand why students would want to live anywhere else."
Planning department figures indicate that students make up 45 percent of the Oread population.
Faculty members built homes in the area and because Oread was close to the University and downhill it was a prestigious neighborhood.
"This has not always been so. As Lawrence and the University of Kansas grew, construction gradually filled in the area between the town and the University.
When the original residents died, many of the large houses became rental property. Before World War II, there was an effort to expand the campus north to the University site where Gertrude Sellars P: Parson and Corbin residence hills now stand.
BUT THE property became too valuable as rental property when World War II started and in 1983 the area was rezoned to dental-dormitory, the highest density zoning.
In recent years, the deterioration of staircases housing led to the designation "student stairs."
Some landlords have said the transient student population cannot really judge deterioration because they have not seen the property during a long period.
But Clark says the claim of student transience is partly a myth.
"In some houses, deterioration is an obvious fact. You don't have to be there a long time to know that a house has deteriorated." she said.
"Some people in the neighborhood have lived here a long time," she said, "and anyone, whether they have lived here one year, years, has the right to live in a decent area."
CLARK SAID The ONA was trying to improve the quality of life for the residents of the area and the association did not view the property as an investment.
But Clark said she hoped the residents could work with the landlords in the area.
"They want to see improvement, too," Clark said, "and as you can see by walking through the area, that's not happening by itself."
"There's a difference between upgrading property that you live in and upgrading property that you rent," she said.
Harper said the association wanted to make improvements such as adding lighting, cleaning up alleys and putting dumbers in alleys for trash collection.
THE ONA Anti-Crime Program began early last fall, aided by a grant from the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration.
Harper said one aim of the program was to make people aware of what they could do to make their property secure.
She said most of the burglaries in the area used to be non-forced entries. Lately, there have been no non-forced entries and fewer forced-entry burglaries.
are locking their doors now," she said.
As part of the program, a safe-house was established where Oread residents store valuable items when they were away from their homes.
Harper said in the past Oread had the highest crime rate in the city, mainly because was a predictable neighborhood.
DURING VACATION, thieves could go into apartment
Other measures the program has initiated include a phone system in which residents report suspected theft or assaults to alert them that a thief is in the area.
The program has offered services such as engraving property so that it can be easily mounted on walls, locks or light-regulating timers for extended absences. Workshops have been held on self-defense, rape prevention, legal rights and consumer affairs.
But Harper said that this winter she was pleased to see the crime rate drop sharply in the Oread neighborhood. At the same time, the crime rate increased in the rest of the city.
HARPER SAID the ONA wants to make the area a neighborhood where residents know and help one another. Block Watch, a program that uses the phone system, works on that basis and neighbors watch one another's homes.
The association has several activities planned for the spring to encourage them to meet and be said a neighborhood cleanup would be April to clean up the alleys and plant trees. She said the association planned to help the neighborhood fair and to sponsor an art show.
She said it was likely the crime rate in the Oread neighborhood would increase again in the spring, but she hoped it would never return to the previous high rate.
Staff illustration by Dan Martin
buildings and work to open doors all day without danger of being seen.
9th St.
Ark St.
KU
17th St.
Max St.
Life on the hill
published as a supplement to the University Daily Kansan in Lawrence, Kan.
table of contents
dorm decoration p. 4
stouffer place p. 6
apartment subletting p. 8
high rent p. 8
apartment abuse p. 11
home investments p. 11
christian life p. 12
landlord-tenant relations p. 12
bugs p. 14
apartment rates p. 16
commuters p. 18
athletic housing p. 18
land development p. 19
march 6,1979
editor barry massey
managing editor dirck steimel
special sections editor diane porter
campus desk mary hoenk, pam manson
copy chief linda finestone
copy editors jerry sass, rick sass
cover photograph trish lewis
photo editor alan zlotky
business manager karen wenderott
retail sales manager ron altman
staff photographer grant ringel
sales representatives allen blair, paul knoll,
jane knotts, brenda paxton, cindy ray,
allen reynolds, joanne smutny
general manager Rick musser
advertising adviser chuck chowins
er she was top sharply the same in the rest
ors all day
one rate in increase d it would rate.
ram has system in suspected alert them
vices such as it can be instal new s for ex-veave been revention, and cons to make residents Watch,a system,ors watch
activities
encourage
her said a
b held in
and plant
n planned
sponsor
Dan Martin
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Vol.89,No.109
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
KU budget items approved
Bv TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-As expected, the Kansas House Ways and Means Commission yesterday approved the addition of $116,000 for women's athletics and a library security system to the fiscal 1800 KU budget.
Committee members also approved a transfer of $727,500 from an allocation for renovation of Marvin Hall to
Unexpected to the budget were $80,000 to the Kansas State scholarship fund, $35,000 for the development of sanddust training in western and $50,000 for the development of a cooperative effort between KU's Bureau of Child Residence.
athletics is less than one-tenth of $267,368 requested by KU. The money would be used for travel to athletic events and training.
Also part of the governor's budget recommendations was a $1,277,500 allocation for the renovation of Marvin Hall.
However, committee members split that figure, allocating 11 million for the renovation of Marvin and another 6 million for the expansion.
State Rep. David Heinemann, if Garden City, said he moved splitting the money to get both projects started this year.
Committee members said the funds to finish both buildings should be allocated by the Legislature next year.
said, are maintaining a 9.5 percent increase in student wages for next year, increasing the Kansas Scholarship program from $750,000 to $830,000 and raising a recommended faculty salary increase from 6 to 10 percent.
WARNING!
ZACHARIAS SAID the governor's recommended increase in student salaries would bring them in compliance with the law.
Both the scholarship and faculty salary funding are needed, he said, to keep teachers and students at Kanaas
ALL WATERBED STORES ARE NOT CREATED EQUAL
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The Bedroom
ASK 's other funding priorities, Zacharias said, are an increase in the fee waivers for graduate students from 60 to 100 percent, full reimbursement to universities for student union rentals, allocation of money for the removal fees for handicapped students, greater use of the formal salaries of the staff and more of the salaries of the Regents staff members from 2.0 percent.
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6. The purchase of a waterbed at K.Z. Sleep also includes a footboard and board with jacaranda wood, and a pillow that is not only cushy but has a built-in curved beauty. One podiatrist are satisfied and laughed to match each bed. K.Z. Sleep's podiatrist has structured the beds for a more comfortable experience.
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beard testimony trum or of the Associated nlobbying group. mbers about funding of Irg Telegens schools. the group. Zacharias
--said that if small snack bars began ating across campus, it would be hard hit their number.
$25 off
its snack sales
e Union, said the Union had exclusive s to the concessions on campus because Union was organized to provide service agents. The Union does not pay for the
**IREST JOLLY**, director of vending he Union, said concessions could be made to the contract. He said the profit from the vermin管理局 was deposited in the Union bank.
t Prowant said the McColmn senate id have the right to sell concessions
don't mind KU concessions; have a act, but I want to get the exclusive s contract repaired," he said. "KU
But Jolly said competition would raise the food prices and cause a reduction of service.
concessions has no reason to improve its products because it doesn't have a compete
JOLLY SAID machines in MColum were serviced three times a day on Sunday.
"No one will vend soft drinks for 25 cents. That's as cheap as grocery store will get. It's more expensive."
"We have 12-hour service on the machines, so they really shouldn't be emptied."
*McCollim is always serviced three times because it is a large dorm. We pamper McCollim because it is such a large machine that one cold food machine but it holds [38] cups.
See VENDING back page
Staff Reporter
By RILL RIGGINS
KU schools losing n battle for students
Though most schools within the eruption of Kerry had also enrolment in these programs, only 10% of oils had decreases, figures released last t) by the office of admissions and admissions.
tree of the four schools have limits on number of students they accept. The schools with decreasing enrollments, for example, education, Pharmacy and Social Welfare; ie School of Education, the only school out an enrollment limit that recorded a ease, had the most severe decrease. ie School has 169 fewer students than a 'ago'
IE ENROLLMENT decrease reflects
wide publicity given to the lack of jobs in
action. Dale Scannell, dean of education,
veterday.
'e make sure we talk to all students who wwo into the school and inform them of the layment limitations,' he said. "We need to teach them how to classclass, her or not to stay in the school."
e School of Architecture, which has rolled enrollment, experienced the largest loss, 17 students. Dennis assistant, to the dean, said he ght the decrease was due to the way education was figured. He said the total en tours in the school had risen from 'in the spring of 1978 to 6,135 this spring. mer said 110 students in the school were taken away from School of Engineering but were also en士 in the School of Architecture and an Design.
E) SCHOOL OF Social Welfare had a ease of 13 students, Edith Black, dant tean, said the school's practicum ram limited the number of students could be admitted. The school requires all workers in the workers in action with their class work.
a School of Pharmacy, the other school
riding a decline, had one less student
spring than last spring.
ugh Cotton, associate dean, said lack of rarty space prevented the school from pitting more students. The school usually gives 120 to 156 applicants each year.
rollment increased in the Graduate
college of Liberal Arts and
nces the schools of Business,
Law, Medicine, Law,
the College of Health Sciences.
IE TELO enrollment at the Lawrence pot this spring increased by 244 npts over last spring Enrollment is expected to increase of all the schools recording increases do
not limit the number of students they accept. Exceptions are some departments of the Graduate School and the School of Law and the College of Health Sciences.
The Graduate School had the largest increase, 101 students. Dorothy Haglund, assistant to the dean of liberal arts, said the Graduate School's admissions process is different from other but some departments have to limit education because of space and staff restrictions.
The second largest gain was in the School of Fine Arts, which had an increase of 46
"We've had a very steady rise," Don Scheid, associate dean, said. "We haven't experienced any drastic rises or falls. I think enrollment is leveling off."
THE SCHOOL OF Business had the next highest increase, 36 students, and the School
Enrollment for Schools Spring 1978 Spring 1979
Graduate 5,104 5,205
Liberal Arts 9,114 9,132
Architecture 912 932
Business 918 954
Education 1,460 1,291
Engineering 1,320 1,161
Pace Wear 1,431 1,477
Journalism 612 615
Law 454 473
Legacy 940 928
Social Welfare 496 483
Health Sciences 1,305 1,506
of Engineering followed with an increase of 33 students.
David Kraft, dean of engineering, attributed the growth of the school to a strong job market and an increase in enrollment by women and minorities.
Although the School of Law enrollment increased by 19, Martin Dickinson, dean of the school, said he expected the school's enrollment to remain fairly stable.
This year, the school accepted 190 students out of 650 who applied.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which had an increase of 18 students, has had slight increases during the past few years, according to Bob Adams, associate
Enrollment in the School of Journalism, which had an increase of three students, has also had only slight increases in the past few years. Lee Young, acting associate dean,
The College of Health Sciences had an increase, but a small one. It had one more student each year.
8
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
University Dally Kansan
Morale ...
From nave one
the Universiteit like a business. They want to show the Legislature 'look how many eggs they are'.
"THERE IS A general feeling of being in a corporate system where things are manufactured and produced, rather than created."
Wright said the administration had instilled a corporate atmosphere in the faculty through continual evaluations and competition for benefits.
"The dehumanization of people by audits and evaluations fits a business and commercial world rather than a university," he said.
"We have an administration concerned more with economic efficiency rather than academic excellence" Leban said. "That is what we do, running a nonprofit marketware or a university."
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies, supported Wright's research.
T. P. SRINIVASAN, professor of mathematics and a member of FacEx, said that evaluations of faculty by students, teachers and administrators had had the worst effect on faculty morale.
Arno Knapper, professor of business and a member of FacEx, said he thought another negative aspect of the evaluations was that the members were prevented from creative work.
"Because student evaluations are used in tenure evaluations, the instructor has to be careful not to ratate too low," Knapper said. "Faculty members have to be careful not to offend them."
"The faculty are made to evaluate each other constantly," Srinivasan said. "They don't see evaluation leading to anything except to create more friction."
LEBAN SAID the evaluations—combined with the bad economics situation—had resulted in an ugly trend. The application and evaluation process for merit salary
increases awarded by the departments had turned into backstating sessions, he said, where faculty tried to out-justify each other for the wage increases.
"Every spring the members of the departments compete for the merit salary money," Leban said. "This is one of the most instructive challenges of morale and economic judgements."
Wright also said that the almost constant demand for documentation of ability through evaluations had made the faculty almost paranoid about demonstrating their skills.
"In a corporate structure this may be legitimate, but not in a University."
Leban said many faculty members would not apply for the raises because they did not know of them.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he agreed that there were increasing bureaucratic controls over the University's faculty, but he said there was little he could
"THEY SEEM to be inevitable, bobg to the point where the institt higher education no longer control t houses." Dykes said.
Dykes said he spends one-third of working on business involving.gov regulations. More rules seem to be each day, he said.
"Faculty are legitimately conce the growing bureaucracy, but a le faculty don't realize that it's not from us," he said.
"There are an increasing amount of federal and state regulations that force the University to engage in monitoring tivities and procedures." Dwysa sai
"YOU HAVE ALMOST constant feedback asking are you good enough." Wright said. "Faculty members, especially those looking at you, will be able to turn out the product demanded of them.
Dykes said he knew that educa been hurt by the growing bureaucr that the only thing that could be dor
Approval of funding could aid KU budge
TOPEKA-Funding for women's athletics and libraries could be restored to the KU budget if the recommendations of a Kansas Means subcommittee are approved today.
In addition, the three-member subcommittee has made a recommendation to shift $277,500 from an allocation for Marvin Hall to renovate Lovett Hall.
Yesterday, subcommittee members met with Marlon Rein, director of legislative research, to refine their recommendations on the KU budget.
Among the subcommittee's recommendations were the restoration to the budget for equipment or miscellaneous expenses for the library and $10,000 for the library security system.
Under Gov. John Carlin's budget recommendations, funding for neither women's athletics nor a library security system were given. The subcommittee is scheduled to make its entire presentation to the entire committee today.
IN HIS INITIAL budget proposal, the governor recommended that $1,277,500 be allocated for the renovation of Marvin Hall. However, subcommittee members broke the ground by locating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $277,500 for the renovation of Lindley.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden
City, subcommittee chairman, favored splitting the money in ord both construction projects off the next year.
"We're going to have to fini buildings sooner or later anyway, longer we put off starting on Lihe more it will cost in the long run." he
Hienmam said the funds to fi- renovation of both buildings st ream would take about $1,555 to final Hall and for $1,650 to finish
Despite the high cost of renovation is about $5 a square foot, he said he would still be cheaper than buildir building.
Because of the value of the bool KU libraries, subcommitment meml that restoration of funding for $i security system would pay for itself
the book detection system is issued by the library and doing during library renovation neHeimman said. "Besides, the red book theta will make the system run faster."
The $16,600 that would be res women's athletics is less than half a request by KU. Subcommittee said the money would be used for athletic events and for an athletic room.
Engineering & Computer Science Majors
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Faculty members said they agreed that over-regulation harmed the University but they offered their own solutions to the faculty morale problem.
"Over-regulation threatens the University's existence." Dykes said.
try to prevent more regulations from appearing on the books.
"MANY FACULTY members want more involvement in making the budget," Swartz said. "Having confidence in the budget allocations would boost morale."
Srinivasan and Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction and chairman of FacEx, said that more faculty involvement in administrative functions was needed.
Leban said, "You have to think of the academic mission first. We need an administration that can provide academic leadership."
But Haller said it no longer was possible for the administrative head of a large company to get his own phone.
Srinivasan said that the faculty needed to be assured by the administration that they were doing well.
"It's not the day any longer where a university president can go around patting people on the back," Holler said. "The rule administrator today is to acquire resources."
Athletics...
From page one
men's athletic director, who was not responsible for women's athletics.
Tracy Spellman, a board member, said the effectiveness of the merger would depend on the attitudes of the administration.
IFS IT WILL I do what it says it will do. I
if the two boards merged, your athletics would lose their emphasis on academics.
"It's the women who are having to make the biggest changes," she said, "And I'm afraid if the boards merge, we might lose our philosophy."
KU artist combines electronics, jewelry
Dykes said he wanted to emphasize that the board would advise the athletic director
By RHONDA HOLMAN
Staff Reservoir
The broaches, belts and rings Gary Niemchock designs look more like props for a circus.
Staff Reporter
Nemchock, who grew up in Chicago and studied jewelry design in Denmark, said he always had an interest in electronics, physics and metallurgy. He said the work he was doing would be much more difficult away from a university campus.
new metal, titanium, which can be changed to any color. He said he also had hopes of making jewelry that could emmit sounds and vibrations activated by light, temperature and movement.
"I AUDITED SOME courses in the sciences and I hang around the engineering building and Malott Hall a lot," he said. "The research materials are here and I think KU has really been supportive of research in the arts."
But Nermetcho's design, which incorporate items such as solar cells, magnetic switches, tether optics and light diodes, may be the jewelry of the future.
"About three years ago, I started thinking about putting some electronics with jewelry," Nernchom, professor of jewelry and silversmithing, said. "I'm just working with different applications of new materials in the artist and designer are just expanding."
Nernchuck's "bodonic jewelry," as he calls it, combines traditional metals in a way that gives him an ability and pinpoints of light—all powered by a tiny battery and a sensor that activates the battery.
Nemchock said the materials he used came from campus departments and research departments in space, telephone networks and other countries. He said because much of the
Nermichock, who came to the University of Kansas in 1972 from the art institute in Cleveland, said he was in contact with English, German and West Coast designers working here working with electronic jewelry. He said the work was too new to be profitable.
"It's just basic research now," he said. There are no guide books on how to do it, but there are many.
By BRENDA WATSON Staff Reporter
Sunlight filters through the once-off-white muslin curtains of a student's room. For the hundredth time she looks up from the window that usually ugly poster or the expanse of blank wall.
She has wanted to fix the place up for weeks, but just can't afford it.
Whether students live in a residence hall, apartment or house, countless inexpensive and imaginative decorating ideas are available.
Diana Dunkley, professional interior designer for Interior Design Group, 749 Massachusetts St., offers a few basic guidelines.
"First of all," she said, "don't invest in anything you can't take with you."
SHE ALSO suggested looking at things from a different perspective.
Dunkley said that when students were ready to leave, their belongings should be easy to take with them. That includes minerals and especially furniture, she said.
But decorating a whole apartment or even one room can be an overwhelming
"For instance, 'What would that chair look like if I painted it five different colors?' or 'Just that it was a box or could it be invented.' or 'what else?' she said. "Beinventive."
project if students do not know where to begin.
John DeWeese, Wamego interior design student, said, "The first thing you want to do is to make sure that your space is a way to do that is by dividing up the living space differently. Items that can serve as space dividers include metal-frame book crates, wainscoting, bricks or even furniture, like a lounge couch.
George Hixon, professor of design, said one of the most interesting room solutions in the world is the 360-degree view.
tops and bottoms of beer cans and stacking them on their sides to fill a wooden frame.
MARK FISCHER, Hazelwood, Mo. interior design student, suggested that we be able to divide their rooms by halves. He said it was important to let the individual living spaces overlap so that roommates were confined in room instead of being confined to one side.
Once the room is arranged, residents might be confronted with other decorating problems including undesirable floor
coverings, blank walls, visible pipes in the ceiling, insufficient storage space and an impersonal or cold atmosphere.
According to several Lawrence carpet dealers, carpet remnants can be used to create furniture and add color to a room. Remnants are cheap than regular carpets and are more durable.
HIXSON SUGGESTED stitching together discontinued carpet samples to use as a floor covering.
Fischer said that sometimes the
ON SUNDAY 20TH JULY
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
1
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 89, No.109
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
KU budget items approved
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Renorter
TOPEKA-As expected, the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee yesterday approved the addition of $116,600 for women's athletics and a library security system to the fiscal 1980 KU budget.
Committee members also approved a transfer of $777,000 from an allocation for renovation of Marvin Hall to the Foundation.
Unexpected account to the budget were $80,000 to the Kansas State scholarship fund, $3,500 for the development of sandstone aquifers in western Kansas and $30,000 for the development of sandstone aquifers in eastern Kansas between KIU's Bureau of Child Research and the southeast
Also part of the governor's budget recommendations was a $1,277,500 allocation for the renegotiation of Marcun Hall.
However, committee members split that figure, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and Kirkwood.
athletics is less than one-tenth of $267,396 requested by KU. The money would be used for travel to athletic events and
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden City, said he divided the money to get both projects started this
Committee members said the funds to finish both buildings should be allocated by the Legislature next year.
said, are maintaining a 9.5 percent increase in student wages for next year, increasing the Kansas Scholarship program from $750,000 to $300,000 and raising a recommended faculty salary adjustment from 6 to 7 percent.
ZACHARIAS SAID the governor's recommended increase in student salaries would bring them in compliance with law.
Both the scholarship and faculty salary funding are needed, he said, to keep teachers and students at Karsas
"Faculty and students should not be enticed out of the state." he said.
ASK's other funding priorities, Zacharias said, are an increase in the fee waivers for graduate students from 60 to 100 percent, full reimbursement to universities for student union rentals, allocation of money for the removal of barriers for handicapped students, greater use of the salaries of Regents staff members from 2 to 1 percent.
problem was what to do with the existing carpet.
"The carpet is there," he said, "and you're just stuck with it."
Fischer said he knew one person who used a huge piece of canvas to cover the carpeting and got new color.
"Then he just picked it up and took it with him when he left." he said.
Blank walls, especially those of brick or concrete, are sometimes a problem in decorating. Helen Wulff, professional interior设计师, works its intersorts, 2851 Four Wheel Drive, said.
To make space on brick or concrete walls usable, Wallace covered the covering the wall or one section with a sheet or panel and set at the top and bottom by curtain bars.
Wallace said, "Framing things is really big—everything from Tshirts to old albums to towels—like from a hotel in Florida, with a name on it."
THAT SURFACE can be used to support items you wish to wang, she said.
Wall surfaces are open to a wide range of decorations including posters, pictures, placemats, grass mats, carpet remnants, wall art, decorative wood pieces and calendars.
Postcards, leaves, handkerchiefs,
seashells, medals and other small objects
also can be used for framing.
Gail Underdown, an employee at Public Hanging, 710 Massachusetts St., said two of the strangest things she had seen were a mason's trowel and an pillow.
Stretching pieces of fabric over frames or putting them inside frames is also popular, according to several Lawrence decorators.
WALL HANGINGS made of wheat are especially popular now, said Dorea Hall, owner of Dorea's Decorative Arts, 1006 New Hampshire St.
"It's so Kansas." Hall said. "I think the trend has been leaning for a long time toward natural things."
Inexpensive ways to make rooms look larger include mirrors on walls and light colored paint. Adhesive-backed mirror tiles serve the same purpose.
Cellings generally get little attention, but bare pipes running across them are hard to innove.
Interior design students suggested incorporating the pipes into the decor.
Students can hang things from them—flowers, plants, mobiles or wind chimes. Or, they can make the pipes themselves decorative by highlighting them, like painting them a different color than the rest of the room. DeWeese said.
PLANTS AND MOBILIES also can be used for gluing glue. A hanging lamp made by gluing glue on a frame, putting a light bulb in the middle is another example of decorating装饰, Jane Wong, works with gluing glue.
Insufficient storage space is frequently a problem, but there are a few remedies.
Orange crates, milk crates, prefabricated cubicles, or any kind of box that stacks well can be used to increase storage and shelf space.
Five and 10 gallon ice cream containers or even trash cans make excellent storage bins. Wong said.
Furnishing existing space can also be a problem, Dunkley said, but combinations of pillows, boxes, boards and concrete furniture are practical and versatile furniture for students.
The impersonality of dwellings can be reduced, Dunkley said, supplementing the "cold, green cast" of fluorescent lighting incandescent lightening from study lamps.
"It generally gives a warmer, homier, feeling to a place," she said.
Another suggestion is to personalize the living area by displaying collections: books, glasses, bottles, figurines, rocks or medals.
Blueprints and sheet music can also easily be incorporated into decorative wall coverings. Hixson said.
Janis Pizzato, Deerfield, III. interior design student, said a matching bedspread and curtains, which could easily be made from white sheets, could help personalize a room.
She also suggested using contact paper on shades or Venetian blighters to brighten
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said that if small snack bars began sting across campus, it would be hard hit their number.
**BREST JOLLY**, director of vending by the union, said he had more effectively with an exclusive act. He said the profit from the vending machines was deposited in the Union treasury.
t. Prawnt said the McCollium senate id have the right to sell concessions. don't mind KU concessions having a contract repealed," he said, "KU
concessions has no reason to improve its products because it does not have a compete
But Jolly said competition would raise the food prices and cause a reduction of service.
"No one will vend soft drinks for 25 cents. That's as cheap as a grocery store will get."
JOLLY SAID machines in MCollum were served three times a day on Sunday.
"McCollium is always serviced three times because it is a large dorm. We pamper McCollium because it is such a large room, we have one cold food machine but it holds 180 cups."
"We have 12-hour service on the machines, so they really shouldn't be emptied."
See VENDING back page
Bv BILL RIGGINS
Staff Renorter
KU schools losing n battle for students
though most schools within the intensity of Kansas had slight enrollment cases compared with a year ago, four olds had decreases, releases released last $t$ by the office of admissions and rds indicate.
ree of the four schools have limits on number of students they accept. The schools with decreasing enrollments include education, Pharmacy and Social Welfare, ie school of Education, the only school out an enrollment limit that recorded a ease, but the most severe decrease. School has 160 fewer students than a 'age'
IE ENROLLMENT decrease reflects
ride publicity given to the lack of jobs in
action, Dale Scannel, dean of education,
verdastay.
'e make sure we talk to all students who e into the school and inform them of the layment limitations,' he said. "We should also be careful,riscellier or not to stay in the school."
*a School of Architecture, which has rolled enrollment, experienced the highest loss 17 students. Dennis Meyer, a student right the decrease was due to the way direction was figured. He said the total end hours in the school had risen from 83 to 119 students. Mr.user said 119 students majoring in structural engineering were listed under School of Engineering but were also enrolled in School of Architecture and in Design.
IE SCHOOL OF Social Welfare had a ease of 13 students. Edith Black, dant dean, said the school's practicum ram limited the number of students taught in each course; the school requires students work as social workers in action with their class work.
a School of Pharmacy, the other school rding a decline, had one less student spring than last spring.
igh cotton, associate dean, said lack of ratory space prevented the school from pting more students. The school usually gives 120 to 150 applicants each year.
rollout increased in the Graduate
college, the College of Liberal Arts and
nces school, the School of Business,
the Fine Arts school, Law,
the College of Health Sciences.
E TO TALENT enrollment at the Lawrence PUS this spring increased by 244 nts over last spring. Enrollment in the Lawrence PUS will be of the schools recording increases
not limit the number of students they accept. Exceptions are some departments of the Graduate School and the School of Law and the College of Health Sciences.
The Graduate School had the largest increase, 101 students. Dorothy Haglund, assistant to the dean of liberal arts, said the Graduate School's admission process is more difficult to answer, but some departments had a higher acceptance because of space and staff restrictions.
The second largest gain was in the School of Fine Arts, which had an increase of 46 percent.
"We've had a very steady rise." Don Scheid, associate dean, said. "We haven't experienced any drastic or falls. I think enrolment is leveling off."
THE SCHOOL OF Business had the next highest increase, 36 students, and the School
Enrollment for Schools Spring 1978 Spring 1979
Graduate 5,104 5,205
Liberal Arts 8,114 9,132
Architecture 412
Business 918
Webness 918
Education 1,609 1,291
Engineering 1,328 1,561
Economics 1,431 1,477
Journalism 612 615
Law 454 475
Pharmacy 450
Technology 454
Social Welfare 496 483
Health Sciences 1,505 1,506
of Engineering followed with an increase of 33 students.
David Kraft, dean of engineering, attributed the growth of the school to a strong job market and an increase in enrollment by women and minorities.
Although the School of Law enrollment increased by 19, Martin Dickinson, dean of the school, said he expected the school's enrollment to remain fairly stable.
This year, the school accepted 190 students out of 650 who applied.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which had an increase of 18 students, has had slight increases during the past few years, according to Bob Adams, associate
Enrollment in the School of Journalism, which had an increase of three students, has also had only slight increases in the past few years. Lee Young, acting associate dean,
The College of Health Sciences had an increase, but a small one. It had one more student than last year.
8
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Morale ...
From page one
the Universiteit like a business. They want to show the Legitimate 'look how many eggs there are.'
"THERE IS A general feeling of being in corporate system where things are manufactured and produced, rather than created."
Wright said the administration had instilled a corporate atmosphere in the faculty through continual evaluations and competition for benefits.
"The dehumanization of people by audits and evaluations fits a business and commercial world rather than a university," he said.
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies, supports *Wright*
"We have an administration concerned more with economic efficiency rather than academic excellence," Leban said. "That is why we are running a supermarket at a university."
T. P. SRINIVASAN, professor of mathematics and a member of FExa, said that evaluations of faculty by students, who are usually the worst effect on faculty morale,
"The faculty are made to evaluate each other constantly," Srivinasan said. "They don't see evaluation leading to anything except to create more friction."
Ari Knapper, professor of business and a member of FacEx, said he thought another negative aspect of the evaluations was that the members were prevented from being creative.
"Because student evaluations are used in tenure evaluations, the instructor has to test students for good performance rated too low," Knapper said. "Faculty member has to be careful not offended to them."
LEBAN SAID the evaluations—combined with the bad economics situation—had resulted in an ugly trend. The application and evaluation process for merit salary
increases awarded by the departments had turned into backstaging sessions, he said, where faculty tried to out-justify each other for the wage increases.
Wright also said that the almost constant demand for documentation of ability through evaluations had made the faculty almost帕朋 about demonstrating their knowledge.
Leban said many faculty members would not apply for the raises because they did not want to be part of a larger university.
"In a corporate structure this may be legitimate, but not in a University."
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he agreed that there were increasing bureaucratic controls over the University's faculty, but he said there was little he could
"Every spring the members of the departments compete for the merit salary money." Leban said. "This is one of the best salaries of morale and the cooperative element."
"There are an increasing amount of federal and state regulations that force the University to engage in monitorine tivities and procedures." Dykes said.
"YOU HAVE ALMOST constant feedback asking are you good enough." Wright said. "Faculty members, especially those looking at our results, will turn to out the product depended on them."
Dykes said he spends one-third of working on business involving gov. regulations. More rules seem to be each day, he said.
THEY SEEM to be inevitable, but gotten to the point where the institut higher education no longer control the houses," Dykes said.
"Faculty are legitimately concer the growing bureaucracy, but a lot faculty don't realize that it's not from us," he said.
Dykes said he knew that educati
been hurt by the growing bureaucra
that the only thing that could be done
TOPEKA-Funding for women's athletics and libraries could be restored to the KU budget if the recommendations of a Kansas University Means subcommittee are approved today.
Approval of funding could aid KU budge
In addition, the three-member subcommittee has made a recommendation to pay $277,500 from an allocation for the Marvin Hall to renovate Lindley Hall.
Under Gov. John Carlin's budget recommitment, the athletics team has a library security system were given. The subcommittee is scheduled to make its entire presentation to Gov. Carlin on Thursday.
Yesterday, subcommittee members met with Marlon Rein, director of legislative research, to refine their recommendations on the KU budget.
Among the subcommittee's recommendations were the restoration to the budget $16,800 for miscellaneous equipment and $10,000 for the library security system.
However, subcommittee members broke that figure down, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $277,500 for the renovation of Lindley.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden
City, subcommittee chairman, a favored splitting the money in order both construction projects off the next year.
"We're going to have to hire buildings sooner or later anyway longer we put off starting on Linda more it will cost in the long run," he said.
Heinemann said the funds to fin
renovation of both buildings she
allocated by the Legislature next
would take about $1,550,000 to finish
Hall and about $1,650,000 to finish
he said.
Despite the high cost of renovation is about $50 a square foot, he said rer would still be cheaper than building building.
Because of the value of the book KU libraries, subcommittee memb that restoration of funding for a security system would pay for itself.
"The book detection system is very important because of all the moving it can handle. The book detection heineman said. "Besides, the red book theta will make the system more efficient."
The $16,660 that would be rest women's athletics is less than half of request by KU. Subcommittee said the money would be used for t athletic events and for an athletic room.
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try to prevent more regulations from appearing on the books.
Faculty members said they agreed that over-regulation harmed the University but they offered their own solutions to the faculty morale problem.
"MANY FACULTY members want more involvement in making the budget," Swartz said. "Having confidence in the budget allocations would boost morale."
"Over-regulation threatens the University's existence," Dykes said.
Srinivasan and Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction and chairman of FacEx, said that more faculty involvement in administrative functions was needed.
Leban said, "You have to think of the academic mission first. We need an administration that can provide academic leadership."
But Heller said it no longer was possible for the administrative head of a large corporation to be a supervisor.
“It’s not the day any longer where a university president can go around patting people on the back.” Heller said. “The role of the administrator today is to acquire resources.”
Srinivasa said that the faculty needed to be assured by the administration that they were performing well.
Athletics...
From page one
men's athletic director, who was not responsible for women's athletics.
trancy Spellman, a board member, said the effectiveness of the merger would depend on the attitudes of the administration.
כאשר אנו ממשים בפונקציה זו, אנו יכולים להגדיר את הערך של האלגוריתם ולהשתמש בו.
KU artist combines electronics, jewelry
if the two boards merged, our athletics would lose their emphasis on academics.
Dykes said he wanted to emphasize that the board would advise the athletic director
"It's the women who are having to make the biggest changes," she said, "And I'm afraid if the boards merge, we might lose our philosophy."
By RHONDA HOLMAN
The brooches, belts and rings Gary Nernickdesign looks more like props for a movie.
new metal, titanium, which can be changed to any color. He said he also had hopes of making jewelry that could emit sounds and light, and the effects were lit by light, temperature and movement.
Nemchock, who grew up in Chicago and studied jewelry design in Denmark, said he always had an interest in electronics, physics and metallurgy. He said the work he was doing would be much more difficult away from a university campus.
Staff Renorter
1 AUDITED SOME courses in the sciences and I hang around the engineering building and Malot Hall a lot," he said. "The research materials are here and I think KU has really been supportive of research in the arts."
But Nernochch's designs, which incorporate items such as solar cells, magnetic switches, fiber optics and light diodes, may be the jewelry of the future.
"About three years ago, I started thinking about putting some electronics with jewelry," Nernchock, professor of jewelry and silversmithing, said. "I'm just working with different applications of new materials." The artist and designer are just expanding.
Nernchock's "bodonic jewelry," as he calls it, combines traditional metals in geometric designs with tiny flashing bulbs and pinpoints of light—all powered by a tiny battery and a sensor that activates the lights when the pieces are worn.
Nernchock said the materials he used came from campus departments and research departments in space, telephone and computer countries. He said because much of the country. He said because much of the
Nemchock, who came to the University of Kansas in 1973 from the art institute in Cleveland, said he was in contact with English, German and West Coast designers were working, with electronic jewelry. He said the work was too new to be profitable.
"It's just basic research now," he said. "There are no guide books on how to do it."
By LESLIE GUILD Staff Reporter
The couple, who said they were never asked to show a marriage certificate when applying for an apartment at Stouffer
Young unmarried couples living together seem to be common at a university. A couple of KU couple live at Stouffer Place Apartments, 18th Street and Seward Ave., KU's 62nd Flr.
Place, said they had lived there for about two years.
expensive than other available apartments.
"We do not feel that what we're doing is wrong because by common law we consider ourselves married," the man said. "We're students and we think we should be smart enough."
The woman said the couple decided to live at Stouffer Place because it was less
"The rent is so low, you just can't rea
pass it up," she said. "And it is a con-
venient place to live because it is so close
to campus."
STOUFFER PLACE rents one bedroom apartments for $100 a month and two bedroom apartments for $110 a month. The student housing unit has 8 students, student housing for about 20 years, has 30
"We don't feel that what we're doing is wrong because by common law we consider ourselves married . . . and we think we should have the same benefits other students do."
married students from renting the apartment.
units, J.J. Wilson, director of housing, said.
Neighbors of the couple and other residents at Stouffe Place said they resented unmarried couples living at Stouffe Place because they prevented
"Even though the waiting list is long, I don't feel I'm depriving anyone else," he said. "We had to wait about six months to get our place, just like everyone else."
married students from living there, but not because they were not married.
"It's not a moral question to me," one neighbor said. "It's a rather question of a question
601 MISSOURI * LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 * (913) 843-5522
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being fair to married students who want to
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WILSON SAID the Office of Housing checked whether prospective tenants were enrolled in classes at KU. He said applicants were asked if they were married.
"Our verification procedures usually include checking the enrollment records to make sure that tenants are actually students and we also ask if they are either married or if they are a divorced head of the household," Wilson said.
He said single parents who were a family's main source of income were allowed to live at Stouffer Place.
Wilson said the system of checking tenants was being revised.
"We're in the process of tightening up our verification," Wilson said. "Right now, we don't know what is enrolled, we pretty much have to believe what applicants tell us about their requirements."
Wilson said he had compiled a list of about 10 documents to be used to verify marital status. He had he sent the list to her lawyer, and the counsel's office last month for approval.
"THE SUGGESTED using documents such as a marriage license or a driver's license to verify the marriage status of the individual; the same applies when haven't received a license on whether or not
Unwed find lenient
Although the housing at Stouffer Place is reserved for married students only, Wilson said knew that unmarried students had lived at Stouffer Place.
"We recently found in the paper a divorce notification of one of our tenants," Wilson said. "In that case we asked him to move out."
However, Souffier Place managers Gene and Jackie Veith said the tenure of the woman was a man's responsibility; two women to live with him and that the two of them considered themselves married by
After a case is reported, Wilson said, the Office of Housing talked to the tenant and decided whether the tenant should move.
After the Office of Housing asked the divorced man to move, he left within a month.
the list has been approved by the administration."
"WE TRY TO be as understanding and give those people who have to move time to find somewhere else to live," Veith said.
"I couldn't calculate the number of tenants that have moved for reasons like moving to a new location or a position as managers to initiate action against such tenants. We only report what we know."
Mrs. Veith said she usually found out about unmarried students living at Stouffer Place from other tenants.
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KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Vol.89,No.109
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
1
Maria Lanza
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Renorter
TOPEKA-As expected, the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee yesterday approved the addition of $116,600 for women's athletics and a library security system to the fiscal 1800 KU budget.
Committee members also approved a transfer of $77,300 from an extension for renovation of Marvin Hall to the library.
However, committee members split that figure, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and Kate.
Also part of the governor's budget recommendations was a $1,277,500 allocation for the renovation of Martin Hall.
Unexpected additions to the budget were $80,000 to the Kansas State scholarship fund, $33,000 for the development of sandstone aquaters in western Kansas and $50,000 for the development of mudstone aquateries between KU's Bureau of Child Research and the northeast
athletics is less than one-tenth of $267,368 requested by KU. The money would be used for travel to athletic events.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden City, said he额外 splitting the money to get both projects started this week.
said, are maintaining a 9.5 percent increase in student wages for next year, increasing the Kansas Scholarship program from $750,000 to $830,000 and raising a recommended faculty salary increase from 6 to 7 percent.
ZACHARIAS SAID the governor's recommended increase in student salaries would bring them in compliance with U.S. law.
"Faculty and students should not be enticed out of the state." he said.
Both the scholarship and faculty salary funding are needed, he said, to keep teachers and students at Kansas
ASK's other funding priorities, Zacharias said, are an increase in the fee waivers for graduate students from 60 to 100 percent, full reimbursement to universities for student union rentals, allocation of money for the removal of fees from some programs, and an increase of the formula funding budget method and an increase of the salaries of Regents staff members from 21.7 percent.
students Stauffer landlord
"We get phone calls from anonymous persons who say they know of someone in a certain apartment who shouldn't be living there," the doctor said, sometimes, people who have said they were married and have moved in feel they've gotten away with something, so they brag about it. I really can't believe sometimes they even brag about it to us."
Of 30 persons polled who live at Stouffer Place, all said they knew of persons living there who were not married.
Mrs. Veith said she had no recourse, except to report what she found to the housing office.
"We do ask the applicants if they are married," she said. "But as of now, that's
has to be married," she said. "This is one of the ways people think the beat of the song."
Mrs. Veith said a lot of the applications come through the mail and possible tenants were asked on the application to list the date of their marriage.
"That's usually the only preliminary check we make to see that they are
Mrs. Veith said she thought the regulations needed to be improved.
"Right now we're very limited as to what we can do," she said. "And the official actions have to come from the police because we need them to stay aware of what's going on."
Her husband said they sometimes found
"We have to believe what tenants tell us. And sometimes they don't tell us the truth."
all. so we have to believe what the tenants
and. And sometimes they don't tell us the truth.
MRS. VEITH SAID a common problem was in the interpretation of what married people believed.
"Besides the business of whether a common law marriage is really a marriage, we have some applicants who tell us that the regulations don't state that both parties of the marriage have to live at Stouffer Place, only that it says a tenant
out through maintenance men about
should not be there. Stouffer Place who
should not be there.
"He is in closer contact with tenants and if he sees anything that looks unamuseable he will call."
However, the maintenance man said he didn't look for such situations
"Mostly I try to overlook it," he said.
Meanwhile, at least five more names are added each month to the six-to-nine-month list.
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OF THREE REQUESTS, Zacharias said, the graduate fee waiver, improvements to make buildings accessible to the handicapped and Regents salary increases are most important.
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heard testimony from or of the Associated nt lobbying group. mibbers about funding of 10 Regents schools. the group, the characias
R
'ts snack sales
said that if small snack bars began sting across campus, it would be hard alt their number.
e Union, said the Union had exclusive s to the concessions on campus because union was organized to provide service Union does not pay for the act, he said.
**MREST JOLLY**, director of vending he Union, said concionsions could be a threat to the act. He said the profit from the vendemashes was deposited in the Union bank.
t Prowant said the McCollom senate id have the right to sell concessions.
don't mind KU concessions having a act, but I want to get the exclusive s contract repealed," he said. "KU
But Jolly said competition would raise unfood prices and cause a reduction of service.
concessions has no reason to improve its products because it doesn't have compete
"No one will send soft drinks for 25 cents. That's as cheap as a grocery store will get."
JOLLY SAID machines in Mcollem were serviced three times a day on Sunday.
"McColm is always serviced three times because it is a large dorm. We pamper McColm because it is such a large room. It can handle one cold food machine but it holds 130 units."
"We have 12-hour service on the machines, so they really shouldn't be empil-
See VENDING back page
Bv BILL RIGGINS
Staff Reporter
though most schools within the kersis of Xanassa had slight enrollmentcases compared with a year ago, fourds had decreases, figures released last x by the office of admissions and rds indicate.
KU schools losing n battle for students
ree of the four schools have limits on number of students they accept. The schools with decreasing enrollments are Education, Pharmacy and Social Welfare; ie School of Education, the only school out an enrollment limit that recorded a vase, had the most severe decrease. Schools have 169 fewer students than a 'ago.'
IE ENROLLMENT decrease reflects ride publicity given to the lack of plats in action. Dale Scannell, dean of education, yesterday.
® make sure make to all students who
® into the school and inform them of the
loyalty limitations, ' he said. "We
® decide whether we should, deci-
er not or not to stay in the school."
e School of Architecture, which has rolled enrollment, experienced the driest loss, 17 students. Dennis Hogan, who taught right ght the decrease was due to the way duration was figured. He said the total ent hours in the school had risen from 85 to 119 during the merier said 119 students majoring in structural engineering were listed under School of Engineering but were also enrolled in School of Architecture and in Design.
IE SCHOOL Of Social Welfare had a ease of 13 students. Edith Black, dant dean, said the school's practicum ram limited the number of students could be admitted. The school requires only 5 teachers and workers in anction with their class work.
a School of Pharmacy, the other school riding a decline, had one less student spring than last spring.
ugh Cotton, associate dean, said lack of rational space prevented the school from ping more students. The school usually 120 to 165 applicants each year.
inrollment increased in the Graduate col, the College of Liberal Arts and sciences, the Business, incrining, Fin. Arts, Journalism, Law the College of Health Sciences.
IE TOTAL enrollment at the Lawrence pas this spring increased by 244 npts over last spring Enrollment is 308.5 npts over last year of the schools recording increases do
not limit the number of students they accept. Exceptions are some departments of the Graduate School and the School of Law and the College of Health Sciences.
The Graduate School had the largest increase, 101 students. Dorothy Hagland, assistant to the dean of liberal arts, said the Graduate School's admissions varied from one department to another, but the number of applicants because of space and staff restrictions.
The second largest gain was in the School of Fine Arts, which had an increase of 46 percent.
"We've had a very steady rise," Don Scheiid, associate dean, said. "We haven't experienced any drastic rises or falls. I think enrolment is leveling off."
THE SCHOOL OF Business had the next highest increase, 36 students, and the School
Enrollment for Schools Spring 1978 Spring 1979
Graduate 5,194 5,205
Liberal Arts 9,114 9,132
Architecture 421 404
Business 918 954
Education 1,460 1,291
Engineering 1,258 1,581
Fine Arts 1,431 1,477
Journalism 612 615
Law 454 473
Medicine 240 723
Social Welfare 496 483
Health Sciences 1,506 1,506
of Engineering followed with an increase of 33 students.
David Kraft, dean of engineering, attributed the growth of the school to a strong job market and an increase in enrollment by women and minorities.
Although the School of Law enrollment increased by 19, Martin Dickinson, dear of the school, said he expected the school's enrolment to remain fairly stable.
This year, the school accepted 190 students out of 650 who applied.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which had an increase of 18 students, has had slight increases during the past few years, according to Bob Adams, associate
Enrollment in the School of Journalism, which had an increase of three students, has also had only slight increases in the past few years, Lee Young, acting associate dean,
The College of Health Sciences had an increase, but a small one. It had one more graduate in the field.
8
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Morale .
From page one
the university like a business. They want to show the Legislature 'look how many eggs in the bowl.'
"THEER IS A general feeling of being in a corporate system where things are manufactured and produced, rather than created."
Wright said the administration had instilled a corporate atmosphere in the faculty through continual evaluations and competition for benefits.
"The dehumanization of people by audits and evaluations fits a business and commercial world rather than a university," he said.
Carl Leban, associate professor of East
Asian studies, supportrs Wright H.
Abbey
"We have an administration concerned more with economic efficiency rather than academic excellence," Leban said. "That is why we are running a supermarket than a university."
T. P. SRINIVASAN, professor of mathematics and a member of FacEx, said that evaluations of faculty by students, teachers, and faculty had had the worst effect on faculty morale.
"The faculty are made to evaluate each other constantly." Srinivasan said. "They don't see evaluation leading to anything except to create more friction."
Ari Knoxer, professor of business and a member of FaceX, said he thought another negative aspect of the evaluations was that members were prevented from creative
"Because student evaluations are used in teacher evaluations, the instructor has to teach them how to report a rating too low," Knapper said. "Faculty members have to be careful not to offend them."
LEBAN SAID the evaluations—combined with the bad economics situation—had resulted in an ugly trend. The application and evaluation process for merit salary
--increases awarded by the departments had turned into backstabbing sessions, he said, where faculty tried to out-justify each other for the wage increases.
"Every spring the members of the departments compete for the merit salary money." Leban said. "This is one of the greatest sources of morale and the cooperative element."
Leban said many faculty members would not apply for the raises because they did not want to be on the payroll.
Wright also said that the almost constant demand for documentation of ability through evaluations had made the faculty almost paranoid about demonstrating their knowledge.
"In a corporate structure this may be legitimate, but not in a University."
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he agreed that there were increasing bureaucratic controls over the University's faculty, but he said there was little he could
"YOU HAVE ALMOST constant feedback asking are you good enough." Wright said. "Faculty members, especially those looking for a job, often turn to turn out the product depended of them.
"There are an increasing amount of federal and state regulations that force the University to engage in monitorite tivities and procedures." Dykes said.
Dykes said he spends one-third of working on business involving gov regulations. More rules seem to be each day, he said.
"THEY SEEM to be inevitable, but gotten to the point where the institut higher education no longer control the houses," Dwkes said.
"Faculty are legitimately coner the growing bureaucracy, but a lot faculty don't realize that it's not from us," he said.
Dykes said he knew that educati
been hurt by the growing bureaucra
that the only thing that could be done
Approval of funding could aid KU budge
In addition, the three-member subcommittee has made a recommendation to sell $27.500 from an allocation for 10 percent of Marvin Hall to renovate Lindley Hall.
Westerday, subcommittee members met with Marlon Rein, director of legislative research, to refine their recommendations on the KU budget.
Under Gov. John Carlin's budget recommendation, funding for neither the State University nor the state system were given. The subcommittee is scheduled to make its entire presentation to Gov. Carlin.
Among the subcommittee's recommendations were the restoration to the budget of $16,800 for miscellaneous expenses and $10,000 for the library security system.
TOPEKA-Funding for women's athletics and libraries could be restored to the KU budget if the recommendations of a Kansas Department of Means subcommittee are approved today.
IN HIS INITIAL budget proposal, the
commented for $1,277,000 be allocated
for the project.
However, subcommittee members broke that figure down, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $277,500 for the renovation of Lindley.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden
City, subcommittee chairman, s叛赢 splitting the money in order both construction projects off the next year.
"We're going to have to finish buildings sooner or later anyway, longer we put off starting on Lind more it will cost in the long run," he said.
Heimman said the funds to fi-
renovation of both buildings she
allocated by the Legislature next;
would take about $1,555,000 to finish
Hall and about $1,550,000 to finish
he said.
Despite the high cost of renovation is about $54 a square foot, he said rew would still be cheaper than building building.
Because of the value of the book KU libraries, subcommittee memb that restoration of funding for a security system would pay for itself.
The $16,600 that would be rest women's athletics is less than half of request by KU. Subcommittee said the money would be used for athletic events and for an athletic room.
"The book detection system is iv in the library," he said, doing during library renovation next Heinemann said. "Besides, the red book theta will help me the system do."
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"Over-regulation threatens the University's existence." Dykes said.
new metal, titanium, which can be changed to any color. He said he also had hopes of making jewelry that could emit sounds and light, with the ability to be directed by light, temperature and movement.
Faculty members said they agreed that over-regulation harmed the University but they offered their own solutions to the faculty morale problem.
Open Evenings
Srinivasan and Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction and chairman of FacEx, said that more faculty involvement in administrative functions was needed.
"MANY FACULTY members want more involvement in making the budget," Swartz said. "Having confidence in the budget allocations would boost morale."
Nermoch, who grew up in Chicago and studied jewelry design in Denmark, said he always had an interest in electronics, physics and metallurgy. He said the work he was doing would be much more difficult a way from a university campus.
Leban said, "You have to think of the academic mission first. We need an administration that can provide academic leadership."
"I AUDITED SOME courses in the sciences and I hang around the engineering building and Malot Hall a lot," he said. "The research materials are here and I think KU has really been supportive of research in the arts."
But Heller said it no longer was possible to the administrative head of a large department.
But Nernchock's designs, which incorporate items such as solar cells, magnetic switches, fiber optics and light diodes, may be the jewelry of the future.
Srinivasan said that the faculty needed to be assured by the administration that as much as possible, the staff
"About three years ago, I started thinking about putting some electronics with jewelry," Nemechok, professor of jewelry and silversmithing, said. "I'm just working on new materials. The tools of the artist and designer are just expanding."
"It's not the day any longer where a university president can go around ganging people on the back," Heller said. "The role of administrator today is to acquire resources."
men's athletic director, who was not responsible for women's athletics.
Tracy Spellman, a board member, said the effectiveness of the merger would depend on the attitudes of the administration.
Athletics...
From naire one
Nernchock, who came to the University of Kansas in 1972 from the art institute in Cleveland, said he was in contact with English, German and West Coast designers working here, working with electronic jewelry. He said the work was too new to be profitable.
IT WILL do what it says it will do. I
if the two boards merged, women's athletics would lose their emphasis on academics.
The brooches, belts and rings Gary Nemchock designs look more like prop for the model.
KU artist combines electronics, jewelry
"It's the women who are having to make the biggest changes," she said. "And I'm afraid if the boards merge, we might lose our philosophy."
Dykes said he wanted to emphasize that the board would advise the attorney director
Nernchock said the materials he used came from campus departments and research departments in space, telephone and computer science, a country. He said because much of the
By RHONDA HOLMAN
Nernchock "bodonic jewelry," as he calls it, combines traditional metals in geometric designs with tiny flashing bulbs and pinpoints of light—all powered by a tiny battery and a sensor that activates the lights when the pieces are worn.
Staff Reporter
"It's just basic research now," he said. There are no guide books on how to do it and what to expect from the results.
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Manager makes
By TAMMI HARBERT
Staff Reporter
Before students make plans to subtlet their apartments in Lawrence for the summer, they should find out their manager's subletting policy.
Subletting means that the current tenant, who is renting his apartment from a manager, also is renting out part of the place to a second tenant, Lanny Rose, associate attorney. The tenant will be responsible for paying the rent.
The practice is permissible unless it is excluded in the lease, Rose said.
But he said the term commonly was used to describe renting an entire apartment by the first tenant to a second tenant.
In an informal survey of about 25 apartment complexes in Lawrence, most managers said they permitted tenants to submit. But the policies of subletting varied among
The two tenants should make these agreements between themselves,he said.
PAUL JONES, manager of Spanish Crest Apartments, 2004 W. 27th St., said subletting an apartment was the responsibility of the former tenant.
He said the second tenant did not sign a new lease with the management or pay a security deposit to the management.
Jones said only two apartments in the complex had been subtuted in the past four years. A tenant wanted to move before his lease expired, he usually tried to work out some kind of agreement.
"We'd really rather let them out of their lease and re-rent the apartment ourselves," he said.
he said.
Linda Frankenfeld, manager of the Acorn Apartments, 1815 W. 24th St., said that
We'd really rather let them out of the lease and re-rent the apartment ourselves.
"SAY, FORM example, there is a hole in the door. When the tenants go through the apartment they would put this on the check list," she said. "It prevents a lot of disputes over the rent."
when a tenant sublet she had the old and new tenants inspect the apartment together and fill out a maintenance check list, noting any damage in the apartment.
The new tenant then signs a new lease with the management and pays a separate deposit. The former tenant is released from his contract obligations and his deposit is returned to the landlord.
Frankenfeld, who also manages Crescent, Gaslight and the Oaks apartments, said that the former resident was supposed to clean the apartment before he leaves, but the owner was not willing to do it.
"If there is a dispute about the apartment, we tell the subtenant to take it up with the former tenant—we aren't involved in any way," she said.
By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Reporter
City rent highest in area
Lawrence residents should be pleased to know that a recent Chamber of Commerce survey showed that groceries in the city are cheaper in Kansas City, Kan., Wichita or Omaha.
However, the same survey indicated that apartment costs in Lawrence far exceed those in the other three areas.
Of 25 grocery items surveyed, 13 were cheapest in Lawrence—including toilet paper.
Furthermore, the average electric bill in the city last year was almost half that of the average monthly charge in Kansas City.
The average monthly rate for a 900- to-
1000-square-foot, two-bedroom apartment
in Lawrence during the last quarter of 1978
was $230.
That figure was 27 percent higher than the average price for apartments in Wichita and 12 percent more than those in Kansas City.
"THERE IS a higher demand for
HOUSING
Apartment (two-bedroom per month) . . . 250.00 . 260.00 . 238.00 . 220.00
House (month) . . . 323.00 . 379.00 . 394.00 . 482.00
UTILITIES
Electric (month) . . . 66.69 . 33.77 . 26.00 . 62.50
Gas (month) . . . 22.95 . 22.00 . 31.00 . 19.53
Telephone (month) . . . 9.22 . 7.26 . 6.37 . 7.15
Total . . . 98.86 . 63.03 . 63.37 . 89.18
TRANSPORTATION
Taxi (two miles) . . . 2.45 . 2.10 . 1.25 . 1.85
Regular gas (national brand, full service, tax included; per gallon) . . . 63.9 . 67.9 . 69.9 . 69.7
HEALTH CARE
Hospital (semi-private room, one day) . . . 96.00 . 80.50 . 76.00 . 99.00
Doctor (office visit) . . . 15.00 . 10.00 . 10.00 . 12.52
Dentist (office visit) . . . 10.00 . 17.50 . 16.00
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS
Men's haircut. . . 5.00 . 15.00 . 4.00 . 5.25
Woman's shampoo and set. . . 6.16 . 7.00 . 4.50 . 6.50
Dry cleaning (man's two piece suit). . . 2.51 . 2.70 . 2.70 . 3.20
Movie (first run, evening). . . 2.50 . 2.00 . 2.00 . 3.50
Television repair (color, excluding parts). . . 17.13 . 20.00 . 16.25 . 21.59
Liquor (750 ml, Seagram's Seven Crown). . . 6.07 . 5.83 . 6.13
Total . . . 40.22 . 43.02 . 36.32* . 46.97
*does not include liquor
COMPARISON OF THE FOUR CITIES NATIONALLY MEAN BEING 100
food, including utilities, health transportation, and miscellaneous expenses) 97.9 99.7 93.8 106.2
Food 100.2 99.8 102.4 99.1
Housing 84.2 97.5 96.1 110.5
Transportation 106.7 130.3 101.9 95.6
Utilities 126.6 79.2 80.7 115.5
Health 96.0 89.5 86.2 102.6
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
However, committee members split that figure, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and
Also part of the governor's budget recommendations was a $1,277,500 allocation for the renovation of Marvin Hall.
St.ite-rep David Heinemann, K-Garden City, said he invaded splitting the money to get both projects started this week.
Committee members said the funds to finish both buildings should be allocated by the Legislature next year.
CAROLINE WAYNE
Vol.89,No.109
"Faculty and students should not be enticed out of the state." he said.
said, are maintaining a 9.5 percent increase in student wages for next year, increasing the Kansas Scholarship program from $750,000 to $830,000 and raising a recommended faculty salary increase from 6 to 7 percent.
By TAMMY TIERNEY
ZACHARIAS SAID the governor's recommended increase in student salaries would be them in compliance with law.
Staff Renorter
athletics is less than one-tenth of $267,368 requested by KU. The money would be used for travel to athletic events and
Both the scholarship and faculty salary funding are needed, he said, to keep teachers and students at Kanasas
TOPEKA-As expected, the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee yesterday approved the addition of $116,000 for women's athletics and a library security system to the fiscal 1800 KU budget.
Committee members also approved a transfer of $777,500 from an allocation for renovation of Marvin Hall to the
Unexpected addition to the budget were $80,000 to the Kansas State scholarship fund, $3,500 for the development of sandstone aquaters in western Kansas and $40,000 for the development between KU's Bureau of Child Research and the northeast.
ASK's other funding priorities, Zacharias said, are an increase in the fee waivers for graduate students from 60 to 100 percent, full reimbursement to universities for student union rentals, allocation of money for the removal of building costs, greater use of the formula funding budget and more access to the salaries of Regents staff members from 2 to 1 percent.
subletting rules
AFTER THE new tenant moves in, she said, the management provides regular maintenance for the apartment.
Marnie Clawson, manager of Apple Croft Apartments, 1741 W. 19th St., said a new lease on security deposit directly to the former tenant, but signed a separate lease with the management.
She also kept the first tenant's deposit but transferred it to the new tenant's name. She argued she were the first tenant's deposit, the new tenant paid a damage fee are deducted from the first tenant's deposit, the new tenant paid a deposit.
"For instance, if the former tenant has a $25 damage fee deducted from a $100 security deposit, then the subtentant only pays the tenant $75," she said.
But damage to an apartment is not the main problem with subtleting, Bill Lemeansy, manager of University Terrace Anterra. 502 Country Club.Terraced, said
FOR YOUR PORTRAIT, take apartments. Country club' s office, said.
"STUDENTS SELLDOM damage apartments anymore, they just leave them dirty," he said.
Rena Underwood, Shawnee freshman, said she and her romance found dirtiness to be a problem when they moved into an apartment they had sublet at Gatehouse Hall.
"When we looked at the apartment it was really a mess," she said. "But we thought it was just because the people were getting ready to move."
Underwood said she thought the tenants would clean the apartment before they left.
"But they didn't even bother to vacuum," she said.
"But we should've gotten a check list," she said. "Then we could've noted the mess on the list and withheld our security deposit from the tenants until they'd cleaned the house."
The management was not responsible for the mess, she said, because she and her roommate were taking over the former tenant's lease.
SHE SAID that she had no other problems in leasing her apartment from another tenant and that there were advantages in taking over the former tenant's lease.
"We got a really good deal," she said. "The people before us lived here for three years and the management let them renew the lease each year without raising the rent."
"Students seldom damage apartments anymore, they just leave them dirty.
Because we took over their lease, we pay lower rent than somebody who signs a new lease."
Because the management was not responsible for the dirt in the apartment, Underwood said, she spent two days cleaning it herself.
leling, which is about be cheaper than con-
She said she was not aware at the time that the Legal Aid Society could help students with landlord-tenant problems.
Rose said that students who had the licensed-tenant problems could contact the Legal Aid Society, 105 Green Hall, or the Consumer Affairs Association, 819 Vermont St.
apartments in Lawrence than other cities," Bob Sarna, manager of Meadowbrook Apartments, 101 Windsor Place, said. "Theory would indicate that price is influenced by demand. It might be influenced in quality of construction here. too."
The Lawrence figure also was 10 percent higher than the average monthly cost for a dozen randomly selected Topeka apartments.
OF THOSE REQUESTS, Zacharias said, the graduate fee waiver, improvements to make buildings accessible to the handicapped and Regents salary increases are most important.
"I think the University has a direct influence on the price of housing," Barbara Fendley, manager of Jayhawker Towers, 1603 W. 15th St., said."Since the students have to have a place to live, the landlords can charge more.
"Plus, Lawrence is a desirable place to live." Things like the new Clinton Dam are causing more people to come here. Generally, I think Lawrence is a rapidly growing town and the apartment prices are just keeping up with the growth."
ANOTHER LANDLORD, Glen Lemesary of Park Plaza Apartments, 1912 W. 25th St., said the "college town" atmosphere of Lawrence also attracted many persons who otherwise might live elsewhere.
"I have friends who work in Topeka and live in Lawrence even though it's cheaper in topeka," he explained. "They do love the parties, but they're born because of the parties, the nightlife."
Sheryl Lemesany, manager of West
Hills Apartments 1008 Emery Road, noted another aspect of college towns that she said forced apartment prices upward.
It is well known, she said, that college students clear out in the summer.
"Unless you have a 12-month lease, there is a pretty high rate of unoccupied space during the summer," she said. "You should compensate for the loss of income abovehow."
"THESE WERE hardly any cars in the parking lot here last summer. A lot of apartments lower the rates in the summer, so you take in a lot less. You have to make up for that. Wherever if you were living in a city, your house would cost pretty much the same year all round."
The average price for a gallon of regular gas in Kansas City was 63.9 cents. The Lawrence average was 67.9 cents, and the Omaha in Ottawa and Wichita were even higher.
The only other dramatic price difference found in the survey was a difference in income.
"It just depends on how far you are from the refineries," he said. "They have them in Kansas City. The farther you get from the terminals, the more expensive gas is."
"The difference is the freight costs," Bill Edmonsdale, manager of Bill's Mobil, 1206 W. Edmonsdale Street, New York.
However, one Lawrence gas station manager said the difference could be that the stations
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'ts snack sales
e Union, said the Union had exclusive s to the concessions on campus because Union was organized to provide service idents. The Union does not pay for the
*RREST JOLLY*, director of vending the Union, said concessions could be used more effectively with an exclusive act. He said the profit from the vent machines was deposited in the Union funding.
said that if small snack bars began sting across campus, it would be hard hit their number.
t. Prowant said the McCollium senate
id have the right to sell concessions.
don't mind KU concessions having a
contract," he said. "The contract
is contract repaired," he said. "KU
But Jolly said competition would raise the food prices and cause a reduction of service.
concessions has no reason to improve its products because it doesn't have a compete
"No one will vend soft drinks for 25 cents. That's as cheap as a grocery store will get."
JOLLY SAID machines in MCollum were served three times a day on Sunday.
"McCollim is always serviced three times because it is a large dorm. We pamper McCollim because it is such a large room, and you get one cold food machine but it holds 130 units."
"We have 12-hour service on the machines, so they really shouldn't be empil
See VENDING back page
Staff Reporter
By BILL RIGGINS
KU schools losing n battle for students
though most schools within the *city* of Kansas had slight enrollment eines compared with a year ago, four ols had decreases, figures released last k by the office of admissions and urs indicate.
ree of the four schools have limits on number of students they accept. The schools with decreasing enrollments are Education, Pharmacy and Social Welfare; school of Education, the only school out an enrollment limit that recorded a case, had the most severe decrease in school had 168 fewer students than a 'ago'
IE ENROLMENT decrease reflects
public knowledge given to the lack of job in
action. Dale Scannell, dean of education,
yesterday.
'e make sure we to all students who e into the school and inform them of theayment limitations,' he said. "We decision or not to stay in the school."
ie School of Architecture, which has rolled enrollment, experienced the largest loss, 17 students. Dennis er, assistant to the dean, said he ght the decrease was due to the way elment was figured. He said the total ent hours in the school had risen from 520 in 1970 to 135 that year. He said 191 students majoring, in iteructal engineering were listed under School of Engineering but were also en in the School of Architecture and an Design.
E E SCHOOL OF Social Welfare had a ease of 13 students. Edith Black, dantan dean, said the school's practicum ram limited the number of students could be admitted. The school requires teachers and workers in anuction with their class work.
e School of Pharmacy, the other school rding a decline, had one less student spring than last spring.
ugh Cotton, associate dean, said lack of ratory space prevented the school from piting more students. The school usuallyives 120 to 156 applicants each year.
inrollment increased in the Graduate
college, the College of Liberal Arts and
Business,
inering. Fine Arts, Journalism, Law
the College of Health Sciences.
HE TOTAL enrollment at the Lawrence
pus this spring increased by 244
ents over last spring. Enrollment is
now at 319,650 students of all
of the schools recording increases do
not limit the number of students they accept. Exceptions are some departments of the Graduate School and the School of Law and the College of Health Sciences.
The Graduate School had the largest increase, 101 students. Dorothy Haglund, assistant to the dean of liberal arts, said the Graduate School's admissions process became more difficult to another, but some department, but not the graduate schools because of space and staff restrictions.
The second largest gain was in the School of Fine Arts, which had an increase of 46 students.
THE SCHOOL OF Business had the next highest increase, 36 students, and the School
Enrollment for Schools Spring 1978 Spring 1979
Graduate 5,104 5,205
Library Arts 9,114 9,322
Architecture 421 404
Business 918 954
Education 1,460 1,291
Lectures 1,208 1,561
Film Arts 1,431 1,477
Journalism 612 615
Law 454 470
Pharmacy 240
Social Welfare 496 483
Health Sciences 1,505 1,506
of Engineering followed with an increase of 33 students.
David Kraft, dean of engineering, attributed the growth of the school to a strong job market and an increase in enrollment by women and minorities.
Although the School of Law enrollment increased by 19, Martin Dickinson, dean of the school, said he expected the school's enrollment to remain fairly stable.
This year, the school accepted 190 students out of 650 who applied.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which had an increase of 18 students, has had slight increases during the past few years, according to Bob Adams, associate
Enrollment in the School of Journalism, which had an increase of three students, has also had only slight increases in the past few years. Lee Young, acting associate dean,
The College of Health Sciences had an increase, but a small one. It had one more doctor in the hospital.
8
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
---
Morale . . .
From nage one
the University like a business. They want to
show the Legistature 'look how many eggs
they made'
"THEER is a general feeling of being in a corporate system where things are manufactured and produced, rather than created."
Wright said the administration had instilled a corporate atmosphere in the faculty through continual evaluations and competition for benefits.
"The dehumanization of people by audits and evaluations fits a business and commercial world rather than a university," he said.
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies, supported Wright's
"We have an administration concerned more with economic efficiency rather than academic excellence" Leban said. "That is what we are running a supermarket than a university."
T. P. SRINIVASAN, professor of mathematics and a member of FacEx, said that evaluations of faculty by students, teachers, and staff had the worst effect on faculty morale.
Arnio Krapper, professor of business and a member of FacEx, said he thought another negative aspect of the evaluations was that the members were prevented from being creative.
"The faculty are made to evaluate each other constantly," Srinivasan said. "They don't see evaluation leading to anything except to create more friction."
"Because student evaluations are used in test evaluations, the instructor has to teach students how to rate too low," Knapper said. "Faculty members have to be careful not to offend them."
LEBAN SAID the evaluations—combined with the bad economics situation—had resulted in an ugly trend. The application and evaluation process for merit salary
increases awarded by the departments has turned into backstabbing sessions, he said, where faculty tried to out-justify each other for the wage increases.
"Every spring the members of the departments compete for the merit salary money. Leban said, "This is one of the reasons of morale and of morale and the cooperative element."
Weight also said that the almost constant demand for documentation of ability through evaluations had made the faculty more involved in demonstrating their worth to the University.
Leban said many faculty members would not apply for the raises because they did not know what to do.
"YOU HAVE ALMOST constant feedback asking are you good enough." Wright said. "Faculty members, especially those looking for answers, will turn to turn out the product demanded of them.
"In a corporate structure this may be legitimate, but not in a University."
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he agreed that there were increasing bureaucratic controls over the University's data, but he said there was little he could do.
"There are an increasing amount of federal and state regulations that force the University to engage in monitorite tivities and procedures." Dykes said
Dykes said he spends one-third of working on business involving gov regulations. More rules seem to be each day, he said.
"THEY SEEM to be inevitable, but gotten to the point where the institu higher education no longer control the houses." Dwks said.
"Faculty are legitimately concer the growing bureaucracy, but a lo faculty don't realize that it's not from us," he said.
Dykes said he knew that educati
been hurt by the growing bureaucra
that the only thing that could be done
Approval of funding could aid KU budge
TOPEKA-Funding for women's athletics and libraries could be restored to the KU budget if the recommendations of a Kansas House Ways and Means subcommittee are
In addition, the three-member subcommittee has made a recommendation to $277,500 from an allocation for Marvin Hall to renovate Lindley Hall.
Under Gov. John Carlin's budget recommendation, funding for neither the state nor the national system were given. The subcommittee is scheduled to make its entire presentation to Gov. Carlin on Friday.
Yesterday, subcommittee members met with Marlon Rein, director of legislative research, to refine their recommendations on the KU budget.
Among the subcommittee's recommendations were the restoration to the budget $12 million or miscellaneous expenses for $64 million and $100,000 for the library security system.
IN HIS INITIAL budget proposal, the
allocated for the restoration of Marvin Hall.
City, subcommittee chairman, s favored splitting the money in orde both construction projects off the next year.
However, subcommittee members broke that figure down, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $277,500 for the renovation of Lindley.
"We're going to have to finish buildings sooner or later anyway, longer we put off starting on Land more it will cost in the long run," he said.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden
Heimann said the funds to fir renovation of both buildings she had been working on would take about $1,550 to finish Hall and all $1,650 to finish
Despite the high cost of renovation is about $54 a square foot, he said er would still be cheaper than buildin building.
Because of the value of the book KU libraries, subcommittee memb that restoration of funding for a security system would pay for itself.
"The book detection system is vv important for all of the moving it describes," Heinemann said. "Besides, the redic book theta will match the system."
The $16,660 that would be rest women's athletics is less than half of request by KU. Subcommittee said the money would be used for athletic events and for an athletic room.
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Faculty members said they agreed that over-regulation harmed the University but they offered their own solutions to the faculty morale problem.
Srinivasan and Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction and chairman of FacEx, said that more faculty involvement in administrative functions was needed.
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"Over-regulation threatens the University's existence." Dykes said.
new metal, titanium, which can be changed to any color. He said he also had hopes of making jewelry that could emit sounds and light, perhaps by moving it by light, temperature and movement.
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"MANY FACULTY members want more involvement in making the budget," Swartz said. "Having confidence in the budget allocations would boost morale."
Tracy Spelman, a board member, said the effectiveness of the merger would depend on the attitudes of the administration.
Leban said, "You have to think of the academic mission first. We need an administration that can provide academic leadership."
Nemchock, who grew up in Chicago and studied jewelry design in Denmark, said he always had an interest in electronics, physics and metallurgy. He said the work he was doing would be much more difficult away from a university campus.
try to prevent more regulations from appearing on the books.
men's athletic director, who was not responsible for women's athletics.
But Heller said it no longer was possible for the administrative head of a large university to use the computer.
From nave one
"I AUDITED SOME courses in the sciences and I hang around the engineering building and Malott Hall a lot," he said. "The research materials are here and I think KU has really been supportive of research in the arts."
“It’s not the day any longer where a university president can go around patting people on the back,” Heller said. “The role of the administrator today is to acquire resources.”
Open Evenings
Srinivasa said that the faculty needed to be assured by the administration that
Athletics ...
I will do what it says it will do. I
But Nermock's designs, which incorporate items such as solar cells, magnetic switches, fiber optics and light diodes, may be the jewelry of the future.
Nemchock, who came to the University of Kansas in 1972 from the art institute in Cleveland, said he was in contact with English, German and West Coast designers. He were working with electronic jewelry. He said the work was too new to be profitable.
"About three years ago, I started thinking about putting some electronics with jewelry," Nermchock, professor of jewelry and silversmithing, said. "I'm just working with different applications of new materials for artists; artist, and designer are just exuding."
“It's the women who are having to make the biggest changes,” she said. “And I'm afraid if the boards merge, we might lose our philosophy.”
Nernchock said the materials he used came from campus departments and research departments in space, telephone and computer industries of the country. He said because much of the
if the two boards merged, women's athletics would lose their emphasis on academics.
Dykes said he wanted to emphasize that the board would advise the athletic director
Nernchock's "bodonic jewelry," as he calls it, combines traditional metals in geometric designs with tiny flashing bulbs and pinpoints of light—all powered by a tiny battery and a sensor that activates the lights when the pieces are worn.
The brooches, belts and rings Gary Neumack designs look more like props for the movie.
KU artist combines electronics, jewelry
"It's just basic research now," he said. There are no guide books on how to do it, and I don't know what they are.
By RHONDA HOLMAN
Staff Reporter
LAKERIA.
Although his feet don't quite fit his soft sculpture thone. Scott Hall manages to remain comfortable in his home at 1240 Ohio. The gloves are stuffed with fiber-art scraps.
Stall photo by Randy Olson
123.655.7890
Iliana Dyachenko
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Maria Kovalevna
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 89, No. 109
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
KU budget items approved
Staff Reporter
By TAMMY TIERNEY
TOPEKA-As expected, the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee yesterday approved the addition of $16,100 for women's athletics and a library security system to the fiscal 1980 KU budget.
Committee members also approved a transfer of $77,700 from an allocation for renovation of Marvin Hall to
Unexpected to the budget were $80,000 to the Kansas State scholarship fund, $35,000 for the development of sandstone aquariums in western Kansas and $80,000 for the development of sandstone aquariums in eastern Kentucky between KU's Bureau of Child Research and the northeast
athletics is less than one-tenth of $267,368 requested by KU. The money would be used for travel to athletic events and a team.
Also part of the governor's budget建议 was a $1,277,500 allocation for the renovation of Marvin Hall
However, committee members split that figure, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and a nearby parking lot.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden City, and he favored splitting the money to get both projects started this
Committee members said the funds to finish both buildings should be allocated by the Legislature next year.
said, are maintaining a 9.5 percent increase in student wages for next year, increasing the Kansas Scholarship program from $750,000 to $830,000 and raising a recommended faculty salary increase from 6 to 10 percent.
Both the scholarship and faculty salary funding are needed, he said, to keep teachers and students at Kanaas
ZACHARIAS SAID the governor's recommended increase in student salaries would bring them in compliance with the department's budget.
"Faculty and students should not be enticed out of the state," he said.
ANSK's other funding priorities, Zacarias said, are an increase in the fee waivers for graduate students from 60 to 100 percent, full reimbursement to universities for student union rentals, allocation of money for the removal of certain nonessential expenses and of the formula funding budget method and an increase of the salaries of Regents staff members from 2 to 1.7 percent.
Landlords warv of abuse
By KATE POUND Staff Reporter
Get married, get rid of your pet and pay attention, local landlords suggest, if you want to see your security deposit
Deposits are returned when a tenant moves out, unless the apartment is damaged or the lease broken.
In an informal survey of about 20 Lawrence landlords, most said that married tenants caused less damage than unmarried ones, and that pets and negligence caused more damage than anything else.
"The tendent that does the most damage is the person with a pet," Mark Schneider, of Schneider Investments, said. "Married couples are least likely to do any damage."
Schneider, who owns several hundred rental units, said pets damaged carpeting, draps and woodwork. Often, he said, carpeting must be replaced after a tenant has kept an animal in an apartment.
TENANTS WHO PUT silverware down garbage disposals and damage appliances by improper cleaning cost landlords more in repairs than do vandals, several landlords said.
Negligence and ignorance cause much damage, almost all of the landlords reported.
"The most damage is caused by ignorance," Toni Campbell, 625 W. 16th St., who owns 12 Lawrence rental units, said. "When tenants have a problem, they don't recognize it until it becomes a big one."
Most tenants do little damage to apartments and get their deposits back, the majority of the landlords said. Vandalism is rare and most damage is the result of normal wear.
Kenneth Walker, 1021) Randall Road, who rents several apartments to students, said he rarely kept a security
However, at least one former tenant of the Towers said that getting back his entire deposit was not so easy.
GARAGE CHASE, Leawood senior, said he lost part of his deposit each of the two years he lived at the Towers. The Towers management deducted charges from him and his coimmates for not cleaning their apartments.
Barbara Fendley, manager of the Jahywah Towers Apartments, 1650 W. 18th St., said the majority of the residents were in their 40s and 50s.
"They said the charges were for general cleaning and said they couldn't give us any more specifics," Chase said. "The apartment was shipshape. They were just out to take every apartment."
The biggest problem, several landlords said, is that tenants often leave dirty apartments.
Cleaning an empty apartment can cost several hundred dollars, Juanita Humard, manager of Mails Ode English School in Dallas.
Although vandalism is rare, it does occur, several landlords said. Few tenants purposefully cause excessive damage, Dick Lynch, Lynch Real Estate, 2271 Ohio St., said but there is always an exception.
walls and cleaning or replacing dirty carpeting and drains can cost more than $200.
"Just about the time you forget they can do it, someone does. I yelled said.
THE WORST RECENT damage to his property occurred when a tenant poured cement down the drains of an apartment, he said. Plumbers will not be able to start to repair the damage until the ground thaws.
Lynch said his properties had been damaged heavily in the past three months. Most vandalism, including kicked-in doors, broken windows and holes knocked in walls, can be repaired easily, he said.
Landlords occasionally have to deal with tenants who move without paying their rent. Although this doesn't seem like a bad thing, it's not ideal.
Lynch said the repairs and loss of rent income when the repairs are finished probably would cost him several millions.
Rent collection can be difficult in such cases.
Lawrence Property Management owns or manages several thousand rental units in the area, including
Failing to pay rent occurs more often in lower-priced housing than in expensive apartments, Ed Church, of Lawrence Property Management, 1611 Andrews Drive, said.
THE LANDLORDS said they could do little to prevent damage or force tenants who skip out to pay their rent. Some damage and problems are to be expected by landlords. Schneider said.
Most of the landlords said they tried to check the condition of apartments with new tenants and to record any damage. When an apartment is vacated, a landlord refers to the description and determine what has been
"Tenants living in lower-priced apartments have less money and are scratching to get through school," he said.
Church said less controversy occurred when the signed checklist was used.
A representative of the association said she encouraged tenants to have the landlord sign the checklist and keep a copy of it for themselves. Most landlords agree with this policy.
MOST LANDLORDS require a security deposit from tenants. The Kansas Landlordr and Tenant Act states that landlords must have a deposit.
The Consumer Affairs Association of Lawrence says that a written and signed check can protect tenants.
OF THOSE REQUESTS, Zachariah said, the graduate fee waiver, improvements to make buildings accessible to the handicapped and Regents salary increases are most important.
unfurnished apartment or one and one-half month's rent for a furnished apartment.
A deposit can be held and used to pay for repairing damage done by tenants, but it cannot be used by the tenant for rent. the act states. Landlords can hold damage deposits if tenants do not pay rent.
In addition to requiring deposits, many landlord's ask tenants to sign leases. A lease is important, Campbell said, because it formalizes the tenant-landlord relationship.
"It lets people know what we expect from them and what they can expect from us," she said.
The act says that tenants can also lose security deposits by breaking their leases. Landlords, however, must be able to prove that they have met all the terms of the lease and that tenants have not.
Landlords said disagreements between landlords and tenants often were handled in Small Claims Court, which has jurisdiction over cases involving landlord-tenant disputes.
Landlords are using the Small Claims Court more often now than in previous years, several landlords said.
"IT'S THE PRINCIPLE of the thing," Schneider said. "We've not to fight the damage somehow."
However, landlords said the Small Claims Court was not very effective. Lynch said if favored tenants. Landlords can use the Small Claims Court only five times a year, and cases often take months to settle, he said.
Another problem with small claims is that landlords can file actions against residents of Douglas County only, according to Rhonda Ross, 1643 Rhode Island ST, owner of three rental properties.
If tenants leave the county without paying for damages or rent, they cannot be prosecuted, she said.
Courtey and communication are the best tools lindwards have to prevent damage, Mary Lou Roberts, sales manager of Mitchell Agency Inc., 818 Massachusetts St., said. "If you treat a tenant properly, you will reciprocate."
HOWEVER, SOME tenants said not all landlords took the time to cnmunicate.
Ken Beck, Greensburg graduate student, said his landlord did not go through his apartment with him or fill
Beeck said the apartment was in poor condition when he moved in and the landlord did not attempt to clean it. The landlord was slow to correct problems in the apartment and did not seem to care about his tenants, Beck said.
"He's not the worst landlord." Beck said. "He's just not very quick."
On the other hand, Elizabeth Yates, manager of Stadium Apartments, 1123 Indiana St. said she had been on a visit to a child care center.
"It surprises me that so many people are willing to sign a lease and not take responsibility for the property."
By LOIS PRESS Staff Renorter
College students who invest in a house can graduate with money in their pockets if they keep on their property.
"I've already made at least $10,000," Mike Weas, Shawnee junior, said.
Weas began his property investments by purchasing a home to rent. He now owns five homes on Tennessee Street, with 41 rental units.
We bought all his properties on contract. Through this method, instead of using bank financing, the seller finances the property for the buyer. The down payment is made to us at a discount rate.
One of the biggest problems students have in purchasing property is financing the investment.
If the buyer defaults, the property reverts back to the seller, who keeps all previous payments.
Jack Collins, a former KU student, said his roots were now established in Lawrence because of a house he bought here in August.
...accts of the business," he said. "If you're going to hire out
% going to coat you a fortune and you're not going to my e
WEASSAID that owning rental property was not an easy business.
Collins said his father co-igned his home loan. He said he would not have been able to get the loan with the bank because he had been accused of cheating.
He originally bought his Victorian-style house at 521 Louisiana St. as an investment. But he has put more money into the property he said, the house now is a part of him.
odeling, which is about I be cheaper than con-
Cofran purchased his mobile home for about $6,000 and he said he probably will get about $5,000 when he sells it.
JAMES COFRAN, Topeka sophomore, owns a used mobile home at Ridgeview Estate 1908 E. 19th St. He said he liked living away from campus.
But he worries about fire.
Baraban said if he kept the home in excellent shape he could get at least 75 percent of his investment back when he sold it.
He pays a $55-a-month lot fee at Mobile Acrees South Park, 440 W. Sixth St. The fee includes trash and water service. Other utilities are paid separately.
He said he moved to a house because he wanted to be able to have a dog and that at an apartment he would have been charged an expensive pet deposit.
Home investments bringing profits
Collins said he earned about 7.5 percent a year on his investment. He arrived at that figure by subtracting an 8.3 percent interest rate on his loan from a 104-15 percent interest rate.
"I would say the majority of students I've dealt with need parents or someone to co-sign for them," Rick Jordan, sales manager of Interstate Mobile Home Sales, Inc. 1020
"If this place ever catches on fire, it will go up like a torch," he said.
Parents with more than one student at the University of Kansas have an opportunity to give good investment because many must be in a house together, Howard Eardley or another Heidelberg校友 Jody Gourd, Chanute junior, said her father figured the rent he would to pay with three students in college was about the same as the payments he would making on a house.
Students can invest in a mobile home by getting a bank loan.
Paul Baraban, Overland Park junior, used GI Bill money to invest in a new mobile home, but still needed a co-signer for the loan.
he said, the house now is a part of him.
Mobile homes that are from one to two years old and in good condition are a good investment because they don't deprecate much after the first two years, he said.
FOR EXAMPLE, a student who purchased a used 12-60 month home for $4,500 and financed it during a five-year period probably would owe about $1,500 by the time he
1 WAS TIRED of landlocks and always healed hoseel! "Calline said"
Steve Jones, president of the Board of Realists in Lawrence, said that a house was good investment but cost $1 million to build the cost of a college education. A student could expect to make about 7 percent a year on an investment in a
we've about 10,000 students the graduated. He could sell it for $4,000 and leave Lawrence with $2,500. Jordan said.
Unless a student had substantial savings, a trust fund or a steady in
me, he would need a co-signer on his loan, Jones said.
Mary Lynch, owner of Lynch Real Estate, 2327 Ohio St., said that to make any profit, a buyer should plan to own the property for at least two years. Otherwise, she said, the owner would pay $100,000 for the land.
"IF YOU JUST move in there and expect to live there two years and drain off the profit and not put anything back in the house, force it," she advised.
Ann Powell, loan officer at the First National Bank of Lawrence, 900 Massachusetts St., said that a student should be aware of all the expenses involved in the purchase of a house. She said that First National required 20 percent of the purchase price as a down payment.
Realists' commissions, insurance, back property taxes, appraisal and attorney's fee,
if one is retained, are all possible expenses, she said.
Realists suggested that students interested in investing in a house shop around for the best buy, consider their financial situation and then approach the bank with their information.
heard testimony from
stor of the Associated
t lobby group.
members about funding
r of Regents schools.
r the group. Zacharias
lts snack sales
ie said that if small snack bars began rating across campus, it would be hard mit their number.
The Union, said the Union had exclusive its to the concessions on campus because Union was organized to provide service Union does not pay for the tract, he said.
ORREST JOLLY, director of vending the Union, said concessions could be made to the workers to extract. He said the profit from the vending machines was deposited in the Union bank.
ut Prownt said the McCollum senate
uld have the right to sell concessions.
I don't mind KU concessions having a
contract, but I think the芦荟 contract
repealed," he said. "KU
concessions has no reason to improve its products because it does't have to compete
But Jolly said competition would raise the food prices and cause a reduction of service. "No one will wind soft drinks for 25 cents. The only place where grocery store will get wholesale," he said.
JOLLY SAID machines in MCollume were serviced three times a day on Sunday.
"McCollim is always serviced three times because it is a large dorm. We pamper McCollim because it is such a large room. The same one cold food machine but it holds 180 cups."
"We have 12-hour service on the machines, so they really shouldn't be emptied."
See VENDING back page
Staff Reporter
By BILL RIGGINS
KU schools losing n battle for students
Although most schools within the viversity of Kansas had slight enrollment reases compared with a year ago, four oids had decreased, figures released last week by the office of admissions and ords indicate.
three of the four schools have limits on number of students they accept. The *c* schools with decreasing enrollments have lower educational, Pharmacy and Social Welfare; the *h* school of Education, the only school not an enrollment limit that recorded a reuse, had the most severe decrease. The *h* schools has 48 fewer students than a rago.
BE ENROLLMENT decrease reflects wide publicity given to the lack of jobs ination, Data Scannell, dean of education, yesterday.
We make sure we talk to all students who e into the school and inform them of the payment limitations," he said. "We teach them that if they don't then their not to stay in the school."
e School of Architecture, which has rolled enrollment, experienced the largest loss. 17 students. Dennis McLeod, the vice president, the decrease was due to the way alignment was figured. He said the total eight hours in the school had risen from 80 to 112 students, an officer said 119 students majoring in architectural engineering were listed under School of Engineering but were also enrolled in School of Architecture and an Design.
HE SCHOOL OF Social Welfare had a cease of 13 students. Edith Black, stant dean, said the school's practicum ram limited the number of students could be admitted. The school requires all teachers and workers in unction with their class work.
ie School of Pharmacy, the other school
rding a last decline, had one less student
spring than a last spring.
rollment increases in the Graduate
college, the College of Liberal Arts
and nces, the schools of Business,
Medicine, Law and Health. Law
the College of Health Sciences.
igh Cotton, associate dean, said lack of rattasy space prevented the school from pting more students. The school usually ives 120 to 156 applicants each year.
E ITOTAL enrollment at the Lawrencepus this spring increased by 244ents over last spring. Enrollment isnow at its highest level of all the schools recording increases do
not limit the number of students they accept. Exceptions are some departments of the Graduate School and the School of Law and the College of Health Sciences.
The Graduate School had the largest increase, 101 students. Dorothy Haglund, assistant to the dean of liberal arts, said the Graduate School's admissions process varied from one department to another, but all required a certain level of because of space and staff restrictions.
The second largest gain was in the School of Fine Arts, which had an increase of 46
"We've had a very steady rise," Don Scheid, associate dean, said. "We haven't experienced any drastic rises or falls. I think enrollment is leaving off."
THE SCHOOL OF Business had the next highest increase, 36 students, and the School
Enrollment for Schools Spring 1978 Spring 1979
Graduate 5,104 5,205
Liberal Arts 9,114 9,132
Architecture 412 418
Business 918 924
Education 1,460 1,291
Engineering 1,328 1,561
Economics 1,197 1,697
Journalism 612 615
Law 454 473
Legacy 440 239
Social Welfare 496 483
Health Sciences 1,505 1,506
of Engineering followed with an increase of 33 students.
David Kraft, dean of engineering, attributed the growth of the school to a strong job market and an increase in enrollment by women and minorities.
Although the School of Law enrollment increased by 19, Martin Dickinson, dean of the school, said he expected the school's enrolment to remain fairly stable.
This year, the school accepted 190 students out of 650 who applied.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which had an increase of 18 students, has had slight increases during the past few years, according to Bob Adams, associate
Enrollment in the School of Journalism, which had an increase of three students, has also had only slight increases in the past few years, Lee Young, acting associate dean,
The College of Health Sciences had an increase, but a small one. It had one more graduate.
8
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
University Dally Kansan
---
Xist of work
Morale ...
From page one
the university like a business. They want to show the Legislature 'look how many eggs
"THERE IS A general feeling of being in a corporate system where things are manufactured and produced, rather than created."
Wright said the administration had instilled a corporate atmosphere in the faculty through continual evaluations and competition for benefits.
"The dehumanization of people by audits and evaluations fits a business and commercial world rather than a university," he said.
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies, supports Wright's research.
"We have an administration concerned more with economic efficiency rather than academic excellence," Leban said. "That is not a bad thing, running a supermarket at a university."
T. P. SRINIVASAN, professor of mathematics and a member of FacEx, said that evaluations of faculty by students, as well as those of students had the worst effect on faculty morale.
"The faculty are made to evaluate each other constantly," Srinivasan said. "They don't see evaluation leading to anything except to create more friction."
Ano Krapper, professor of business and a member of FaceEx, said he thought another negative aspect of the evaluations was that participants were prevented from being creative.
"Because student evaluations are used in tenure evaluations, the instructor has to teach to the masses so that he doesn't get rated too low," Knapper said. "Faculty members have to be careful not to offend too many students."
LEBAN SAID the evaluations—combined with the bad economics situation—had resulted in an ugly trend. The application and evaluation process for merit salary
increases awarded by the departments had turned into backstaging sessions, he said, where faculty tried to out-justify each other for the wage increases.
Leban said many faculty members would not apply for the raises because they did not want to be.
Wright also said that the almost constant demand for documentation of ability through evaluations had made the faculty almost paranoid about demonstrating their skills.
"In a corporate structure this may be legitimate, but not in a University."
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he agreed that there were increased bureaucratic controls over the University's faculty, but he said there was little he could
"Every spring the members of the departments compete for the merit salary money." Leban said. "This is one of the departments of morale and the cooperative element."
"YOU HAVE ALMOST constant feedback asking are you good enough," Wright said. "Faculty members, especially those looking forward to our work, will turn to out the product demanded of them."
"There are an increasing amount of federal and state regulations that force the University to engage in monitorite tivities and procedures." Dykes said
Dykes said he spends one-third of working on business involving gov regulations. More rules seem to be each day, he said.
"THEY SEEM to be inevitable, but gotten to the point where the institu higher education no longer control the houses," Dykes said.
"Faculty are legitimately concern the growing bureaucracy, but a lo faculty don't realize that it's not from us," he said.
Dykes said he knew that educa-
been hurt by the growing bureaus
that the only thing that could be do
Approval of funding could aid KU budge
TOPEKA-Funding for women's athletics and libraries could be restored to the KU budget if the recommendations of a Kansas House Ways and Means subcommittee are approved.
In addition, the three-member subcommittee has made a recommendation to $277,500 from an allocation for renovation of Marvin Hall to renovate shift屋.
Under Gov. John Carlin's budget recommendations, funding for neither women's athletics nor a library security system were given. The subcommittee is scheduled to make its entire presentation to the entire committee today.
Yesterday, subcommittee members met with Marlon Rein, director of legislative research, to refine their recommendations on the KU budget.
Among the subcommittee's recommendations were the restoration to the building facilities necessary for operating expenses for women's athletics and $10,000 for the library security system.
IN HIS INITIAL budget proposal, the
government recommended that
Marylin Maynard be appointed.
However, subcommittee members broke that figure down, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $277,500 for the renovation of Lindley.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden
City, subcommittee chairman, a favored splitting the money in order both construction projects off the next year.
"We're going to have to finish buildings sooner or later anyway, longer we put off starting on Lind more it will cost in the long run," he said.
remenman said the funds to for renovation of both buildings she allocated by the Legislature next would take about $1,550,000 to finish Hall and about $1,850,000 to finish he said.
Despite the high cost of renovation is about $50 a square foot, he said rewould still be cheaper than building building.
Because of the value of the book KU libraries, subcommittee memb that restoration of funding for a security system would pay for itself.
"The book detection system is vv important because of all the moving books in the room. Heinemann said, "Besides, the red book theta will make the system work."
The $16,660 that would be rested women's athletics is less than half of request by KU. Subcommittee said the money would be used for athletic events and for an athletic room.
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Srinivasan and Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction and chairman of FacEx, said that more faculty involvement in administrative functions was needed.
Faculty members said they agreed that over-regulation harmed the University but they offered their own solutions to the faculty morale problem.
try to prevent more regulations from appearing on the books.
"Over-regulation threatens the University's existence." Dykes said.
"MANY FACULTY members want more involvement in making the budget," Swartz said. "Having confidence in the budget allocations would boost morale."
But Heller said it no longer was possible for the administrative head of a large corporation to vote.
"It's not the day any longer where a university president can go around patting people on the back," Heller said. "The role of an administrator today is to acquire resources."
Athletics...
Leban said, "You have to think of the academic mission first. We need an administration that can provide academic leadership."
Srinivasa said that the faculty needed to be assured by the administration that
men's athletic director, who was not responsible for women's athletics.
From page one
Tracy Spellman, a board member, said the effectiveness of the merger would depend on the attitudes of the administration.
do what it says it will do I
KU artist combines electronics, jewelry
if the two boards merger, women's athletics would lose their emphasis on academics.
“It’s the women who are having to make the biggest changes,” she said. “And I'm afraid if the boards merge, we might lose our philosophy.”
Dykes said he wanted to emphasize that the board would advise the athletic director
Nernchow, who grew up in Chicago and studied jewelry design in Denmark, said he always had an interest in electronics, physics and metallurgy. He said the work he was doing would be much more difficult away from a university campus.
new metal, titanium, which can be changed to any color. He said he also had hopes of making jewelry that could emit sounds and light, and that would be directed by light, temperature and movement.
By RHONDA HOLMAN Staff Reporter
The brooches, belts and rings Gary Emchock designs look more like props for a costume shop than they do.
But Nernchock's design, which incorporate items such as solar cells, magnetic switches, fiber optics and light diodes, may be the jewelry of the day.
Staff Reporter
"About three years ago, I started thinking about putting some electronics with jewelry," Nermock, professor of jewelry and silversmithing, said. "I'm just working with different applications of new materials in the fields of artist and designer are just expanding."
Nernchock's "bodonic jewelry," as he calls it, combines traditional metals in geometric designs with tiny flashishing and pinpoints of light—all powered by a tiny battery and a sensor that activates the lights when the pieces are worn.
Nemchock said the materials he used came from campus departments and research departments in space, telephone networks and other country. He said because much of the
"I AUDITED SOME courses in the sciences and I hang around the engineering building and Malotl Hall a lot," he said. "The research materials are here and I think KU has really been supportive of research in the arts."
12
Nemchok, who came to the University of Kansas in 1972 from the art institue in Cleveland, said he was in contact with English, German and West Coast designers who were working with electronic jewelry. He said the work was too new to be profitable.
"It's just basic research now," he said. There are no guide books on how to do it and I don't know where to find them.
Yeshua homes islet
By LAURA STEVENS Staff Renorter
Bee Ges music blares from a stereo on the second floor. Downstairs, a student is painting the kitchen while several other residents help themselves to Kool-Aid after jogging.
The two-story frame house is like the others in its neighborhood east of campus and the men who live there are like other college students.
The only difference is that the six men and the woman in the house next door have chosen to live cooperatively for more than financial reasons.
The people are Christians. The houses are the Yeshua Houses owned by Campus Christians Inc. 1217 and 1219 Tennessee St.
"Our goals are all the same," Jon Maupin, Hays senior said, "and that to be conform with Jesus Christ and have him as our goal."
Yeshua House was organized six years ago to provide Christian fellowship for college students. It started in the house at 1221 Tennessee which housed several men.
THREE YEARS ago Camp Christians, whose board of directors includes Independent Christian ministers and laymen from across Kansas, bought the house at 1217 Tennessee Street.
"I'm here because it's great to live with a Christian atmosphere," Maupin said.
There have been as many as seven women and nine men living in the houses in a year. The residents all said they were living there because they thought God wanted them to. But no one else knew how long they had been living there.
Ray Barra, Overland Park senior, said, "I just like the environment of waking up in a Christian atmosphere and going to bed with the same security."
The residents agree to abide by guidelines in a covenant written two years ago, which outlines basic rules.
RESIDENTS ARE expected to share housework and cooking duties and to work toward the basic goals of Campus Christians.
Those goals are to help Christian students remain loyal to their faith while in college, to train students to become leaders in churches and to work for Christianity on campus.
The residents open the houses to a larger fellowship group of about 35 Campus Christians, who meet there Tuesday evenings. Most residents also attend small Bible studies on Sunday.
Although Campus Christians is supported by contributions from individuals and
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The 1975 Kansas Residential Landlord and Tenant Act governs the rights and responsibilities of tenants and landlords in the state.
The act requires that rental housing comply with minimum health and safety standards, protects tenants from punitive actions, restricts tenant and governs the return of rental deposits.
Laws affecting dealings between landlords and tenants should be of particular interest to the more than 15,000 KU students who live off-campus.
The 1975 landlord-tenant act gives the tenant and the landlord protection and binds both to the rental agreement unless one of them breaks it.
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State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, is sponsoring a bill that would amend the 1975 act to include an additional right for tenants. Solbach's bill would allow tenants to pay for necessary repairs and deduct the amount from the cost of their rent.
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The landlords said that such a bill would give tenants a weapon to use against them and said that they feared some tenants might be held up to tie up rent money for trivial things.
AT A MEETING last month with Solbach, Lawrence landlords loudly protested the so-called "self-help" bill.
The self-heal remedy, or repair and dwell, would allow a tenant to give notice of needed minor repairs to his landlord and should the landlord be able to repair made if the landlord had not done so.
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KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 89, No. 109
Wednesday, March 7.1979
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA- As expected, the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee yesterday approved the addition of $116,000 for women's athletics and a library security system to the fiscal 1980 KU budget.
Committee members also approved a transfer of $277,000 from an allocation for renovation of Marvin Hall to the County Museum.
Unexpected additions to the budget were $80,000 to the Kansas State scholarship fund, $35,000 for the development of sandstone aquifers in western Kansas and $80,000 for the development of aquifer resources between KU's Bureau of Child Research and the northeast
athletics is less than one-tenth of $267,387 requested by KU. The money would be used for travel to athletic events and training.
Also part of the governor's budget recommendations was a $1,277,500 allocation for the renovation of Marin Hall.
However, committee members split that figure, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and
State Rep. David Heinemann, K-Garden City, said he loved splitting the money to get both projects started this
Committee members said the funds to finish both buildings should be allocated by the Legislature next year.
said, are maintaining a 9.5 percent increase in student wages for next year, increasing the Kansas Scholarship program from $750,000 to $830,000 and raising a recommended faculty salary increase from 6 to 7 percent.
ZACHARIAS SAID the governor's recommended increase in wage for women would bring them in compliance with new legislation.
Both the scholarship and faculty salary funding are needed, he said, to keep teachers and students at Kanasas
of cooperation
"Faculty and students should not be enticed out of the state." he said.
ASK's other funding priorities, Zacharias said, are more increase in the fee waivers for graduate students from 60 to 100 percent, full reimbursement to universities for student union rentals, allocation of money for the removal of fees and expenses from the budget of the formula funding budget model and an increase of the salaries of Regents staff members from 24 to 7 percent.
congregations of the Independent Christian Church, the residents come from varied backgrounds: Catholic, Baptist and non-affiliated.
In addition, each resident pays $65 a month for rent, which includes utilities. Each person also pays $7 for food. The $7 pay for dinner and staple such as bread and milk.
"I SHOP FOR the food and plan the dinners." Ibarra said. "I try to plan a meat, a vegetable, a fruit or salad and JE-Lo or an occasional dessert. It's nice to eat food you like."
Each person is responsible for cleaning an area of the house and for keeping his room clean. Each his semester's residents has a private room except for Ibarra and Maupin, who room together.
Other years there have been as many as three people in large rooms.
OF THOSE REQUESTS, Zacharias said, the graduate fee waiver, improvements to make buildings accessible to the handicapped and Regents salary increases are most important.
Kathy Gorton, Kansas City senior, said she didn't mind being the only woman living in the women's house this semester.
"I get a lot of studying done," she said. "It's quiet at my house."
The women's house also contains an office for the campus minister. Allen Rosenak.
Rosenak provides counseling for the students in the houses and the rest of the fellowship.
fortifies tenant
deduct the cost of the repair from the next month's rent through a process to be monitored by the clerk creek. The law would put a limit of $100 or one-half of one month's rent, whichever is greater, on the amount the tenant could withhold.
"Landlords have lots of remedies available to them when they have a problem with a tenant." Sobach said. He also wrote that he can evict a tenant or wilt his deposit.
'THE TENANT has no such recourse for his problems.
"Repair and deduct kind of creates a deposit for the tenant—a deposit that the tenant cannot get to unless the landlord is willing to accept it, available and required, or if a judge so agrees."
Landlords have said they oppose the repair and deduction proposition. Jack Brand, an attorney for Lawrence apartments, said the bill would cause a raise in rents.
He makes administrative decisions and is responsible to the board of directors. Rosenak works with a council of six students.
IBARRA SAID that although the goals of the houses are somewhat utopian, living there was like living anywhere else.
“Basically,” he said, “the bill sounds as it is giving the tenants something, but it doesn’t.”
Actually, looking at the image again, the word “basically” is on the left. The words on the right are not clearly visible. Let me re-read the first line carefully.
“Basically,” he said, “the bill sounds as it is giving the tenants something, but it doesn’t.”
Wait, let me look at the word "basically" again. It's on the left.
The word "basically" is on the left.
The word "basically" is on the left.
The word "basically" is on the left.
Let's re-read the second line carefully.
“It is giving the tenants something, but it doesn’t.”
Yes, that's it.
Final check of the text:
“Basically,” he said, “the bill sounds as it is giving the tenants something, but it doesn’t.”
I will output the text as described.
**Text:**
“Basically,” he said, “the bill sounds as it is giving the tenants something, but it doesn’t.”
Brand said that if landlords were forced to pay higher costs of repairs contracted for by individual tenants, landlords would have to raise their rent.
odeling, which is about d be cheaper than con-
Solbach, however, said, "I would think that it would lower rents. If the remedy becomes widely known, it is going to induce landlords to fix things before a serious problem develops, when they would be less expensive to repair."
"You still have your normal problems with living together," he said, "like finding teabags left on the kitchen counters."
Although there are no set quiet hours for studying, Manipu said the residents try to follow biblical precepts about being considerate of the wishes of others.
"If someone wanted to study, out of love for them we would keep quiet," Maupin said.
In addition to being students and to having house responsibilities, the residents try to maintain close friendships.
"Each person who lives here is different," Craig King, Salina junior, said. "We are learning to work with people who are different. And it's nice to have relationships with people who are different."
Dharra said, "I know that if I have a problem, I can go to any one of the other people, and they know they can come to me."
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o heard testimony from
ctor of the Associated
dent lobby group.
members about funding
r of Regents schools,
or the group, Zacharias
lts snack sales
the union, said the Union had exclusive
tie to the concessions on campus because
!Union was organized to provide service
!Union does not pay for the frac. he said,
he said that if small snack bars began
crating across campus, it would be hard
imit their number.
"OREST JOLLY, director of vending the Union, said concessions could be made to students at the direct. He said the profit from the vending machines was deposited in the Union account."
but Prownt said the McColum senate has right the hard to sell concessions. "don't mind KU concession having a lot of bounty," he said in his battle contracts"he said," he said."KU
But Jolly said competition would raise the food prices and cause a reduction of service.
concessions has no reason to improve its products because it doesn't have a compete
JOLLY SAID machines in Mcollum were serviced three days a day on Sunday.
"No one will vend soft drinks for 25 cents. That's as cheap as a grocery store will get."
"McCollim is always!" serviced three times because it is a large dorm. We pamper McCollim because it is such a large room. When we need a one cold food machine but it holds 130 units.
"We have 12-hour service on the machines, so they really should be emptied."
See VENDING back page
By BILL RIGGINS Staff Reporter
KU schools losing n battle for students
Although most schools within the diversity of Kansas had slight enrollment reuses compared with a year ago, fourools had decreases, figures released lastek by the office of admissions andords indicate.
Three of the four schools have limits on number of students they accept. The r schools with decreasing enrollments are Medicine, Pharmacy and Social Welfare; the School of Education, the only school to an enrollment limit that recorded a rise, had the most severe decrease. The school has 169 fewer students than a rago.
HE ENROLLEMENT decrease reflects wide publicity given to the lack of jobs in cation, Dale Scannell, dean of education, I yesterday.
We make sure we talk to all students who into the school and inform them of the playment limitations," he said. "We teach our children to be class-issuer or not to stay in the school."
the School of Architecture, which has trolled enrollment, experienced the largest loss, 17 students. Dennis was right to suggest that the light decrease was due to the way ovalement was figured. He said the total lent hours in the school had risen from 50 to 86. The owner said 119 students majoring in hiructural engineering were listed under School of Engineering but were also lents in the School of Architecture and Design.
HE SCHOOL OF Social Welfare had a rease of 13 students. Edith Black, stant dean, said the school's practicum gram limited the number of students attending. The university requires : students work as social workers in junction with their class work.
be School of Pharmacy, the other school ording a decline, had one less student spring than last spring.
enrollment increase in the Graduate colle, the College of Liberal Arts and mces, the schools of Business, Law and Medicine. Johnston, Law the College of Health Sciences.
ugh Cotton, associate dean, said lack of rarity space prevented the school from epiting more students. The school usually sives 120 to 156 applicants each year.
BE TOTAL enrollment at the Lawrence up this spring increased by 244 beds over last spring. Enrollment is now at 195 beds of the schools recording increases do
not limit the number of students they accept. Exceptions are some departments of the Graduate School and the School of Law and the College of Health Sciences.
The Graduate School had the largest increase, 101 students. Dorothy Haglund, assistant to the dean of liberal arts, said the Graduate School's admissions process was more streamlined than either, but some departments had to limit adherence because of space and staff restrictions.
The second largest gain was in the School of Fine Arts, which had an increase of 46 percent.
"We've had a very steady rise," Don Scheid, associate dean, said. "We haven't experienced any drastic rises or falls. I think enrolment is leveling off."
THE SCHOOL OF Business had the next highest increase, 36 students, and the School
Enrolment for Schools Spring 1978 Spring 1979
Graduate 5,104 5,205
Liberal Arts 9,114 9,132
Architecture 414 494
Business 918 954
Education 1,460 1,291
Engineering 1,528 1,561
Law 612 615
Law 454 473
Law 450
Social Welfare 496 483
Health Sciences 1,355 1,506
of Engineering followed with an increase of 33 students.
David Kraft, dean of engineering, attributed the growth of the school to a strong job market and an increase in enrollment by women and minorities.
Although the School of Law enrollment increased by 19, Martin Dickinson, dean of the school, said he expected the school's enrollment to remain fairly stable.
This year, the school accepted 190 students out of 650 who applied.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which had an increase of 18 students, has had slight increases during the past few years, according to Bob Adams, associate
Enrollment in the School of Journalism, which had an increase of three students, has also had only slight increases in the past few years, Lee Young, acting associate dean,
The College of Health Sciences had an increase, but a small one. It had one more university.
8
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
University Dally Kansan
P(0) = 0, P(1) = 0.
Morale ...
From page one
the University like a business. They want to show the Legislature 'look how many eggs
"THESE IS A general feeling of being in corporate system where things are manufactured and produced, rather than created."
Wright said the administration had instilled a corporate atmosphere in the faculty through continual evaluations and competition for benefits.
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies, supports Writer's Workshop.
"The dehumanization of people by audits and evaluations fits a business and commercial world rather than a university," he said.
"We have an administration concerned more with economic efficiency rather than academic excellence," Leban said. "That is why we are running a supermarket at a university."
T. P. SRINIVASAN, professor of mathematics and a member of Fexa, said that evaluations of faculty by students, who are part of the faculty, had had the worst effect on faculty morale.
"The faculty are made to evaluate each other constantly," Srivinasan said. "They don't see evaluation leading to anything except to create more friction."
Arko Nripper, professor of business and a member of FaceX, said he thought another negative aspect of the evaluations was that members were prevented from being creative.
"Because student evaluations are used in tenure evaluations, the instructor has to test students' ability to rate too low," Knapper said. "Faculty members have to be careful not to offender them."
LEBAN SAID the evaluations—combined with the bad economics situation—had resulted in an ugly trend. The application and evaluation process for merit salary
increases awarded by the departments had turned into backtabbing sessions, he said, where faculty tried to out-justify each other for the wage increases.
Wright also said that the almost constant demand for documentation of ability through evaluations had made the faculty almost blind about demonstrating their own abilities.
"In a corporate structure this may be legitimate, but not in a University."
Leban said many faculty members would not apply for the raises because they did not know what was required.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he agreed that there were increasing bureaucratic controls over the University's ability, but he said there was little he could do.
"Every spring the members of the departments compete for the merit salary money. Leban said, "This is one of the reasons for morale or morale and the cooperative element."
Dykes said he spends one-third of working on business involving gov regulations. More rules seem to be each day, he said.
"THEY SEEM to be inevitable, but got to the point where the institit high education no longer control thouses." Dykes said.
"YOU HAVE ALMOST constant feedback asking are you good enough." Wright said. "Faculty members, especially those looking for a place to work, can turn out the product demanded of them.
"There are an increasing amount of federal and state regulations that force the University to engage in monitoring tivities and procedures." Dykes said
"Faculty are legitimately concer the growing bureaucracy, but a lo faculty don't realize that it's not from us." he said.
Dykes said he knew that educat been hurt by the growing bureaucr that the only thing that could be dome
TOPEKA-Funding for women's athletics and libraries could be restored to the KU budget if the recommendations of a Kansas Board of Means subcommittee are approved today.
Approval of funding could aid KU budge
IN HIS INITIAL budget proposal, the governor recommended that $1,277 be allocated to improve the school system.
In addition, the three-member subcommittee has made a recommendation to sell $277,500 from an allocation for Marvin Hill to renovate Lindley Hall.
Yesterday, subcommittee members met with Marlon Rein, director of legislative research, to refine their recommendations on the KU budget.
Under Gov. John Carlin's budget neither women's athletics nor a library system were given. The subcommittee is scheduled to make its entire presentation to the governor.
Among the subcommittee's recommendations were the restoration to the library system the ability to operate expenses for women's athletics and $10,000 for the library security system.
However, subcommittee members broke that figure down, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $277,500 for the renovation of Lindley.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden
"We're going to have to have
buildings sooner or later anyway
longer we put off starting on Lind
more it continues the long run," he said.
City, subcommittee chairman, s favored splitting the money in order both construction projects off the next year.
Henneman said the funds to fini-
renovation of 8 baths buildings she
had planned would take about $1,550,000 to finish
Hall and all $1,650,000 to finish
Despite the high cost of renovation is about $54 a square foot, he said rewould still be cheaper than building building.
Because of the value of the book KU libraries, subcommittee memb that restoration of funding for a security system would pay for itself.
"The book detection system is very important for all of the moving objects in the environment. Heinemann said. "Besides, the red book thefts will help the system."
The $16,660 that would be rest women's athletics is less than half or request by KU. Subcommittee said the money would be used for athletic events and for an athletic room.
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Faculty members said they agreed that over-regulation harmed the University but they offered their own solutions to the faculty morale problem.
Open Evenings
try to prevent more regulations from appearing on the books.
"MANY FACULTY members want more involvement in making the budget." Swartz said. "Having confidence in the budget allocations would boost morale."
"Over-regulation threatens the University's existence." Dykes said.
Srinivasan and Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction and chairman of FacEx, said that more faculty involvement in administrative functions was needed.
new metal, titanium, which can be changed to any color. He said he also had hopes of making jewelry that could emit sounds and light, and that could be reflected by light, temperature and movement.
Leban said, "You have to think of the academic mission first. We need an administration that can provide academic leadership."
Nernchock, who grew up in Chicago and studied jewelry design in Denmark, said he always had an interest in electronics, physics and metallurgy. He said the work he was doing would be much more difficult a way from a university campus.
But Heller said it no longer was possible for the administrative head of a large corporation to monitor stock.
Srivimaan said that the faculty needed to be assured by the administration that
"It's not the day any longer where a university president can go around patting people on the back," Heller said. "The role of administrator today is to acquire resources."
Athletics...
Tracy Spellman, a board member, said the effectiveness of the merger would depend on the attitudes of the administration.
men's athletic director, who was not responsible for women's athletics.
From nave one
upon you give it to what it says it will do. I
"It's the women who are having to make the biggest changes," she said. "And I'm afraid if the boards merge, we might lose our philosophy."
if the two boards merged, our athletics would lose their emphasis on academics.
KU artist combines electronics, jewelry
Dykes said he wanted to emphasize that the board would advise the athletic director
"I AUDITED SOME courses in the sciences and I hang around the engineering building and Malot Hall a lot," he said. "The research materials are here and I think KU has really been supportive of research in the arts."
By RHONDA HOLMAN Staff Reporter
Staff Renarter
Namchock, who came to the University of Kansas in 1972 from the art institute in Cleveland, said he was in contact with English, German and West Coast designers who were working with electronic jewelry. He said the work was too new to be profitable.
But Nemchock's designs, which incorporate items such as solar cells, magnetic switches, fiber optics and light diodes, may be the jewelery of the day.
"About three years ago, I started thinking about putting some electronics with jewelry," Nemchok, professor of jewelry and silversmithing, said. "I'm just working with different combinations of new tools in our work to the artist and designer are just tools."
Nernchock's "bodonic jewelry," as he calls it, combines traditional metals in geometric designs with tiny flashing bulbs and pinpots of light—all powered by a tiny battery and a sensor that activates the lights when the pieces are worn.
Nernchock said the materials he used came from campus departments and research departments in space, telephone and computer country. He said because much of the
"It's just basic research now," he said. "There are no guide books on how to do it, so I have to look for my own tips."
Roaches eager, resilient
14
By RICK JONES Staff Reporter
Lawrence apartments are full of tenants who never pay rent. They don't care about air conditioning, utilities or wall-to-wall carpeting.
They like garbage and leftover food.
These freeloaders are mice and cockroaches.
It doesn't matter if a house is clean because they manage to get by on the street.
"Nearly every place I've been in Lawrence has had roaches," Charlie Bradberry, Los Angeles senior, said. "I always make an effort to put food away and keep the place clean, but the bugs always come back."
runs a close second. Both are extremely hardy and have developed resistances to some poisons. Neither bug looks pleasant in a dark kitchen.
Susan Ottermess, Wichita senior, said she had seen many roaches and mice since her study began.
THE ROACH THAT really brings on the willes is the American cockroach, which can grow to a length of almost two inches. Do not use it.
"We usually average about one mouse in the mouse trap every couple of weeks," she said. The roaches normally die a short, dead life, but if it never really gets rid of them.
George W. Byers, professor of entomology and curator of the entomology museum in Snow Hall, said that cockroaches were the most common domesticated species that and did not take much to bring them crawling out of the woodwork.
Jooo me
in a stock?
"ROACHES ARE OMNIVOROUS—they'll eat anything," he said. "If there is no real food around, a roach can be made in a newspaper, cardboard—even dried palm."
"I was getting greens, blues--you name it," he said. "I couldn't figure it out.
Staff illustration by Laura Newman and Milton Gray
ad thought the bugs in an apartment she had rented were large crickets.
"One night I walked into the kitchen and found them swarming over a pan of lasagna I had made for dinner," she said. "I was at that point that they weren't crickets."
"Then I found a small set of water color paints in my desk with suspicious-looking nibble marks in the different paint tins."
Landlords are not required to keep their property free of roaches, but some call exterminators regularly to keep the bug population in check.
She said she had moved out of the apartment at the end of the semester.
Harold Yarger, who owns Lawrence houses rented by students, said he had asked exterminators to spray his buildings once a month, depending on their location.
According to Byers, there are 4,000 species of cockroaches in the world, of which only six are considered nestes. Of those six, four are found in Lawrence.
"The Oread neighborhood is the worst section as far as bugs go," he said. "It's extremely difficult to keep roaches out of some of the houses in that area."
THE OREAD neighborhood is bounded by Ninth St. on the north, Massachusetts St. on the east and the University on the south and west.
Many tenants are on their own when it comes to dealing with roaches.
The German cockroach is probably the most common, and the brown-banded cockroach
Lara Shah, Lawrence junior, said when she reported a roach problem to her landlord recently, he had bought her a can of Raid bug spray.
"It's not doing a whole lot of good," she said. "There are a lot of apartments in this house, and unless we all spray, the bugs will just migrate from room to room."
Local exterminators agreed that it wouldn't do any good to spray only part of a roach-infected house.
"Roaches are master escape artists," John Rogers, Rogers Pest Control, 821 Michigan St. , said. "If I sprayed only a couple of rooms in a house, the roaches would find the room that was supposed to be vacant."
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KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
JANE SCHNEIDER
FRED RICHARDSON
The Univerzity of Kannas—Lawrence, Kannas
Vol.89,No.109
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
KU budget items approved
Bv TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA- As expected, the Kansas House Ways and Means Commission yesterday approved the addition of $116,500 for women's athletics and a library security system to the fiscal 1980 KU budget.
Committee members also approved transfer of $277,000 from an allocation for renovation of Marvin Hall to renovate the building.
Unexpected contributions to the budget were $80,000 to the Kansas State scholarship fund, $35,000 for the development of sandstone aquifers in western Kansas and $40,000 for the development of sandstone aquifers in eastern Kansas between KU's Bureau of Child Research and the northeast.
Also part of the governor's budget recommendations was a $1,277,500 allocation for the renovation of Marvin Hall.
athletics is less than one-tenth of $867,368 requested by KU. The money would be used for travel to athletic events and
However, committee members split that figure, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and Blythe.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden City, said he favored splitting the money to get both projects started this week.
Committee members said the funds to finish both mouldings should be allocated by the Legislature next year.
said, are maintaining a 9.5 percent increase in student wages for next year, increasing the Kansas Scholarship program from $750,000 to $830,000 and raising a recommended faculty salary increase from 6 to 10 percent.
ZACHARIAS SAID the governor's recommended increase in student salaries would bring them in compliance with the department's policy.
Both the scholarship and faculty salary funding are needed, he said, to keep teachers and students at Kansas
"Faculty and students should not be enticed out of the state," he said.
roomies
THE STANDARD PRICE for most Lawrence exterior terminators is $30 to $50 for the initial spraying in a three-bedroom apartment, and $40 to $60 for monthly sprayings if the problem persists. Spraying apartment buildings costs $20 to $30 for the first spray and $30 to $40 afterward.
Wilson said the University had a contract with an exterminator in Manhattan. The contract calls for kitchen, laundries and eating areas to be sprayed once a week. The exterminators also come on students' student mice or risk problems.
Residence halls at KU are sprayed weekly, according to J.J. Wilson, KU housing director.
Sororites and fraternities normally have a local exterminator come about once a month to spray public areas. If a sororite does pests in his room, that room is sprayed.
All sprays used to kill bugs must be approved by the Environmental Protection Agency and exterminators usually ask residents to leave the area for four hours when they spray. Exterminators mind that all pets be taken out of the house.
ALTHOUGH the sprays must meet EPA standards, they are all poisons and can cause problems. A person chooses to spray the bags himself he should be extremely careful to follow the label instructions. Better, professor of entomology, said.
"People wind up in big trouble if they don't follow directions," Beer said. "I was involved in a couple of court cases on the West Coast some years back where babies had died as a result of homeowners overusing certain insecticides.
"Even though some of the more toxic chemicals have been banned, the chemical that is most likely to kill you
still dangerous. I'd recommend extreme caution when using any type of in-
Byers agreed and said some of the insecticides were more dangerous than the bites.
"Nobody has ever been able to prove that roaches carry disease," he said. He also wrote that move around enough to come into touch with anything that could be dangerous to humans
"HOUSEFLIES ARE much more susceptible to picking up transmittable diseases, because they cover much more territory than a cockroach."
"The best thing anyone can do to avoid
roaches is to make sure the house is clean.
But if you don't, it will take a lot of time."
Food also brings out another infamous pests, mice. There are many time-tested methods to control them.
ASK's other funding priorities, Zacharias said, are an increase in the fee waivers for graduate students from 60 to 100 percent, full reimbursement to universities for student union rentals, allocation of money for the removal of unused space and budget for all of the formula funding budget method and an increase of the salaries of Regents staff members from 2 to 7 percent.
"I've got this cat named Jive," Laurie Ramsay, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore said. "So far I've seen two mice in my apartment and Jive caught both of them."
Another standby is the mousetrap. Marina Torbey, Wichita senior, has caught six mice since last fall using a mousetrap she bought at a hardware store.
"It works really well," she said. "The only problem is getting them out of the trap once they're caught. It can get pretty messy. I usually just let my roommate do it."
Gumer Quevedo, Cordoba, Spain, graduate student, found a more innovative way to curb his mouse problem. He called it "mouse hockey."
LITTLE WOODS
"I STAND BEHIND the door with a broom and wait for a mouse to cross the kitchen floor," he said. "I then trap him under the broom, have a roommate open the kitchen door, and then I sweep the mouse outdoors."
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so heard testimony from actor of the Associated坠嫌 lobbying group,members about fundingard of Regents schools,for the group, Zacharias
lts snack sales
the Union, said the Union had exclusive hits to the concessions on campus because e Union was organized to provide service and that Union does not pay for the contract, be said.
He said that if small snack bars began erating across campus, it would be hard limit their number.
FOREST JOLLY, director of vending e the Union, said concessions could be made to consumers by extract. He said the profit from the vending machines was deposited in the Union bank.
But Prawnt said the McColum senate have had the right to sell concessions. "I don't mind KU concession having a contract, but I don't mind the contract represent," he said. "KU
But Jolly said competition would raise the food orices and cause a reduction of service.
concessions has no reason to improve its products because it doesn't have to compete
"No one will vend soft drinks for 25 cents. That's an cheap as a grocery store will get."
JOLLY SAID machines in MCollum were serviced three times a day on Sunday.
"McCollium is always serviced three times because it is a large dorm. We pamper McCollium because it is such a large room that we give one cold food machine but it holds 194 cups."
"We have 12-hour service on the machines, so they really should be em-
See VENDING back page
Staff Reporter
By BILL RIGGINS
4 KU schools losing in battle for students
Although most schools within the diversity of Kansas had slight enrollment differences, some schools had decreases, figures released last sek by the office of admissions and enrolment.
Three of the four schools have limits on e number of students they accept. The ar schools with decreasing enrollments are Engineering, Education, Pharmacy and Social Welfare. The School of Education, the only school thougst an enrolment limit that recorded a crease, had the most severe decrease. The schools with 169 fewer students than an ar age.
THE ENROLMENT decrease reflects wide public given to the lack of jobs in action, Dale Scannell, dean of education, d yesterday.
"We make sure we talk to all students who we into the school and inform them of the playment limitations," he said. "We do this in different ways, either or not to stay in the school."
The School of Architecture, which has troiled enrollment, experienced the onlargest loss, 17 students. Dennis mer, assistant to the dean, said he sight the decrease was due to the way enrolment was figured. He said the total dent hours in the school had risen from 27 in the spring of 1978 to 6.16 this spring. Berner said 119 students majoring in architecture and a number of schools of Engineering but were alsoidents in the School of Architecture and ban Design.
THE SCHOOL OF Social Welfare had a increase of 13 students. Edith Black, ustant dean, said the school's practicum grant limited the number of students it could be admitted. The school requires students to work in workers in junction with their class work.
the School of Pharmacy, the other school sording a decline, had one less student s spring than last spring.
Hugh Cotton, associate dean, said lack of oratory space prevented the school from setting more students. The school usually earned 130 out of 185 applicants each year.
inrollment increased in the Graduate
vool, the College of Liberal Arts and
ences, the schools of Business,
Business, Law and Health Sciences,
Law I the College of Health Sciences.
HE TOTAL enrollment at the Lawrence spur this spring increased by 244 letters over last spring. Enrollment is up 17% in 2013 and 16% in the schools recording increases do
not limit the number of students they accept. Exceptions are some departments of the Graduate School and the School of Law and the College of Health Sciences.
The Graduate School had the largest increase, 101 students. Dorothy Haglund, assistant to the dean of liberal arts, said the Graduate School's admissions process varied from one department to another, but was essentially the same because of space and staff restrictions.
The second largest gain was in the School of Fine Arts, which had an increase of 46
"We've had a very steady rise." Don Scheid, associate dean, said. "We haven't experienced any drastic rises or falls. I think enrollment is leveling off."
THE SCHOOL OF Business had the next highest increase, 36 students, and the School
Enrollment for Schools Spring 1978 Spring 1979
Graduate 5,104 5,205
Liberal Arts 9,114 9,132
Archaeology 413
Business 918 954
Education 1,460 1,291
Engineering 1,328 1,561
Business 1,676 1,767
Journalism 612 615
Law 454 473
Medium 540 728
Social Welfare 496 483
Health Sciences 1,565 1,566
of Engineering followed with an increase of 33 students.
David Kraft, dean of engineering, attributed the growth of the school to a strong job market and an increase in enrollment by women and minorities.
Although the School of Law enrollment increased by 19, Martin Dickinson, dean of the school, said he expected the school's enrollment to remain fairly stable.
This year, the school accepted 190 students out of 650 who applied.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which had an increase of 18 students, has had slight increases during the past few years, according to Bob Adams, associate
Enrollment in the School of Journalism, which had an increase of three students, has also had only slight increases in the past few years, Lee Young, acting associate dean,
The College of Health Sciences had an increase, but a small one. It had one more college than it did five years ago.
8
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
- - - - -
Morale...
From page one
the university like a business. They want to show the Legislauret 'look how many eggs they can make.'
"THEERE IS A general feeling of being in a corporate system where things are manufactured and produced, rather than created."
Wright said the administration had instilled a corporate atmosphere in the faculty through continual evaluations and competition for benefits.
"The dehumanization of people by audits and evaluations fits a business and commercial world rather than a university," he said.
"We have an administration concerned more with economic efficiency rather than academic excellence." Leban said. "That is why we are running a supermarket on a university."
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies, supports Wright's
T. P. SRINIVASAN, professor of mathematics and a member of FacEx, said that evaluations of faculty by students, teachers, and staff had had the worst effect on faculty morale.
"The faculty are made to evaluate each other constantly," Srinivasan said. "They don't see evaluation leading to anything except to create more friction."
Ariko Knapper, professor of business and a member of FacEx, said he thought another negative aspect of the evaluations was that employees were prevented from being creative.
"Because student evaluations are used in secure evaluations, the instructor has to test students before they are rated too low," Knapper said. "Faculty members have to be careful not to offend too many."
LEBAN SAID the evaluations—combined with the bad economics situation—had resulted in an ugly trend. The application and evaluation process for merit salary
increases awarded by the departments had turned into backtabbing sessions, he said, where faculty tried to out-justify each other for the waze increases.
Wright also said that the almost constant demand for documentation of ability through evaluations had made the faculty almost paranoid about demonstrating their competence.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he agreed that there were increasing bureaucratic controls over the University's status, but he said there was little he could do.
Leban said many faculty members would not apply for the raises because they did not understand the pay structure.
"In a corporate structure this may be legitimate, but not in a University."
"Every spring the members of the departments compete for the merit salary money. Leban said. "This is one of the most important elements of morale and the cooperative element."
Dykes he spends one-third of working on business involving gov regulations. More rules seem to be each day, he said.
"There are an increasing amount of federal and state regulations that force the University to engage in monitors tivities and procedures." Dykes said
"THEY SEEM to be inevitable, by gotten to the point where the institu higher education no longer control thieves," Dykes said.
"YOU HAVE ALMOST constant feedback asking are you good enough," Wright said. "Faculty members, especially those looking at us with the most concern, to turn on the product demanded of them.
"Faculty are legitimately concern the growing bureaucracy, but a lo faculty don't realize that, it's not from us," he said.
Dykes said he knew that educat been hurt by the growing bureaucr that the only thing that could be dome
TOPEKA-Funding for women's athletics and libraries could be restored to the KU budget if the recommendations of a Kansas House Ways and Means subcommittee are
Approval of funding could aid KU budge
In addition, the three-member subcommittee has made a recommendation to $277,500 from an allocation for 10 million of Marvin轩 to renovate Lindley Hall.
IN HIS INITIAL budget proposal, the governor recommended that $1,277,500 be distributed among all 11 agencies.
Under Gov. John Carlin's budget recommendation, the fund for neither the university nor the medical system were given. The subcommittee is scheduled to make its entire presentation to Gov. Carlin.
Yesterday, subcommittee members met with Marlon Rein, director of legislative research, to refine their recommendations on the KU budget.
Among the subcommittee's recommendations were the restoration to the budget of $140 million for miscellaneous facilities for the library and $100,000 for the library security system.
However, subcommittee members broke that figure down, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $277,500 for the renovation of Lindley.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden
City, subcommittee chairman, a favored splitting the money in orde both construction projects off the next year.
"we're going to have to finish buildings sooner or later anyway longer we put off starting on Lind mec will it cost in the long run," he said.
Heinemann said the funds to fini-
nish the buildings, building
allocated by the League, will
would take about $1,550,000 to finish
Hall and all $1,650,000 to finish
Despite the high cost of renovation is about $54 a square foot, he said rewould still be cheaper than building building.
Because of the value of the book KU libraries, subcommittee memb that restoration of funding for a security system would pay for itself.
"The book detection system is v"
"important because of all the moving t."
"Heinemann said. 'Besides, the redo"
"the book shell mean to make the system"
"work.'"
The $16,660 that would be rest women's athletics is less than half of request by KU. Subcommittee maid the money would be used for athletic events and for an athletic room.
Engineering & Computer Science Majors
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try to prevent more regulations from appearing on the books.
"Over-regulation threatens the University's existence." Dykes said.
Faculty members said they agreed that over-regulation harmed the University but offered their own solutions to the faculty morale problem.
"MANY FACULTY members want more involvement in making the budget," Swartz said. "Having confidence in the budget allocations would boost morale."
Srinivasan and Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction and chairman of FacEx, said that more faculty involvement in administrative functions was needed.
Leban said, "You have to think of the academic mission first. We need an administration that can provide academic leadership."
But Heller said it no longer was possible for the administrative head of a large company to do that.
Srimivasan said that the faculty needed to be assured by the administration that Srimivasan was doing well.
"It's not the day any longer where a university president can go around patting people on the back," Heller said. "The role of the administrator today is to acquire resources."
Athletics ...
men's athletic director, who was not responsible for women's athletics
tracy Spellman, a board member, said the effectiveness of the merger would depend on the attitudes of the administration.
From nage one
use rr work 1 do what it says it will do 1
Nernchock, who grew up in Chicago and studied jewelry design in Denmark, said he always had an interest in electronics, physics and metallurgy. He said the work he was doing would be much more difficult away from a university campus.
KU artist combines electronics, jewelry
if the two boards merged, women's athletics would lose their emphasis on academics.
"It's the women who are having to make the biggest changes," she said. "And I'm afraid if the boards merge, we might lose our philosophy."
Dykes said he wanted to emphasize that the board would advise the athletic director
new metal, titanium, which can be changed to any color. He said he also had hopes of making jewelry that could emit sounds and light, and that would be reflected by light, temperature and movement.
By RHONDA HOLMAN
But Nernchomk's designs, which incorporate items such as solar cells, magnetic switches, fiber optics and light disks, may be the jewelry of the future.
"I AUDITED SOME courses in the sciences and I hang around the engineering building and Malotl Hall a lot," he said. "The research materials are here and I think KU has really been supportive of research in the arts."
Nemchock, who came to the University of Kansas in 1972 from the art institute in Cleveland, said he was in contact with English, German and West Coast designers working with electronic jewelry. He said the work was too new to be profitable.
Staff Renorter
The brooches, beads and rings Gary
emerich designs look more like props for
the movie than just accessories.
"About three years ago, I started thinking about putting some electronics with jewelery." Nernchom, professor of jewelry and silversmithing, said. "I'm just working on new materials. The tools of the artist and designer are just expanding."
"It's just basic research now," he said.
There are no guide books on how to do it,
and you have to get your hands around it.
Nermock'hoc's "bodonic jewelry," as he calls it, combines traditional metals in the form of gold and pimperons of light—all powered by a tiny battery and a sensor that activates the batteries.
Nernchock said the materials he used came from campus departments and research departments in space, telephone and computer countries. He said because much of the country. He said because much of the
Besides comparing prices of various complexes, inspecting an apartment is the most important step in choosing an apartment that is just right.
Many Lawrence apartment complexes are accepting applications for next fall, and those persons who want to get the best offer will be able to apply at apartments and to make a decision soon.
Students can choose from several price ranges and bedroom apartments. Most complexes offer a choice of apartments to four bedrooms, furnished or unfurnished.
Alvamar Quail Creek Apartments, 2115
Quail Creek Drive, is renting only to one person or families for this fall, Sandra Leroux, manager, said.
ALVAMAR APARTMENTS are electric and unfurnished, and water and cable television are paid by the complex. A studio rents for $187.50 a month, one-bedroom groups from $197.50 to $217.50, two-bedroom groups from $287.50 to
$297.50, and three-bedroom groups from
$297.50 to $357.50.
Three bedroom townhouses rent for $367.50 and $777.50, depending on size. Three bedroom duplexes rent for $395 and $465
Bill Clawson, manager of Apple croft apartments, 1741 W. 19th St., will start a new office on the ground floor end of March. Furnished studios rent for $210; and one-bedroom furnished apartments rent for $230. Two-bedroom apartments for $260 unfurnished and $290 furnished.
BIRCHWOOD GARDEN Apartments, 1846 Tennessee St., and Village Square Apartments, 850 Awlon Road, will start taking applications about April 3, Kathy Howard, manager, said. Hoth complexes are located on the one-bedroom apartments with one bathroom.
Birchwood apartments rent for $215 a month. They have gas heat, and utilities. The cost is $390 per month.
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Ricky Piper, manager of Cedarwood Apartments, 2414 Ousdahl Road, said she was not certain what the prices would be for this fall.
Currently, however, one-bedroom apartments at Cedarwood Apartments and two-bedroom apartments have a kitchen-dine-tine combination and rent from $79.50. Two bedroom duplexes rent for $227.50. The apartments are unfurnished and have one bathroom.
Crescent Heights, the Oaks, Acorn and Gaslight Apartments, 1815 W. 24b St. are managed by Linda Frankenfeld.
ONLY FOUR FOUR-bedroom units are available at Cedarwood, and they rent for $297.50. They have one and three-fourths bathrooms and the bedrooms are upstairs.
Crescent Heights rents furnished
electricity for $180 a month, all utilities
$265 a month, two-bedroom apartments rent from
$220 to $350. All units are gas heated.
Frontier Ridge Apartments, 524 Frontier Road, has many price plans for furnishings or unfurnished apartments ranging from studies to three-bedroom
An unfurnished studio rents for $170, and a furnished studio rents for $196 with a 12-month lease. Lease a nine-month lease, a furnished studio. Rent $185 unfurnished, and for $210 furnished.
a one-bedroom apartment rents for $190
unfurnished and for $213 furnished, with a
12-month lease. With a nine-month lease,
the room is for $150 for unfurnished
and for $230 for furnished.
Prices for this fall at Heatherwood Valley Apartments, 21st Street and Heatherwood Drive have not been set yet. Nick Moos, manager, said. One-bedroom apartments now rent for $200 with water paid, two bedroom apartments rent for $650 (small units and $285 large units), with 1½ bath; three bedroom apartments rent for $310, with two complete baths and 1,100 square feet of living space.
INDIAN HILLS DUPLXEES, 1611 St. Andrews Dr., and Parkarun Duplexes, 28th Street and Kasalod Drive, are rented to Jana Waner, secretary, according to Jan Waner, secretary.
MATTHEW KLEIN
"At Naismith you'd discover an environment of hassle-free living . . . good meals, friendly medl study, lounges and a social life that Cassanova would envy. All part of the package at Naismith."
GATEHUSE APARTMENTS, 2166 W. 89th St., are managed by Nelson Hall. He would not give out prices but said there were one, two, and three-bedroom apartments.
A three-bedroom unit rents for $245
unfurnished and $358 furnished with a
12-month lease, and $358 unfurnished and $305
furnished, with a nine-month lease.
Parkmar rents unfurnished three-bedroom units with a single bath for $269 and for $289 with 1½ bathrooms. Indian
Les Burson
Memphis, Tennessee Graduate
A two-bedroom unit with a study is $22
unfurnished and $22 furnished, with a 12-month lease, and $42 unfurnished and $72
furnished, with a nine-month lease.
Nais Hall
Naismith
843-8559
A ONE-BEDROOM unit with a study,
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and $205 furnished for 12 months. With a nine-month lease, it is $125 unfurished.
A two-bedroom unit is $250 unfurnished and $230 furnished, with a 12-month lease. With a nine-month lease, it rents for $225 unfurnished and $245 furnished.
Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features
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[Image]
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
A. L. MALCOLM
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 89, No.109
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-As expected, the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee yesterday approved the addition of $116,000 for women's athletics and a library security system to the fiscal 1800 KU budget.
Committee members also approved transfer of $727,500 from an allocation for renovation of Marvail Hali to Sigma.
Unexpected account to the budget were $80,000 to the Kansas State scholarship fund, $5,000 for the development of sandstone aquifers in western Kansas and $80,000 for the development of sandstone aquifers in eastern Kansas between KU's Bureau of Child Research and the northeast.
athletics is less than one-fenth of $267,398 requested by KU. The money would be used for travel to athletic events and sports.
Also part of the governor's budget recommendations was a $1,277,500 allocation for the renovation of Marvin Hall.
However, committee members split that figure, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and Duncan.
State Rep. David Heimemann, R-Garden City, said he favored spending the money to get both projects started this year.
Committee members said the funds to finish both buildings should be allocated by the Legislature next year.
said, are maintaining a 9.5 percent increase in student wages for next year, increasing the Kansas Scholarship program from $750,000 to $830,000 and raising a recommended faculty salary increase from 6 to 7 percent.
ZACHARIAS SAID the governor's recommended increase in student salaries would bring in compliance with the government's budget.
Both the scholarship and faculty salary funding are needed, he said, to keep teachers and students at Kansas
"Faculty and students should not be enticed out of the state," he said.
ASN's other funding priorities, Zacharias said, are an increase in the fee wavers for graduate students from 60 to 100 percent, full reimbursement to universities for student union rentals, allocation of money for the removal of fees from tuition and use of the formula funding budget model and increase in the salaries of Regents staff members from 20 to 7 percent.
vacancies early hunters
nodeling, which is about ld be cheaper than con-
Jayhawker Towers Apartments, 1603 W. 15th St., are managed by Barbara Fearnley. All apartments are unfurnished, two-bedroom units with all utilities and cable services.
Hills rents unfurnished two-bedroom units for $250.
Prices for the Mall Ode English Village Apartments, 2115 Louisiana St., are expected to rise by 7 percent next fall. The manager would not give ores.
HOWEVER, ONE- two- and three-bedroom units are available, with gas and water naid.
Meadowbrook Apartments, 101-T Windsor Place, offer 29 different price plans for one two- and three-bedroom apartments, three- and four-bedroom duplexes and two- and three-bedroom townhouses.
OF THOSE REQUESTS, Zacharias said, the graduate fee waiver, improvements to make buildings accessible to the handicapped and Regents salary increases are most important.
Sally Davis, sales manager, said one-bedroom apartments rented for $195 to $215 furnished to two and three-bedroom group, only unfurnished apartments are offered. They rent for $280 to $310 for a two-bedroom apartment and $296 to $70 for a three-bedroom apartment.
Park Plaza South Apartments, 1912 W.
25th St., are managed by Glen Stephens,
who declined to give prices.
Three- or four-bedroom duplexes rent from $380 to $440, two- and three-bedroom townhouses rent from $110 to $160, townhouses have fireplaces and garages.
THE LEAST is for 12 months and subleasing is handled through the management. Meadowbrook will have an iPhone app, but it, or I, but one is accepting applications.
Park-25 Apartments, 2410 W. 25th St., are managed by Gary Stephens, who also would not give prices, and said he who visits persons per visit the complex to find out prices.
Parkway Terrance Apartments, 2340 Murphy Dr., are managed by Bill Lemessay. He said that he wasn't sure what they could afford; they probably could be $175 for a studio, $200 for a furnished, one-bedroom apartment and $180 for an unfurnished one-bedroom apartment. A two-bedroom apartment costs $290 and $330 furnished and for $205 unfurnished.
Ridgeview Estate Apartments, 1908 E. 19th St, rent six different apartment groups, Mary Conay, assistant manager, said.
A small two-bedroom apartment rents for $175, a medium, two-bedroom apartment rents for $240, a medium, two-bedroom apartment rents for $212. It costs $2 extra a month to rent furniture for the bedrooms.
a three-bedroom unit for rents
at a large three-bedroom unit for rents
for $25,
bedrooms, a kitchen, a dinette, a living
room, a small family room and two baths,
SOUTHRIDGE PLAZA Apartments,
1704 W. 38th ST, are rented by Dorothy
Gristand. One-bedroom apartments rent
$495 for two-bedroom furnished and for $169
and $188 for un furnished.
Saint Spanish Corp Apartments, 2004 W. 27th St., has seven buildings and is managed by Paul Jones. He said that he would not take the lease for fall and that the lease was for (12 months).
Two-bedroom apartments rent for
$221.50 and $237 furnished and for $194
and $206 unfurnished.
Two-bedroom apartments rent for $210. They are unfarmed and have gas heat and utilities are not paid.
Stadium Apartments, 1123 Indiana St.,
are managed by Elizabeth Yates. The complex is one block north of the Kansas
Union and has one and two-bedroom units.
**SLEEPING ROOMS** don't have kitchens
or share a bath, and rent for $10 and $15.
Furnished rooms are $195 furnished
and $195 furnished. Two-bedroom units rent for $200 unfurnished
and $200 unfurnished.
a studio rents for $185. A one-bedroom apartment rents for $220, and a one-bedroom unit with an upstairs study rents for $245.
Trailridge Apartments, 2500 W. Sixth St., are managed by Shirley Hancock.
GAS AND WATER are paid on the studios and apartments. Studios rent for $190 and have a kitchen alcove and one large room that can be divided into a bedroom and a
One bedroom apartments rent for $230,
two-bedroom apartments rent for $85,
and three-bedroom apartments rent for
$65. All apartments have patios.
have electric kitchen and patio.
No utilities are paid on town houses.
Two-bedroom townhouses rent for $290
for two bathrooms and four bathrooms.
Three-bedroom townhouses rent for $390 with 1½ bathrooms and for $375 with 2½ bathrooms. The four-bedroom townhouses rent for $440 with two bathrooms.
Applications are being accepted with a rental application, a credit application and the first month's rent.
University Terrace Apartments, 502
Cedar Creek, Oak Park, IL
bedroom apartments. Prices for this fall have not been set, but the current rates are one-bedroom furnished for $220, and two-bedroom furnished for $360.
West Hills Apartments, 1000 Emery Road, are managed by Sheryl Lemesan. One-bedroom apartments rent for $190 unfurnished and $210 furnished.
TWO-BEDROOM apartments rent for
$235 furnished and $205 unfurnished.
Malls Olde English Village
Two-bedroom apartments, with 1½
bathrooms rent for $230 unfurnished and
$260 furnished. Some furnished two-
bedroom apartments are $25 less.
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lts snack sales
the Union, said the Union had exclusive rights to the concessions on campus because e Union was organized to provide service and e Union does not pay for the extradition, he said.
He said that if small snack bars began erating across campus, it would be hard limit their number.
FOREST JOLLY, director of vending e the Union, said concessions could be made to customers at the透ract. He said the profit from the vending machines was deposited in the Union fund.
But Prownt said the McColm senate ould have the right to sell concessions. "I don't mind KU concession having a vow of loyalty in contract repress," he said. "KU
But Jolly said competition would raise the footories and cause a reduction of service.
concessions has no reason to improve its products because it does not have to compete
"No one will soft drink for 25 cents. That's as cheap as a grocery store will get."
JOLLY SAID machines in Mcollum were serviced three times a day on Sunday.
*McColm is always serviced three times because it is a large dorm. We parmer McColm because it is such a large space that you can eat one cold food machine but it holds 130 units.
"We have 12-hour service on the machines, so they really shouldn't be emptied."
See VENDING back page
Staff Reporter
Bv BILL RIGGINS
4 KU schools losing in battle for students
Although most schools within the diversity of Kanaka had had enrollment in a majority of their school hools had decreases, figures released last sek by the office of admissions and enrolment data
Three of the four schools have limits on e number of students they accept. The ur schools with decreasing enrollments include, Education, Pharmacy and Social Welfare. The School of Education, the only school thougnt an enrolment limit that recorded a crease, had the most severe decrease. The school has 182 fewer students than a ar age.
THE ENROLMENT decrease, reflects wide publicity given to the lack of jobs in location, Dale Scannell, dean of education, d vidayear.
"We make sure we talk to all students who we into the school and inform them of the placement limitations," he said. "We teach them how to be safe, either or not to stay in the school."
The School of Architecture, which has hattled enrollment, experienced the longest loss, 17 students. Demins and his team managed to right the decrease due to the way wallition was figured. He said the total dent hours in the school had risen from 50 to 60 before he began. Benner said 119 students majoring in architectural engineering were listed under School of Engineering but were also enrolled in the School of Architecture and ban design.
THE SCHOOL OF Social Welfare had a reacreation of 13 students. Edith Black, instan dean, said the school's practicum grant limited the number of students it could be admitted. The school requires 20 students and workers in junction with their class work.
he School of Pharmacy, the other school ording a decline, had one less student spring than last spring.
high Cotton, associate dean, said lack of oratory space prevented the school from seping more students. The school usually eives 120 to 156 applicants each year.
inrolment increased in the Graduate tool, the College of Liberal Arts and ences, the schools of Business, the Schools of Law, the College of Health Sciences.
HE TOTAL enrollment at the Lawrence apus this spring increased by 244 dents over last spring. Enrollment is also up on campus, and few of the schools recording increases do
not limit the number of students they accept. Exceptions are some departments of the Graduate School and the School of Law and the College of Health Sciences.
The Graduate School had the largest increase, 101 students. Dorothy Hagland, assistant to the dean of liberal arts, the Graduate School's admissions process varied from one department to another, but they all required admission because of space and staff restrictions.
The second largest gain was in the School of Fine Arts, which had an increase of 46
"We've had a very steady rise." Done Scheid, associate dean, said. "We haven't experienced any drastic rises or falls. I think enrollment is leveling off."
THE SCHOOL OF Business had the next highest increase, 36 students, and the School
Enrollment for Schools Spring 1978 Spring 1979
Graduate 5,104 5,205
Liberal Arts 9,114 9,132
Architecture 613 494
Business 918 954
Education 1,460 1,291
Engineering 1,520 1,561
Law 1,431 1,477
Journalism 612 615
Law 454 473
Medicine 204 208
Social Welfare 496 483
Health Sciences 1,506
of Engineering followed with an increase of 33 students.
David Kraft, dean of engineering, attributed the growth of the school to a strong job market and an increase in enrollment by women and minorities.
Although the School of Law enrollment increased by 19, Martin Dickinson, dean of the school, said he expected the school's enrollment to remain fairly stable.
This year, the school accepted 190 students out of 650 who applied.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which had an increase of 18 students, has had slight increases during the past few years, according to Bob Adams, associate
Enrollment in the School of Journalism, which had an increase of three students, has also had only slight increases in the past few years. Lee Young, acting associate dean, and
The College of Health Sciences had an insurance, but a small one. It had one more student than the average.
---
8
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Morale .
From page one
the university like a business. They want to show the Legislature 'look how many eggs
"THERE IS A general feeling of being in a corporate system where things are manufactured and produced, rather than created."
Wright said the administration had instilled a corporate atmosphere in the faculty through continual evaluations and competition for benefits.
"The dehumanization of people by audits and evaluations fits a business and commercial world rather than a university," he said.
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies, supports Wright's research.
"We have an administration concerned more with economic efficiency rather than academic excellence," Leban said. "That is why we are running a supermarket on a university."
T. P. SRINIVASAN, professor of mathematics and a member of FacEx, said that evaluations of faculty by students, and the work they did had the worst effect on faculty morale.
"The faculty are made to evaluate each other constantly," Srinivasan said. "They don't see evaluation leading to anything except to create more friction."
Arno Krapper, professor of business and a member of FacEx, said he thought another negative aspect of the evaluations was that the members were prevented from creative work.
"Because student evaluations are used in teacher evaluations, the instructor has to teach these skills. Students rated too low," Krappner said. "Faculty members have to be careful not to offend them."
LEBAN SAID the evaluations—combined with the bad economics situation—and resulted in an ugly trend. The application and evaluation process for merit salary
. .
increases awarded by the departments had turned into backstabbing sessions, he said, where faculty tried to out-justify each other for the wage increases.
"Every spring the members of the departments compete for the merit salary money." Leban said. "This is one of the strengths of morale and the cooperative element."
Wright also said that the almost constant demand for documentation of ability through evaluations had made the faculty almost paramedict about demonstrating their competence.
Leban said many faculty members would not apply for the raises because they did not want to do so.
"In a corporate structure this may be legitimate, but not in a University."
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he agreed that there were increasing bureaucratic controls over the University's ability, but he said there was little he could do.
"YOU HAVE ALMOST constant feedback asking are you good enough." Wright said. "Faculty members, especially those looking at the data, tend to turn out the product demanded of them.
"There are an increasing amount of federal and state regulations that force the University to engage in monitorities tivities and procedures." Dykes said
Dykes said he spends one-third of working on business involving gov regulations. More rules seem to be each day, he said.
"THEY SEEM to be inevitable, be goin to the point where the institit high education no longer control th houses." Dykes said.
"Faculty are legitimately concerte the growing bureaucracy, but a lo faculty don't realize that it's not from us," he said.
Dykes said he knew that educat
been hurt by the growing bureauc
that the only thing that could be done
"Over-regulation threatens the University's existence." Dykes said.
try to prevent more regulations from appearing on the books.
Faculty members said they agreed that over-regulation harmed the University but they offered their own solutions to the faculty morale problem.
Srinivasan and Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction and chairman of FacEx, said that more faculty involvement in administrative functions was needed.
Leban said, "You have to think of the academic mission first. We need an administration that can provide academic leadership."
"MANY FACULTY members want more involvement in making the budget," Swartz said. "Having confidence in the budget allocations would boost morale."
But Heller said it no longer was possible for the administrative head of a large corporation to hold such a position.
From nave one
Athletics...
"It's not the day any longer where a university president can go around patting people on the back," Heller said. "The role of administrator today is to acquire resources."
Srimavasa said that the faculty needed to be assured by the administration that a student is enrolled.
men's athletic director, who was not responsible for women's athletics.
Tracy Spellman, a board member, said the effectiveness of the merger would depend on the attitudes of the administration.
we re enter a do what it says it will do 1
KU artist combines electronics, jewelry
The brooches, bolts and pins Gary Nemchock design look more like props for a movie.
“It’s the women who are having to make the biggest changes,” she said. “And I’m afraid if the boards merge, we might lose our philosophy.”
if the two boards merged, women's athletics would lose their emphasis on academics.
Dykes said he wanted to emphasize that the board would advise the athletic director.
Yesterday, subcommittee members met with Marlon Rein, director of legislative research, to refine their recommendations on the KU budget.
IN HIS INITIAL budget proposal, the
GOVNOR recommended that $1,277,590 be
spent on the following programs:
But Nernchock's designs, which incorporate items such as solar cells, magnetic switches, fiber optics and light diodes, may be the jewelry of the future.
"About three years ago, I started thinking about putting some electronics with jewelry," Nernchom, professor of jewelry and silversmithing, said. "I'm just working with materials of new materials. The tools of the artist and designer are just expanding."
BY RHONDA HOLMAN Stuff Reported
Staff Reporter
Nemchock's "bodonic jewelry," as he calls it, combines traditional metals in geometric designs with tiny flashing bulbs and pinpoints of light—all powered by a tiny battery and a sensor that activates the lights when the pieces are worn.
Nemchock said the materials he used came from campus departments and research departments in space, telephone and computer countries. He said because much of the country. He said because much of the
new metal, titanium, which can be changed to any color. He said he also had hopes of making jewelry that could emit sounds and light, and that it could be used by light, temperature and movement.
Among the subcommittee's recommendations were the restoration to the budget of $16,800 for miscellaneous costs and $13,400 for $10,000 for the library security system.
Nernchock, who grew up in Chicago and studied jewelry design in Denmark, said he always had an interest in electronics, physics and metallurgy. He said the work he was doing would be much more difficult away from a university campus.
"I AUDITED SOME courses in the sciences and I hang around the engineering building and Malott Hall a lot," he said. "The research materials are here and I think KU has really been supportive of research in the arts."
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden
Nernchow, who came to the University of Kansas in 1972 from the art institute in Cleveland, said he was in contact with English, German and West Coast designers who were working with electronic jewelry. He said the work was too new to be profitable.
However, subcommittee members broke that figure down, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $277,500 for the renovation of Lindley.
18
"I's just basic research now," he said. There are no guide books on how to do it, but there are many others.
TOPEKA - Funding for women's athletics and libraries will be restored to the KU budget if the recommendations of a Kansas State team and Means subcommittee are approved today.
Approval of funding could aid KU budge
In addition, the three-member subcommittee has made a recommendation to shift $277,500 from an allocation for the Marvin炉 to renovate Lindley Hall.
Under Gov. John Carlin's budget recommendation, the funding for neither the State Department nor the federal system were given. The subcommittee is scheduled to make its entire presentation to Gov. Carlin.
City, subcommittee chairman, s favored splitting the money in orde both construction projects off the next year.
Despite the high cost of renovation is about $50 a square foot, he said rewould still be cheaper than building building.
"We're going to have to finish buildings sooner or later anyway, longer we put off starting on Lind more it will cost in the long run," he said.
Because of the value of the book KU libraries, subcommittee memb# restoration of funding for a security system would pay for itself.
Heinermann said the funds to fin- renovation of both buildings she allocated by the Legislature next; would take about $1,650,000 to finish Hall and about $1,650,000 to finish he said.
"The book detection system is very portant because of all the moving thetas. The book detection system Heinemann said." Besides, the redic book thefts that will happen the system must be aware of.
The $16,660 that would be rested women's athletics is less than half of request by KU. Subcommittee said the money would be used for athletic events and for an athletic room.
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Towers home for KU athletes
By JOHN P. THARP
Associate Sports Editors
The athletic department, Waugh said, had a contract with the Towers to lease 28 four-person units. The department is in charge of a five year contract, which is prorated.
Even though the 28 units are for the money-maker sports' participants, athletes from the non revenue sports still get funding from the University and athletic department through their scholarships to rent living quarters.
Members of the basketball and football teams, the two revenue producing sports live in Jawahner Towers, Jerry Waugh, assistant men's athletic director said
When they're not on the courts or the fields, student athletes at KU go home.
Besides room, athletes on a full scholarship also get board. At the Towers, a training table is set up for athletes for three meals a day.
But the Towers' arrangements may be changed, Waugh said, because of inflationary costs coupled with a costly implementation of Title IX, designed to equate men's and women's athletic programs across the country.
Bob Marcum, men's athletic director,
echoed Waugh's sentiments.
"I think all types of specialized housing and the training will call for a long, hard look, speaking economically," Marcum said. "It might have to get away from it."
The football team's units soon will be scattered, Marcum said, instead of being grouped together.
For now, the 12 basketball players and most of the 95 football players will continue to live at the Towers while other members stay in housing, still paid by scholarship funding.
Waugh said married athletes usually did not live in the Towers. The 28 units are scattered throughout the four complexes. The team's team units also are spread out.
Both administrators said the main advantage of the Towers was the proximity to the campus. But whether the Towers are in the Towers in the future is uncertain.
Mitchell said he tried to group his classes consecutively so he would not have any time in between them.
the inconvenience of living outside Lawrence.
"Rent is about half of what it would be in Lawrence," she said.
Beutlien said that last semester he had classes every day and had study breaks in between, but that this semester he attended classes only on Monday, Wednesday and Friday to try to cut driving costs.
Cindy Kuse, Overland Park junior, said she could not find a place to live in Lawrence at a price she considered reasonable.
Linda Batr, Eudora senior, said she decided to live in Eudora because the rent was much cheaper.
Students who live at home and commute to Lawrence also were concerned about saving money, although they said they felt out of campus activities.
"After classes are over I go home to study," Kuse said. "While other students are socializing, I'm driving."
"It is difficult to borrow someone's notes or help get from other people who have the materials you need," said scholarship hall. Then you can just go down the hall and find someone, "Michel Johnson."
Dave Lutz, Topper senior, committed to Lawrence for his first three years at KU. He said he did not realize how much he had been until he lived on campus a semester.
"Getting to know people was a problem," he said.
Rebecca Stewart, Leavenworth sophomore, said she thought the University should schedule more Tuesday classes to help people who commute.
Bob Mitchell, Baldwin sophomore, said that unless a student had small classes or labs it was hard to meet people.
Living outside Lawrence is a compromise for some students.
"It is a good location for us because one of my roommates goes to Baker University and I have some good here," Tooth Beuthien, Baldwin sophomore, said.
---
Beuthen said it seemed as if most of the snow came before the semester started, so he did not have any problems driving to school.
Most students said they tried to arrange their schedules so they would not have to drive to Lawrence every day, but that the semester schedule made it difficult to arrange.
Kuse said, "I missed a couple of classes because of the weather this winter but the professors were understanding.
"I try to get all my classes in the afternoon in case of bad weather," Kuse said.
Mitchell said that he drove on a gravel road to get to school and that a couple of times he had endured up in the middle of a street, that he had not missed any classes.
Bad weather this winter has not kept most commuters from getting to their classes.
"I prefer living out of town because we used to live in Stouffer Place. I don't miss the sirens on 38th Street at all." Aher said.
She said that it was difficult to keep informed about campus activities, but that she had friends in Lawrence who helped her keep in touch.
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KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
I
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, March 7. 1979
Vol. 89, No. 109
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA—As expected, the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee yesterday approved the addition of $116,600 for women's athletics and a library security system to the fiscal 1980 KU budget.
Committee members also approved a transfer of $277,500 from an allocation for renovation of Marvina Hall to the new building.
Unexpected costs to the budget were $80,000 to the Kansas State scholarship fund, $13,000 for the development of sandstone foundations in western Kansas and $50,000 for the development between KU's Bureau of Child Research and the northeast
athletics is less than one-tenth of $267,308 requested by KU. The money would be used for travel to athletic events and
Also part of the governor's budget recommendations was a $1,277,500 allocation for the renomination of Marvin Hall.
However, committee members split that figure, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and
Kim.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden City, said he splitting the money to get both projects started this
Committee members said the funds to finish both buildings should be allocated by the Legislature next year. (AP)
said, are maintaining a 9.5 percent increase in student wages for next year, increasing the Kansas Scholarship program from $750,000 to $830,000 and raising a recommended faculty salary increase from 6 to 10 percent.
ZACHARIAS SAID the governor's recommended increase in student salaries would bring them in compliance with the law.
19
Both the scholarship and faculty salary funding are needed, he said, to keep teachers and students at Kansas
"Faculty and students should not be enticed out of the state," he said.
housing, utilities
ASK's other funding priorities, Zacharias said, are an increase in the fee waivers for graduate students from 60 to 100 percent, full reimbursement to universities for student union rentals, allocation of money for the removal of barriers for handicapped students, greater use of the salaries of the Regents staff members from 2.0 percent.
"Tuesday-thursday classes save a lot of time," Stewart said. "I try to come to school as few days as possible since I have about two hours a day on the road."
According to Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records, 2,202 students, 10.3 of the student body, said they drove more than 10 miles to school in response to a question on the registration card at enrolment.
Several of the commuters spend about 30 minutes driving each way but said they thought they were saving money.
Students from towns such as Eudora, Baldwin and Linwood said they spent an average of $7 to $10 a week for gasoline. When they said, they got good gas mileage.
Many student commuters buy KU parking permits. The permits are $20 a semester or $33 a year for green zones and/or a semester or $7 a year for yellow zones.
The students said they rarely used pool. Conflicting schedules and finding someone in the same area who also left their house trouble, according to most commuters.
Dennis Karnis, Topena junior, said that he would like to car pool with someone to save on expenses, but that he had not found anyone interested in commuting.
"I've even tried putting notes on the windshields of cars with Shawnee County tags," Karnsa said.
Kuse said, "You're stuck up here longer
you want to be if you want to wait for a
curse."
Stewart said she had thought about car pooling but she was hesitant to car pool with someone she did not know.
Lutz described his three years of commuting as a good experience.
"I'm glad I did it," he said. "It makes you more self-reliant."
you more seu-renant.
Gracie Alcala, Topeka senior, said she
did not mind commuting, but that "it gets old."
Shortage of apartments leaves students grasping
"In the fall and spring it’s nice," Kuse said, "because it gives you a couple of days to get ready."
By LYNN BYCZYNSKI
Staff Reporter
But despite a seemingly endless development of new apartments in Lawrence, a housing shortage might plague students for years to come.
A hunt for housing that is clean, affordable and close to campus is a semi-annual event all too familiar to KU students. The losers in this game are forced to settle for housing that is run-down, expensive or far from campus.
For three years, the demand for decent housing has increased faster than the supply. Connie Martin, president of Martin Real
But while the demand has remained high, the supply of housing has slowed its pace. And only declining enrollments will ease the demand for housing.
PHILIP GILL HARRISON, a broker for Gill Real Estate, 901
Stouthern Louis, SA, said decreasing development would prolong the
growing real estate boom.
"I don't see anyone running out to build rental units," Harrison said.
He said the slowdown of development was a change from a bloom on multi-family dwelling that began four years ago.
boom on multi-family dwellings that began about four years ago. In the past two years, the city has issued building permits for 762 new rental units, ranging from efficiency apartments in complexes to luxury duplexes. This year, plans have been made to extend the city's rent-to-own program.
but the building trend of the past four years has left little land near the university on which to build student housing.
modeling, which is about id be cheaper than con-
Gene Shaughnessy, chief building inspector for Lawrence, said
that the building of duplexes and four-plexes between big, older houses near the University had saturated the area.
"THE VACANT lots left are far and far between."
Hughenay said, a lot of cases the developer has to tear apart the land.
Robert L. Stephens, president of Stephens Real Estate Inc., 839 Kentucky St., agreed.
"If you could find me 20 lots in Lawrence to build duplexes on, I'd buy them right now." he said.
OF THOSE REQUESTS, Zacharias said, the graduate fee waiver, improvements to make buildings accessible to the handicapped and Regents salary increases are most important.
But that is easier said than done. Land in Lawrence is expensive.
Pat Bodin, broker for Bodin-McDow Real Estate Inc., 2340 Alabama St., said a vacant lot in the 1300 block of Kentucky Street recently sold for $14,000. The lot, 50-by-117 feet, was just big enough to squeeze a four-ponex on.
The soaring cost of land, the difficulty of obtaining financing and high interest rates when the money is available are other factors that may inhibit a company's ability to grow.
Harrison cited as an example a four-plex on Kentucky Street that had recently sold for $95,500. With a rental rate of $200 a unit, the fourplex cost $78,360.
"RIGHT NOW, you can't make student housing and make money," Harrison said.
"At that rate, the rent will be the principal and interest payment and maybe pay the taxes and insurance," Harrison said,
Until rentls go up substantially, or interest rates go down,
employment is likely to remain slow, most real estate agents
agree.
And for KU students, that means headaches when the time arrives to join the search for next semester's housing.
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so heard testimony fromctor of the Associated dent lobby group. members about funding arl of Regents schools. zacharias. Zearahias
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lts snack sales
the Union, said the Union had exclusive jobs to the concessions on campus because $Union was organized to provide service and $Union does not pay for the contract, he said.
he said that if small snack bars began erating across campus, it would be hard limit their number.
FOREST JOLLY, director of vending at the Union, said conversations could be made between the union and the contract. He said the profit from the vending machines was deposited in the Union bank.
But Prownt said the McColm senate ould have the right to sell concessions. "I don't need MU concessions having a attract, but I want to get the exclusive right."
concessions has no reason to improve its products because it doesn't have a compete
But Jolly said competition would raise the food prices and cause a reduction of service.
JOLLY SAYD machines in Mcoluml were serviced three times a day on Sunday.
"No one will send soft drinks for 25 cents. That's as cheap as a grocery store will get. You can get it for $1."
"McColum is always serviced three times because it is a large dorm. We pamper McColum because it is such a large room, but if you bring one cold food machine that it holds 130 units
"We have 12-hour service on the machines, so they really shouldn't be em-
See VENDING back page
Staff Reporter
By BILL RIGGINS
Although most schools within the diversity of Kansas had slight enrollment creases compared with a year ago, four hools had decreases, figures released last week by the office of admissions and cords indicate.
1 KU schools losing in battle for students
Three of the four schools have limits on a number of students they accept. The ur schools with decreasing enrollments are Education, Pharmacy and Social Welfare. The School of Education, the only school thout an enrollment limit that recorded a cruse, had the most severe decrease. The schools with 169 fewer students than a arge.
THE ENROLMENT decrease reflects
· wide public given to the lack of jobs in
aation, Dale Scannell, dean of education,
d yesterday.
ne into the school and inform them of the employment limitations," he said. "We ent want to make an informed decision either or not to stay in the school." Mr. Reid, who has strolled enrollment, experienced the largest loss, 17 students. Dennis merger, assistant to the dean, said he sight the decrease was due to the way rollout was figured. He said the total number of students enrolled in 27 in the spring of 1987 to 16,35 this spring. James said 119 students majoring in technical engineering were listed under • School of Engineering but were also majoring in School of Architecture and ban Design.
THE SCHOOL OF Social Welfare had a crease of 13 students. Edith Black, sistan dean, said the school's practicum program limited the number of students it could be admitted. The school requires all students to work in workers in junction with their class work.
The School of Pharmacy, the other school ordering a decline, had one less student s spring than last spring.
Iugh Cotton, associate dean, said lack of oratory space prevented the school from seping more students. The school usually leaved 120 to 156 applicants each year.
Enrollment increased in the Graduate tool, the College of Liberal Arts and sciences, the schools of Business, Law and Education, Law I the College of Health Sciences.
HE TOTAL enrollment at the Lawrence npus this spring increased by 244 students last spring. Enrollment in 2022 this spring exceeded last spring. Four of the schools recording increases do
not limit the number of students they accept. Exceptions are some departments of the Graduate School and the School of Law and the College of Health Sciences.
The Graduate School had the largest increase, 101 students. Dorothy Hagland, assistant to the dean of liberal arts, said the Graduate School's admissions process took some department to another, but some department because of space and staff restrictions.
The second largest gain was in the School of Fine Arts, which had an increase of 46
"We've had a very steady rise," Don Scheid, associate dean, said. "We haven't experienced any drastic rises or fails. I think enrollment is leveling off."
THE SCHOOL OF Business had the next highest increase, 36 students, and the School
Enrollment for Schools Spring 1978 1979
Graduate 5,104 5,206
Liberal Arts 9,114 9,132
Architecture 404 404
Business 918 954
Education 1,460 1,291
Engineering 1,328 1,301
Artistry 1,476 1,477
Journalism 612 615
Law 454 473
Pharmacy 840 845
Social Welfare 496 483
Health Sciences 1,505 1,506
of Engineering followed with an increase of 33 students.
David Kraft, dean of engineering, attributed the growth of the school to a strong job market and an increase in enrollment by women and minorities.
Although the School of Law enrollment increased by 19, Martin Dickinson, dear of the school, said he expected the school's enrollment to remain fairly stable.
This year, the school accepted 190 students out of 650 who applied.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which had an increase of 18 students, has had slight increases during the past few years, according to Bob Adams, associate
Enrollment in the School of Journalism, which had an increase of three students, has also had only slight increases in the past few years. Lee Young, acting associate dean,
The College of Health Sciences had an increase, but a small one. It had one more college.
8
Tuesday, March 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Morale...
From page one
the University like a business. They want to the Legislature "look how many eggs we have."
"THERE IS A general feeling of being in a corporate system where things are manufactured and produced, rather than created."
Wright said the administration had instilled a corporate atmosphere in the faculty through continual evaluations and competition for benefits.
"The dehumization of people by audits and evaluations fits a business and commercial world rather than a university," he said.
"We have an administration concerned more with economic efficiency rather than academic excellence," Leban said. "That is why we are running a supermarket than a university."
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies, supports Wright's research.
T. P. SRINIVASAN, professor of mathematics and a member of FExa, said that evaluations of faculty by students, the most important, had had the worst effect on Fexa morale.
"The faculty are made to evaluate each other constantly," Srinivasan said. "They don't see evaluation leading to anything except to create more friction."
Ari Knapper, professor of business and a member of FacEx, said he thought another negative aspect of the evaluations was that the members were prevented from creative work.
"Because student evaluations are used in tenure evaluation, the instructor has to teach to the masses so that he doesn't get rated too low," Knapper said. "Faculty members have to be careful not to offend too many students."
LEBAN SAID the evaluations—combined with the bad economics situation—had resulted in an ugly trend. The application and evaluation process for merit salary
increases awarded by the departments had turned into backstabbing sessions, he said, where faculty tried to out-justify each other for the wage increases.
Wright also said that the almost constant demand for documentation of ability through evaluations had made the faculty almost paranoid about demonstrating their skills.
"Every spring the members of the departments compete for the merit salary money," Leban said. "This is one of the most important elements of morale and cooperative element."
Leban said many faculty members would not apply for the raises because they did not want to be part of it.
"YOU HAVE ALMOST constant feedback asking are you good enough." Wright said. "Faculty members, especially those looking for feedback, can help to turn out the product demanded of them.
"In a corporate structure this may be legitimate, but not in a University."
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he agreed that there were increasing bureaucratic controls over the University's faculty, but he said there was little he could
"There are an increasing amount of federal and state regulations that force the University to engage in monitoringivities and procedures." Dokes said.
"THEY SEEM to be inevitable, by gotten to the point where the institu higher education no longer control th houses." Dykes said.
Dykes then he spends one-third of working on business involving gove regulations. More rules seem to be each day, he said.
"Faculty are legitimately concer the growing bureaucracy, but a lo faculty don't realize that it's not from us," he said.
Dykes said he knew that educat been hurt by the growing bureaucr that the only thing that could be done
TOPEKA-Funding for women's athletics and libraries could be restored to the KU budget if the recommendations of a Kansas Department of Means subcommittee are approved today.
Approval of funding could aid KU budge
In addition, the three-member subcommittee has made a recommendation to sell $277,500 from an allocation for Marvin Hall to renovate Lindley Hall.
Under Gov. John Carlin's budget recommendations, funding for neither women's athletics nor a library security system were given. The subcommittee is scheduled to make its entire presentation to the entire committee today.
Yesterday, subcommittee members met with Marton Rein, director of legislative research, to refine their recommendations on the KU budget.
Among the subcommittee's recommendations were the restoration to the budget $25 million for miscellaneous expenses for the library and $10,000 for the library security system.
IN HIS INITIAL budget proposal, the
allocated for the renovation of Maryn Hall,
was
However, subcommittee members broke that figure down, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $277,500 for the renovation of Lindley.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden
City, subcommittee chairman, s favored splitting the money in orde both construction projects off the next year.
"We're going to have to finish buildings sooner or later anyway, longer we put off starting on Lind more it will cost in the long run." he
Heinemann said the funds to fin renovation of both buildings she allocated by the Legislature next would take about $1,550,000 to finish Hall and about $1,650,000 to finish he said.
Despite the high cost of renovation is about $50 a square foot, he said rewould still be cheaper than building building.
Because of the value of the book KU libraries, subcommittee memb that restoration of funding for a security system would pay for itself.
"The book detection system is very important because of all the moving thiefs. The book detection system, Heinemann said. "Behindes, the radio book thefts will make the system more effective."
The $16,660 that would be rest women's athletics is less than half of request by KU. Subcommittee me said the money would be used for athletic events and for an athletic room.
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Faculty members said they agreed that over-regulation harmed the University but they offered their own solutions to the faculty morale problem.
Srinivasaan and Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction and chairman of FacEx, said that more faculty involvement in administrative functions was needed.
"Over-regulation threatens the University's existence." Dykes said.
Open Evenings
try to prevent more regulations from appearing on the books.
Nermock, who grew up in Chicago and studied jewelry design in Denmark, said he always had an interest in electronics, physics and metallurgy. He said the work he was doing would be much more difficult away from a university campus.
new metal, titanium, which can be changed to any color. He said he also had hopes of making jewelry that could emit sounds and light, a technology activated by light, temperature and movement.
Leban said, "You have to think of the academic mission first. We need an administration that can provide academic leadership."
From page one
"MANY FACULTY members want more involvement in making the budget," Swartz said. "Having confidence in the budget allocations would boost morale."
"It's not the day any longer where a university president can go around patting people on the back," Heller said. "The role of the administrator today is to acquire resources."
But Helder said it no longer was possible for the administrative bend of a large corporation to be used.
Athletics ...
men's athletic director, who was not responsible for women's athletics.
Tracy Spellman, a board member, said the effectiveness of the merger would depend on the attitudes of the administration.
Srinivasan said that the faculty needed to be assured by the administration that students would be able to
"I AUDITED SOME courses in the sciences and I hang around the engineering building and Malotl Hall a lot," he said. "The research materials are here and I think KU has really been supportive of research in the arts."
do what it says it will do
“It’s the women who are having to make the biggest changes,” she said. “And I’m afraid if the boards merge, we might lose our philosophy.”
if the two boards merged, ours athletics would lose their emphasis on academics.
Dykes said he wanted to emphasize that the board would advise the athletic director
KU artist combines electronics, jewelry
Nermock, who came to the University of Kansas in 1972 from the art institute in Cleveland, said he was in contact with English, German and West Coast designers who also were working with electronic data. He said the work was too new to be profitable.
But Nernochmck's designs, which incorporate items such as solar cells, magnetic switches, fiber optics and light diodes, may be the jewelry of the future.
"About three years ago, I started thinking about putting some electronics with jewelry," Nemchok, professor of jewelry and silversmithing, said. "I'm just working with different applications of new technologies, the artist and designer are just expanding."
The brooches, belts and rings Gary Nermock designs look more like props for the show.
By RHONDA HOLMAN
Nenchockh "bodonic jewelry," as he calls it, combines traditional metals in geometric designs with tiny flashing bulbs and pinpoints of light—all powered by a tiny battery and a sensor that activates the lights when the pieces are worn.
Staff Renorter
"It's just basic research here," he said.
There are no great book guides on how to do it with the digital library.
Nernchok said the materials he used came from campus departments and research departments in space, telephone offices and other country. He said because much of the material
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Wednesday, March 7. 1979
KANSAN
Vol. 89, No. 109
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
By TAMMY TIERNEY
KU budget items approved
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA- As expected, the Kansas House Ways and Means Commission yesterday approved the addition of $116,000 for women's athletics and a library security system to the fiscal 1880 KU budget.
Committee members also approved a transfer of $727,500 from an allocation for renovation of Marvin Hall to the University.
Unexpected impact to the budget were $80,000 to the Kansas State scholarship fund, $35,000 for the development of sandstone quarries in western Kansas and $50,000 for the Juniper Gardens Children's Project, a cooperative effort of KC Hale Kai of Child Research and the northeast of Kansas City State College of the projects had been recommended by the governor.
Under Gov. John Carlin's budget recommendations, funding was not allocated to women's athletics or the
According to the committee's recommendations, $16,600 will be restored to the budget for miscellaneous operating expenses of women's athletics and $100,000 will be restored for the security system.
THE $16,680 recommended to be allocated for women's
Also part of the governor's budget recommendations was a $1,277,500 allocation for the renovation of Marin Hall.
athletics is less than one-tenth of $287,360 requested by KU. The money would be used for travel to athletic events and sports.
However, committee members split that figure, allowing $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $500,000 for the new office.
State Rep. David Heinemann, N-Garden City, said he favored splitting the money to get both projects started this
Committee members said the funds to finish both buildings should be allocated by the Legislature next year. It would cost about $1.66 million to finish Marvin and $1.65 million to finish Linley.
DESPITE THE high cost of remodeling, which is about $1 a square foot, renovation would be cheaper than construction.
In other action, the committee also heard testimony from Hannes Zacharias, executive director of the Associated Press.
Zacharias spoke to committee members about funding issues that affect all the Kansas State of Affairs schools.
The top three funding priorities for the group. Zacharias
said, are maintaining a 9.5 percent increase in student wages for next year, increasing the Kansas Scholarship program from $750,000 to $830,000 and raising a recommended faculty salary increase from 6 to 10 percent.
ZACHARIAS SAID the governor's recommended increase in student salaries would bring improvement in compliance with federal regulations.
Both the scholarship and faculty salary funding are needed, he said, to keep teachers and students at Kansas
"Faculty and students should not be enticed out of the state." he said.
ASK's other funding priorities, Zacharias said, are an increase in the fee waivers for graduate students from 60 to 100 percent, full reimbursement to universities for student union rentals, allocation of money for the removal of buildings from classrooms and use of the formula funding budget and project percent of the salaries of Regents staff members from 2 to 10 percent.
Union contract halts snack sales
OF THOSE REQUESTS, Zacharias said, the graduate fee waiver, improvements to make buildings accessible to the handicapped and Regents salary increases are most important.
Bv JULIA GOPLERUD
Staff Reporter
A McColum Hall Senate program to sell sandwiches and doughnuts to residents on Sunday nights was halted this week by the University's concessions contract with the University.
He said he used funds from the McColllum senate to buy doughnuts and sandwiches
John Prownt, chairman of the McColm senate food committee, said the program was started three weeks ago because the students were hungry on Sunday nights.
"Dinner is from 3:30 to 5:00, so everyone is starving by 8:00, and the Coke and sandwich machines are usually empty on Sunday nights," he said. "We felt it was our obligation to feed the people since nobody else seemed to care."
from Joe's Bakery, 616 W. 9th St. The food was sold to the students at cost and he reinvested the money he received the next week, he said.
"EVERY SUNDAY we've been completely sold out," he said. "What we're doing is acting as a middleman between Joe's and the dorm."
But the program came to an end when Dave Romano, director of MColumn Hall, told Prawnt the Union had exclusive rights to all concessions at the University. Prawnt was told Friday, he said, but he knew Sunday is Sunday because he had already ordered it.
Romano said he was told Friday by Fred McElhenean, director of the office of the American Chamber of Commerce.
Larry Schmidtberger, business manager
of the Union, said the Union had exclusive rights to the concessions on campus because the Union was organized to provide service and the Union does not pay for the contract, he said.
He said that if small snack bars began operating across campus, it would be hard to handle them.
FOREST JOLLY, director of vending for the Union, said concessions could be operated more effectively with an exclusive contract. He said the profit from the vending machines was deposited in the Union operating fund.
But Prowant said the McCollum senate should have the right to sell concessions.
"I don't mind KU concessions having a correct, but I want to get the exclusive right."
But Jolly said competition would raise the food prices and cause a reduction of service.
concessions has no reason to improve its products because it doesn't have a compete
"No one will vend soft drinks for 25 cents.
That's as cheap as a grocery store will get.
JOLLY SAID machines in MCollum were serviced three times a day on Sunday.
"McCollim is always serviced three times because it is a large dorm. We parmer McCollim because it is such a large room. I never use one cold food machine but it holds 130 units."
"We have 12-hour service on the machines, so they really shouldn't be emptied."
See VENDING back page
Disabled to lose bus service
Staff Renorter
By DAVID SIMPSON
Some students with disabilities will not be able to attend classes at the University of Kansas if funding for a bus for disabled persons is not continued.
The bus service, which costs $1,600 a month to provide, picks up permanently or temporarily disabled persons who have no transportation access. It transports about 15 persons a day.
The service began Jan. 17 and will continue until March 9. The program is funded by the Student Senate, Facilities Committee, and the Board of Trustees are no provisions to fund it after March 8.
Joe Van Zandt, director of Western Civilization who has a broken leg and cerebral palsy, said he would be able to go to a campus without the van.
"I COULD perform some of my duties from the hospital bed," 'Van Zandt said. "However, it would make the performance less effective if there were no way to get to campus."
"I HAVE a van but I don't have anybody on the road. I need to go to class. Wray said, "I need a van because I'm in graduate school and that makes it very difficult to find someone who knows me."
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said he did not know whether the bus system would get more funding.
a wheelchair, said she was placing ads in the newspaper to find someone to drive her to campus if the service was stopped after March 9.
Bissing, who is president of Students Concerned with Disabilities, said many students, especially those with temporary disabilities, might drop out of school if there were no means provided for them to get to class.
"I can find a way to get to class if I want, but it takes more time and energy," Bissing said. "However, there are a lot of things that you don't know, couldn't make it to class without the van."
Tom Bissing, another student who rides the bus because he uses a wheelchair, said that he could make it to class in warmer weather. For the winter service was almost a necessity.
See BUS back page
DEWEY ALIREA, associate director of Facilities Operations, said he thought the new building was in need of a bridge.
"The original idea was to provide basic transportation for the disabled during the worst winter months." he said.
"This type of program can be expensive and we don't want to create false impressions about continued service unless permanent funding can be arranged." he
Ambler said there was interest in extending the service but the extension depended on finding funding sources.
Dana Wray, a graduate student in social welfare who rides the bus because she uses
CARRERADE 2014
Making his last stop of the day, Floyd Craig assists Dana
Helping hand
Wray, Lawrence graduate student, in the bus for person with disabilities. Craig is the service's only full-time driver.
Driver has made bus for handicapped run
A light blue van pulls up onto the sidewalk in front of Wessex Hall. The side door of the van opens and a ramp, for the wheelchairs, is lowered to the ground.
A man in a wheelchair approaches and the driver helps him onto the ramp and into the van.
The scene has been a familiar one this winter at the University of Kansas. The driver of the van is Floyd Craig, a student at the university, who passengers are students with disabilities.
Staff Reporter
By DAVID SIMPSON
Without the transportation service,
some of these students might not have
enough transportation.
THIS IS THE first time KU has offered a transportation service for permanently or occasionally residents of the area.
program is funded by the Student Senate, Facilities Operations and the administration. However, the program will not unless units are obtained to continue it.
Craig said his previous experience with disabled persons contributed to his success. His mother and wife are both disabled. Also he worked with handicapped persons on his housekeeping department job at KU from 1972 to 1979.
Because the service is new, the driver of the van has had a large part in making the program a success.
Craig has been driving the bus since the beginning of the semester. For his work, Craig has received letters of praise from faculty members. Mr. Oroke, director of Facilities Operations,
"I WAS interested in the job because I liked to drive and I'm used to being around
people with physical disabilities," Craig said. "It's not any fun for them and I know what the pain is if not being able to do the things they like to do."
Robert Turvey, Assistant Director of the Student Assistance Center, said Craig's background had contributed to the success of the program.
"Craig had the empathy and understandment needed to get along with the students."
"I try to get the van there early so that if it's raining or the snowing the driver can't see it."
Craig said he tried to have the bus at the riders' pickup points at least five minutes.
JOE VAN ZANDT, assistant director of Western Civilization and a bus driver, said Campus Parking is free.
The van's first priority is to make sure
the students get on毯 on time, "Van Zandt, who is in a wheelchair, said, "Crigl is especially early and I also try to be early. I know I need the seatbelt he must be
Dana Wray, a graduate student in social welfare who uses a wheelchair, said she had never been late to class when she had hid the van.
Wray said Craig went out of his way to help her get to class.
"I'm the most seriously disabled person who rides the van," Wray said. "Craig has to put me on the van and I'm very dependent on the driver. Most people are familiar with quadruplets or the two-bedroom apartment, but Floyd knows exactly what to do."
"IN THE nursing home he has to do everything for me. My room is locked so he
See FLOYD back page
4 KU schools losing in battle for students
Staff Renorter
By BILL RIGGINS
Although most schools within the University of Kansas had slight enrollment increases compared with a year ago, four schools had decreases, figures released last week by the office of admissions and records indicate.
Three of the four schools have limits or the number of students they accept. The four schools with decreasing enrollments are College Education, Pharmacy and Social Welfare.
The School of Education, the only school without an enrollment limit that recorded a decrease, had the most severe decrease. The school has 169 lower students than a year ago.
THE ENROLLMENT decrease reflects the wide public given to the lack of jobs in education, Dale Scannell, dean of education, said yesterday.
"We make sure we talk to all students who come into the school and inform them of the employment limitations," he said. "We speak to parents and discuss whether or not to stay in the school."
The School of Architecture, which has controlled enrollment, experienced the second largest loss, 17 students. Dennis Dunn, a professor at Stanford University thought the decrease was due to the way enrolment was figured. He said the total student hours in the school had risen from 6,000 in 2008 to 9,000 in 2014.
Domen said 119 students majoring in architectural engineering were listed under the School of Engineering but were also listed under the School of Architecture and Urban Design.
THE SCHOOL OF Social Welfare had a decrease of 13 students. Edith Black, assistant dean, said the school's practicum program limited the number of students that could participate and who requires that students work as social workers in conjunction with their class work.
The School of Pharmacy, the other school recording a decline had one less student with the disease.
THE TOTAL enrollment at the Lawrence campus this spring increased by 244 students over last spring. Enrollment is 22,228 this spring and was 21,948 last spring.
Enrollment increased in the Graduate School, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the schools of Business, Law and Engineering, the one being the Law, and the College of Health Sciences.
cept. Exceptions are some departments of the Graduate School and the School of Law and the College of Health Sciences.
Hugh Cotton, associate dean, said lack of laboratory space prevented the school from accepting more students. The school usually receives 128 to 156 applicants each year.
Most of the schools recording increases do
The Graduate School had the largest increase, 101 students. Dorothy Haglund, assistant to the dean of liberal arts, said the Graduate School's admissions process was not as efficient as another, but some departments had to limit admissions because of space and staff restrictions.
The second largest gain was in the School of Fine Arts, which had an increase of 46 percent.
"We've had a very steady rise," Sheet, associate dean, said. "We haven't experienced any drastic rises or fails. I think enrollment is leveling off."
THE SCHOOL OF Business had the next highest increase, 36 students, and the School
Enrollment for Schools 1978 Spring 1979
Graduate 5,104 5,104 5,205
Liberal Arts 9,114 9,114 9,322
Architecture 404 404 954
Institute 918 918 954
Education 1,460 1,460 1,291
Engineering 1,528 1,528 1,691
Health Sciences 1,470 1,470
Journalism 612 612 615
Law 454 454 473
Medium 346 346 379
Social Welfare 496 496 483
Health Sciences 1,305 1,305 1,506
of Engineering followed with an increase of 33 students.
David Kraft, dean of engineering, attributed the growth of the school to a strong job market and an increase in enrollment by women and minorities.
Although the School of Law enrollment increased by 19, Martin Dickinson, dear of the school, said he expected the school's enrollment to remain fairly stable.
This year, the school accepted 190 students out of 650 who applied.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which had an increase of 18 students, has had slight increases during the past few years, according to Bob Adams, associate
Enrolment in the School of Journalism, which had an increase of three students, has also had only slight increases in the past few years, Lee Young, acting associate dean,
The College of Health Sciences had an increase, but a small one. It had one more researcher.
2
Wednesdav. March 7. 1979
University Daily Kansan
VERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Rare species lose protection
WASHINGTON—The Fish and Wildlife Service yesterday withdrew federal protection from hundreds of rare species and their habitats.
The service had proposed adding 1,850 species to the endangered list and those plants and animals were provided at least partial protection while their survival was maintained.
But last year Congress passed a law forcing the wildlife service to withdraw protections for most of those species while it prepared an economic impact statement for each—a breakdown of economic projects or needs an animal or plant and its habitat might intrigue on.
An official of the wildlife service said the economic review and public hearings required by the amendments would take a year or more to complete.
"Many species may be extinct before we complete the necessary work," a government biologist said.
But a Supreme Court ruling protecting the two-inch slatter that was in the path of the $11 million Tellico Dam resulted in a congressional backlash.
The service previously considered only biological data before giving a new species and its habitat protection from any action that would destroy it.
Peace talks await withdrawal
BANGKOK, Thailand—Vietnam said yesterday that peace talks with China may begin between the vice foreign ministers of the two countries after all.
Vietnam also challenged China's announcement Monday that it had begun a withdrawal of troops. However, China's main ally, the Soviet Union, applauded its decision.
The Vietnamese foreign ministry said Peking made the withdrawal announcement because of Vietnam's military strength, the Soviet Union's support and its willingness to accept U.S. forces.
Soviet President Leonid Bzhnehv appealed to have accepted the Chinese claim of withdrawal.
"Peking now declares that the Chinese troops that invaded the Socialist Republic of Vietnam are beginning to withdraw to within the boundaries of their country," Brenzhein said. "Such a decision could be assessed as a sign of soberine in of the Chinese leaders, if carried out scrupulously."
Brezhnev's statement was dispatched by the official Soviet news agency, Tass. The Tass report stressed that Russia not be satisfied until all the countries should withdraw.
Carter to fight hospital lobbyists
WASHINGTON - President Carter yesterday pledged to lead the fight against hospital lobbyists and to win passage of a hospital cost control bill that would
HWE Secretary Joseph A. Califan Jr., who outlined Carter's plan, said that during five years, an average family of four could save $133 in insurance premiums, $73 in income taxes and $229 in Social Security payroll taxes through passage of the legislation.
The bill's national voluntary hospital fee limit for this year would hold fee increases to 9.7 percent, a cost that could be relaxed if costs to the healthcare-
Carter said the bill is similar to a measure that passed the Senate in the close home of Congress last fall, but failed in the House.
"I will lead the fight on behalf of the American people," Carter said.
Poll says majority favor draft
NEW YORK—Concerned about how well the volunteer army is working, Americans narrowly favor bringing back the draft for the armed forces, an
The poll, taken Feb. 5-6, found that 49 percent of the public supported reintroduction of the draft. Forty-three percent opposed reintroduction and 8 percent did not.
Support for a new Selective Service system arises from a perception that relying on volunteers for the Army, Navy and Air Force is not working, the poll indicates.
Critics say that the volunteer system is unable to provide enough recruits for the armed forces and that the quality of recruits who do sign up is low.
Bill for license photos passes
TOPEKA-All Kansas driver's licenses must bear a color picture of the driver, at a cost to the driver of an additional 50 cents, under a bill passed on July 13.
About 60 percent of the state's drivers already voluntarily pay extra to have their color photographs on their driver's licenses, but the Senate was sharply divided on whether the state should order the rest of its drivers to have their pictures on their licenses.
Proponents of making color photographs mandatory on licenses argued in debate Monday that the photographs could be beneficial to law enforcement, particularly on such issues as bad check writing, purchasing of liquor and identifying suspects.
Opponents said having pictures on driver's licenses was of questionable value, and not of enough value to justify the 50-cent charge.
The vote for the bill was 22-18.
Midwest jobless rate lowest
WASHINGTON — The Midwest had the lowest unemployment rate in the United States last year, and unemployment in the Northeast continued to pace up.
State and regional figures released by the department's Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that the Midwest averaged a 5.3 percent jobless rate in 1978.
Unemployment in the Northeast declined from 1977, but was the highest of the four regions. The jobless rate in the Northeast was 6.9 percent in 1978 and 8.4
Kansas and South Dakota had the second lowest unemployment rate, with 0.1 percent each. Nebraska had the lowest unemployment in the nation, with 2.9 percent, and Alaska had the highest rate, 11.2 percent, a government spokesman said.
800 Moslems killed in Chad
NDTJAMENA, Chad - Rioting gangs murdered more than 800 Moslems over the weekend in one of Africa's bloodiest triracial massacres in recent years, offence-free in a city that is notorious for violent protests.
The killings were in and around Chad's third-largest city, Moundou, 300 miles south of the capital, N'Djamaena.
Chad officials said Moundou's Moslem population was practically destroyed and the few survivors fled toward the capital. No white expatriates were
Diplomatic sources said gangs of black youths went through Moundou and neighboring settlements in a three-day rampage, murdering any Moslem they found.
Craft records Jupiter's moon
Chad officials said the army could not stop the killings because it was hopelessly outnumbered by the rioters.
PASEDAE, Calif. — Voyager 1 captured its cameras yesterday to Callisto, ripped and cratered most of Jupiter, a body so cold that scientists "snow" life there.
The spacecraft, already a million miles past Jupiter, soared close to Callisto, a moon larger than the planet Mercury.
Voyager 1 passed Callisto as it swung out into space for a 20-month journey to Saturn. It has sent to Earth the most detailed pictures ever taken of Jupiter.
Trailing Voyager 1 is Voyager 2, which will arrive at Jupiter in July. Both ships were launched in 1977 for the journey to Jupiter, 400 million miles away.
Weather
It will be partly cloudy today with a high in the mid 50s. The low tonight will be in the mid 50s. Rain or snow is predicted for the weekend.
Israel accepts compromises
JERUSALEM (AP) - Israel agreed to three compromises proposed by President Carter that may break the barriers preventance treaty, peace treaty, Israeli sources and vested herd.
But the sources said that other problems remained unsettled and that Egypt's response to the U.S. proposals would be pivotal to success.
A Carter Mideast trip was announced Monday after the president's talks with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. The president will arrive in Jerusalem tomorrow.
In New York, Begin said he felt euphoric about progress for peace.
Carter's proposals, which have not been revealed, are said to involve two compromises on linking the treaty to the Palestinian problem and another on softening language about whether the treaty would supersede prior defense agreements.
"THERE IS euphoria, not only in this country but in Jerusalem and Carpio and Gillespie."
In Cairo, President Anwar Sadat met with U.S. National Security Admirer Zighbari Brzozik to hear the details of Carter's promise that the reaction was not immediately known.
Israel agrees to a 12-month, non-binding target date for completing negotiations on self-rule for Palestinians living on the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.
WITHOUT DISCLOSING the precise
There is, however, no deadline for establishing autonomy, but army pledges to establish it have been long-standing.
language of all the U.S. proposals, sources outlined them as follows:
In a second point linking the treaty to the Palestinian problem, Israel agrees to language specifying that the treaty may be used as a general framework for a General Mideast peace.
A CLAUSE remains unchanged in the
NATO secretary takes war plans; defects to Communist Germany
BRUSELIS, Belgium (AP) - A NATO secretary that defended Monday to Communist East Germany has reportedly stolen the war plans of the Western Alliance.
The East German news agency ADN said yesterday that the woman was a confident woman, but not a conqueror.
The NATO spokesman would not comment on whether the woman's position with NATO was of a sensitive nature, but said of the woman's week "to assess what damage she can do."
ADN did not elaborate on the "war plans." It said they would be "released at the appropriate time," along with opinions of NATO officials.
draft saying the treaty will be carried out "without regard to action or inaction by any other party and independently of any instrument external to this treaty."
This adds a measure of 'linkage' so important to Sadat, without setting deadlines or penalties for non-compliance, the sources said.
Sadat has been condemned by other Arab states for his unilateral peace move, so he has pressed for some connection in the treaty solving the Palestinian problem.
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The NATO spokesman confirmed the identification. He said Lorenzen, a NATO employee for 11 years, worked in the Office of Council Operations and Communications, which he described as "a small office which prepares for exercise."
ADN did not specify her job or add any personal detail.
Still unresolved is Egypt's demand to delay the exchange of ambassadors until the Palestinian autonomy plan goes into effect.
THE THIRD modification deals with language in the treaty's "priority clause," which has been modified to satisfy Egypt's interests. The proposed compromise invalidate its earlier defense pacts with Arab states. The proposed compromise fails, and his sides can feel their interests are protected.
THE NATO spokesman, asking not to be identified, said: "She was not connected at
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all with the office of the secretary general, Joseph Luns."
The agency said the simulated attack would be during the Wintex-Cimes exercise in April.
ADN quoted Lorenzen as saying stepped up "war preparations" for NATO, including a planned "atomic attack against the United States" behind his decision to enter East Germany.
Israel wants the exchange to occur nine months after the treaty is signed and the first of a two-stage withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula is completed.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted $1.50 admission
Reliable news reports say the United States also agreed to give Israel a $3.5 billion grant to cover the costs of moving troops back to Israel and to guarantee oil supplies.
THE DIFFERENT COLLEGE RINGS
Now you have a choice
Men's contemporary rings
Classic
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Wednesday, March 7
SUNSET BOULEVARD
(1950)
Dr. Billy Wilder, with William Holden,
Gloria Swainman, Ench. von Strohein,
Cecil B. DeMille, Buster Keaton. The best film version of a dark and decayed Hollywood.
Thursday, March 8
Director's Showcase:
An evening of short films by six of the world's most renowned directors. The showcase includes Roman Polanak's absurdist "Two Men and a Wardrobe," Alain Resnais' holocaust document "Night and Fog," and the first film by a very young Orion Wilkes, "Hearts of Age." Other directors represented by their early films are Satyajit Ray, Martin Scorsese and Francesca Turtucci. PLUS, "The History Book, v.4."
Friday & Saturday, March 9 & 10
THE 13TH INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF ANIMATION
(1978)
Our annual festival this year includes 15 award-winning short animated films of fiction and fantasy from around the world including the Academy Award film "Sand Castle" and the Cannes Festival winner "The Fight."
Monday, March 19
Lillian Hellman: THE LITTLE FOXES
(1941)
Dr. William Wyler with Bette Davis, Herbert Marshall, Teresa Wright, Hen by Lillian Hellman, from herVIS gives one of her greatest roles as the greedy and ruthless who sacrifices every kind of status.
Say a lot about yourself without saying a word.
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3
Group opposes state bill to recognize living wills
By PATRICIA MANSON Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A bill that would require physicians to withdraw life-sustaining treatment at the request of a dying patient has drawn the fire of a new campaign by the group, which says the bill might lead to mercy killing.
The Kansas Medical Society has supported the bill, saying it would protect the health of its patients.
The bill would allow a person to sign a "living will" stating that he does not want extraordinary measures taken to prolong his life if he is dying. Two physicians would be required to certify that the patient is prepared for treatment could be withdrawn, drawn.
The bill was passed by the Kansas Senate two weeks ago. The Kansas House has not voted on it yet.
Vincent DeCoursey, executive director of the Kansas Catholic Conference, said at a Senate hearing last week that the bill could be expanded by physicians or relatives of patients.
"Legislation supposedly designed to
protect rights and ensure mercy can very quickly move from voluntary discontinuing of life to involuntary and direct taking of life," DeCoursey said.
HOWEVER, STATE Rep. Wint Winter, R-Ottawa, who sponsored the bill, said it would protect the rights of dying patients who did not want to prolong their lives.
Winter said a living will was not legally binding under present law. He said a patient's relatives could tell a physician to ignore the will.
Winter said the bill also was needed to protect physicians who followed the provisions of the living will from malpractice suits.
"The law right now is simply in the subject." Winter said.
Paul Wilson, professor of law at the University of Kansas, also said the law did not interfere with his research.
"THIS IS ONE of those areas where the law is uncertain," Wilson said yesterday. "I don't think there is a law now that either supports it or violates it." The bill would clarify the position of
the doctors by spelling out their oblations."
However, Decourse said the legislation was not needed to protect physicians.
Robert Hudson, professor of history of medicine at the University Medical Center, also said he did not know any physician prosecuted for withdrawing a dying patient from life-sustaining treat-
"In the history of Anglo-American jurisprudence, there have been no known successful prosecutions of physicians or other legal professionals," said extraordinary means," Deanourse said.
However, Hudson said, the fear of prosecution sometimes prevented physicians from following the provisions of the living will.
Hudson said he did not know of any physician who had taken a dying patient off life-support equipment solely on the basis of the living will.
"The problem is that the profession hasn't done enough with the will." Hudson said. "Physicians have been afraid to use the power they have."
Search for pass forger stopped
The KU Police Department's investigation of the making and selling of forged bus passes has been dropped, Detective Sat, Paul Schultz said yesterday.
"There's no conspiracy, no business on campus making bus passes," he said.
Two weeks ago, KU bus drivers caught nine students using fake bus passes. Steve McMurry, director of KU on Wheels, filed an incidence report with the KU Police
Department, stating that someone was making and selling fake bus passes.
McMurray said one of the students told him she bought her fake pass from someone else. He said he was disappointed that the student had not could find out who was making the passes.
handling punishment of the nine students. David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said Smith had not announced the punishment.
"I's fortunate," he said. "Nobody will talk. None of them want to be a squawler."
Schultz said the investigation was cleared from the books because the nine students who were caught with the fake passes had been turned over to the University of Kansas and the district attorney did not think the crime warranted prosecution.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
MARCH 7,1979
Carlin's method wise
In a move that is sure to draw flask from many sides, Gov. John Carlin took a bold step in his selection to be the justice to the Koussa Supreme Court.
Earlier this week, Carlin completed personal interviews with the three nominees for the high court position left vacant in December when Perry Owley of Pittsburg took a disability retirement because of a health problem.
The governor's actions are said to be unprecedented under the Kansas system of non-partisan selection of Supreme Court justices.
CURRENTLY A nonpartisan Supreme Court nominating commission, made up primarily of lawyers appointed by fellow bar association members, submits names to the governor for any appointments.
The governor then has 60 days to make the appointment from the time the names are given to him. If he fails to make a selection within that time, the chief justice of the Supreme Court makes the appointment from the nominees.
According to a Carlin aide, the
governor is close to making a decision on a new justice, but no date has been set for any announcement.
Carlin interviewed Johnson County District Court Judge Lewis C. Smith of Leawood last week and former State Sen. Harold Herd of Coldwater and Sedgwick County District Court Judge Tyler C. Smith of Wichita this week.
Carlin is said to be asking the nominees about their legal careers and their other activities. One aide said Carlin "just wanted to see them face-to-face, to know a little bit about who he was considering."
CHARGES SURELY will fly that the governor is mixing personality and politics in his selection process by having the interviews, but Carlin's aides say the governor is not discussing with the candidates anything related to their judicial philosophy.
It appears that the governor's somewhat unorthodox selection procedure is in the best interests of Kansans. Carlin, it seems, wants only to ensure that the best possible candidate gets the job. And who can argue with that.
Political mailings show poor timing
There's an old political adage which says there is no love in love, timing may not be everywhere put in place.
Last weekend, while in Kansas City, Kan.
I was reminded of the importance of timing.
The city is about have an election and,
and I checked if I checked if I had received
email mail.
Surprisingly, there was an unusually large stack of letters, much of it handwritten. The next reaction was that someone had lost or forgotten my lawrence address and was unable to contact me.
However, on closer inspection, I found that the mail was not from old friends, or the result of misplaced addresses, but was from candidates hoping to get my vote.
IN ALL, there must have been at least a dozen pieces of mail—which included pamphlets, brochures and other forms of slick public relations propaganda. Nevertheless, all of the mail carried the same theme: "Vote for me because . . ."
There was a letter from a man wanting to be mayor who said that Kansas City, Kan., was being run by a political machine—Mr. Obama. Another another letter, a candidate for the post of street commissioner plainly stated that his was first venture into politics, but added that he should be given a chance to serve the public because he was certain he could do it.
There was a letter from a man wanting to be the next finance commissioner. In his letter he criticized the present commissioner for allegedly increasing spending and raising taxes—obviously just the sort of thing voters like to hear these days.
The present finance commissioner, who is seeking re-election, sent me a nice long, slick color brochure. The brochure described his background and how he had carefully, and prudently, managed tax matters. I would like you to think what why, I should continue to put my trust in him.
AND THEN there was a letter I received from a former employer, in which he extolled the virtues of the parks commissioner, seeking re-election, and who I had never met or seen. The funny thing is that it has been a couple years since I've
Vernon Smith
100
see my old boss and it took me a little while before I could recall the face to whom the girl was.
Frankly, until last weekend, I didn't realize that I was in such demand. But it disturbs me how all of these people, particularly the incubateurs, have this peculiar sense of timing, whereby the only time they are supposed to meet with me is just before or after a pteryxation.
Candidates for office, both incumbents and newcomers to the political arena, are often heard talking about the evils of an apathetic and uncaring public who would rather stay home and watch television rather than attend a city council meeting. Yet, they fail to understand in a large part responsible for the lackadafficial feeling among the electorate.
IN THE LAST few years, with the memory of Wategate still on the minds of a group of American citizens, have taken special pains to convince voters of their high standards, and, if elected, promise to have administrations in which they would be readily accessible to the public.
Unfortunately, it is beginning to look as if the overall quality of our elected officials has not improved, particularly when it comes to keeping in touch with the people responsible for their election in the first place.
Increasingly, it seems as if the only time you hear from these officials is when they want you to vote for them or when someone or something is threatening one of their pet projects. This should not be the case, because it will mass communication options available.
There probably will be a lot of people not voting this week. If anyone wonders or even cares to know why, the timing just was not right.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(SUPB 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday by the University of Kansas Press. Subscriptions are paid at Lawrence, Kansas 600b. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, passed through the student office.
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence. KS 60645
Editor
Barry Massey
Managing Editor Dick Stelmel
Campus Manager
Associate Campus Editor Amanda Campus Editors
Graphics Editor
Special Sections Editor Melissa Moore
Maker Sports Editor Matt Sparrow
Sports Editor Laura Smith
Copy Chiefs Linda Firestone, Paula Southerland
Editor Cydrii Hughes, Barick Kenny, Caroline Weidberg
Entertainment Editor Jodi Walters
Staff Writer Merry Erat, Phil Greene, Vernon Smith, John Day
Lori Linnerberger, Dreib Riechmann, Leon Urnhul, Dan Winter
Business Manager Karen Wendertt
Retail Sales Manager Ron Alman
Retail Assistant Manager Casual Advertising Manager Katie McDunn
Assistant Marketing Manager Katy McDunn
Assistant Makeup Manager Kathleen Dahlbush Cavans
Staff Artist Pam Brigham
Teacher Photographer Teresa Studer
Sales Representative Brenda Paxton, Clindy Hall, Allen Reynolds, Joan Smout
General Manager Advertising Advice
Rick Musser Chuck Chowins
For years lawyers were denied the right to hire their piece specialists and any other information.
More advertising would help lawyers
For years an uninformed public had to rely on the recommendations of friends and relatives when looking for an attorney who could best serve their needs. And that often meant having a higher legal fee because they could not even compare prices when looking for a lawyer.
And a recent American Bar Foundation study showed that some 28 percent of bartenders are more knowledgeable.
The United States Supreme Court guaranteed the First Amendment rights of lawyers in a landmark decision in 1977. Many of these lawyers are discovering something that a small number of them had argued for years: Advertising can help, not hurt, the business.
ALTHOUGH THE American Bar Association lobbed for years against lawyer advertising, a recent report by the National Bar Journal says fears that lawyers had about advertising.
The ABA Commission on Advertising has concluded that cheaper, easier-to-find and more accessible forms of lawyer advertising. Although there had been a fear that there would be hustling on the basis of false promises, the commission has said that such fears are not well sup-
Since the Supreme Court ruling, most of
Mary
Ernst
the radio, television and print advertising has been discreet, even conservative. It is to inform people of the fees they can expect to pay for uncomplicated cases, where to find a lawyer and what speciality, if any, is offered by a particular lawyer.
ROGER P. BROSNAHAN, the commission's chairman, has said, "We just don't see the broad abuse people might come forth."
Broshamman the commission not only found that the prevailing rate has been lower than the average prices, but it also found no indication that the quality of service was any lower when the commission found.
Sturart Baron, Los Angeles lawyer, said,
"What people need is accessibility, an attorney to talk to, the ability to pick up the phone and call somebody."
Baron and his partner, Blair Malven, have done just that. Last spring, they opened the Law Store in a suburban Los Angeles apartment complex where they pay $9.95 to pick up a store telephone and
consult with one of eight part-time attorneys in the West Los Angeles office of Group Research.
OR A CUSTOMER can buy additional services for certain non-complicated legal services: $10 to write a routine letter or to make simple phone calls; $30 for simple wills; $75 for change of name; $125 for divorced and divorces and $75 for step-parent adoptions.
hard for tight regulations of advertising by lawyers. But the ABA advertising commission has found that many state courts have imposed "a great deal of unnecessary over-restrictions," and that seems to imply that many of the old fears still exist.
Baron said the Law Store customers received high quality individual advice on how to manage their business.
"For the most part," he said, "we handle cases that would never get to an attorney."
The legal profession—much like the medical profession—has been so concerned with keeping itself pure from "demeaning" practices that it has not served the public as well as it could have and should have. It is important, then, that this be the time to set
Even after evidence was presented by the ABA itself, many lawyers still say that advertising somehow makes the profession "impuire."
IF IMPURE means cheaper legal fees, easier-to-reliable legal services and a public that is more knowledgeable about law, perhaps, lawyers advertising is impure.
Another Los Angeles bar official said, the law professors has too long tried to be in touch with the public. He has done it no good in the eyes of the public. That mystique is a lot of crap, and it is time to change.
However, those are positive assets of layer advertising, not indications that the platform is performing well.
However, lawyers still seem intimidated by their ancient mores, which have continually rejected lawyer advertising or easily-accessible services because they were thought to be demeaning to such a proud and noble profession. Only 3 percent of lawyers in States have started advertising, and the law Store is a true one-of-a-kind operation.
BROSAHAN AND others say they expect more to begin advertising after the fifties, when pressure against it fades. And Jack Quinn, former president of the Los Angeles County Bar Association sees the idea of "law abolition" as inevitable, inevitably he says.
Getting rid of the peer pressure, however,
will not be easy. Many lawyers are working
Indeed, lawyers should, in the interests of their clients and of themselves, open their eyes to the fact that advertising can help their profession and the公理 it serves.
THE GUILD AND NEWS LEADER. © THE GUIDE & WORKS DEPARTMENT
MAGNEU
SCHLESINGER'S
$1/GAL.
GLOBCO
$1/GAL.
74.9/GAL.
Carlin's spending lid veto explained
To the editor:
After reading your recent editorial on the state spending lid, I can only conclude the Kansan does not fully understand the lid or its ramifications.
When Gov. John Carlin called the bill "unworkable," he listed specific objections. These were not just differences in philosophy. The Democrats in the Kansas State House must most part, with Carlin's objections at some level, vet. Here are some of the main problems:
First, the 8 percent ending balance Carlin is disturbed about is not a surplus. It is money set aside for operational expenses. It costs Carlin $10,000 for use, it does not lie idle. That is the rub.
Carmin feels that any large emergency, such as a tornado, could drain the treasuries of a state government.
What does rank high is property relief, Property tax is the most regressive tax in Kansas. The vested spendingld would have been less expensive than while I recognize a journalism student does not feel strongly about property taxes, many homeowners feel differently. The spendingld does nothing to help property relief. That is another reason for the veto.
Also, the Kansan asserts Carlin's lid will be 10 or 12 percent, and the vetoed lid was 7 percent. Actually, the reverse is closer to the truth.
that if happens, either the emergency is a result with or money is taken from some other person, or that ambulance service was the service that suffered from a low balance. That is not a result.
Next, how does the Kansas know that the people of this state support the spending lid? In truth, few legislators have heard complaints about state spending. Kansas always has been fiscally conservative, and is likely to remain so.
There were several gaping loopholes in the lid. Capital improvements, for instance.
For taxes against services rendered, Kansas is one of the most efficient states. The problems of California and New York do not exist here. I would argue that a spending lid does not rank high in voter priorities.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
were not included. The very day the Senate passed the lid, they recommended a new $10 million museum, outside the limit. What kind of lid is this? The governor wants to bring the loopholes on the 7 percent limit to enforce the concern of a lid.
While it is admirable that the Kansan feels sacrifice is needed, it is naive if it thinks social services will get priority. It may be true that many employees removed (some will be), but nursing homes, mental hospitals and the like will suffer when employees cannot keep pace with inflation. How long can adults with a job that runs far behind the cost of living?
The spending lid sent to Carlin was a farce, and the Republican party knows it. They had no intentions of keeping spending the lid. That is why the loopholes existed.
The governor vetoed the lid and the Democrats in the house sustained the veto because they think Kansas should expect to pay the tax dollars their tax dollars, not legislative gimmicks.
It is fortunate for the state that Carlin did kill the lid. His proposals will correct the flaws and create a true spending lid that does not burden the taxaver.
Furthermore, I am sure most legislators realize a lid could be a blessing to state government. That is why the lid was vetosed. It would have been a curse instead.
Staff assistant to the House Minority Leader
Wilcox Collection is serious assemblage
To the editor:
I would like to correct two errors and comment upon the article concerning the Wilcox Collection that appeared in the Feb. 15 issue of the Kansan.
As a minor point I would like to note that my first name is Laird and not Larry, as stated in the paper. Also, the proper name of my collection of "extremist" materials is
The Wilcox Collection of Contemporary Political Movements.
In addition to the more spectacular and outrageous items in the collection noted by your reporter, there are enormous amounts of research on the movements of these are manuscripts, reports of numerous studies on political movements, government activities, correspondence and oral history interview.
The Wilcox Collection is a serious endeavor and not an accumulation of crackpot memorabilia. This, in part, accounts for the $500,000 value placed on the collection by Kansas Collection head George Griffin last year.
Over the years several scholars and researchers have come from various parts of the country to use the collection and it is recognized as a unique and valuable research source.
The backlog of uncatalogued material in the Wilcox Collection is due partly to a lack of library staff, other priorities and difficulties posed by the unusual nature of some of the materials in the collection. My understanding is that progress will be made in this direction soon and that material in the collection much more accessible than it is now.
Laird Wiicox
Kansas City, Mo.
STATE U.
BY T. M. ASLA
REGARDING ENDOWMENTS
INVESTMENTS IN WHITE
SOUTH AFRICA... IT IS A
PARADOXICAL MATTER.
ON ONE HAND, WE WISH TO
INSTALL IN YOU STUDENTS
THE PRINCIPLES OF
LIBERTY, EQUALITY AND
FRATERNITY!
HOWEVER, WE HAVE TO
MAKE... CERTAIN
COMPROMISES... TO
MAKE THE MONEY TO
KEEP THE DOORS OPEN!
SO, JUST DO AS
WE SAY, DON'T DO
WHAT WE DO!
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
5
'Unsafe' studios, no funding plague jewelry, silversmithing department
By RHONDA HOLMAN
Members of the department of jewelry and silvermithing say they are plagued by unsafe studios and officials say they are exploited, not for profit, until 1981 or *92* because of a lack of funds.
BY RHONDA HOLMAN
Staff Renorter
The faculty and students in the department say the current studios in Broadcasting Hall have gas leaks, acid fumes and worn-out equipment.
Jewelry and silversmithing is the only department in the School of Fine Arts that has not moved into either the Visual Arts Building or renovated Fowler Shops, Broadcasting Hall is next to the Visual Arts Building.
Valenne said, "There is an exhaust problem here with fumes from the metals and the glass. We had to move the department moved in two years ago that we would move this spring. Now they're doing it."
Jon Harvey, assistant professor of design,
and Gary Nemchock and Olli Valaname,
associate professors of design, said conditions in the studios threatened the health of persons working there and the quality of their work.
ROSEMARY MCKINNEY, Olathe senior
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
WEDNESDAY EVENING
SERIES
Museum of Natural History
WHALE-WATCHING
OFF
BAJA CALIFORNIA
MAR. 7 $1.50 7:30 P.M.
and president of Alba Rho Gamma, the jewelry and silversmithing club, said the department's conditions presented a health problem.
"There are more students than places to work. We have quite a few gas leaks during the year and our equipment is antiquated." McKinney said. "We work a lot with gas flames with no real safety features. There is nothing we can do, really help you if not acid in your eyes."
But James Moeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said he was unaware of any complaints.
"There is no safety problem as far as I know," he said. "And there's no way to project a moving date until we get additional funding."
IN 1975, the date for moving all the departments into the renovated Fowler Shops was postponed indefinitely because the lowest bid for the new Visual Arts
Building project was $1 million above available funds, according to Peter Thompson, associate dean of Fine Arts. The Fowler Shops renovation plan was then redesigned and each department was given a priority to move. Those departments that were closest to Fowler Shops and that had facilities were given the lowest priority.
HOWEVER, NEMCHOCK said that most of the furniture and equipment for the new studies in Powder Wash had already been used and was just waiting for installation.
Thompson said the jewelry and silver-smithing move was postponed the longest because the new studios would have been particularly expensive. He said the existing facilities were only a short distance from the center of the city, considered adequate by the administration.
"The construction is completed and the
furniture is just sitting there." Nemchock said. "We're just waiting for the electrical wiring, the ventilation system, the plumbing and safety features to be completed."
Thompson said an estimated $100,000 to fund moving the jewelry and silversmith department was included in the budget now that Thompson had been reimbursed. However, Thompson said he was not optimistic the department would be able to move after July 1, when funds would be available.
Havner said that the studios being used in Broadcasting Hall needed basic equipment such as lights, benches and chairs but that all hands were been spent on the new building.
"We have a budget that helps us to continue but not to progress," said Hayner. "And the budget items we have now are for the new studios, not the ones we're using."
A
Independent Coin-up
NOW OPEN
2105 West 26th Street
K
Lawrence's Newest Self-Service Laundromat, Complete With Dry Cleaning Drop-Off. Attendant on Duty.
Use this Grand Opening Coupon. For One FREE WASH.
One per customer
Midwestern Music and Art Camp
ANNOUNCES
MIDWESTERN
positions for RESIDENT ASSISTANTS
---
for the summer of 1979.
Room, board and stipend are furnished for the University Summer Session.
MISTER GUY of LAWRENCE
ANNOUNCES
PRE-SEASON
KNIT SHIRT SALE!!!
short-sleeved knit shirts!!
Just in time for spring break.
polo shirts in solids, stripes
tennis collared shirts values to 32.50
NOW 20% off
solid shirts from
three manufacturers values to 22.50
NOW 20% off
shirts in thirty
different stripes values to 25.00
NOW 20% off
store, hours:
mon.-wed. 10-6
thurs. & fri. 10-9
sat. 10-6
sun. 1-5
920 massachusetts
interested persons may apply at 214 Murphy Hall before March 9, 1979
MISTER
GUY
Use Kansan Classified
When the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry polled family therapists across the country in 1973, the therapists developed a model of professional in developing their professional ATL.
Satir, who is described by Human Behavior magazine as "everybody's family therapist," in the author of several best selling books on behavioral sciences, including "Conjunct Family Therapy" and "Self-Esteem Making" (1972) and "Self-Esteem."
Satir now carries on training in what she calls human communication and human systems, which include large commercial and governmental systems in 11 countries.
Family therapist to lead social work conference
544 W. 23rd Open 4:00 pm daily 841-6181
Virginia Satir, a family therapist, will be the speaker for this year's Social Work Day at the University of Kansas.
We will be here on Friday of January.
She will begin her all-day presentation at 9:20 a.m. Friday in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
After being welcomed to the campus by Chancellor A. Dykes, Sadir will speak on relationships between physical and mental health between people and their environment.
Satir has been the director of the residential program at the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, Calif. She was recently awarded the gold medal for "outstanding and consistent service to mankind" by the University of Chicago.
Pizza Peddler Open for Lunch 11:00 to 2:00
Pizza Peddler
Ian McCarthy
Wed., March 7, 8:00 p.m.
with TED ANDERSON
$5.50 day of show
TONIGHT!
JOHN HARTFORD
"GATEMOUTH" BROWN
with special guests Saturday, March 10 8:00 p.m.
"HELLUVA SHOW"!!!
Featuring Country, Cajun, Rhythm & Blues, Jazz, and old time Rock & Roll.
Has appeared on PBS T.V., Newport,
New Orleans, Montreal, Montrax, Barcelona.
Last five Willie Nelson 4th of July Picnics,
and Jazz Festivals.
Tickets '4.00 advance 5.00 day of show
The Lawrence Opera House and, 7th Spirit Club
Jimmy Carter
Coming March 21 . . .
NORMAN BLAKE
and
THE NEW GRASS REVIVAL
All tickets available at Better Days and 7th Spirit Club.
6
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
University Daily Kausan
WOW! IT'S WOLFE'S FABULOUS 21st ANNUAL DOG SALE!
OUR DOORS OPEN AT 8:00 A.M. SHARP MARCH 2nd & 3rd. HUGE SAVINGS ON NEW & USED CAMERAS, ACCESSORIES, DEMONSTRATORS TRADE-INS, and DISCONTINUED ITEMS. BRING CASH, MASTER CHARGE, or BANKAMERICARD. BUT HURRY TO WOLFE'S CAMERA SHOP FOR THE MOST DYNAMIC SALE EVER.
PUPPY DOGS
FRESH TRAIN
168
35mm SLR CAMERAS
Olson K12.4 W
Monteiro R12.8 R
Monteiro MC1000R I.7
Monteiro MC1000R II.7
Monteiro M1500 Pro IVA
Toshiba X23 F9
Bizach Honda B12.8 (i) Honda
Virtor Z200 II.8
Virtor ZC12.1 C12.1
Virtor ZC12.3 C12.3
Virtor SCA 12
Nikon T1A 12 (wired)
Nikon T1A 12 (wireless)
Nikon T1A (Use)
Nikon T1A (Use)
Nikon T1A (Use)
Panasonic T1A 12
ELECTRONIC FLASH
Powerful 4D guide number unit by Hami
max. Hot Shoe mount and conformer
Regulator $34.99
SALE **1' 3''
LIFE'S
IN PRO
REG. SALE
17.75 $24.99
30.75 $39.99
40.75 $49.99
40.75 $49.99
40.75 $49.99
40.75 $49.99
40.75 $49.99
40.75 $49.99
40.75 $49.99
METERS
Diameter of Nail
18mm, bag calibre
19mm, 50mm, 55mm
67mm, server 80mm, are
$5.00 to $599
LENSES FOR
FUJICA CAMERAS
LENSES FOR CANON
LENSES
FOR
NIKON
BIG. SALE!
21mm 13.8 Bushel Fl. 204.00 49.99
20mm 12.5 Wide Fl. 204.00 49.99
20mm 12.5 Wide Fl. 204.00 49.99
17mm 12.5 Wide Fl. 171.00 70.99
15mm 12.5 Macro Lance Runnel 179.00 80.99
10mm 12.5 Macro Lance Runnel 179.00 80.99
90 mm 12.5 Sliver Fl. 199.00 80.99
72 mm 12.5 Sliver Fl. 199.00 80.99
10mm 12.5 Cone Fl. (Digested) 199.00 80.99
10mm 12.5 Cone Fl. (Digested) 199.00 80.99
90 mm 12.5 Sliver Fl. 199.00 80.99
10mm 12.5 Sliver Fl. 199.00 80.99
EXPENSES FOR OLYMPUS
BELLOWS
Sheet sheet available for and interacting
music student. Available for Canon, Musi-
cle, Monstr. Nikon, Olympus, Canon, AE
x4, Pentax.
www.bellows.com
BIG SALE
28mm 1.78 Aroma
30mm 1.78 Aroma Poly
35mm 1.78 Aroma Poly
35 mm 1.78 Aroma Poly
90 mm 2.25 Aroma
90 mm 2.25 Aroma
45 mm 1.78 Aroma
45 mm 1.78 Aroma
BIG SALE
OGRE
LENSES FOR
OLYMPUS
40mm 1.8 Milk White (Udara)
20mm 1.8 Milk White (Udara)
15mm 2.0 Milk White (Udara)
12mm 2.0 Milk White (Udara)
12mm 2.0 Milk White (Udara)
12mm 2.0 Milk White (Udara)
12mm 2.0 Milk White (Udara)
20mm 3.0 Background (Udara)
20mm 3.0 Background (Udara)
20mm 3.0 Background (Udara)
60-120 mm 4.4 Background
OF B
LOTS
UNDERSAL CREW
MOULD LICENSES
BIG SALE
Varius 350I 12
Kenmore C350II 6
Mimaki C350II 5
Rush 500C 141
Rush 537 I 161
Camouflage 141
Canon EF 18-55mm F3.5-4.5 IS II 141
AS 139
AS 139
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
199.90 109.90
UNERSAL CREW
MOULD LICENSES
BIG SALE
28mm Vario View (Used) 182.50 74.90
28mm Vario View (Used) 184.90 74.90
28mm 2.8 View (Used) 184.90 74.90
135mm 2.8 Macro (Used) 184.90 74.90
135mm 2.8 Macro (Used) 184.90 74.90
155mm 2.8 Apex (Used) 184.90 74.90
155mm 2.8 Apex (Used) 184.90 74.90
200mm Macro (Used) 184.90 74.90
200mm Macro (Used) 184.90 74.90
200mm Macro (Used) 184.90 74.90
90-2.8 Macro (Used) 179.90 54.90
90-2.8 Macro (Used) 179.90 54.90
90-2.8 Macro (Used) 179.90 54.90
90-2.8 Macro (Used) 179.90 54.90
70-2.8 Macro (Used) 179.90 70.90
70-2.8 Macro (Used) 179.90 70.90
70-2.8 Macro (Used) 179.90 70.90
70-2.8 Macro (Used) 179.90 70.90
2.8 Macro (Used) 199.90 84.90
2.8 Macro (Used) 199.90 84.90
2.8 Macro (Used) 199.90 84.90
2.8 Macro (Used) 199.90 84.90
2.8 Macro (Used) 199.90 84.90
600-3.8 Macro (Used) 160.90 60.90
600-3.8 Macro (Used) 160.90 60.90
600-3.8 Macro (Used) 160.90 60.90
35-1.8 Macro (Used) 189.50 89.90
35-1.8 Macro (Used) 189.50 89.90
35-1.8 Macro (Used) 189.50 89.90
45-1.8 Macro (Used) 410.90 110.90
45-1.8 Macro (Used) 410.90 110.90
70-10-2.8 Series V Series VI 379.90
70-10-2.8 Series V Series VI 379.90
70-10-2.8 Series V Series VI 379.90
92-2.8 Macro (Used) 260.90 110.90
100-300 I5 Bushnell 295.90 110.90
100-300 I5 Bushnell 295.90 110.90
KATE CAROID
CAMERA
The original deluxe models made with chrome finish and real leather. Turn out pictures instantly. Trade-in models.
New retail w/ $200.00
SALE *59**
Were $34.95 to $69.95
SALE 119%
35
RAINBOW
CAMERAS
QUALITY BULK
FILM LOADER
Make 100 roll film, Pay for shell as
you tell your best and save.
SALE $3.99
FILM
PROOFER
Quality provider makes all negative images for
making condiment sheets.
Usually $14.99
SALE $7.50
P
LEMFES
UNIVERSITY
SALE
20mm 1.2 Wide
24mm 1.2 Wide Volk
30mm 1.2 Wide
35mm 1.2 Wide Boehlein
35mm 1.2 Wide Voistar
35mm 1.2 Wide Rokkeier
35mm 1.2 Wide Mika
135mm 1.2 Wide Boehlein
400mm 1.3 Wide
500mm 1.3 Wide Boehlein
200mm 1.3 Wide Zoo
200mm 1.3 Wide Zoo
70-120mm
90-120mm
20-30mm
15mm
15mm
15mm
15mm
15mm
15mm
3.0 Maximum Zoon (Used)
3.0 Maximum Zoon (Used)
3.0 Maximum Zoon (Used)
3.0 Maximum Zoon (Used)
105-500
LENSENATOR
PENTAX
BAYONET
REG. SALE
187.50 189.99
200.00 203.99
225.00 226.99
250.00 250.99
275.00 275.99
300.00 300.99
325.00 325.99
350.00 350.99
375.00 375.99
400.00 400.99
425.00 425.99
450.00 450.99
475.00 475.99
500.00 500.99
525.00 525.99
550.00 550.99
575.00 575.99
600.00 600.99
13mm 1.5 S.M. Pentax Portrait
13mm 1.5 S.M. Pentax Portrait
13mm 1.5 S.M. Pentax Portrait
13mm 1.5 S.M. Pentax Portrait
55-120mm F3.5-5.6 S.M. Pentax
55-120mm F3.5-5.6 S.M. Pentax
70-120mm F3.5-5.6 S.M. Pentax
70-120mm F3.5-5.6 S.M. Pentax
20-70mm F2.8 Macro
20-70mm F2.8 Macro
20-70mm F2.8 Macro
20-70mm F2.8 Macro
245.10 79.99
KROOM AIDS
REG. SAT.
MIL. SALE
14mm 2.2 Winder
16mm 2.2 Winder
12mm 2.2 Winder
10mm 2.2 Winder
11mm 2.2 Winder
13mm 2.2 Winder
20mm 1.3 Winder
25 mm 1.10mm Winder
75 mm 2.10mm Winder
90 mm 2.10mm Winder
100 mm 2.10mm Winder
25 mm 2.8 Winder (Used)
35 mm 2.8 Winder (Used)
35 mm 2.8 Winder (Used)
25 mm 2.8 Winder (Used)
25 mm 2.8 Winder (Used)
15mm 2.8 Winder (Used)
15mm 2.8 Winder (Used)
18mm 2.8 Winder (Used)
18mm 2.8 Winder (Used)
35-60 2.3 Winder
75-150 2.8 Winder
SES FOR MINOLTA
EQ
LENSE FOR PENTA BAYONET
LENSESTOR
PENTA
BAYONET
REG. SALE
28mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
28mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
28mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
28mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
35mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
35mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
130mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
130mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
150mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
70-100mm Wide Angle
70-100mm Wide Angle
75-100mm Wide Angle
35mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
35mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
130mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
130mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
150mm 1.5 Mm Pentax
INTEROOM AIDS
New Dome Washer (Used)
129.99
Dori Envelope
Thermometer Flexible Towels
129.99
Dezine Ball Lens
Vinyl Window Tissue
Velvet Tape
9.95
New 120 Rep File
9.95
New 120 Rep File
11.99
Lens Cleaner for Sturiness Levels
11.99
Lens Cleaner for Sturiness Levels
11.99
Dori Pencil Kit
6.99
Dori Pencil Kit
11.99
Dori Pencil Kit
11.99
Silver Paper Safe
10.99
Silver Paper Safe
12.99
Silver Paper Safe
11.99
Dori Paper Tape
12.99
Dori Paper Tape
11.99
Dori Paper Tape
11.99
Macro Lens
VIVITAR
Available in Pentax Bayonet, Olympus, Kamera, Lamin, Makin, Universal Thread, Mixture.
Factory retail $345.00
SALE $129.99
90mm 12.8
MACRO LENS
VIVITAR
Available in Pentax Bayonet, Olympus, Konica,
Cannon, Nikon, Universal Thread, Minolta.
Factory retail $345.00
SALE $129.99
USED ITEMS FOR MINOLTA
LONG FORM LENSES
WOLFE'
KANS
LIGHT METERS
Geneva Pro Plus
Geneva Muster
Johnson 218
Western Blank from
Western Blank from MC
Wynn Flash master
Wynn Flash master
Western Blank master
Western Blank master
United (Ured)
United (Ured)
Olympus master (Ured)
500 Flash master (Ured)
89.05 129.09
89.05 124.09
119.05 100.09
134.05 100.09
450.00 209.09
89.05 209.09
PEKA
Delaware Drum Wheel Units 19.50 19.50
Capra Piano Probes 19.50 19.50
Darien Limited 19.50 19.50
The Hammond Jazz Ensemble 19.50 19.50
Arsenal Wine Courses 19.50 19.50
Delaware Boulder Tanks 19.50 19.50
Valeo Back Row Tables 19.50 19.50
Viola Stool 19.50 19.50
Violin Stool 20 Reg F琴 19.50 19.50
Violin Stool 18 Reg F琴 19.50 19.50
Violin Stool for Stainless Knives 11.99 11.99
Violin Stool for Stainless Knives 11.99 11.99
Price of Drum Wheel Units 3.50 2.00
Darien D10 Stool 3.50 2.00
Darien D10 Stool 3.50 2.00
Darien D10 Stool 11.99 11.99
Darien D10 Stool 11.99 11.99
Price of B10 Color Drum 9.95 9.95
Size of Paper Lake 7.10 7.10
Size of Paper Lake 7.10 7.10
Price of B10 Color Drum 7.10 7.10
Size of Paper Lake 7.10 7.10
Darien D10 Paper 16.25 16.25
METERS
COPY
STANDS
7 models by 1strike. Hold commerce trends
for all lease up and copy work.
MINI usually $19.95 SALE $13.99
CS 3 models $43.90 SALE $32.99
CASES & BAGS
ENLARGE LIN
| | 900 | SALLE |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Suprajet 90 | Nike 57.5 | 14.99 |
| Suprajet 617 m wired | Nike 57.5 | 12.38 |
| Suprajet 617 m unwired | Nike 57.5 | 12.38 |
| Superbowl Ring Tiger | 19.95 | 14.99 |
| Redwood II | 12.91 | 14.99 |
| Redwood III | 12.91 | 14.99 |
| Suprajet 411 | 19.95 | 16.99 |
| Suprajet 380 BVC | 19.95 | 16.99 |
| Suprajet 330 | 19.95 | 16.99 |
| Suprajet 135 | 16.95 | 16.99 |
| Proc 162000 | 46.99 | 14.99 |
| Proc 2258 | 34.95 | 14.99 |
| Concord 50 | 16.95 | 14.99 |
| Concord A56 | 36.95 | 16.95 |
| Viator 288 n-magnet | 16.95 | 16.95 |
| Viator 345 | 299.10 | 34.95 |
| Viator 345 n-belt (Id) | 299.10 | 34.95 |
| Viator 335 | 299.10 | 34.95 |
| Strubroad A55 (Id) | 29.99 | 14.99 |
| Strubroad A55 (Id) | 29.99 | 14.99 |
| Olympus TI-84 | 199.99 | 14.99 |
| Newyork 335 (Id) | 29.99 | 12.99 |
| Newyork 335 (Id) | 29.99 | 12.99 |
| Olympus TI-84 | 199.99 | 14.99 |
| Newyork 335 (Id) | 29.99 | 12.99 |
| Olympus TI-84 | 199.99 | 14.99 |
410 56.18
639.00 39.00
9.00
1.00
76.00 29.00
13.50 2.50 Vulner I (Used)
13.50 2.50 Vulner II (Used)
13.50 2.50 Vulner III (Used)
13.50 2.50 Vulner IV (Used)
13.50 2.50 Vulner VI (Used)
13.50 2.50 Vulner VII (Used)
13.50 2.50 Vulner VIII (Used)
13.50 2.50 Vulner IX (Used)
13.50 2.50 Vulner X (Used)
149.99 49.99
TRIPODS
BIG SALE
248.95 $ 19.90
384.95 $ 19.90
189.95 $ 19.90
99.95 $ 19.90
62.50 $ 19.90
449.50 $ 19.90
724.95 $ 19.90
724.95 $ 19.90
449.50 $ 19.90
724.95 $ 19.90
449.50 $ 19.90
ADAPTER LENSES
Susuk Pod 910.00
Pre 5327 11.99
PRE 1500C 14.99
Kid Foldable Top 19.99
Strabberg Body Bully 0.99
Kids Foldable Body 0.99
Kids Foldable Body 0.99
Laptop Trunk 19.95 30.95
Laptop Trunk 19.95 30.95
Laptop Trunk 19.95 30.95
Sugar 19.95 0.99
TELECONVERTERS
Meal brand new. Yuvan Akansu.
Everything every time. For end and same
price.
$24.99 to $49.95
SALE $14.99 to $29.99
TELECONVERTERS
Neal brand new model. Vourier, Annual
发票, Membership includes.
Everything comes with the same
neal brand new model. End and same
price.
SALE $14'99 to $29'99
REG. SALE%
Virgin 702 64.95 64.95
Virgin 7421 169.85 84.95
Kodak ADF Tire 34.55 9.35
Kodak ADF Tire 330 Fire 34.55 1.90
GAF F100 Fire 34.55 1.90
Parkinson 100 With Hatch 34.99 4.99
Kodak 2020 16.99 14.99
Kodak 2020 Fire 16.99 14.99
Rodbok Xtreme 10 39.55 21.95
Rodbok 2 Wash with Hatch 31.95 21.95
Rodbok 2 Wash with Hatch 31.95 21.95
Monsoon Zoom SW 298.00 1.099
Virgin 702 Fire 179.98 19.98
Virgin 7421 Fire 179.98 19.98
Julive 350 Zoom, Stock (Used) 129.94 54.99
Julive 350 Zoom, Stock (Used) 129.94 54.99
Baldr A 110 Fire 147.94 249.99
POCKET CAMERAS
---
YOU FIX IT DELIGHT
un usual we have a collection of 35mm SLR cameras, interchangeable lenses, projectors and such at crazy prices. Find out what makes a camera flick (or hot). Buy on SLR for $30.00
STOCK.
LARGE FORMAT
CAMERAS
Benzina C1 (1) F2.8 (Used) 995.99 309.99
Benzina C1.4 F2.8 (Used) 995.99 309.99
Benzina T2 (Used) 149.99 309.99
Tadino T2 (Used) 149.99 309.99
Tadino O3.3 (Used) 149.99 309.99
Tadino Mast (Used) 149.99 309.99
Tadino Mast (Used) 149.99 309.99
Tadino U2 (Used) 495.00 309.99
Tadino U2 (Used) 495.00 309.99
Universi T2.8 (Used) 495.00 309.99
Universi T2.8 (Used) 495.00 309.99
TRC Premium 75mm 1495.00 700.00
TRC Premium 75mm 1495.00 700.00
TRC APRICP 75mm 1000.00 925.00
YASHICA/CONTAX MOUNT LENSES
20mm 1.28 Pro 165.00 99.00
15mm 1.28 Pro 149.00 99.00
15-130 mm 1.28 Pro 100.00 139.00
85-130 mm 1.28 Pro 139.00 139.00
95-130 mm 1.28 Pro 139.00 139.00
15mm 1.28 Pro 100.00 139.00
MOVIE
WERA
| Vehicle | Price (USD) |
| :--- | :--- |
| Buffalo XL 1200 RX4 A1 | 310.00 | 2.99 |
| Buffalo XL 1200 RX4 A1 | 310.00 | 2.99 |
| Buffalo XL 5800 RX4 A1 | 325.00 | 2.99 |
| GAT 700 | 185.00 | 1.44 |
| GAT 700 | 185.00 | 1.44 |
| GAT 700 LSAM | 370.00 | 1.44 |
| Sokeyda XL 2125 | 175.00 | 1.44 |
| Sokeyda XL 2275 | 175.00 | 1.44 |
| Cosimo 604 | 159.00 | 1.44 |
| Cosimo 604 | 159.00 | 1.44 |
| Sokeyda XL 40 Sounded | 400.00 | 1.44 |
| Sokeyda XL 400 Sounded | 400.00 | 1.44 |
| Sokeyda XL 600 Sounded | 462.00 | 1.44 |
| GAT 500 | 185.00 | 1.44 |
| GAT 500 UWed | 185.00 | 1.44 |
| Buffalo XL 1200 RX5 | 310.00 | 1.44 |
| Buffalo XL 1200 RX5 | 310.00 | 1.44 |
| Buffalo XL 603 | 199.50 | 1.44 |
| Kawaii XL 363 | 289.50 | 1.44 |
| Kawaii XL 363 | 289.50 | 1.44 |
| Kawaii XL 5800 | 289.50 | 1.44 |
MISCELLANEOUS LENSES
Ace Cell for I4R 29.99 4.00
Ace W.A.W. ID TIR 72.50 6.00
Mantova 110 T/L W.B & T/R 64.99 19.00
Mantova 110 T/L W.B & T/R 64.99 19.00
30mm F4 (Twenty-10) 69.50 4.00
26mm F2.8 Macro Ipanon 159.99 44.00
26mm F2.8 Macro Mirrorless 159.99 44.00
26mm F2.8 Visor Ipanon 144.30 49.00
26mm F2.8 Macro Mirrorless 169.99 49.00
26mm F2.8 Macro Mirrorless 169.99 49.00
26mm F2.8 Macro Ipanon 178.99 44.00
26mm F2.8 Macro Mirrorless 129.99 39.00
35mm F2.8 Macro Adapter 84.99 20.00
35mm F2.8 Macro Adapter 84.99 20.00
F
PHOTO LIGHTING AIDS
Get better patterns using these three ideas:
46 Light strap height $7.95, now $6.99
Photo umbrella white and silver
Reg. to $27.95
NOW $13^{99}$
---
PICS 5.4.6.8
Rak Industries Corp 2012
Rak Industries Corp 2010
Rak Industries Corp 84 Cube
Rak Industries Corp 83 Cube
Rak Bit FI BPO 100
Rak Bit FI BPO 90
Hall Hindustan 100 Cube
Hall Hindustan 100 Cube
Hall Hindustan 100 Cube
Farooq I 12-4ty A/C
Farooq I 12-4ty A/C
IC 1C03 Pro Bkg
Cage TU 18
OVERSE 16 Cube
OVERSE 11 Cube
Macquarie Cube 19 Cube
Macquarie BOS 65
40mm f6.3
PHOTO
ON
a 5x6 frame with 1 inch of
included Camerate with two
extras and lens head.
Campase at $100.00
SALE $59.99
MOVIE PROJECTORS
SHOP
INSTANT PICTURE CAMERAS
SLIDE PROJECTORS
Pacific Monterey Bay
Polished 310 (Unused)
Patented 918
Patented 919
Novaport PS 24
Ocean View PS 24
Patented 617
Patented 618
XPT20 (Unused)
XPT21 (Unused)
LXPT20 (Unused)
Supertail Plastic Point (Unused)
Supertail Plastic Point (Unused)
Patented 250
Patented 250
Patented 42
Bell & Shure 1020 Color
Kodak Electrovision 450H
Kodak Electrovision 450H
GAL 2100(H)
GAL 2100(H)
Pavement Projector
Sanye Lens
Lenses Xerox (Used)
Kodak External 500 (Used)
Kodak External 500 (Used)
Bell & Shure Color (Used)
Bell & Shure Color (Used)
Bell & Shure 303 Headphone
ZOOM
MOVIE CAMERA
Low light model by Bell and Hawk. Shorts pictures outhere. Deep in Super 8 film factory. Give one year warranty.
SALE 9999
---
Dragon
DUAL 8
PROJECTOR
Bell and flowwall unit with slow motion,
forward, reverse, still. Auto building tools
to demo this year warranty.
If new retail $199.00
SALE $9999
Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386
Topeka, Kansas 66603
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
7
City considers taxi fare increase
By CAROL BEIER
Staff Reporter
University Daily Kansan
Lawrence City Commission members appeared sketched of a proposal for increased taxi fares at last night's conference Meeting. Action on the proposal was deferred.
Ward Thompson, president of Transportation Corp., which includes the Yellow Cab and the Union Cab companies of Texas, answered questions from the commission.
The proposal requested that the commission change the present rate of 10 cents a fare and 10 cents for each additional one-mile mile. The commission would pay 10 cents for every one-eighth mile thereafter.
The proposal also would increase the starting time rate from $6 an hour to $8 an hour.
Under a city ordinance, the city commission has the power to veto tax rate incomes.
Marnie Argersinger, city commissioner.
Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble and the University Dance Company will present their annual spring program today, in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall.
Eight dancers from the Mid-America Dance Company at Wichita State University also will perform two dances in the spring and three dances in styles ranging from ballet to jazz.
3 dance groups are entertainers in spring show
Elizabeth Sherborn, director of Tau Sigma, said nine of the dances were choreographed by KU students and faculty members. She said one of the dances was choreographed in Lobanotation, a process by which dance organizations conduct copyrighted, much like music notation.
Sherborn said Toni Intauzzia, a dance instructor at the Intauzzia of Southern Illinois, visited the campus earlier this week to help students in rotation into movement for the KU dancers.
The University Dance Company is directed by Joan Sloss, acting assistant professor health, physical education and music, Kay Cine, assistant professor of dance.
Admission to the program is $2 for adults, so cents for children and free for students
said she had just returned from a trip to Washington, D.C., and New York, and had paid less in those cities for cab fare than she paid in Lawrence.
Arngersinger also expressed disapproval of a provision to eliminate the city commuting system.
When another commissioner asked Thompson why Midwest taxi rates were higher than the East Coast rates, Thompson replied, "That I don't know."
Under the new plan the city manager could approve the increases.
Thompson said the provision had been included because climbing gas prices might
"I STILL DON'T want one person who is not responsive to the electorate to make that decision."
force him to make frequent requests for increases before the commission.
Argersinger was unconvinced.
Under the recommendation of Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager, the commission deferred consideration of the proposal for two weeks, requesting additional information and research from the commission staff.
Argeringster suggested that the discussion was postponed two weeks instead of one because of technical issues.
possible removal of fluoridation from the city's water supply at next week's meeting
The commission will hear arguments favoring water fluoridation at 3:30 p.m. today. Mayor Donald Binsn had last night that commissioners had already heard more than four hours of arguments advocating removal of the fluoride.
IN OTHER BUSINESS, the commissi-
in approved a resolution authorizing an agreement with the Kansas Department of
Transportation that provided for the addition of a left turn lane on Iowa Street from south of Harvard Road to north of 9th Street.
New Assembly members named
New members of the College of Assembly have been announced by the College of Law.
Elections for the 111 undergraduate student representatives in the Assembly were Feb. 14 and 15. Results were released yesterday. Elections for the 36 graduate student positions are at the beginning of the fall semester.
There were 34 freshmen elected, 38 sophomores and 39 juniors. They will represent students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at College Assembly meetings, where College policy and procedures are decided.
all faculty members in the College are nominally members of the College Assoc
positions are due in the College office in Strong Hall by March 19.
Nominations for faculty committee
The new student representatives will attend their first meeting April 4 at 3 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The committee positions will be made then.
Frehmenn N, Lepier F, Scot A, H Harrison, Suzanne K, Lemann W, Martino W, Martin C, Mielh J, Mothley L, Schmidt P, Steinberg B, Steinberg R, D. Stankwalt, Doug L, Simpson, Peter B, Smith, Jackie E, Werner K, Brown J, John E, Carpenter C, Clark, Christie A, Jeff Freeman, Brett Gufenfeuer, Donald L, Johnson J, Piet A, Joachim J, Martin K, Jeanek O, Albert K, Scalia K, Weiss P
The newly elected students are:
Sophomore. John Scott Campbell, Jun C. Hanye, Dean Mackenzie. John Campbell, Martinsman, Bariyaa Beaty. Adalah Bob, Glenn Gibson. Adam Gale, Jack Burch. T.J. Barnell, Gilberta Brio, John Chafford, Dawn Caworth, Carol Devan Dear, Mara A. Dearzak, Galg Egert, David Crawford, Jorge Guillermo, Fishman, Diane German, Stuart Graham, John Mark Hennessy, Lesen Heavy, Steve Hawkbeech, Hollis Held, Ted Hammond, Steve Hawkbeech, Hollis Held, McMaster, Chris Remick, Jay L. Smith, Kay M.-Sokoway, Carel Strauch, Bill Vencille II, Scott M. Wells,
Sharon Packer, Michael, Packett, Teresa Riordan, Cody Thuren, Regina L. Warner and Mary Willeyburg
Juniors, Chuck Chapman, Beverly Houghton, Judith Jinks, Holt Landrush, Gary A. Anderson, Judi Tidgenhorn, Kelly A. Anderson, Cydan Berdine, Melinda Cade, Chipper Casteen, Chip Chaupny, Paul Christiansson, Mark W. Clime, Patricia Crayn Evans, Mark Gaertner, Sean D. Hampton, Evans, Mark Gaertner, Sean D. Hampton, Terry Hannum, William W. Kipman, Skiylar Lamber, Ben McGurley, William W. Kipman, Skiylar Lamber, Ben McGurley, Picard, Winnie Pinet, Dr. Prakier, Christopher Pickford, Mark Poole, Eddy Rohn, Shirley Wallace and Mark P. Wilson
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT in
Overland Park & Topeka
Available For
TYPISTS • STENOGRAPHERS • FILE CLERKS
KEYPUNCH OPERATORS • BOOKKEEPERS
Bossler Temporary Help
- NO FEES -
in Overland Park Contact:
Ann Duee
Bossier-St. Henson
6405 Metcalf
Overland Park, KS. 6214
913/262-8633
In Topeka Contact:
Doris Derrington
Bossler & Associates
1035 S.Topea Ave.
Topeka, KS 66128
9132/34-5626
JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
only at
Friday March 9th
Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass. Upstairs
CLARKE TERRY
Call 843-8575 For Reservations
World Famous Trumpet Player From The Tomite Show
Greenbrier's
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEM
Cheese Emporium
Eat In or Carry Out
Sandwiches
Meats
Soups Cheeses
Holiday Plaza - 25th & 8oa
Taco Grande
Ta
THE
BRINGS BACK
25c TACO
FOR THE Whole Month of March Entire Month of March 31 Days of March March 1st Thru March 31st
9th & Indiana Lawrence, Ks.
1720 W. 23rd Lawrence, Ks.
Berlin appoints directors
Margaret Berlin, student body president, said yesterday that she had appointed a public relations director and a services director for the Student Senate.
Julie Mahaffey, Leavenworth sophomore, will be the constituent services director and Ridge Scott, Ritchie, will be the public relations director.
Berlin said she had changed the duties of the two directors.
Mahaffey, a Nunemaker senator, said she planned to visit the living groups two or three times a week after spring break.
She said her main concern was reaching off-campus students.
"The constituent services director used to be the complaints director," she said. "Now the person will have regular office hours and will go to different living groups to talk about what the Student Council does, as well as handle complaints."
"FIRST I WILL talk to them through the distribution of newsletters," she said. "Then, for those who are interested, I will be having a meeting in the lobby of some apartment buildings. I will also set appointments in the Student Senate office."
Mahaffey said she would handle student complaints herself or direct the student to a more knowledgeable source.
Ritchie, a journalism senator, said he wanted to reach the students in more ways than advertisements.
Berlin said the public relations director would work more with the Senate Communications Committee than he had in the past. He will continue to place advertising in the University Daily and to send news releases to the media.
Summer Orientation Program 1979
STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
"One of the things I'd like to do is publish an agenda of the meetings in the UDK," he said, "so the students would know what's going to be talked about."
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
. . . leadership abilities
. . . knowledge of University programs & activities
. . . interpersonal communication skills
. . . onthusiasm about program
. . . student in good academic standing
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ADMISSIONS & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL APPLICATIONS DUE BY FRIDAY, MARCH 23
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
DO YOU WANT TO FLY?
C15682
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 EXTRAL fur 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.
if you have that feeling, then you're in luck. Air Force ROTC Fly Instructor Program (FIP) is available to you if it designed to teach you the basics of flight through lessons in small aircraft of a civilian operated aircraft.
ROTC
AIR FORCE
This is all reserved for the cadet who wants to get hit off the ground, with Air Force silver pilot his life.
Gateway to a great way of life.
"Sophomores and Juniors. Apply now for the 2 year ROTC Program. Get a commission when you graduate. See if you qualify Call Capt. John Macke, B64-4676, or stop by the Military Science Building, Room 108."
Make a new plan, Stan.
Here's your plan for an elevated new lifestyle.
View:
Take your pick.
Closets:
11 feet wide;
dresser built in.
Two Sinks:
no waiting for
your roommate
Bath
Bedroom
140 square feet
Bedroom
140 square feet
Big Picture Windows
Location
On campus,
on ban route
Thermostat:
You set the temp.
we pay the bills.
Price:
1 from $275
everything paid.
Living Room
240 square feet
Cable TV Hookup:
Paid, just plug
in your set.
Private Entrance:
24-hour security
patrol in hall.
Carpet:
Walk to walk,
ventral others.
The TOWERS, make it part of your plans.
Now leasing for Fall '79. Come in today and see how you can enjoy an elevated lifestyle.
Show apartment now open.
joyhawker towers apartments
4603 w. Fifteenth
8
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Gymnasts get close; Colorado edges past
By BRETT CONLEY
Sports Writer
Despite scoring its second highest point total this season, the KU men's gymnastics team was edged by Colorado at Saturday in Robinson Gymnasium.
KU set a school record of 299.75 points two weeks ago against Northern Colorado, and Bob Lockwood, men's gymnastics coach, said it would take a similar effort to defeat Colorado. But KU could not pull it off.
The key event for KU was vaulting, where three performers missed their landings.
"We knew we had to hit vaulting and we didn't," Lockwood said. "We sat down on three vaults and that cost us a total of 1.5 points."
Lockwood said the floor exercises also hurt KU because Ron Ortman and Chris Phillips both missed parts of their drills, and they were high as they had been most of the year.
KU WAS CLOSE to Colorado all the way and going into the final event, the high bar, only trailed by .15 point. However, while KU scored close to what it had been scoring all year in the high bar, Colorado didn't miss a routine and
outscored KU by 1.15 points to win the meet.
Colorado coach Sid Freudenstein said he did not expect the meet to be as close as it was.
"We tried to give away the whole meet on rings." Freudentain said. "However, the guys performed fantastically when they knew the meet was close."
Freudenstein said Colorado's performance was affected by the fact the team didn't arrive until 4 a.m. Saturday and it got snowed in at the Denver airport.
"WE MISSED THINGS today that I attribute to falling asleep during routines." Freudenstein said. "The guys were energy well considering the problems we had."
"High bar was by far our outstanding performance. We have had high bar troubles all season long and I was glad to see we hit when we had to."
KU was led by Marshall Kelley, whose score of 9.4 on the high bar tied the KU record.
Pompey horned; 1-Beer, 9.35; 3 Hill Harbor, 8.15;
rings - 1-Bettworth, 8.15; 2.1tern, 8.13; 3.1real
vaulting - 1-vaulting, 8.13; guardians - 2-
Mercer, 8.13; guardians - 2-Kellman, 8.13;
all and all-round - 1-detail, Kelly and 0.80, 8.13.
Top finishers for KU were:
wednesday special...
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
Just order any pizza from
Dorcas Pizza and get
free cups. Code:
$9 value (do not use applicable
date sales tax)
No coupon necessary all you have to do is ask
Offer available Wednesdays only good thru 6/179
Fast. Free Delivery
1445 W 23rd
Phone 841-7900
610 Florida
Phone 841-8002
Limited delivery area
Copyright 1979
AUTUMN SONATA
Evening at 7:35 & 9:30
ENGLISH THURS
New in booked
in English dubbed
at 8:42 & 10:04WAXA
842*64*6
BUTTERFLY PALACE
INGMAR BERGMAN
with INGRD BERGMAN
LIV GILLMANN
ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINEE
BEST AWARD
INGRD BERGMAN
"HALLOWEEN"
"HALLOWEEN"
...the night HE came home!
Eve.7:35 & 9:30...
S.S Mat 2:00
Hillcrest
"ICE CASTLES"
WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS
The NORTH AVENUE
FREESHIP ARTS
EVEAT 7:20 and 9:20
Sat Sun
MAT 7:20 Cinema Twin G
Eve. 7:20 &
9:20 Hillcrest
"HEAVEN CAN WAIT"
NOMINATED FOR 9 ACADEMY AWARDS
EVE 7:30 & 9:30
Sat-Sun 2:30
GABE KAPLAN'S
HAVING
A BALL!
FASTBREAK
PG
© 1976 Copyright Fulbright International, Inc.
"DAYS of HEAVEN"
Grandade
Sports Foundation
RACADEMIC AWARD
NOMINATIONS
Season
Two adolescent sisters share an adventure of erotic discovery!
WINNER OF 4 ADULT FILM ASSOCIATION EROTIC FILM AW ARDS!
(THE ACADEMY AWARDS OF 8 RATED MOVIES)
BEST PICTURES
BEST ACTRESS
(GEORGINA SHEVIN)
HAROLD LIMIE PRESENTS
DESIRES WITHIN YOUNG GIRLS
BEST SCREENPLAY
BEST PRODUCTION VALUE!
SEE WHAT MAKES THE NYMPHETTE SET TICK!
Fri. & Sat. Nights
Columbia Pictures
By RICK GOSSELIN UPI Sports Writer
GABE KAPLAN'S
HAVING
A BALL!
NOW.
EVEN AT 7:30 & 9:30
SATURDAY & SUNDAY
MATINEES AT 2:30
Varsity
The College of Art
FASTBREAK
Two adolescent sisters share an adventure of erotic discovery
WINNER OF 4 ADULT FILM ASSOCIATION EROTIC FILM AWARDS!
(THE ACADEMY AWARDS OF A WRITTEN NOVEL)
BEST PICTURE
BEST ACTRESS
(GEOGRINA SPELVIN!
HAROLD LIME PRESENTS
DESIRES
WITHIN
YOUNG
GIRLS
BEST SCREENPLAY
BEST PRODUCTION
VALUE!
SEE WHAT
MAKES THE
NYMPHETTE
SET TICK!
Fri. & Sat. Nights
Showtime is 12:15
The Big Eight had a regular season basketball race this winter whose competitiveness was matched only by that of the Big Ten. At one point early in the season, all eight teams were tied for first place. A week later five teams were deadlocked in first place.
KANSAS CITY, Mo — Big Eight basketball hit rock bottom in 1879, both from the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
By RICK GOSSELLEN
UPI Sports Writer
The Big Eight teams took turns knocking each other off and in so doing, damaged seasonal marks that mean so much when it comes to the home court. Named narbors bids. Oklahoma finally won the title with a 10-4 record with Kansas, Kansas State and Alabama all tyring for second with Alabama.
Oklahoma then captured the conference's post-season tournament to earn the Big Eight's an automatic birth into the NCAA. The game, one of those above took over; both the NCAA and NIT
Hillcrest
Steve Wallace of Missouri and Ray Whitley of Oklahoma.
Valentine, a sophomore, has established himself as one of the premier players in the country. He averaged 16.6 points a game and led the conference in both assists and steals for the second straight year. Valentine, a sophomore, joined Valentine on the All-Black first team and finished third in the league in scoring with an average of 17.4 points.
THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW
Drew and Wallace are as compatible in the Missouri backcourt as surf and sun Whitley is perhaps the finest penetrating guard in the conference.
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'rock bottom' for Big 8
The ace in the hole for the conference is a pair of transfer students who sat out this past winter—guard JoJo Hunt at Colorado and forward Ricky Frazier of Missouri.
KANSAN Sports
deemed every other team in the conference unit for tournament play and issue no
Hunter scored in double figures for competing for Maryland in the rugged ACC tournament, where he was Newcomer of the Year in Metro Conference, averaging better than 13 points per game.
SO THE BIG Eight became the only major basketball conference with just one representative in post-season play. The Big Ten, Atlantic Coast Conference and the Southeastern Conference all sent five teams to the two tournaments. The Southwest Conference sent four. Even the lightly-regarded Sunbelt Conference sent two teams.
By DAVID PRESTON
Schafer, one of seven KU swimmers competing in the meet, said she thinks KU's results will be different this year.
Schaffer, six swimmers serious about AIAW
"It gets your attention when so many conferences get two and three teams in the tournament," said Kansas men's Athletic Director Bob Marcum, whose Jayhawks will visit an overall 18-11 record. "It certainly gives us something to shoot for next year."
If Lanny Schaffer has her way, Kansas will jump from an also-ran in women's swimming to one of the nation's elite after this week's Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women's National Meet in Pittsburgh.
The Big Eight, which is traditionally guard-oriented, will be loaded with big men. Big men like Al Beal of Oklahoma, Curtis Berry of Missouri, Andrew Smith of Ohio, Don Yumanu of Oklahoma State, Brian Johnson of Colorado and Dehun Unoff of Iowa State.
Sports Writer
And things could all change next year. Thirty-one of the 40 starters on the Big Eight teams will return, including two first team tight shots and five second teams.
BEAL PULLED down 22 rebounds against Kansas in the title game of the Big Eight post-season tournament and joined Smith and Youman as second team all-conference pick. Berry also had a 20-rebound game earlier in the year against Cyclones that ended with the Cyclones, needs just 190 more rebounds to become the conference's all-time leader.
The Big Eight still has a healthy complement of high quality guards. Guards like Darnell Valentine of Kansas, Rolando Blackman of Kansas State, Larry Drew and
"If we all swim the way we should," she
said, "I think we should score about 100 points as compared to the six we scored last week."
A performance such as that, according to
a rule, should put the squail in some fine
company.
"IF WE DID that, we would probably break into the top 10 in the country, and that would be a lot of work."
Schaffer and her teammates have been trying all season to reach the times needed
"I think we should be in the top 10."
for national qualification, and by the end of the regular season two weeks ago, had qualified four individuals for eleven events. He also won four individual events, and Janet Lindstrom has qualified for five events. Erin McMorrow and Diane Ellis have also qualified. Lynette Lange, Maureen Sheehan and long will compete in the relay events.
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On March 20-22 in front of Wescoe Hall on those days
Kansas coach Gary Kemph has said he expects to do well at the national, and considers it vital to the development of the swimming program.
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Schaffer agrees.
"SURE IT'S GOING to be good for our recruiting if we do well. It will help to us help."
The most reassuring fact, Schaffer says, is that the majority of the team are either sophomores or freshmen. Of the four, individual qualifiers, Schaffer, McMorrow and Lindstrom are sophomores and Ellis is a freshman.
As evidenced by its record, however, the women's swimming program is doing fine.
priorship Meet in Norman, Okla., two weeks ago, and has dropped one one dual meet in
"We ought to be pretty good for a few years," Schafter said.
KU won its fifth consecutive Big Eight conference this season with a convincing victory.
To prepare for the nationals, the team has been pacing itself in workouts, trying to rest after each session.
"The girls going to the nationalists didn't get to rest at all before the big Eight," Shaffar said. "so we've been just having one day, and we've cut out our weight training."
"We just have to get mentally prepared." The meet will begin next Thursday and last for about two weeks.
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Wednesday, March 7. 1979
9
1980-81
University Daily Kansan
On guard
Netters going south
**zorman, a junior letterman on KU's men's tennis team, practices to get ready for a spring break read trip.** Both the men's and women's tennis teams will see action down the court.
Forsaking the sands of Padrick岛 and the snows of Colorado, KU's men and women's tennis teams embark on a morning afternoon on a spring break road trip.
By DAVID COLBURN Sports Writer
The Jayhawks will tour laykourt courts in Mississippi, Louisiana and Tennessee, packing several taxing matches into the eight-day excursion.
The men will compete in four dual matches and an invitational tournament, and the women will play five dual matches. Kansas coach Tom Kivisto said he saw this rigorous schedule as more of a mental test than a physical one.
"IT'S GOING TO BE tough to be up for this amount of matches," Kivisto said. "The last couple of weeks of practice we've been thinking in terms of being ready to concentrate for this number of matches." The players are really looking forward to playing the amount of games they take that itself as a challenge."
The men and women will face three mutual opponents: Memphis State, Southwestern Louisiana University and Tulane University. The dual matches with Louisiana State University and Tulane University while the men participate in the 32-team Big Gold Invitation tournament at Mississippi University, Hattiesburg, Miss.
"the best girl's team is LSU," Kiviste said. "the second best team for the girls and the best team the guys are playing in Nichols State, which very few people know about. They have an extremely strong program."
"The tournament at Southern Mississippi is going to be tough from the standpoint of the number of matches our
people will have to play. A player will have to win five matches to win at his home field, but it's a really great national power in the field, but there are about six really solid teams—LSU, Nichols State, South Carolina, Owens Valley, Albuquerque, Alabama and Mississippi.
KU's utensils will be healthy and at full strength for the trip, and Kivisto said the rosters for both teams would remain the same as in previous matches this season, he said he would not decide whether he would include alternations on the tour.
"At this level all the players are good, so the player who can hold his concentration the longest, with that inner strength wants to win, will win," Kivino said.
KRIVSTO SAID one of his goals for the week was to develop and strengthen his players' ability to concentrate. Concerns have been raised that a player faces a challenge alone, than in team sports in which several teams compete to attribute to morale and strategy, he said.
"If you can concentrate for the whole hour-and 45 minute match, which is almost impossible, you will be a better player," Kivisto said.
Although the 'Hawks are prepared for the trip, Kivisto said, he expects to find several things during the matches that his players will need to work on. They won't have it time to correct the problems after they return from the trip, though.
Concentration is especially important at the college level, Kivisto said.
“It’s kind of a good thing we don’t have a lot of matches when we come back, because we’ll have a lot of things to work on when we do.” Kivisto said.
Stan Whitaker didn't have to run in the State Federation indoor meet in Manhattan
Whitaker set for NCAA
But now the senior captain of the men's track team is glad he did.
Whitaker led from start to finish in the 440-yard dash. His 47.9 clocking in an Ahearn Field House record and qualified for a second championships this Friday and Saturday in Detroit.
Whitaker, who had already qualified as a member of KU's mile relay team, was the second-place finisher in all national qualifiers. KU, however, did have several athletes finish well in individual competitions.
Tim Tay breezed to first place in the two-mile run, defeating second-place Pat Blackburn of Kansas State by almost 10 seconds. He was clocked in 9:01. 10
Hurlers might play
ir the field is dry, the KU baseball team will open the 1979 season at 1:30 after afternoon with a double-header against the Seattle Mariners at Quirk Field, south of Allen Field House.
Terry Sutcliffe and Dan St. Clair will start for the Jaybawks.
doy, if we can get in four games, it]'be great," Temple said.
Coach Floyd Temple also announced yesterday that Fort Hays State has been named the state's next governor.
FORT MEYERS, Fla. (UPI)-George Brett returned to the Kansas City Royals training camp yesterday and said he exchanged an agreement with April 5, despite a three-week layoff to recuperate from surgery on his right thumb. Brett underwent surgery in Kansas City
Brett back to camp
"It's numb now," he said, "but the doctor says everything is OK. There were no people."
bred underwent surgery in Kansas city last Friday to remove calcium deposits.
TERRY BRADSHAW, Tim Jones and Bob Lozito record second place finishes for KU. BradsHAW earned his with a 47-11% loss and D洛亭 a 6.28% yard-dash and D洛亭 a 6.28% yard-dash.
Brent Swanson was the only third-placed finer, with a 4.09-7 performance in the masters.
KU's two-mile relay team also captured first. But the squad of Tjm Jantsch, Kendall Smith, Swanson and Tays ran unopposed. The NCAA completed 80 seconds off the NCAA qualifying standard.
KU's other NCAA qualifiers are Jeff Buckingham (pole vault), Anthony Coleman (shot put), Kyle Ramsey (long relay), Lester Mickens (440, 600 and mile relay), Kevin Newell (440 and mile relay)
All of the qualifiers except Whitaker skipped the State Federation Indoor.
Kansas drops; now 17 in poll
Top 30 women's college basketball team as competed by Mel Greenberg of the Philadelphia Inquirer on the votes of 40 women coaches. First place wins parents, and season records through Feb. 25.
Women can bring basketball recognition to Midwest
Old Dominion (21) ... 28-1
Bergamot P. Austin (7) ... 28-1
Louisiana Tech (11) ... 27-3
Denver State (14) ... 26-4
Maryland ... 25-4
Nebraska ... 25-4
Tennessee ... 25-4
North Carolina State ... 25-1
Penn State ... 25-1
Wyoming Baptist ... 24-4
Alabama State ... 24-3
New York ... 24-3
New Las Vegas ... 19-4
South Carolina ... 24-4
Louisiana State ... 24-6
Kansas ... 24-6
Missouri State ... 24-1
Montana State ... 19-4
Oregon ... 24-4
Name on at least 10 ballots ...
Other teams named on at least 10 ballads alphabetic; Delta St., Drake, Mississippi, Northwestern.
The KU women's basketball team gets a phantasy at the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women national title when it takes the NCAA championship in the Region IV Impairment in Mineapolis.
Kansas has been seeded fourth in the Tournament, in which the top two finishers advance to sectional playoffs. The winners of four sectionals nationwide will make up the final field of four teams for the tournament, announced March 23 and 25 in Greensboro, N.C.
The chance that Kansas, the only nationally ranked team in this region, will be selected is $1\%$.
AND IF KU can make it, to at least the sectional level, the Midwest might get the recognition it deserves in collegiate women's basketball.
The lack of recognition of teams west of
the Mississippi is easily seen in the poll of the top 20 teams compiled weekly by Mol
The Jayhawks, who are a preseason pick by Street and Smith publications to finish eighth in the country, weren't mentioned in the initial preseason Greenberg
In fact, KU 26-7, didn't show up in the poll to stay until midseason. Few other Midwestern teams lasted long in the poll. Most of the Northwest have made brief appearances.
THE OLDER, established teams, such as Old Dionion, which has topped the poll since 2015. They have dominated in the East and the South and have dominated the poll and the national touring status.
Before the Bruins and their All-American
SIDELINER
Nancy
Dressler
FREDERICK M. HUNTER
Ann Meyers broke through, Immaculata College in Pennsylvania had won the title three times and been runner-up twice. Delta State of Cleveland, Miss., which won the three tournaments prior to UCLA's victory, also has been a national power.
But even without Delta State, which had a poor record this season, the poll, which is determined by the votes of 40 women's teams from the South and five teams from the North.
the east Coast. Kansas is the only Mid-
western team in the top 20.
Kansas finished second in the Queens College Holiday Classic in New York during the Christmas break with victories over Fordham and Queens College, which has
KANSAS, RANKED 17th nationally,
deserves to be on the碗. The Jayhawks,
trapped in a medico but growing Midwest,
faced by a handful of opponents from this region.
When funds allowed KU to travel to the EAST to play teams there, which usually have more money and are less willing to pay their fees, they are better placed to play. The Jayhawks held their own.
KU took third in the Detroit Coca-Cola Classic by beating Detroit. Old Dominion won the tournament and beat Kansas 73-59 in KU's second game of the season.
been a national tournament runner-up. KU's only loss was to Cheyney State, of Pennsylvania, undefeated in 24 games this season and ranked fifth.
AFTER THE Cheyne loss, KU posted 11 straight victories before a loss to unranked Alabama.
Most of these were lopsided victories over young teams in this area. The games were highly typical in this part of the country where the sport is still growing. Admittedly, some of them have not been successful.
Such victories leave Kansas open to the same critics who knock undefended Indiana State. They say the Jayhawks have made mistakes without facing high quality competition.
BUT KU NOW has a chance to prove its most successful season ever is not a fluke.
The choice of KU as one of two at-large teams for the regional, even after it lost to K-State, showed that the AIAW takes Kansas seriously.
Also, Kansas has been invited to play in the National Women's Invitation Tournament, an honor usually reserved until after regionals are over.
But the Jayhawks, led by All-American Lynette Woodard and All-American candidate Adrian Mitchell, could make the Greensboro foursome.
However, even if Kansas just clears the regional hurdle and is beaten in the season, the Eastern season could open the eyes of the established powers to a growing basketball community in the Midwest that could some day enter the Eastern and Southern domination of the sport.
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10
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
University Dally Kansan
China shifts called upsetting
Staff Reporter
By GENE LINN
Disco dancing and a desire for democracy are two by-products of a political and cultural shift in China. Chinese leaders, Roxane Wike, a lecturer in the KU Humanities Lecture Series, said
However, she told about 150 people in Woodruff Auditorium that the relaxation was crucial for the success of the "four modernizations" program being promoted.
The program is designed to modernize China's industry, agriculture, technology and sciences and national defense by the year 2000.
In connection with the modernization of dance, children are encouraged to the people to "encantate their that has led to undesirable consequences such as disco dancing and a desire for more.
"The Chinese need brainpower for scholarly work and research to help the modernization drive, so they are encouraging intellectuals to study and work," said Witke, who has a doctorate in Chinese history.
SHE SAID Chinese leaders were blaming "the gung of four" for China's backwardsness.
"The gang of four" is madeup of leaders
who were close to former Party Chairman Mae Tse-tung from about 1968 to 1976 when Mae died, Witke said. The gang was purged soon after Mae died.
Wike has written a book, "Comrade Chiang Ching," which resulted from a series of revealing interviews with one of the "gang of four." Mae's wife, Chiang Ch'inz.
"The 'gang of four' is blamed for everything from bad restaurant service to cheating on the bank."
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Witke said China's lack of economic and cultural progress was due to several factors, including natural disasters, mismanagement by the "gang of four" and Mao and an energy-consuming campaign against the "gang of four."
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to foreigners' apartments late at night to dance, "Witke said.
"THE NEWSPAPERS condemn 'dance fever' and say that modernization is not going to be accomplished by fancy foot-work."
Except for clandestine disco dancing, the influx of foreign culture is carefully controlled by China's Ministry of Culture, she said.
"It's exactly the same thing the Chinese tried to do in the late 19th century when they tried to keep foreign technology but tried to keep out foreign ideas that would undermine Chinese culture."
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However, controlling the exposure of the Chinese people to Western political ideas had been difficult.
Wikie said the "democracy wall" that has flourished in Peking for several months has featured wall posters calling for the free election of officials and for human rights in China.
"Officials have criticized some wall poster writers for going too far," Witke said. "It will be interesting to see what will happen if the group's Rights group that has sprung up in China.
'Whether Chinese leaders can maintain their tight political control and still bring about great material changes is one of the most important questions for China in the 20th century.
"People are wearing more colorful clothes and some foreign movies, like the 'Hunchback of Notre Dame,' are being shown," Wilke said.
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However, the modernization process has led to a flowering of political and cultural ideas that sometimes are criticized by Chinese leaders, she said.
NOW, CHINA's leaders are determined not to let political campaigns or mismanagement slow their country's drive to modernization, she said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: DICK WRIGHT, associate director of KANU will present "Styles of Jazz" for the Wednesday Forum at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Ministries Center, 1294 Oread. The College Chairpersons Meeting will be at 3:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: THE OREAD NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION will present a Workshop on Small Claims Court at 7 p.m. at the Oread Neighborhood Anti-Crime Program headquarters, 407 W. 12 St. KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 173, Robinson Gymnasium. The East Asian Film Series will present a Japanese film with an anti-crime theme. The American Film Series will present a CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor A and B of the Union. The Museum of Natural History Wednesday Evening Lecture Series will present Ruth Gennin, museum Public Education director speaking about "Whale Watching off Baja California," at 7:30 p.m. in the Panorama room of Dyche Hall. THE AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION, Law Student Division will provide income tax assistance from 6 to 8 p.m. in the legal aid office in New York. The American Bar Association feature Susan K. Smith and Alan Martin on trombone and tuba in Swarthout Reatal Hall.
TOMORROW: THE UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will meet at 3:30 p.m. in room 105 in Blake Hall. A presentation called, "How Does an Exhibition happen," at 1 p.m. will be in the auditorium of the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art. The SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Oread room of the Union. The SU BJA Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the Pine room of the Union. The English Department Colloquium will feature professors Stephen Hopkins and Tracy Beecham. Techniques of teaching history to students in the Walnut room of the Union SKYDIVING CLUB will meet at 8 p.m. in room 124, Robinson Health and Physical Education building. A student recital at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall will feature organist Helen Hofermeier. Tomorrow is the deadline for Graduate School Fellowships. THE KU BAND will perform at 8 p.m. at the Lawrence High School auditorium.
AURH elects officers; top 2 run unopposed
Jay Smith and Mark Fouts have been elected president and vice president of the Association of University Residence Halls. They Fouts, who ran as a team, were unopposed.
They received 529 votes in elections Monday, yesterday in the eight residence halls.
Other officers elected were Syburn! Herriun,stein,Overland Park sophomore,treasurer; and Ron Giersch, Topeka freshman, secretary.
Smith, Greensburg sophomore, was chairman of this year's contracts committee for AURH. Fouts, Derby sophomore, returns as AURH's vice president.
Burnstein received 337 votes. Brent Lamb, Topeka sophomore, received 73 votes.
and Parvesh Kumar, Overland Park sophomore, received 73 votes in the state debate.
Giersch received 441 votes. His opponent, Grieser Kuo, Lawrence freshman, received 176 votes.
Bill Dahman, chairman of the AURH elections committee, said approximately 675 people voted, about 15 percent of the residence hall population.
According to AURH policy, the president and vice president must live in separate halls. Smith lives in McColm Hall and Founts lives in Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
He said there were 50 write-in votes for president and vice president, but none were eligible because both members of the teams lived in the same hall.
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INTRAMURAL SOFTBALL — 1979 Manager's Meeting Robinson South Gymnasium
Recreation Release
Tuesday, March 20
- Recreation League at 5:15
* Trophy League at 6:00
Wednesday, March 21
- "B" League at 5:15
- Co-Rec. League at 6:00
THERE IS A $5 ENTRY FEE FOR ALL LEAGUES.
THERE IS AN ENTRY ON OUR SCHEDULE.
You must be represented by a manager for your respective meeting. Entry packets are available in Room 208, Robinson Center.
208 Robinson • Univ. of Ks. • Lawrence, Ks. 66045 • Phone: 864-3546 or 864-3556
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Wednesday, March 7, 1978
University Daily Kansan
11
Research disputes merits of biorhythms
By LYNN BYCZYNSKI
Staff Reporter
Charting biorhythms, internal biological cycles that reputedly govern human lives, is a serious business for believers. Sometimes those believers let the predicted "critical days" and "triple lows" dictate their activities.
But planning around those wavy lines on the biorhythm chart is probably a waste of time, according to a recent study at the University of Texas. Linked biorrhythms to athletic performance
Carole Zebas, assistant professor of health, physical education and recreation, said she had studied the performances of members of the men's track team for one year to determine if their positive youth cycles corresponded to their successes.
"My basic conclusion was that I could substantiate the biorthym theory." *Bezann*
Zebas said she was an enthusiastic
believe when she began her study of biorhythm, but became skeptical as her
"TM CONVINCED that the biological one does exist, but cannot be used to predict it," the author wrote. "theory does have some scientific validity, but maybe we're just using it the wrong way."
Biorthym theory says that three cycles that begin at birth govern the physical emotional and intellectual facets of every person's life.
The physical cycle lasts 23 days, carrying a person from the depths of being an accident-prone klutz to the peak of feeling fit.
Emotions can run from elation to depression in the 28 day emotional cycle. And the intellectual cycle spans 33 days, from those who have survived sinks in to those when supplying is effortless.
THE HALF-WAY point of each of these cycles is a "critical day" that can be either great or terrible. When all three cycles are on "critical day," an omnious "triple low" mandates caution.
Zebas's research with the KU track [gams] showed no consistent relationship between performance and cycles. However, a difference investigation produced surprising results.
Zebas compared the record-setting days of Jim Ryun, former KU track star and 10-year holder of the world's record for the mile run, with his biorhythm chart.
"The majority of his record-setting days were on emotional lows," she said.
HOWEVER, ZEBAS said she would not recommend using biorhythms to determine future performances, as did one high judge who cares more, me because his priority was had day.
"We just have to know what its limitations are," she said.
But Zebas said she had not given up on the idea of biorhythms.
Michael Kerr, a Lawrence graduate student who has helped Zebra analyze her data.
*Biorythmus may be the greatest thing since sliced bread but, before we buy it, let's just use it.*
*
KERR ALSO said believing in biorhythm could be dangerous because expecting trouble.
"It's unwise to make plans based on the commercially solid version of biorhythms because you never know how much of it is the result of self-suggestion." he said.
mine if everybody goes through the same cycles," he said.
But despite scientific skepticism, biorhythm advocates continue to grow in importance.
Books on the subject are continually being published and their sales are steady, say clerks at the Orcad Bookshop in the Kansas union and Adventure Bookstore, 925 W. Sioux.
A battery-operated calculator has been designed that will quickly plot cycles. One model, which sells for almost $30, is sold by Gibson Discount Center, 2525 Iowa St.
But those predicted bad days are hard to plan for and if one is coming," I just bear up my neck. "You've got to be patient."
believers, but sometimes only because it provides a convenient scapegoat.
Others admit to being firm biorhvthm
As Katherine Taylor, Lawrence junior,
you if you have an off day, it is a good ex-
cuse.
Leak lowers lake level; Army Corps checks cause
County Commissioner Bob Neis and officials from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers inspected a leak yesterday that is lowering the level of Lone Star Lake.
The lake, southwest of Lawrence, is maintained by the county.
Nets said the level of the take could drain the 15ft to the nine.
Neis said the leak, which was reported to commissioners last week, had lowered the level of the lake about six or seven inches. He noted that in order to control the amount of water in the lake.
The pipe is 15 feet from the surface and
KANSAN WANT ADS
The water is draining more slowly than it did last week, he said. The water is draining into the creek at the bottom of the lake and there is no danger of flooding, Neis said.
The Corps of Engineers advised that the pipe be repaired. Nets said the project would not have been determined and the commissioners have not decided the best way to correct the damage.
Accommodations, goods, services and regulatory requirements for the provision of airfares. AFLC, ACCOMPLISHED, INC. AFLC, ACCOMPLISHED, INC. AFLC, ACCOMPLISHED, INC.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
times times times times
15 words or
fewer
$ . 20 $ . 25 $ . 25 $ . 30 $
Each additional
01 02 03 04 05
0. 074 ___ .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
to lunch:
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.
JERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 861-4258
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge; for a period not exceeding three days. These cases can be placed in person or by telephone at the URN business office **644-1539**
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ENTERTAINMENT
USCF Class Tournament $550 prize food for March
weeks. Visit us at www.uscf.org/march.
Youth organizers, 412-8292.
Ebola medicine—An Ewing VFW W/FluViral
W1925 Tissue May 1st, Fourth Fever KN-EN-
W1925 Tissue May 1st, Fourth Fever KN-EN-
W1925 Tissue May 1st, Fourth Fever KN-EN
SOUND WAVE PRODUCTIONS - The ultimate in
improving sound. Our professional services in
amplifying sounds. Our specialized amplified
sound system and experienced live display
sets, plus price and information. 866-320-1020
or www.waveproductions.com by Webtech
Zen practice daily. 6 p.m. Introductory talks
following practice sessions. Zoom meeting on
Wednesday March 14 at 10 a.m. Liesinger Church
FOR RENT
Apr. 2 HR and efficiency Clase toa >>
Clent, Client, quiet, and comfortable: 82-94
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most
needed. Phone 812-607-7677 and rear lice care.
Phone 812-607-7677
FRIENDER HIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
1800 W. 23rd Street, 2ND Floor,
formalized with a 2-bedroom apartment and
unfurnished loft. Free parking. On KU bus zone
INDOOR. 441-726-5000 or see at 234 Front Door. Next door
441-726-5000 or see at 234 Front Door. Next door
Sell looking for a place to call home? Nasmith
Lakefront. 206 W. 49th St. Northwest of the year. Stay by and look for
or give us a call at 514-8243 and we will be glad to answer.
Nasmith Hall, 1800 N. 49th St. Northwest of the year.
NASMITH HALL, 1800 N. 49th St. Northwest of the year.
Jajuhaver TOWERS Apartments 1603 West 15th
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
Room with kitchen appliances, 2 blocks south of garage in private home. No smoking. 905, 1786
2 & 3 Bedroom apt & display available in-
terior. Close to campus. No jobs. B42-7666-1014
842-4114
For retreat. Room in a very nice 5 hr. house, close to swimming pool. Swimming pool, table, fireplace. Share utilities but plenty of privacy and privacy. 1. 5. attic. Call 642-841-980 or 642-841-9830. 0-8-8-8-8
For Rent: A room for rent at 100 Tennessee.
Available now. Phone: 842-892-181. 3-9
To add support Meadowbrook studio. Call 841-391-
2941 or 843-4218 at 6 p.m.
Finally a Laurence landlord who cares'
Call Mark. Schneider for apartments and rentals, 843-3212 or 812-4111.
Beautiful 7 month old 3 bedroom rancher;
dragged up and amplified applications; e.g., ua
cue, volcano, bluesky.
Want to lie in, in luxury, in your bed for $55 per night?
Call 817-2432 or email immediately. Call 817-2432 at 3:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Niceaest 2 bedroom. A11; bath 7airs, chair舱 3airs, cute kitchen. B2520, sofa 6, bed 3-23
642-2017
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure acres out of Western Civilization makes some sense in your own home. Call the Office at 214-896-2700 or visit www.westerncivilization.com for exam preparation. *New Analysis* (July 25, 2013). *New Theory* (Aug. 21, 2013). *City Booktitles*, & Ordnance Books. *U*.
Altimator, starter and generator. Specialized
AUTOMOTIVE. 823-706-0200. 790 W/Y.
Fender Modified Bass Guitar with strap, strings,
sustainers, bridge, pickups. Stainless steel cards, wood
cards, and very good condition.
Bandolier (Bandoliers) for bass guitars.
SunSparc Sun glasses are our specialty. No prior
experience needed. Reasonable rates, 1023
6051 841-7470
686 Scheenens at Louise's every Friday from 2
Hill 5. 4-3
Need first aid or whiplash? An association with a local Goodwill and Dontrex Life at the hospital shows that we also available at wholesale prices and before you even know what to call, our Board spends a more than twice as much to Call.
Clarion GE-P2E12 ethernet radio-lan diffuser recb ch U-B-C Track AM-FM in reply to NB-101800.
PUZZHSTER 'RADAR DETECTOR' 825, 841-
3827 3-8
Management and maintenance time set, lot of solvents
Cancels phone heat, 26 by 21, Bride with brown
hair. Azalea topaz. Brand New; never used.
645-989-3900
Blue Women's. Schwinn Continental 10-30.
Excelent condition. #1151. B11-8492.
spot your bird - Ring $5.95 binoculars now $2.50
at Round Corner Drug Store 3-8
Operate-ope-vent Cust. Secured-Earned-Returns / LAMENT/
Reward Stake $295. to Return Curr. Dug Store $867.
Basket-Washroom B-34, excellent instruction book (in-
troduction to instruction books B-34)
Call 614-259-4458 after 5 p.m.
Check this device voltage. Teach A-409 again that voltage is about 5V. Check the power supply, with a multimeter, MHZPAD (MID) set to 12V. The output voltage should be about 7V.
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 720W, 1200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 840W, 1300W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 960W, 1400W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 1080W, 1500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 1200W, 1500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 1600W, 1700W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 1900W, 2000W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 2200W, 2300W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 2500W, 2600W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 2800W, 2900W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 3100W, 3200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 3400W, 3500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 3700W, 3800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 4000W, 4100W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 4300W, 4400W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 4600W, 4700W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 4900W, 5000W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 5200W, 5300W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 5500W, 5600W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 5800W, 5900W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 6100W, 6200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 6400W, 6500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 6700W, 6800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 7000W, 7100W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 7300W, 7400W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 7600W, 7700W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 7900W, 8000W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 8200W, 8300W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 8500W, 8600W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 8800W, 8900W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 9100W, 9200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 9400W, 9500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 9700W, 9800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10000W, 10100W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10300W, 10400W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10600W, 10700W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10900W, 11000W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11200W, 11300W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11500W, 11600W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11800W, 11900W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12100W, 12200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12400W, 12500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12700W, 12800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13000W, 13100W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13300W, 13400W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13600W, 13700W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13900W, 14000W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14200W, 14300W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14500W, 14600W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14800W, 14900W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 15100W, 15200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 15400W, 15500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 15700W, 15800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 16000W, 16100W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 16300W, 16400W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 16600W, 16700W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 16900W, 17000W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 17200W, 17300W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 17500W, 17600W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 17800W, 17900W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 18100W, 18200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 18400W, 18500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 18700W, 18800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 19000W, 19100W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 19300W, 19400W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 19600W, 19700W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 19900W, 20000W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 20300W, 20400W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 20600W, 20700W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 20900W, 21000W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 21200W, 21300W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 21500W, 21600W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 21800W, 21900W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 22100W, 22200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 22400W, 22500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 22700W, 22800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 23100W, 23200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 23400W, 23500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 23700W, 23800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 24100W, 24200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 24400W, 24500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 24700W, 24800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 25100W, 25200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 25400W, 25500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 25700W, 25800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 26100W, 26200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 26400W, 26500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 26700W, 26800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 27100W, 27200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 27400W, 27500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 27700W, 27800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 28100W, 28200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 28400W, 28500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 28700W, 28800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 29100W, 29200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 29400W, 29500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 29700W, 29800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 30100W, 30200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 30400W, 30500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 30700W, 30800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 31100W, 31200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 31400W, 31500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 31700W, 31800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 32100W, 32200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 32400W, 32500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 32700W, 32800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 33100W, 33200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 33400W, 33500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 33700W, 33800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 34100W, 34200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 34400W, 34500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 34700W, 34800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 35100W, 35200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 35400W, 35500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 35700W, 35800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 36100W, 36200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 36400W, 36500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 36700W, 36800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 37100W, 37200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 37400W, 37500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 37700W, 37800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 38100W, 38200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 38400W, 38500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 38700W, 38800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 39100W, 39200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 39400W, 39500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 39700W, 39800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 40100W, 40200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 40400W, 40500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 40700W, 40800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 41100W, 41200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 41400W, 41500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 41700W, 41800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 42100W, 42200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 42400W, 42500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 42700W, 42800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 43100W, 43200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 43400W, 43500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 43700W, 43800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 44100W, 44200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 44400W, 44500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 44700W, 44800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 45100W, 45200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 45400W, 45500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 45700W, 45800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 46100W, 46200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 46400W, 46500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 46700W, 46800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 47100W, 47200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 47400W, 47500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 47700W, 47800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 48100W, 48200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 48400W, 48500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 48700W, 48800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 49100W, 49200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 49400W, 49500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 49700W, 49800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 50100W, 50200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 50400W, 50500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 50700W, 50800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 51100W, 51200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 51400W, 51500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 51700W, 51800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 52100W, 52200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 52400W, 52500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 52700W, 52800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 53100W, 53200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 53400W, 53500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 53700W, 53800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 54100W, 54200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 54400W, 54500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 54700W, 54800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 55100W, 55200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 55400W, 55500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 55700W, 55800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 56100W, 56200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 56400W, 56500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 56700W, 56800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 57100W, 57200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 57400W, 57500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 57700W, 57800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 58100W, 58200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 58400W, 58500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 58700W, 58800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 59100W, 59200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 59400W, 59500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 59700W, 59800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 60100W, 60200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 60400W, 60500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 60700W, 60800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 61100W, 61200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 61400W, 61500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 61700W, 61800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 62100W, 62200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 62400W, 62500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 62700W, 62800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 63100W, 63200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 63400W, 63500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 63700W, 63800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 64100W, 64200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 64400W, 64500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 64700W, 64800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 65100W, 65200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 65400W, 65500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 65700W, 65800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 66100W, 66200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 66400W, 66500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 66700W, 66800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 67100W, 67200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 67400W, 67500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 67700W, 67800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 68100W, 68200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 68400W, 68500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 68700W, 68800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 69100W, 69200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 69400W, 69500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 69700W, 69800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 70100W, 70200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 70400W, 70500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 70700W, 70800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 71100W, 71200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 71400W, 71500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 71700W, 71800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 72100W, 72200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 72400W, 72500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 72700W, 72800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 73100W, 73200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 73400W, 73500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 73700W, 73800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 74100W, 74200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 74400W, 74500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 74700W, 74800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 75100W, 75200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 75400W, 75500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 75700W, 75800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 76100W, 76200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 76400W, 76500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 76700W, 76800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 77100W, 77200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 77400W, 77500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 77700W, 77800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 78100W, 78200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 78400W, 78500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 78700W, 78800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 79100W, 79200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 79400W, 79500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 79700W, 79800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 80100W, 80200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 80400W, 80500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 80700W, 80800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 81100W, 81200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 81400W, 81500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 81700W, 81800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 82100W, 82200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 82400W, 82500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 82700W, 82800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 83100W, 83200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 83400W, 83500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 83700W, 83800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 84100W, 84200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 84400W, 84500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 84700W, 84800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 85100W, 85200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 85400W, 85500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 85700W, 85800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 86100W, 86200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 86400W, 86500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 86700W, 86800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 87100W, 87200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 87400W, 87500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 87700W, 87800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 88100W, 88200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 88400W, 88500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 88700W, 88800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 89100W, 89200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 89400W, 89500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 89700W, 89800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 90100W, 90200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 90400W, 90500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 90700W, 90800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 91100W, 91200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 91400W, 91500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 91700W, 91800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 92100W, 92200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 92400W, 92500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 92700W, 92800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 93100W, 93200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 93400W, 93500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 93700W, 93800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 94100W, 94200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 94400W, 94500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 94700W, 94800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 95100W, 95200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 95400W, 95500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 95700W, 95800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 96100W, 96200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 96400W, 96500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 96700W, 96800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 97100W, 97200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 97400W, 97500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 97700W, 97800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 98100W, 98200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 98400W, 98500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 98700W, 98800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 99100W, 99200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 99400W, 99500W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 99700W, 99800W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10010W, 10020W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10040W, 10050W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10070W, 10080W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10090W, 10100W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10120W, 10130W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10150W, 10160W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10180W, 10190W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10210W, 10220W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10240W, 10250W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10270W, 10280W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10290W, 10300W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10320W, 10330W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10350W, 10360W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10370W, 10380W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10390W, 10400W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10410W, 10420W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10440W, 10450W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10470W, 10480W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10510W, 10520W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10540W, 10550W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10570W, 10580W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10610W, 10620W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10640W, 10650W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10670W, 10680W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10710W, 10720W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10740W, 10750W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10770W, 10780W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10810W, 10820W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10840W, 10850W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10870W, 10880W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10910W, 10920W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10940W, 10950W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10970W, 10980W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 10990W, 10999W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11010W, 11020W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11040W, 11050W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11070W, 11080W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11100W, 11120W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11140W, 11150W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11170W, 11180W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11200W, 11210W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11240W, 11250W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11270W, 11280W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11300W, 11310W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11340W, 11350W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11370W, 11380W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11410W, 11420W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11440W, 11450W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11470W, 11480W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11510W, 11520W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11540W, 11550W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11570W, 11580W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11610W, 11620W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11640W, 11650W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11670W, 11680W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11710W, 11720W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11740W, 11750W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11770W, 11780W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11810W, 11820W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11840W, 11850W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11870W, 11880W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11910W, 11920W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11940W, 11950W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 11970W, 11980W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12010W, 12020W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12040W, 12050W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12070W, 12080W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12090W, 12100W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12120W, 12130W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12150W, 12160W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12170W, 12180W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12190W, 12200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12240W, 12250W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12270W, 12280W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12300W, 12310W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12340W, 12350W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12370W, 12380W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12400W, 12410W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12440W, 12450W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12470W, 12480W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12500W, 12510W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12540W, 12550W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12570W, 12580W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12600W, 12610W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12640W, 12650W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12670W, 12680W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12700W, 12710W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12740W, 12750W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12770W, 12780W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12810W, 12820W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12840W, 12850W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12870W, 12880W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12900W, 12910W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12940W, 12950W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12970W, 12980W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 12990W, 12999W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13010W, 13020W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13040W, 13050W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13070W, 13080W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13090W, 13099W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13100W, 13110W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13140W, 13150W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13170W, 13180W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13190W, 13200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13240W, 13250W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13270W, 13280W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13290W, 13300W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13340W, 13350W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13370W, 13380W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 13390W, 13399W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14010W, 14020W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14040W, 14050W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14070W, 14080W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14090W, 14099W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14100W, 14110W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14120W, 14130W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14140W, 14150W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14170W, 14180W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14190W, 14200W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14240W, 14250W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14270W, 14280W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14300W, 14310W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14340W, 14350W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14370W, 14380W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14390W, 14400W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14410W, 14420W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14440W, 14450W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14470W, 14480W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14500W, 14510W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14540W, 14550W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14570W, 14580W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14600W, 14610W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14640W, 14650W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14670W, 14680W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14700W, 14710W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14740W, 14750W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14770W, 14780W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14800W, 14810W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14840W, 14850W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14870W, 14880W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14890W, 14900W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14910W, 14920W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14940W, 14950W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14970W, 14980W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 14990W, 14999W)
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 15010W, 15020W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 15040W, 15050W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 15070W, 15080W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 15090W, 15099W)
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 15100W, 15120W
Natiprofil range Microwave T900 15140W
MUST BELIEVE 7.61 T扑机 wagon, 4 speed AM-PM
Low range railway, Elevated condition
841-1426
WHY RENT? When you could own this beautiful studio, it would be a dream. Like new appliances, dispensaries, ceramic toilets, water-washers and wash-dryers area 2.5 square meters, air-conditioned, storage building, binder trees, bushes, tree, tall garden, storage building, fire pit, bird feeder.
50- OFF SALE on all kinds of drawing pad-
ing kits 60-108 Vermont Vernor Furniture
Kit
326 HONDA, morrally perfect. Mike. 812-9
434
QuikGlip Brand Tire Chains H-15 size $25; CALL
864-323-366 or 841-2606
2.7
MARANTZ 2220 B receiver, 26 watts, chg good
condition. $55. 820 or 3423 or 8422. 3-9
17 Camaro, 3-door, runs excellent, rear end
limo. Adoring $7,600, 84-9254
FOUND
MARANTZ 2028, 2258 chassis receive; Perfect
connection; 9432-TBD or 9425-A25
9432-TBD or 9425-A25
For large, single bed with two mattresses and one mattress cover.
For large bed with two mattresses and two mattresses cover.
For large bed with three mattresses and one mattress cover.
Gibson Les Paul Custom, Guitar, Good Condition,
Call 841-8515
3-6
Tiger kitten, stripped found in 1814 and Alabama
Call Jenifer, 845-956 or 841-2522
3-7
KDTJ, driver's license, way, buildings, schools
and hospitals. All must be certified or can be obtained from Level 4. Kauai Union Infant
Center.
HELP WANTED
Now taking applications for Fountain & Garth
Ink, apply in person at the Fountain, Inc.
Apply in person at Vollmer Hickman,
Inc.
Part three maintenance person needed. Starting pay $23 per hour. Must be trained to allow 8 hours of cleaning required, plus additional manual cleaning required, and also nutritional assistance. Apply in person. Shipment Foods. 3-12
Рис. 14.8. Структура данных при создании таблицы данных.
В таблице данных хранятся три битов, которые представляют значения типа int64.
В таблице данных хранятся три битов, которые представляют значения типа int32.
В таблице данных хранится три битов, которые представляют значения типа int64.
EXOTIC JOE LAKE TAHOO, CALIFORNIA!
Little expense, famine-like $1700-$4000 ammunition,
tamarins, ramboes, cineraries, river rats, & more.
$692.932 San Diego, river rafts $692.932 San Diego,
San Diego, river rafts $692.932
JOBS MEN WOMEN SAILBOATS!
CRUISE SHIPS? No iceagents! Hail high pay! See Caribbean, Hawaii, Europe, West Africa, Greenland
Sea, South America SEA 10500
Box 6029, Box 6030, Caesium. 35000
4-24
IT Support Developer - BVH Group, L.L.C. Provide technical support for BVH Group's IT systems to ensure their smooth operation. Respond to client issues and implement solutions to improve performance. Req. Bachelor's degree in Computer Science or related field + 5 yrs of experience in IT support. Apply online at http://www.bvhgroup.com/careers/it-support-technician/.
Fluoropaque, office assistant. Full time. An annual
salary of $1500 plus 4% tax. Applicants who
please indicate their phone and MH320 for their
phone number.
O. Konsultan, Youth Justice Fund, matriar disfarmeri
mudah menyebabkan mahasiswa yang mengalami kekurangan
98% untuk information. For information, 402-372-5788
SUMMER OBTENTION STAFF POSITIONS. Auditors are the first line being assigned in the new information center; they must provide all information to the office in the form of a resume. The office must have a computer and Rentmate 128 Mailing Hall. An input terminal is also required.
Because the data is provided in a specific format, we must specify the required format for each column. For example, if the data consists of dates and times, the appropriate format should be `dateTime`. If the data consists of numbers only, the appropriate format should be `number`. If the data consists of text only, the appropriate format should be `text`.
Partition stainless-minder wadded Jewelry mender
480 Mesh Grips Apply to 30
480 Mesh Grips Use for 30
Graduate student assistant to run statistical and other programming packages, write programs for data analysis, and work with Honeywell wire servant with Honeywell wire servant. Agree Prof. Gradually, 31 Nonuniforme 64226-8248 Mts. Fax: (704) 525-7978.
EXTRA ENCORE PROGRAM. Earn up to $40 per hundred envelopes you address & staff help. Encourage your customers at home and thank self-addressed envelopes for their support. VW, Daimler, Post, BOI-21 Morgentwalt, W, Va 2600
Institute容积 for full and short time water
storage. Inverter, pump, controller, feeders,
2222 W, 40 V, 80 Hz. Rapid Operator:
Cisco, RTL-SDR, Logitech, Eagle.
SUMMER JOBS! Come to Cresta (co.) if interested in working as a Floor Cleaner for Gold State Bank, 5155 West Oakland Ave., San Francisco, CA 94107 or as a Bank Position Manager for Gold State Bank, 5155 West Oakland Ave., San Francisco, CA 94107.
immediate opening for part-time evening and
weekend nurse aid for female quadriplegic in
nursing home. Will train. Provide own trans-
portation. Contact: 613-728-4500, m. Apt. 811; 2-50
p.m. Apt. for China.
Waartje and wittenhoeve. Variety of hour. Deliver.
Monday through Friday. 8am-10pm. Gate
Garden Hallway. 106 Park N. Way. 3:25
Resident director, residence hall. In month,
boston, full-time; professional position beginning
Aug. 1, 1999. Required. Master's degree in sociology or
job description included in 125 Student Health 3-29
Time part time career or kitchen work must Must work 3-4 hrs per day 3-4 days a week. Call for information.
LOST
Gold stable franchise on 2.27 per 10,000
funds and park franchise areas. Institutional
fonds must be paid directly to the fund.
Lost a green arm back pack containing books, net to law. Call 813-6324. Retain 9
THESSIS BINDING COPYING The House of
Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court of
Louisiana help us copy and catalog in Lawyer's
Room.
MISCELLANEOUS
Two piece, ring in 564, Norsemerted,
or Thursday, March 1, Wedge 811-9044 3-9
NOTICE
DEATH WHY BOOTIES
Authored Snippet of Soul Travel 8212-8422
ECKANKARAN
EITF-Mitte mit der bestellung bei Inventarent
anbaut und die in diesem Jahr nach dem
Verpacken mit den Bestellungen auf dem
Boden des EITF-Mitte mit der bestellung bei Inventarent anbaut und die in diesem Jahr nach dem Verpacken mit den Bestellungen auf dem
East J. LeLochard and Julie Freeman were
from New York City who have one ability in each other's favor, as a musician and an educator.
Kevin Ryan can be contacted by hearing at 480-325-7091 or Kevin.Ryan@microsoft.com. Contact Kevin Marzolo at marzolo@microsoft.com to speak with him regarding the latest updates.
PERSONAL
HARDWARE SPECIALS 6am Mon, Tues, and Thurs
3-5pm Wed, Fri, Sat & Sun
MAIDS MOONLIGHT NIGHT 7pm - $199 per person
**RUINS HIRE SHOP** (more open) 298 Ruleng A, Pike, & Conti Building, East Village, NYC. Phone: (718) 650-3150. Visit www.ruinshore.com.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Attention: up to
$25,000 for qualified patients in New York,
Councilbridge, Total Dislocation, and
Pre-surgical rehabilitation. For more
information call (866) 713-4922.
GOOD LUCK
MID-TERMS
and have a
GREAT SPRING BREAK
David Bernstein Photography
the party picture professionals
842-4155
842-6135
Gay-Ladius consulting referees now handled
high, high. RI Info 360 or Sorek@business.812.
450-579-3233.
Personality. I am asked to come graduation? Or give auto-enrollment now at the Kansas University? Yes.
Wait, the prompt says "Preserve text exactly as it appears."
The image shows:
"Personality. I am asked to come graduation? Or give auto-enrollment now at the Kansas University?"
Yes, the text is exactly what it says.
Final check of the text:
"Personality. I am asked to come graduation? Or give auto-enrollment now at the Kansas University?"
Yes, the text is exactly what it says.
PEN HILL, WICHER CITY, Aberdeen unite to
join forces against the opioid crisis.
713-258-9400 www.penhillwicher.com
@penhillwicher.com
@penhillwicher.com
@penhillwicher.com
Moving to Calgary, Texas, Canaan takes a hiker and meets his new lover in Calgary. Sharon shares with Mildred the story of her longtime love.
Free to everyone
Bottleneck Coves, every Monday night 6-12 at
Lonesome Way at Michigan & Galena. $45
Remember
Short courses in businesstechnical writing. Every Wednesday evening 6/7 p.m., 4pm, Summerfair; Topic for Businesswriting, March 8; Effective Sentences
Thursday evening, 6-7 p.m.
408 Summerfield
the Selebenmen and 11 Pichers every Friday
afternoon (2-5) at Lunette's bar.
4-3
Wanted a Bedroom furnished Apartment at 179 W. 10th St in NYC for $35K/week including full kitchen, bath, lift in the spring, ACK for rent! Call to 212-436-8142 or email info@ladyjohnson.com
Kilty Sanders, I've not you care but how do I
1 and you again? signed Rick!
Spring Break
Special
Women's Tops
20%
OFF
at
Litwins
831 Mass.
Sale Thru Weekend
Salo Thru Wookond
HC Wanna to pay friend for 1962? For an unvaccinated
HC Wanna to pay friend for 1962?
$40,000 for a full year of vaccine + will be $54,000
for a half year of vaccine.
Who's not Deadly Assassin, but the way the word "Assassin" is used in this poem is 16 HEAVEN THERE IS NO BREATH.
To whoever found a large blue skirt above
To whomever on 12F that warmer weather uppe-
rion to the edge of the staircase, to an in-
side of its rough edge. At least allow them to be
a match dart品 (PLEASE bid #11-050). No que-
suality.
Moffet & Beers Band at Lounes Bar this Thursday Night
How many pouches could a Tahiti Pound pound if a Tahiti Pound could pound pouches?
Patrick, I'm going to miss you! So you on the
21st. No, 81-82
3-7
Huge birthday慰问 New year 1984! legal no
to receive the M.A.O & P.W
SERVICES OFFERED
RUNNING EDITING. Your memoir, the first or a term paper edited into an effective,庄严的 book, should be written with precision and smoothness. Outlines, tables, and articles are equally useful. 842-1353
EXPERT TUTORS MATH WEEK 092 (1) cell 843.5722
TUTORIALS ONLINE FOR MATHEMATICS SCIENCE PRESENTATIONS
cell 843.5723 COMPUTE SCIENCE LAB (1)
cell 843.5724 DATA ANALYSIS LAB (1)
TUTORS cell 843.5726 QUALIFICATIONS (1)
TUTORS cell 843.5728 PROGRAMMING (1)
For general problem-solving
New help in truth or CSI GS for a father who cared for his own birth, your birth or CSI problems. 811-747-6177
811-747-6178
MATH TUTOR M in math, practice three years professional tutoring experience, B2124, 5144
Tired of feeding yourself? Nathans Hall is of great interest for the first time over a boarding plant. Students can spend up to 30 days each week can be yours if you choose this plan. SHIP HALL, 1196 Ninth Street, 842-828-5588 MASSMHALL 1196 Ninth Street, 842-828-5588
Halb by Ken parallels Experimented Kryptonite
Halt by Ken parallels Experimented Kryptonite
End by Ken parallels Experimented Kryptonite
End by Ken parallels Experimented Kryptonite
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Aires at the Houses of Uvea/Quick Corp Centre; Aires is available from a 4m, to 5m. Monday to Friday, 8 am to 4 pm on Saturday at Mass.
DOC OBEDIENCE AND INFORMATION CLASS
DOC. BACKUP TO PRESENT GUESTS.
Bach to resignation to T. B. P.M. and
M.C. to resignation to M.S. F.A.
Grand General Armory. Payments $8 on either
$10 or $20. Available in the Grand
Armory. Payment required for further
services available inquiries. For further
information, call 714-394-1156.
TYPING
1 do damned good typing, Peggy, 842-4476. If
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980
7 year experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Finished projects, book formations, books
W12-8723
Tarik/Editor IRM, Pima Elite. Quality work.
Help with research and dissertation welcome.
Mail MS 93279
Experienced Typed, term papers, flasks, mice,
and other lab equipment. Spacing equiv.
613-554-9344, Ms. Wright
Experimental, hybrid therapies, dissociations, form-
ulations, and studies of selective cardiac
BILS-CMN, serum, aECV.
Research documentation, legal forms, family
history, research archive, Electronic Call Center,
Burlington 811-2725
www.burlington.edu
Quality testing parameters: IBM Electronics Term-
ment Work, Illustrations, Carte Maude
X400
1. file share to quiet training. Under 20 min. 1 minute
2. call CALL 856-4633 after 9:15am.
3. Call CALL 856-4633 after 9:15am.
4. 9-14
COMPETITIZED THISIS TYPING. Have your typesetter typed up PTT-1900 and you can have it run on your computer. Call PROFESSIONAL TYPING, SERVICE, 641-798-3000, job title on line 2.
Trying on film file temperature. Proper setting
required. No results. Mets, Maria 83-9
1777
TPTING: Over 3000 points passed, Quality
within 95% of the criteria. Master's
applicable with no work experience.
Assist in all jobs for you. 22
Examiner required, with excellent background
IMC consulting Science II Call Jm. 843-3122
WANTED
Roommate wanted Central Air w/师者 w/ter
Roommate wanted Central Air w/师者 w/师者
month plus 12
Call Nibbs 867-107
Small House or Double in yard with fever and grindy dog my day. Call rebelled info 415-315-6180.
Wardell, M. D.; recommend for clean two-bedroom
cells. Culb 941-0832 for 4-400.
3-20
Two female remembrances wanted to share special memories with the next year. Call Julie Ralph at (866) 521-0700 or www.julie-ralph.com.
Mail reservation for FF 79 senser only. Own
unit, lk with 480mAh, e-mail Call Dear
user.
ELECTRICIAN
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 20,550 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
SELL IT!
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
If you've got it, Kansan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint Office to show how to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
--to run
Monday Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday Friday 5 pm
Wednesday Monday 5 pm
Thursday Tuesday 5 pm
Friday Wednesday 5 pm
AD DEADLINES
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
RATES:
15 words or less
additional word
1
time
$2.00
Write ad here:
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
additional words:
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col x 1 Inch - $3.50
Col x 1 Inch - $3.50
DATE TO RUN: to
5 times $3.00 .05
NAME:
ADDRESS:
%HONE:
KANSAN CLASSIFIED-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
12
Wednesday, March 7, 1979
University Daily Kansan
---
Vending
From page one
Daryl Hutton, who supervises employees who restock the machines, said McColum was served for the third time on Sundays between 7:30 and 8 p.m. He said the machines were usually not empty at that time.
Prowant said most of the McCollium residents probably did not think the machines were filled more than once a day on Sunday.
PRANT SAID, "It’s really hard for me to believe that they fill those machines three times."
But even it the machines are working and stocked with food, it is not up to the quality of Joe's, and there is no danger of losing money like in the machines."
Prowant added that he thought many people did not have cars and could not buy them.
Romano said, "We have more than 837 people here. Usually by Sunday night the machines get low, so the senate decided to provide a service for the students."
--must wheel me to my room, take the keys out of my purse and unlock the door. He helps me a lot and he'd do the same for anyone else."
"We'd like to open up a snack bar like Wescoe Catera on a small scale, but we can't because of the contract," he said. "We don't have any input, and we want it."
"We try to improve our service if we are failing in a certain area. We want to open the door." "There is no intention on anyone's part to alight anyone. We will increase the number of patients."
Jolly said any complaints and problems about service should be reported.
Prownt said his committee may talk to the association of University Residence Halls to find out whether they are using machines. He also said the committee may start a letter writing campaign to the University Daily Kansan and State Rep. Mike Glover, D-12.
Floyd...
Craig said that when he accepted the job he was told he might have a do a few extra calls.
HE SAID he had offered to meet with representatives of the residence halls to discuss problems, but had gotten no response.
"If we can get AURH organized against this thing at least we will eat better."
From page one
"If I'm in trouble, I know that Craig would be there to help out," Bissing said. "I often go to the library and it was comforting to know that if the weather was bad and I couldn't make it to the van, Floyd would come in looking for me."
"If any of the riders need help to get or to
from their home or classrooms, do it."
Torn Bissign, another student who uses a wheelchair, said the service was exceptional, especially when the weather was bad.
THE VAN RUNS from 7:30 a.m. to at least
4:30 p.m. Despite the heavy use, Craig said,
there were others who were not using the
van who should.
"Some people are shy and embarrassed about using this service," Craig said. "It shouldn't hurt anyone's pride if they have a reason to need it."
Craig said he was trying to make the transportation service successful so the session would be more efficient.
"A lot of people count on this van running so that they can get to class." Craig said. "We've been there and right to an education. They need some way to get around and this van takes
"There are a lot of people who need this service. I might be able to get by without driving this van. However, there are many who could not get by without this service."
WOMEN IN BUSINESS
Lecture series presents Beverly Laughlin
Vice President Women's Marketing & Recruiting Southwestern Life Insurance Co.
Wednesday, March 7 3:30 p.m.
112C Summerfield Hall
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource and Career Center
Have Dinner with Gov. John Carlin Friday March 9th Douglas County Democratic "Dinner with the Winners"
Donations $15.00
Reservations at 843-3225 or at door
Reception 6:00
Russell's East 3400 W.6th
Dinner 7:00
Mingles
Disco
FOR MINGLERS ONLY.
(See you at Happy Hour, 4:00-7:00 p.m. Monday-Friday)
through March 10 only
Lawrence Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th 842-7030
"This service was set up on a temporary basis," Alaire said. "Facilities Operations is of the opinion that the program should continue. However, we're still interested in dollars and how much it will cost to continue operation."
survey contacted Facilities Operations about using one of the department's vans for transporting equipment with a wheelchair attachment and Facilities Operations and the Student Senate provided assistance.
Every KU student on the Lawrence campus pays $3.50 a semester through the activity fee for KU on Wheels, the student bus service. Disabled students are also paying for this service, although many cannot use it because of disabilities.
$10 MEMBERSHIP SPECIAL
Alaina said KU had improved its services for disabled persons in the past four years.
Bus ...
THIS ORLIGATION prompted the beginning of the bus service for disabled persons at KU Lest fail Mike Harper, who was attacked during a Turkey about the need for the bus service.
From page one
"Students were paying for a service they couldn't use." Robert Turvey, assistant director of the Center for School Safety, said. "Since KU was associated with KU on Wheels, federal guidelines said KU had to provide some kind of service for students who needed help." The center is the possibility of a lawsuit.
MINGLES DISCO...A PRIVATE CLUB
"KU spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to make the buildings accessible to residents."
get people to these buildings," Alaire said. "With this van service, the University is getting a lot of help."
"We hope that more students with disabilities would come to KU." Gomez said. "It's a matter of mobility and this is a system that would put you at the front door of a classroom. This service would make KU the most accessible university in the state.
Van Zandt said that if the program were continued and expanded disabled students who were discouraged from attending KU because of hills and who should be attending KU because of their abilities might consider coming.
GEORGE GOMEZ, student body vice
student, ask that the service would attract
them.
"I think it's the responsibility of the University and not just the Student Senate to keep the program going. If we're the ones to mitigate it thought, that's fine.
- "NIGH school I had cerebral palsy and
my counselor recommended Emperor Sinai.
"KU could be a good school for the handicapped but it still has a long way to go. It has to be aware of the needs of the handicapped."
Wray said, "Each year there are disabled students who go to Emporia State. They can't ride KU on Wheels because they'd get knocked down."
Turvey agreed that programs for the handicapped should be expanded.
"Education is the key to the future for a lot of these people." Turvey said.
Happy 1st Year
FREE
Anniversary!
Shampoo and Blow-dry with every Prime Cut Mar. 1-15
Lawrence's Most Unique Hair Salon
841-4488
Prime Cut Hair Co.
13 E. 8th
105
Open Evenings
---
HENRY'S RESTAURANT
henrys
SIXTH & MISSOURI 843-2139
CARRY-OUT
DRIVE-IN
FacEx to consider faculty raise plan
Buy one Quarter Pound All-American with or without cheese and get The Second One for .25c
Reg.—99° without cheese, $1.09 with cheese
With this coupon
A. S. A.
But Srinivasan said KU faculty members discussed the proposal with Gov. John Carlin after he was elected as governor. He also had the idea and had told the faculty that if the Board of Regents asked for a report, the Legislature would be responsive.
A proposal that would change the way faculty raises are awarded will receive preliminary discussion at today's Faculty executive committee meeting.
THE
Currently all faculty salary increases are based on merit, T.P. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics, said. Srinivasan suzested the proposal.
ANSWERED POEM
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, declined to comment on the proposal but said it could have "interesting implications."
My only sister died of cancer when I was three years old; she was twelve. This was in Panama, by the Pacific Ocean. As a child, I experienced a lot of loneliness and frustration, and a deep presentment about death. I often asked myself: "Will I live beyond the age of twelve?" I finally did, but since I couldn't cope with a world in which weakness was rejected, I ended up isolating myself.
The raise distribution proposal would divide faculty salary increases into cost of living increases and merit increases.
"Any time this idea was mentioned before, it was shot down right away," he said. "The standard administration response has been to tell us that the legislators would not touch it with a 10-foot pole."
Later on, unbearable anxieties and phobias began to disturb my life. I became rebellious, even violent toward my parents. My psychiatrist diagnosed objectionary anxiety. I felt helpless, and only my pride kept me going.
During high school, I devoted my time to intellectual pursuits. I wrote poetry and practiced piano for hours. I was a good student, and that made me feel superior to my classmates.
I had the opportunity to study music in Mexico. I remember that, prior to my departure, I wrote a poem to God, in which the last line was "I Need You." Three months later, he Answered. A Mexican student told me (in a practice room) about the Gospel, God's diagnosis of my problem was a lot simpler. sin. The only remedy was
He did say the proposal would require a change in the way the Legislature passes appropriations for higher education. He said that if the Regents approved the proposal, it would take at least a year to implement.
Another Life changed by Jesus Christ
Srinivasan said faculty dissatisfaction with the present method had prompted his proposal. Faculty members object to having to compete with one another to demonstrate they are worthy of raises, he said.
Things have changed quite a bit since then, though it hasn't been precisely a bed of roses. The exciting thing about Christianity is not the absence of problems, but rather the assurance of victory. Christ has given me security and peace, and most of the life I die to be able to love, in the truth of my existence, in no longer afraid of death, made of love with my Creator.
Christ. Right afterwards, I became a Christian.
Srinivasan said he would ask FacEx to pass a resolution urging the Kansas Board of Regents to ask the Kansas Legislature for the two-step raise
But Srinivasan said he had mixed feelings about the possible success of his proposal.
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Veto of district plan sought
Staff Reporter
Bv GENE LINN
TOPEKA—Two Lawrence state representatives are to meet with Gov. John Carlin this afternoon to ask him to veto a Kansas House redistricting bill they say splits the KU student vote.
State Reps. John Solbach and Mike Glover, both Lawrence Democrats, have said the bill takes away much of the power to keep schools open.
The legislation would place all of Glover's 48th District west of Massachusetts Street, and would move the KU campus and Oread area out of Glover's district into a new 48th District.
Glover would pick up heavily Republican districts in west central Lawrence.
The bill went to the governor yesterday after the House unexpectedly decided not to send it to a conference commit-tee.
The House had a chance to送 it to a House-Senate conference committee because the Senate had made two minor changes in the budget.
HOUSE MAJORITY Leader Robert Frey, B-Liberal, a model minister to committee. Democrats want the House to support the mandate.
"Fifteen minutes before the vote on the bill, we were prepared to try to work out a compromise," said House Republican Leader John C. McCain.
"But Glover and Solloch ask us they couldn't accept the republicans' compromise proposal, so we made a decision," she said.
The substitute motion carried 98-19, with Solbach and Glover voting "present."
Glover said all of the compromise proposals would have split the student vote and called the proposed given to him.
"In effect, Vogel told me I could have a safe Democratic candidate if I'd let them student the vote." Glover said.
seat 14 of diehcnim spout the stunnet vove. Glover said,
"I told him if he was going to take advantage of the
Vogel said his proposal basically would have placed Glover back in his old district.
"WE JUST would have shifted three predecessors in the present bill," Vogel said. "The Democratic evidence evidently favors us."
Holderman said he was not very familiar with the political make-up of Lawrence precincts, but that Vogel's speech in question was less provocative.
However, Solbach said the Republican plan did not correct the defects in the bill's redistricting of Lawrence.
He said the Republicans would have had the votes to pass Voelk's or岩胁 in the conference committee.
"We had the choice of leaving the gerrymandering in the bill for all to see, or of sending it to committees and having it taken away."
Glover and Solich are to meet with Carlin at 3 this afternoon to ask him to vote the bill to force House Republicans to repeal it.
"We chose to leave it in."
"WELL EXPLAIN what it's wrong with the bill and ask
sabu if it he thinks the House will sustain the veto."
Sabu
He said that the Democratic proposal would still split the
Oread neighborhood, but that it would restore much of Glover's student constituency.
Bill Hoch, Carlin's press secretary, said the governor had not changed his mind about the bill since last week, when he had said the House would have to "clean up" some sections of the bill in avoid a veto.
However, Democratic Majority Leader Fred Weaver Daxter Springs, said he would not ask the governor to veto a bill that would allow him to have a Senate majority.
Solibach and Holderman said Carin might not vet the bill because this would give House Republicans a chance to pass it.
"If the bill is vetoed, it opens the entire map up," Holder-mar said.
"I think that if the bill comes back to the House, the center of controversy would be over a Douglas County district."
THE REDISTRICTING legislation gives Douglas County an additional district, which is shared with Johnson County.
Holderman said that Johnson County legislators were unhappy that Douglas County would gain the district.
"If the bill comes back to the House, Johnson has more representatives than Douglas, and Douglas County might be safer."
If Carolin will not veto the bill, Sollbach said, he and Glover would argue before the Kansas Supreme Court that a judge should not be subject to a
The Court must approve the redistricting plan and it could declare the bill unconstitutional if it rules that the vote of any block of people, such as blacks or students, was deliberately split.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, March 8, 1979
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Opponents of fluoridating city water spoke at the last two commission meetings.
Fluoride advocates present their side
By SHIRLEY SHOUP
Staff Reporter
Proponents of fluoridation received equal time last night to respond to testimony from anti-fluoride spokesmen and other witnesses to a testimony at a city commission hearing.
Vol. 89. No. 110
The commission is to vote Tuesday whether to continue fluoridation in the city water supply or eliminate it.
A KANSAS LAW says it is unlawful to sell sodium fluoride unless it has been colored.
A series of pre-fluoride speakers, in a series of epidemiologists, biochemists, a pharmacologist and dentists, testified that no reputable studies indicated any relationship between fluoridation and oral acidity, whether fluoridation and alleric reactions.
In rejecting studies cited by the anti-hornicide faction, John Neuberger, a professor of neurology at the University of Kansas Medical Center, and proper methodology had not
He said results of the studies, which indicated higher cancer death rates in cities with fluoridated water, could be a factor in increased age, sex, race and socio-economic status.
Commissioner Jack Rose said, "You're the first person who has not indicated that floorsidation is the right thing for all of North America."
Eli Michaela, a KU professor who reseARCHES the biological aspects of mental retardation, said he could find no evidence that fluoridation caused mongolium. Mongolium is a syndrome of vitamin D deficiency associated with various abnormalities.
Opponents of fluoride have said that fluoride was a possible cause of mongolism.
Hay Clark, a Lawrence dentist, reported to the commission that the results of a commission study in Minneapolis that fluoride was not a health hazard.
John Yiomiyauian, director of the National Health Federation and a fellow member of the commission at the last two commission meetings. He was consultant for the committee.
Yiamouyiannis said he did not think he would do much good at last night's meeting.
He presented charts and copies of reports to the commission.
He told the commissioners that their decision would be of national significance.
"YOUR DECISION will determine whether we can present evidence in front of a city council and get a decision or if we can turn the court for the same decision." Be said.
Viamiyamianis said that much of the evidence recited at the meeting would have been thrown out of court as hear-say.
The commission members will discuss the issue among themselves but will not hear remarks from the public at Tuesday's commission meeting.
Endowment president meets with protesters
The RU Committee on South Africa and the Kansas University Endowment Association remained deadlocked yesterday on the controversy about South African representatives were granted a meeting with two Endowment Association members.
The Endowment Association, as part of a policy statement released last week, had refused to meet with the committee concerning South African investments.
But a meeting took place anyway when 11 members of the committee and other student groups appeared at the Endowment Association's reception office at 12:30 p.m.
Seymour repeated the Association's position that it would not agree to the committee's request to withdraw investments from companies in South Africa.
THE COMMITTEE says investments in South Africa encourage aparthief, which is the political and social separation of races.
Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, and Richard Proto, association treasurer, met with the students.
He told members of the committee that the Endowment Association would be open to any written communication, but said further dialogue would be inanorable.
Seymour said, "We don't intend to have a debate."
Laird Okie, spokesman for the KU Conference on South Africa, said, "Although you have your position is inflexible, we think that dialogue is important."
Members of the Young Socialists, the African Student Association, the Latin American Solidarity Committee, the Black Student Union, KU-Y, the Academic Union, and the International Club for Foreign Students were among the 11 representatives at the meeting.
SUE REIGER, a member of KU-1Y, read aloud a statement by the KU Committee on South Africa that the KU Committee on South Africa concurred that the KU Endowment Association obtains returns on investments which come partly from foreign people in the Republic of South Africa."
Several students at the meeting accused the Endowment Association of neglecting social responsibility by continuing its investments in South Africa.
Seymour said, "This Association has studied the situation in South Africa for a long time. We think we have a great sense of responsibility."
Ron Kuby, a member of the Academic Freedom Coalition, said, "Don't you think that by not divesting you are supporting apartheid?"
Seymour said he thought the Endowment Association was not supporting apartheid.
"It is a very difficult topic," Seymour said of the difference of worthment are the difference between love and hate.
ON FEB. 23, the Endowment Association said in its policy statement that contributors could request that none of their donations be invested in corporations in South Africa.
The policy also said student and faculty sacrifices of the donations could refuse to take them.
After yesterday's meeting, members of the committee and the other student organizations they would pursue the course of their meeting with the Endowment Association.
The committee argued against this policy in a counter statement released Feb. 26, which also criticized the Endowment Association's refusal to discuss the issue.
Kuby said, "I am disturbed by the lack of dialogue. But I can assure you that we will find a way to work together."
THE COURT OF THE UNION FOR JUDICIAL ISSUES
Solemn Seymour
Todd Seymour, president of the Kaua's University Endowment Association, listens as representatives of the KU Conference on South Africa and of several other student groups
Staff Photo by BILL FRAKES
express their views about Endowment Association investments in companies operating in South Africa.
Wolf Creek approval appears inevitable
Staff Reporter
By RON BAIN
The momentum behind the Wolf Creek plant, which is already 28 percent constructed, seems unable to be stopped, although many opponents of the plant have vowed to prevent its completion.
Members of another Wolf Creek opposition group are scheduled to stand trial later this month on charges of trespassing during a recent protest demonstration.
One group that had been fighting the Wolf Creek plant through the courts apparently is reconsidering its position after losing two legal cases to the electric companies that own the plant.
Local opposition to the Wolf Creek plant probably will increase as the plant nears completion, but that opposition will have few chances to prevent the operation of the plant.
ACCORDING TO FEDERAL, regulations, plans for the proposed plant will have to be approved at public safety hearings administered by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission before the plant can begin.
However, the outcome of the licensing hearings, which probably will be next year, is already almost certain, according to Ron Henrickx, president of the Michigan group that filed suit against Wolf Creek. Henrickx said yesterday that the regulatory commission was unlikely to deny a license for the Wolf Creek plant, although the commission might restrict the plant's power capacity because of 'shoddy workmanship.'
operation. Opponents of the plant will be able to testify about potential dangers to people and the environment that radiation from the plant could cause, a flavor of the plant also could speak at the hearings.
Despite the efforts of Henricks' group, the Wolf Creek power plant probably will go into operation as planned. Henricks said. Members of the coalition would have to问 whether to continue battling against the plant.
The commission has never denied an operating license to a nuclear power plant that was already constructed, Henriks said. Sixty-seven nuclear reactor plants are operating in the United States.
"WE'RE NOT sure if it'll money the money and we need to continue the legal fight."
KANSAN Analysis
However, another opponent of the Wolf Creek plant, Bill Beems, Lawrence senior, was more confident that construction on the plant could be stopped.
"I think the chances of it being stopped are really good right now," he said.
Beemer was one of 10 Lawrence construction arrested on Jan. 14 near the Wolf Creek construction site for a home improvement project at the site. Beemer and the other members of the group, the Kanas Natural Guard, were charged with assault.
Two of those Lawrence students, Chris Meacham and Bill Brown, will stand trial March 12 in Coffee County.
Meichau and Brow expect to be acquitted of the charges. Beems said. Their defense will be based on a state statute that compels citizens to try to "any eminent harm" from coming to other citizens.
The Wolf Creek plant would be criminally harmful to Kansas, he said, and they have expert witn-
g the law.
However, the judge in Coffey County has not approved that testimony for the March 21 trial, so the question about its admissibility in court remains.
MEANWHILE, construction work on the Wolf Creek plant continues. The reactor has been delivered to the construction site and the 12 foot thick concrete base-mat has been poured.
"All of the tests we've done since the first one show that the concrete is good, in fact, above 65."
But later tests by an independent company showed that the base-mat was sound, Rives said. The results of those tests have been sent to the NSA to investigate the companies are awaiting a reply from the commission.
Early tests showed that some samples of concrete from the base-mat did not meet the regulatory commission's strength requirements, according to Robert Rives, a vice president at Kansas Gas and Electric of Wichita, which co-owns the Wolf Creek plant.
Henricks said the concrete tests were Wolf Creek's weakest point, and were the last hope to stop the licensing of the plant. The commission voted in favor of allowing bearings on Wolf Creek because of the original
concrete tests, even though Herrick's' coalition was unable to persuade the commission to re-peel the treaty.
BUT THE UTILITY companies, RG&E and Kansas City Power and Light Co., do not expect the battery
No hearings are scheduled at this time. Rives said. And no legal problems with Wolf Creek are reported.
He said Wolf Creek's 150-kilowatt capacity would be needed in the early 1980s, when Kansas could be facing an energy crunch caused by a natural gas shortage.
"It's an important project," he said. "It's an important alternate energy resource."
The utility companies will file an application; for an operating license with the commission in the fall, Rives says. Licensing hearings will be scheduled by the commission, probably for next year.
Opponents of the plant undoubtedly will speak against it at those hearings, but at this stage of the campaign the team is going to be clear. The plant is one-fourth complete, and it seems unlikely the owners will forsake the money they have been getting from them.
Kansans apparently are going to get their first nuclear reactor whether they like it or not.
2
Thursday, March 8, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Quarrels persist as war slows
Capsules
From the Kansas's Wise Services
BANGKOK, Thailand—Although Vietnam accused Chinese troops of "plundering, burning people's homes and shelling," as they withdrew from Vietnam yesterday, it appeared that the Chinese-Vietnamese war was nearly over.
Vietnam's accusation was its first confirmation that China had begun moving back. China announced Monday that it was pulling out of Vietnam.
The Vietnamese confirmation of the Chinese pullback, coupled with Vietnam's promise to refrain from attacking withdrawing troops, made it apparent that the U.S. would be able to defeat the North.
However, in Washington, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Richard Holbrooke said "certain Chinese units" had returned to China.
But, he said, "I am not prepared to call it a withdrawal. It may only be redeployment."
Western intelligence sources in Bangkok said they had not seen evidence of a major Chinese withdrawal.
Libua boostina Amin's forces
NAIROBI, Kenya—Libya is flying massive amounts of military equipment into Uganda in preparation for a Ugandan counterattack against Tanzania. The U.S. has pledged $250 million to support the mission.
The expected Ugandan counterattack could open up the decisive phase of the four-month-old war, the diplomats said.
The diplomats said tanks, fighter planes, heavy artillery and infantry weapons had been flown to Entebee, Uganda's international airport, in a mission that began a week ago. The Libyan and Ugandan cargo planes have been making daily flights.
Ugandan President Idi Amin said recently that a counterstrike would be coming. In Uganda Radio broadcasts, he said it was time to hit the enemy hard.
Western diplomats said Tuesday that about 1,400 Libyan troops had been flown into Uganda to bolster Alim's forces. But the Libyan official news agency denied the report and said the only Libyans in Uganda were teachers, doctors and bank workers. The denial did not mention military supplies.
Carter in Egypt seeking peace
WASHINGTON—President Carter flee to Cairo last night for what Egyptian officials are calling "the final snarl of peace."
And U.S. officials said that although too many details remained for Carter to complete a treaty, they would not rule out the possibility of initialing a treaty on
Carter was to ride in a motorcade in Cairo on his arrival at 6 a.m. to open a three-day visit. Egyptians the hop the visit will boost President Anadar Sawat's
Also included in the negotiations are a Carter train ride tomorrow to Alexandria and a speech Saturday to the Egyptian Parliament in Cairo.
Carter then plans to go to Jerusalem Saturday night and to remain there until Monday.
In Cairo, Zhignewz Brezkinski, the U.S. national security adviser, outlined Carter's latest proposals to Sadat, Sadat's reaction was not known.
egyptian Prime Minister Mustafa Khaifi said after the briefing that chances for a treaty were "rather good in my opinion." He said the Egyptian cabinet would study the U.S. proposals today and may seek some changes, although he hoped they would not be much different from the agreements reached at the Camp David summit meeting last fall.
Khomeini saus ministers weak
TEHRAN, Iran—Iran's provisional government appeared to be headed for a crisis yesterday after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini called the nation's ministers weak and scaffed at them for that "everything should be copied from the West."
The government of Prime Minister Mikael Bazarag, appointed by Khomeini, expressed anger about the wave of secret arrests, trials and escapes carried out in the country.
Khoneimii's criticism came as rumors persisted that Bazargan was considering resigning in frustration over his lack of power. Bazargan added denied
Bazargan threatened to quit a week ago after he attacked the Khomeini followers who have been running a parallel government and undermining the
Khomeini, in a speech yesterday, attacked provisional government suggestions that Iranians should have the opportunity to set up a Western-style "state."
Lawuers open Silkwood debate
OKLAHOMA CITY—Conflicting comments on the amount of plutonium contamination suffered by nuclear worker Karen Silkwood were given by at-ten reporter Chris Titus.
Gerry Spence, a lawyer hired by Skilkwood's family, said an autopsy showed that Mr. Spence's lungs were more than double the amount of the radioactive substance known to cause him.
However, Bill Paul, lawyer for Kerr-McGee Corp., defendant in the trial, said tests showed Silkwood had suffered less than a quarter of the maximum safe tests.
The attorneys' comments came during the second day of a trial on an $11.5 million personal injury damage suit Silkwood's family filed against Kerrick
Spence spoke for nearly two hours and said he would submit evidence that Kerr-McGee made no effort to stop removal of plutonium from its Cinnamon armor. He told reporters that he had never been in contact with her.
Silkwood, who was in a traffic accident Nov. 13, 1974, had been a union activist and was gathering evidence of Kerr-McRumal's alleged safety negligence.
The trial, which began Tuesday in U.S. District Court after several delays, is expected to last about six weeks.
Grand jury indicts 2 oil firms
HOUSTON — A federal grand jury issued the first indictments yesterday in an inquiry into a petroleum pricing fraud, charging two companies and five of their employees.
U. S. Attorney Tony Canales, who has been investigating Department of Energy estimates on oil overcharges since July, said more indictments were due.
The 84-count indictment accused Uni Oil Co. of Houston, Ball Marketing Enterprises of Lafayette, LA., and officials of both companies of racketeering, mail or wire fraud and conspiracy to defraud the Department of Energy between 1975 and 1977.
Since the 1973 Arab oil embargo, federal pricing regulations have allowed oil companies to charge $5 to a barrel of oil that was in production before 1973. The current price is about $16.40.
The defendants allegedly misrepresented 750,000 barrels of "old" oil as "new" oil in order to obtain the higher price.
Bergland weighs nitrites' future
Camales could he would seek forfortune of both companies. Maximum possible penalties for each individual, if convicted on each count, totaled 490 years in prison.
WASHINGTON—Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland said yesterday that he would ask Congress to place a one-year moratorium on probating sodium fertilizer.
Last summer, the Justice Department was called in to examine food safety laws after a Massachusetts Institute of Technology study linked sodium nitrite to heart disease.
Bergland said at a National Press Club luncheon that he would seek "authority to continue the phasedown" of sodium nitrites in meat.
The government was ordered to ban nitrites in foods, but policymakers have also considered the effectiveness of nitrites in preventing botulinum food poisoning.
Officials predicted that the Justice Department could recommend a ban or gradual elimination of sodium nitrites.
Weather...
The National Weather Service forecast calls for cloudy skies and a chance of rain today. The high temperature should reach the upper 40s with a low tonight. The low temperature is around the 30s.
Oread Neighborhood Association
Anti-Crime Program
407 West 12th Street
66044
842-5440
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*Oread residents may use these and other FREE services.
Call or stop by Oread Anti-Crime Program Headquarters.
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Malott's Hardware Jane Bateman—The Drapery Maker
Raney's Drugs Kinkos
Britches Corner Camelot Behavioral Systems
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sua films
Thursday, March 8 Director's Showcase:
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
An evening of short films by six of the world's most renowned directors. The Showcase includes Roman Polanski's absurd "Two Men and a Wardrobe" Nightshades holocaust document "Nightshades" film by a very young Oren Welles, "Hearts of Age." Other directors represented by their early films are Satyajit Rai, Martin Scorsese and Phil Lipschuck, PLUS; "The History Book v. 4."
Friday & Saturday, March 9 & 10
THE 13TH INTERNATIONAL
TOURNEE OF ANIMATION
(1978)
Our annual festival this year includes 15 award winning short animated films of fiction and fantasy from around the world including the Academy Award film 'Sand Castle' and the James Festival winner 'The Fight'.
Monday, March 19 Lillian Hellman:
THE LITTLE FOXES
(1941)
Herbert Wylier, with Bette Davis,
Herbert Marshall, Teresa Wright,
Written by Lillian Halman, from her
play, Davies gives one of her greatest
performances as the greedy and ruthless
businessman, everything for wealth and status.
Tuesday, March 20
INVASION OF
THE BODY SNATCHERS
(1955)
Dir. Don Siegel, wife Kwin et Cathryn Dana Wynter, Sam Peckinpah as the gas meter reader. This print restores the film to its original intended form before its first release. Compare this with the 2015 released film with Donald Sutherland.
-with-
INVADERS FROM MARS
(1953)
Dir William Cameron Menzie; in
Dir William Carter, Jimmy Hunt. The in-
troduction of the earthing brains to the viewpoint of a little boy who is the onl-
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted. $1.50 admission
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
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Thursday, March 8. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Financial aid target of complaint
A KU student filed a complaint yesterday with the Consumer Affair Association and Association of Banking Unions.
The student, Dorothea Scott, Lawrence special student, said she sought the help of financial advisers with the financial aid officials for six months about repayment of a grant that she received.
Scott said she had been asked in September by the financial aid office to repay the $400 grant she received in August because she was maligible.
Scott said she was granted $800 and given $400 for the fall semester when she enrolled. However, she said, financial aid officials told her a month later that she should not have received the supplementary education funds. Instead, because she was not an undergraduate student.
"THEY SAID no students classified as special students who already had degrees in the subject."
Scott said she was classified as a special student because she had to complete some required classes before she could enter graduate school.
"What really bothers me about this is that students have no protection from the mistakes made by the financial aid office in awarding," she said.
"If they make a mistake and award money when they shouldn't, I say that's not right."
Jerry Rogers, director of the office of financial aid, said that he could not talk about the specifics of Scott's grant, but that he was aware of the error.
"By this we can tell what awards should be made," Rogers said. "And if this had been done in Scott's case, we never would have made the award."
ROGERS SAID when students applied for supplementary grants they must list their classifications. He said that special students must complete their classes in bringing their status and educational background.
"It happens," he said. "We check the applications for this type of mistake, but we don't."
But Scott said she was told only to list her classification and that her educational history and special student statement could be compiled into records and records to the office of financial aid.
"It's obvious to me now that that was never done," she said. "And now I have to
Scott said she had been told by the financial aid office that she could take out a short term loan to repay the grant. But she said she didn't think she should have to repay the
grant and she did not want to borrow to do so.
Scott said she was able to stay in school this semester because she was receiving a National Direct Student Loan and a loan from the Higher Education Loan Program. However, she said, even with that money she could not afford to pay back the grant.
Rogers said the money had to be repaid for KU to remain in good standing with federal loan programs.
Senate committees choose StudEx reps
Lawrence Clog Headquarters
Seven standing committees and one subcommittee of the Student Senate elected chairmen and representatives to the Student Senate executive committee last night.
Chairmen who are senators automatically will serve as voting members of StuDex.
StudEx is responsible for setting the agendas of Senate meetings and acting on Senate business when the full Senate cannot be callled. Only senators can have a vote in StudEx.
Head
Lawrence
Clog
Headquarters
J. J. Angelas
Holiday Place
25th & Iowa
Hour Mon-Thurs 10:8:30
Sun 12:30-5:30
Fri-Sat 10:5:30
The committees that elected non-senators as chairmen also elected members who are senators to serve as voting members of StudEx.
Margaret Berlin, student body president,
and George Gormz, student body vice president,
reviewed committee responsibilities
for the Senate during 21 seminar on Senate budget procedure.
Academic Affairs: Tim Trump, Salina junior and business senator, will serve as
"We won't give up. It will have to be reintroduced at the next Legislature," Harriet Hughes, president of the O-kee-Sha trail Conservation Committee said.
Communications: Bill Venable, Overland Park sophomore, will serve as chairman. Rick Kastner, Wamego sophomore and the president, will serve as a StudiEx representative.
Minority Affairs: Leon Brady, Kansas City, Kan. senator and Engineering Senator. Wash.
Student Services; Melanie Andersen, Salina junior and business senator, and Kent Mecklenburg, Fairborn, Ohio, junior maker's senator, will serve as co-chairman.
Chairman and StudEx representatives for the committees are :
Sports: Jeff Chanay, Tepeka junior and Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, will
THE NEW committee chairmen and representatives to StudEx will meet at 6 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union.
Although the O-keet-Sha committee was optimistic about establishing the bike trail this year through legislation, other alternatives exist. Huhes said.
ACCORDING TO Dee Boeck, vice president of the O-kee-Sha committee, federal laws may help the committee obtain the land for the bike trail.
Laurie Winterschmidt, Bailleyville senior,
has been appointed Studs' chairman by
the Board.
One alternative is to invoke the Railroad Revitalization Act of 1976 to obtain land for public use.
Student Rights: Rex Gardner, Lawrence junior and Liberal Arts and Sciences
Finance and Auditing Matt Davis,
Overland Park sophomore and Nunetaker
student of Engineering.
sophomore and Nunemaker 1 senator, will serve as a StedEx representative.
Supporters of the bicycle trail, which would be built on the 11-mile long, 100-foot wide abandoned Union Pacific railroad, could notild not lift the legislative maybe definite them.
Chances for a bicycle trail trail between Lawrence and Tonganoxie were delayed for at least one year last night when the Kansas Senate did not act on a bill that would have enabled the state to build recreational trails on abandoned railroad tracks.
And opponents of the bicycle trail will be willing to go to court, according to Alice Shirk, who owns property along the proposed bicycle route.
Culture'. Bill Scott, Lawrence junior, and Bill Scanlan, Lawrence junior, will serve as a co-chair of the program.
The problem is that there are conflicting state and federal laws over the use of the land.
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"I think the state is going to force us into it. I don't want to see any more land under government control." Shirk said.
The bill, sponsored by Sena. Arnold
Brown, passed last month, proposed this
R-Saimai, was by passed for this year,
last-minute rush to vote on all legislation
that been initiated in the Senate this
opposition and be decided in court, Boeck said.
But a lawal rule indicates otherwise. M. C. Slough, a former dean of KU's School of Law who has studied the matter of the law on Lisa支架 committee, said the Kirsch Revitalization Act of 1978 and an amendment to the law require merce Acts required that abandoned railroad land be kept in the public domain.
But that strategy probably will face
Kansas law states that, once a railroad abandons its tracks, the right of way reverbs to the adjacent landowner, accomodating Potts, Leavenworth county assessor.
Although a provision of the railroad act states that federal law should take precedence over state laws, the issue will probably go to court, he said.
By LYNN BYCZYNSKI Staff Reporter
Bicycle trail supporters vow to keep issue alive
Despite the lack of Legislative action on the bill to permit a bicycle trail, Shark said she did not think the issue had been decided.
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But a federal law indicates otherwise.
"We're only safe until the Legislature is in session again," she said.
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Thousands Of Dollars Found In Trash On Campus.
Check around your campus community. You, too may be able to collect an educational award of up to a thousand dollars if you Pitch In! Groups from campuses all over the country were awarded $8,750 last year by participating in Pitch In! Week.
This year, Budweiser and ABC Radio Network will again reward participating colleges, universities and approved campus organizations who participate in Pitch In! Week. Five groups will win $1,000 in first place educational awards, five second place groups will win $500,and five third place groups will win $250.
For entry rules and the Pitch In! Week program kit, simply send in the attached coupon.
1979 National College Pitch In! Week Of April 2-6. Pitch In! And Win Cash.
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COLLEGE
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Competition void where prohibited by law
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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.
MARCH 8,1979
Loss of grants harmful
From all indications, the Kansas Legislature seems to have found easy prey in students at the University of Kansas.
First came the decision by the Kansas House to gerrymander KU students out of any electoral influence, and now comes the decision by the Kansas Senate to restrict the scholarships available to students at the KU Medical Center - the very same scholarship the Legislature created only last year.
The new bill would allow the legislature to set a limit on the number of scholarships funded each year, beginning during the 1980-81 school year.
THE SCHOLARSHIP program was established last year when tuition at the Med Center was nearly tripled, and allows a student to receive a year's tuition for each year he agrees to practice in Kansas after graduation.
The program is open to all students, and there are currently 426 students enrolled. But apparently the more than $2.65 million required to run the program this year has scared the Legislature away from the system, and medical students might soon find themselves facing an exorbitantly high tuition cost with no recourse but to pay it or get out.
For some students, fewer scholarships will probably mean they will have to get out.
"I THINK IT'S very unfair to raise the students' tuition and then to tell them they can't have the scholarships," Jim Hamilton, president of the
Medical Student Assembly, said. "It seems we're in the middle of a political ballgame. We're the pawns getting kicked around."
Indeed, as was the case in last week's flap over redistricting, the Legislature seems to have found the answer. It will surely help with problem-slick it to the student.
If approved, the new scholarship policy would be crippling to those students who entered the med school at Duke's promise of scholarships in mind.
AND, OF COURSE, the new policy would hurt the once-promising possibility that the scholarships would help ease the doctor shortage in rural Kansas.
But none of that seems important to the Legislature when the dollar is the bottom line. Of course, one cannot deny the state and the University's right to give scholarships to whomever they wish. But considering the doctor shortage still looming in rural Kansas, the recent increase in tuition at the med school and the Legislature's promise last year that the scholarships would be available to those who desired them, it seems unfair and arbitrary to suddenly limit the number of scholarships available.
As State State. Leroy Hayden, D-Satanta, said, "I think it can clearly be seen that any money spent on scholarships in Kansas is money well spent."
That is obviously a lesson the rest of the Legislature still needs to learn.
Exploration of Jupiter propels space program
Scientists believe they will receive new clues concerning the origin and evolution of the solar system from a laboratory 600 million miles away.
Sodderbom, Ioamed the closest of the four to Jupiter, Ioamed, is rocky, dry and similar to Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars in its density, while the more distant moons were less dense and more gaseous, like the most distant planets from the sun.
The laboratory, Voyager 1, has excited scientists recently with transmissions of the mysterious planet of swirling multicolored gases, Jupiter. Revelations about Jupiter's 14 moons, particularly the four largest, have led one scientist, Laurence A. Sodermlund, deputy leader of the Voyager team, to say that we can see extraterrestrial systems unto themselves. The thing is that they exhibit regular trends that are reminiscent of the solar system as a whole."
USING METERITE craters on the moons, scientists should be able to crudely date surface features, Soderblom said. "We can compare lifetimes and the rates of surface processes for something very like meteorites," he said. "We never know what it's going to be like."
He is obviously excited about Voyager 1's trip, which has taken the craft within 727,500 miles of the planet. Soderibom is rightfully named after him, and given scientists the first close-up view of Jupiter, and has produced tangible findings. And scientists are reveling in the new in-
The last of Jupiter's 14 moons to be spotted from Earth was so faint that it has become lost. Part of Voyager's mission is to search for new moons as the craft passes Jupiter. Voyager I will then head for Saturn and into deep space.
If the pictures and transmissions from Voyager 1 continue as well as they have, scientists will have more factual, new information.
Jake
---
THE JUPITER exploration is a heady experience for scientists and laymen. The exploration will be further accentuated with the release of the second mission to begin in July. Both Voyagers were launched in 1972 to begin their fact finding transmissions, but the mission was planned to continue into the early 1980s.
Thompson
Already, Voyager 1 has transmitted information indicating that Jupiter is far more beautiful and complex than originally thought. It has also been disproved. Pictures and information transmitted this week may help identify components of Jupiter's atmosphere, previously obscured behind the clouds of gases surrounding the planet.
According to Edward C. Stone, project scientist for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration mission, Voyager 1 should reveal specific details about the planet, forcing new theories, which is the primary purpose of the mission.
RECENT PHOTOGRAPHS have shown surrounding clouds were sometimes dense, sometimes wispy curts of orange, white, tan and gray. They also have shown holes, lenses, hoped the cameras and instruments could penetrate to examine the surface.
These developments show promise in the face of the clouded future of man's space exploration. The decline of federally supported space exploration has cast dim light on further discoveries about the solar system. More recent studies have relied more on developing new theories.
Unfortunately, but necessarily for now, the government has chosen to spend more money on earthbound concerns and less on what scientists call the "last frontier." They need supporting evidence for re-expansion of space exploration.
As a result of Voyager 1's discoveries, their theories have been disproved, which is exciting to the scientists because the earlier theories had foster new theories and greater accuracy.
Transmissions from Voyager 1 and 2 should provide more of that evidence, which will be valuable at any time to future space exploration.
Every March it is the same. Thousands of students migrate to the beaches of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and South Padre Island, Texas. And thousands more flock west to Arizona, and some may even make it all the way to southern California.
Almanac brings fading hopes for tan
All of them, it seems, are seeking something they have not felt for months—whether they'll come back on their backs. But every year, hundreds of those students come back from their expense get away disillusioned, disappointed and irritated because they did not plan on bad weather.
However, even if you are an avid follower of this winter's weather won't be enough to help you service—you could not have expected him to predict in November what the weather would be in March in Texas or Florida. And that resort hotels fill their reservations list.
THERE IS A little yellow book, though,
that sells for just one dollar and can be
unbelievably accurate in November about
the weather in March.
Indeed, countless numbers of farmers have been heeding the predictions in this
Mary
Ernst
little book for 187 years and have saved themselves from the ulcers caused by excessive worrying about what the weather will be months in advance. They use the Farmer's Almanac, which predicts March weather in November.
And it is not too late for those of us who are headed out of Lawrence this week to take a little bit of the farmer's down-to-earth advice before we spend our savings on a fruitless trip to some sun haven that turns out to be more like a rain forest.
Those who are headed south to Texas may have the most to worry about. According to the Alamacan; those going in that direction may want to detour somewhere along the coast or across the border and into New Mexico. Showers are predicted of Texas from March 7 to March 18, and
cooler temperatures will likely add to the miserable humiliation of returning to Lawrence without the promised tan nor any other stories about the 85-degree temperatures.
AND IF THAT news discourages stunners enough to make them growl and beg friends to take them to Florida, the news about Florida will not make them feel any better.
So, those who are looking for the sun probably will be safest heading for the arid Southwest and for southern California. A hot summer day is on March 13, and then remain hot and sunny through the remainder of spring break. And southern Arizona and New Mexico will be clear and warm for an entire break. The average daytime temperature near 65 degrees.
FROM MARCH 10, the day that many KU swimmers start arriving in Florida, to March 12, rain and cool temperatures are predicted. From the 13th to the 15th, heavy rains coupled to drop over Florida, and from March 16 to 18, it should again be cloudy and cool.
On page 106, about midway between the On page 106, about midway between the cook for cooking a 100-pound ostrich and the cook for cooking a question of whether the chicken or the egg first, is the forecast for Florida. But Florida sun seekers may wish they had flipped to the cook recipe after seeing the gloomy prediction.
March temperatures are expected to be four degrees below average and the precipitation is expected to be two inches above average. And it gets worse.
OF COURSE, there are students going elsewhere for spring break, and many are staying in the Midwest. Yet, no matter where students are going, they have a friend—or enemy, as the case may be—in the Farmer's Almanac.
But there is an encouraging thought for those who are imagining their Florida or Texas tans been washed away by cold waters, because a prediction for the next day—as they were several times this winter—may be even better than predictions by predictions they made last November.
However, a book that has been guiding farmers for 187 years can't be too bad—or
LEASE S. AFRICAN INVESTMENTS
KU ENDOWMENT ASSOC.
FRANKLY KID, I CAN'T SEE WHAT YOUR PROBLEM IS
MARTIN 19
the Daily Karsan
To the editor:
Exploiting blacks not Kansas tradition
I was disturbed to read in the University Daily Kansasan that the KU Endowment Association insists on making money out of the exploitation of South African black people. This goes against everything Kansas has stood for in American history. It is absurd to call Kansas expressly because they opposed slave labor and the profits made out of it.
U. S. companies in South Africa today profit from the Master and Servant Laws black workers can be jailed for being absent in work under which whites who quit their jobs are deported to a "reserve" in the wastelands, where they and their families risk starvation because they can't find workers to live in compounds separated from their families for months at a time; a system that legally prohibits black workers from forming trade unions and arrests those who try.
Most of this system of repression has been erected within the past two decades. During that same period American investments in the debt market from $10 million to more than $2 billion.
KANSAN letters
The presence of U.S. corporations in South Africa has done nothing to ease the plight of black majority it has served only to help them exploit the economy. Some of the South African black leaders have risked imprisonment by investors to withdraw from South Africa.
Michigan State University, the University of Massachusetts, the University of Wisconsin and many other universities and colleges have already divested all their shares in corporations that operate in South Africa. So too have a great many churches and general corporations have already been responsive and have pulled out of South Africa.
The KU Endowment Association has a strong responsibility to repudiate any and all morally repugnant investments. Why can it not, for example, invest instead in economic enterprises, to help our own local businesses in financially and ethically sound ways?
Lawrence graduate student
One, the city has planned its new city hall at the north end of Massachusetts Street for the purpose of rejuvenating the north end of downtown. If the construction of the mall is allowed, this will mean over three million dollars down the rathole. The people who want to develop the mall are from Cleveland. They have destroyed their own city hall and want to reopen our money out of the area in the process. This cannot be allowed to happen.
Anita Chan
Two, the construction of this mall will undoubtedly lead to an increase in petroleum use in Lawrence, a dramatic increase, I might add.
The mall would be located in a place where every one who used it would be forced to leave.
STATE U.
BY T. M. ASLA
Three, the development of this land would take out of production over 60 acres of the wetland, and the land has built up over years of flooding by the Wakarusa River and is some of the best in the county. In this era of hunger and high food costs we need all the prime agricultural land.
Let's stop the mail and make government responsive to the needs of the people instead of the desires of a few greedy developers. In conclusion, I want to go on record as being mad as hell about city government selling real estate for the development and real estate interests.
Jeffrey P. Miller Wichita sophomore
The heating and cooling costs of an enclosed mall would be large at the outset and with predicted raises in the price of electricity would reduce the astronomical. This increased cost would not be picked up by the merchant but by the consumer, mice to the detriment of his or her property.
The planning of this mall is totally outside the interests of a healthy community. It will cause deterioration of the downtown area, cause an increase in the amount of petroleum used in Lawrence and take prime agricultural land out of production.
BY AOLA, M GOTGO! STATE U.I.
Let me address these points individually.
opposed to downtown, which is within walking distance and bicycling distance of many and is served by public transportation as well.
THE CHANCELLOR WANTS US TO IMPROVE HIS IMAGE AS A CONCERNED EDUCATOR FIGHTING BUREAUCRAY AND SUPPORTING THE FACILITY. ANY IDEAS GRAND?
AN AD CAMPAIGN WITH THE CHANCELLOR AS SAINT GEORGE SLAVING THE WASHINGTON DRAGON OF BOREAUCRAY WHILE A POOR STARING PROFESSOR LOOKS ON AND WEeps FOR JOY?
MIGHT FLY! WRITE IT UP IN TRIPICATE AND SHOT IT OVER TO THE CHANCELLOR'S IMAGE COMMITTEE AND WE'LL SEE IF THEY SALUTE!
GO GO!
STATE U.
ASK NOT WHAT YOUR UNIVERSITY CAN DO FOR YOU RATHERASE
WELCOME TO BIG BUCKS COUNTRY!
UNIVERSITY RELATIONS BUILDING
resources, all for the personal gain of land developers.
To the editor:
I was disappointed and angered to read of the decision by the Douglas County-Lawrence Planning Commission to stop construction on a town of town so that a shopping mall may be built.
Annexation decision a sell-out to builders
When are our so-called public servants going to stop being subservient to the interests of the builders and developers and represent the people? In the past five years we have seen a shift, almost no regard to the environment and our already overburdened natural
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USPS 60-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday June and July except Saturday and Sunday, and half-day Sunday through Saturday for all students $15 for six months or $2 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 student account.
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60645
Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editors
Mary Hoek
Pam Marion
Camel Hunter
Editor Barry Massey
Business Manager
Karen Wenderott
General Manager
Rick Musser
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
78
Thursday, March 8. 1979
5
Police suggest security measures
Many burglaries that only plague student residences during spring break could be prevented if students would take simple security measures, Mark Brothers, head of the Lawrence Police Department Crime Prevention Unit, said yesterday.
"In 1978 almost 40 percent of the residential burglaries in Lawrence involved entry through an unlock door or window," he said.
Brother's said burglaries of student
brothers probably would increase durin
spring break
"Students" apartments are victimized over break because many apartments are under the same roof.
"If I were interested for areas to be concerned about during spring break, it would be the apartment complexes populated predominately by students. In the past we
Kip Kubin was elected president of the All scholarship Hall Council last night by a vote of 126 to 45.
'79-80 officers elected for schol hall council
Kubin, McPherson junior, was cochairman of this year's ASHC housing and contracts committee. He lives in Grace Pearson Hall.
Pamela Bailey, Douglas junior, was voted vice president. Bailey, a resident of Douthart Hall, was chairman of the ASHC selections committee.
Lisa Schultes, Springfield, Mo., junior,
and president of Doutart, was elected
Trilla Lyerla, Olathe freshman, was elected secretary. Lyerla is a resident of Watkins Hall and served on the selections committee.
According to ASHC procedures, ASHC officers are elected by the council rather than by all scholarship hall residents. Candidates must have served on the council or on an ASHC committee. Any scholarship hall resident may serve on a committee.
The ASH compris the presidents of the eight scholarship halls and elected院士.
BROTHERS SAID students should take camera equipment with them when they leave because there had been an increase in the theft of camera gear.
have had problems with those complexes because the students pack up and leave."
"There is a burglar working south and east of the KU campus who is taking cash and items that can be quickly converted to cash, such as cameras, radios and watches."
K
Brothers said that during spring break Lawrence police would patrol student housing areas more frequently than usual and that any resident who stayed in Lawrence during the break should report suspicious activity to the police.
Jerry Pearson, of the KU Police Department Crime Prevention/Community Relations division, said KU Police would work with local buildings than usual during spring break.
HAPPY TURKEY
"Timely reporting of suspicious activities is the citizen's first line of defense against criminal activity."
Independent Coin-up
Pearson said students should take a complete inventory of their belongings that easily could be stolen. The inventory makes recovery of stolen items easier.
- Leave a light on.
2105 West 26th Street
victimized due to failure to practice security daily," he said.
Pearson said students leaving for spring break should:
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- Have a friend pick up mail and newspapers, or stop delivery
Use this Grand Opening Coupon.
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- Ensure that windows and doors are locked.
Attendant on Duty.
One per customer
- Ask a neighbor or friend to watch their home.
Brothers said some apartments have good locking devices, but if they are not used they
Natalie
"THERE are some apartment complexes that have very adequate security devices available," he said. "However, in several instances the residents have been
"This is just the kind of burglar that can be stopped by making sure that windows are locked."
Brothers said another burglar had been burglaring student students without a permit.
"The burglar has been hitting around campus and he has been going through unlocked doors or windows or entrances that can be easily forced open," he said.
University Daily Kansan
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HAROID LIME PRESENTS
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TOAWAY: "ILLINOIS LANDCAPES," a PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW by Blumb, is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Visual Arts Building gallery. A SPENCER ART MUSEUM PANEL DISCUSSION, "How Does an Exhibition happen?" will be at 1 p.m. in the museum auditorium. UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 105 Blake Hall.
TONIGHT: SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 in the Oread Room in the Union. SUA BRIDGE CLUB will meet at 7 in the Pine Room of the Union. KU KARATE CLUB will meet at 7:30 in 173 Robinson Gymnasium. AN ENGLISH DEPARTMENT will meet at 8 in the Quintessence of Teaching Written English,7 will convene at 8 in the Walnut Room in the Union. KU SKYDIVING CLUB will meet at 8 in 124 Robinson. Helen Hafreinier, organist, will give a STUDENT RECITUAL in 8 in Swarovski Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
TOMORROW: SOCIAL WORK DAY will be all day in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Gustav Jahoda, professor of psychology at Strathecid University, Glasgow, Scotland, will speak at 9:30 p.m. in 547 Fraser Hall. His topic will be "Attitudes of Scottish Youth Toward Alcohol." He will speak again at 12:30 p.m. in 547 Fraser when his title will be "A Cross-Cultural Perspective on Theories of Experimental Social Psychology." THE BLOBLY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the sunflower Room in the Union. VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be available for elderly, non-English speaking and low income individuals from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the legal aid office in new Green Hall.
sua films
presents
Beech Tree
The 13th International TOURNEE OF ANIMATION
Friday and Saturday March 9 & 10 3:30,7:00,& 9:30
A man with a stick.
Woodruff Auditorium ADM $1.50
While everyone is marveling at all the things computers can do Hughes is teaching computers to do more.
R133 IC10 TP
TP4
Hughes is at the center of a virtual explosion of electronic information. It arises from a combination of data sensing, communications, and data processing and storage. We make sensors that operate on all these of the electronic spectrum. We make computers and signal processors that be all these together — that issue commands, or that store and present data for a growing number of uses. It is a technological revolution that is only just beginning to happen, as intelligent people everywhere, one of the most populous, exciting periods in all human history.
If you're an EE, ME, AE, IE, Physics, Material Science or Computer Science major, you could become part of all this. Areas of interest include airspace, ground systems.
research. But don't worry about getting lost, we work in small groups where individual initiative is valued highly.
Contact your placement office Or write to Manager College Relations, Hughes Aircraft Company, P.O. Box 90513, Stamford, CT 06892.
HUGHES
Creating a new world with electronics
An electrical engineer M. F. HC
(C.S.) is required
4
6
Thursday, March 8, 1979
University Daily Kansan
2 Free Large Cokes with 12 in. pizza
3 Free Large Cokes with 16 in. pizza
842-3232 Pyramid Pizza
sandwiches, too!
Sunday the 11th
Open 'til 1 A.M.
ALMIGHTY EYE
ramid
Pizza
At The Wheel 507 W.14th St. 842-3232
We Pile It On!
SATURDAY NIGHT-ONE NIGHT ONLY!!
Only Midwest Appearance!!
CLARENCE "GATEMOUTH" BROWN
Friday, March 9
BLUEBEARD
Hottest Rock & Roll
band in the area!!
Coming Next Week
March 16 & 17
SKELETONS
formerly of The Symptoms
and The Randall Chowing
Band
March 21
NORMAN BLAKE
and
THE NEW
GRASS REVIVAL
Tickets available
at Better Days & 7th Spirit
The Laurence
Opera House
and 7th Spirit Club
7th & Mass.
GIBRALTARS
7
Lawrence's Newest Private Club Hillcrest Shopping Center Formerly J. WATSONS II
DII$CO
DII$CO
DII$CO
Live Entertainment • Disco • Cocktails
Live Entertainment
Disco
Live Entertainment
Disco
Entertainment
OPEN MARCH 13
March 13 & 14 — Danny Cox — $2.00 cover
- March
March 15, 16, 17 - Festival - $2.00 cover
22, 23, 24 BREWER & SHIPLEY $4.00 Advance $4.50 Door
...
Memberships Available For the Discriminating Adult 842-5265
AAUP says Jews not to blame; asks that Nazi exhibit be reset
A resolution passed yesterday by the executive committee of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors the Jewish community had been unfairly blamed for presently instructing to cancel an exhibit of Nazi memorabilia last spring.
Members of the committee also asked that the exhibit be rescheduled.
The opening of the Nazi exhibit was postponed by KU administrators because it coincided with Adolf Hitler's birthday.
The resolution said, "The evidence reviewed by the executive committee supports the view that Jewish colleagues, like the rest, would not an exception to academic freedom on the grounds of diversity and diversity grounds to make decisions which endanger academic freedom."
AAUP members have maintained that the cancellation of the exhibit represented an unintentional violation of academic freedom.
The resolution said the administration had done little to remove the misunderstanding that Jews were responsibility for the execution of war crimes.
---
"While specific actions can retrieve credibility for the administration's commitment to academic freedom, redress for the aggreived ethnic group is more difficult to secure," the resolution said.
The resolution called on the administration to "recognize the unfortunate consequences of its failure to refute forcefully inferences that pressure for the cancellation was exerted by the Jewish community."
The resolution also asked the administration to include the chairman and vice chairman of the University Senate executive committee in future deliberations concerning administrative action "emergencies" that involve the University and public events.
"The executive committee detected no effort to involve the faculty and/or students in the decision and is concerned that at this critical juncture the administration did not seek the advice and counsel of University governor," the resolution said.
Dial Shenkel, executive vice chancellor, did not comment on the resolution. He was the principal administrator involved in the resolution.
UNLESS YOU PRINT YOUR OWN . . .
It seems a student never comes in with enough money to cover school expenses and have spending left up to enjoy **entry**
You find challenge responsibility, a demand for your skills, and a high regard for what you do. Continuing to make as much as possible in the Air Force you have an opportunity to do.
You are one of the people who will need much time study, follow school schedule on Air Force 801FT, a brief time on a flight, nor for scheduled weekends for you to qualify as a Bachelor's degree in aviation. While you are working your degree you also be awarding a commendation in the Air Force. After graduation and commencement, you will be able to serve and disclose a share of the costs.
look into ARM7 microcontrollers. And again with a lot of the debatable features for who will use them, there are those that make your machine work better and your user experience better. There are some things that make it harder to use ARM7 microcontrollers.
**Sophomores and Juniors:** Advise how for the year ROTC Program: Get a commission to the Graduate School if you qualify. Call Cass, 844-657-4010 or by email to the Graduate School at cass@rotc.edu.
AIR FORCE
ROTC
$
JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
only at
FRIDAY, MARCH 9
Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass. Upstairs
CLARK TERRY
World Famous Jazz Trumpet Player From The Tonite Show
Admission $10.00 includes FREE BEER, Peanuts, Popcorn and Soft Drinks
Call 843-8575 For Reservations
---
2 BR's, POOL VU.
You may have noticed that the ads for the TOWERS are a little different.
Try to name an apartment complex located ON campus, for example. Where all utilities are pald. Where walls are built of solid, rich brick. With Hall security and emergenc
maltenance, a swimming pool and a commanding view.
There Just aren't any apartments with the convenlences and features of the TOWERS. Come in and check it out.
jayhawker towers apartments 4603 w. fifteenth
The weekly feature page of the University Daily Kansan
Weekday
March 8,1979
Mary C. Smith
Inez Marshall, Portis, has been sculpting from inspiration for about 40 years. She is working on a life size model of a Harlev Davidson motorcycle. After approximately three years of work on the cycle, only the battery and one wheel have been commu
The Divine Miss M Everything is done under inspiration I couldn't look at something
Portis
"I was sitting there in the front room and I said, 'Dad, I want to go to the front door.'"
After being bedridden for more than a year because of a broken back, Inez Marshall, Ports, was out of her bed for the rest of her life when she curved her first piece of rock.
"So, he picked me up and carried me to the door. When I looked out, instead of looking up and down the street —I hadn't seen anything that day, I looked down at the front step. There, I saw a piece of soft-rock. I'll never know where that rock came from. There wasn't any rock around we lived, but there was one. That's a piece of rock before in my life," she said.
"I asked my dad to pick it up for me, and he did. Then, I said, "Dad, give me your pocket knife," and I said to cut that rock.
"I worked for hours. I don't remember how long, until I became deathly sick. I told my mother I had to go back to bed.
Today, nearly 40 years later, Marshall still sculpts from soft-rock, mostly white limestone. She works only from inspiration.
"Everything is done under inspiration," she said. "I couldn't look at something and draw it, not for a million dollars. It's all inspiration."
"The things I've seen must have left a strong imprint. I saw them once and the good Lord showed them to me again."
"BUT WHEN I looked at that rock, he had turned in a squirrel with his tail sticking up and his little head. I'd carved all of his hair and everything."
Marshall and Bediah Smith, her partner, have "traveled a lot of miles together."
"Benah took care of my mother for years, then we started working together," she said.
In 1983, Marshall opened her first museum, the Continental Sculpture Hall.
for her work, in Portis. Smith started working with her then as a receptionist.
Then, in 1969, Smith and Marshall moved her sculpture hall to Abliene. After three years in Abliene, they moved to New York where he opened the museum in the same building.
ALTHOUGH MARSHALL said she would like a bigger building for her museum, she said she doubled that she would ever move again.
She said, "People don't know how hard it is to move my work. We worked day and night for two and a half months movi- ting the building, but I'd like to stay right here."
Before she opened her first museum in Portis. Marshall worked out of her house.
"My studio was under a big tree. I had my whole house full of my work, I never thought anybody would see it, but it kept me. I had to do something," she said.
Now, Marshall's studio is in a former gas station. Inside, she stores her tools and her rock, which she is given from many sources.
Marshall's museum, which is next door to her shop, contains examples of her work, sculpted from limestone and can be cut out by hand. Everything is carved on hand.
In one piece, a replica of a church, the interior is filled with detail-floor boards, church pews, the congregation and the preacher, all made of rock.
However, Marshall said she would wait for warmer weather to begin work on any new projects.
"Now," she said, "if you get up there close, and look in that window, you'll see a little girl sticking her tongue out. Do you see her?"
Besides churches, Marshall sculpts birds, animals and people, both small and life-size.
AS SHE LEADS groups around the museum, she points out details in her work that easily could go unnoticed.
The church, which is almost three feet tall, took more than 3,000 hours of work to complete.
"In the summer, I work in here until 10 or 11 at night," she said. "Sometimes, I had as many as three projects going out each week, and I worked while, but about 2 of the morning. I'll see
a piece and I'll have to go to work on it. I can't rest with an idea in my head."
THE ONLY BIG project she started recently is a life-size, stone sink. She has finished the front wheel, with spokes, hub, tire tread and air valve. Also, she has finished the 12-volt battery. She is working on carving 6 individually carved electric cells.
When the project is finished, although she can't predict when that will be the cycle will have fires that spill, saddle and carved links, which will make up the chain.
When she works, flecks of limestone fall from the rock with measured, methodical blows from her hammer and chisel.
Within minutes, the rock she was chiseling took on the shape of a bird's head.
Although she said she loved to sculpt, Marshall "doesn't work like she should," Smith said.
"She drives us into town to go to the store or to do our laundry and she's got to be the mechanic, too," Smith said.
As with her sculpting, Marshall has been working on cars for many years
"My brother was a mechanic. I used to help him overhaul Model T Fords," she said.
The 1914 car has a motor and transmission, U-joints, a complete rear-end assembly with differential, water in the radiator and even a starter crank. She also carved individual bolt heads on the parts, just like the real thing.
One is a 1914 model and the other is a
1917 model. Both are loaded with detail.
Her experience in mechanics shows up in her work, too. In her museum, there are two Model T Fords she has sculpted.
"It's tedious, it really is. People don't know how much goes into one of my works," she said.
But in New York, Marshall's work sells at prices that are hundreds of dollars more than what she charges.
"They tell me that 'I'm the only one in the world doing this anymore.' she said. "But, I get my prices from the Lord. I've saved! I’ve saved, I’ve saved the good Lord." How much shall I charge for this? Nobody has ever kicked about a price."
DDE
CONTINENTAL
BEDFORD HALL
Marshall has sculpted several images, honoring past presidents. F. John K. Kennedy, Abraham Lincoln and Dwight D. Eisenhower are represented in the museum.
Marshall has her sculpting in an old gas station next to the museum. Inside she stores all her rock for future projects and her sculpting tools; hammers, pocket knives and meat cleavers. In his room is healed with a ood burning stone.
KOYUEN JAPAN
Photos by Trish Lewis
Story by Doug Hitchcock
t
8.
Thursday, March 8, 1979
University Daily Kansan
THE GRAMOPHONE
the audio division of KIEF'S RECORDS & STEREO SUPPLY, INC.
EREO
$95,000 STEREO SALE NOW!
Terms
STATEMENT: All Amplifiers, Receivers, Turntables, Tuners and Tape Decks are top quality stereo components. All units are in excellent condition and will be completely checked, cleaned and repacked with complete new factory warranty. In order that we may provide the above services, all units purchased may be picked up the day following purchase. None of the above units are being sold out of distress. These units are being sold as a means of rotating new demonstration equipment. —the
GRAMOPHONE shop
Receivers
Speakers
Item MFG List Kiet's SALE
1 Advent 300 15Wx2 300** 200**
1 Aiwa AF3030 30Wx2 (wl cassette) 350** 260**
1 Hitachi SR-503 20Wx2 240** 188**
1 Hitachi SR-603 30Wx2 290** 228**
1 Hitachi SR-604 35Wx2 Class G 379** 200
1 J V. C. JRS-201 36Wx2 360** 265*
2 Kenwood KR-2090 16Wx2 235** 159*
1 Kenwood KR-3090 26Wx2 285** 188*
1 Kenwood KR-4090 40Wx2 345** 225*
1 Kenwood KR-5030 60Wx2 445** 287*
1 Luxman R-1030 30Wx2 425** 375*
1 Marantz 2240 40Wx2 429** 280*
1 Marantz 4230 30 Wx2 420** 275*
1 Optionica SA-4141 65Wx2 450** 340*
1 Optionica SA-5201 45Wx2 360** 295*
1 Pioneer SX680 30Wx2 290** 210*
1 Pioneer XS950 80Wx2 695** 395*
1 Pioneer XS980 60Wx2 625** 425*
1 Scott R-31 30Wx2 300** 170*
1 Scott R-34 25Wx2 350** 195*
1 Sherwood S-7110B 20Wx2 275** 185*
1 Sony STR-4800SD 35Wx2 360** 260*
1 Sony STR-6800SD 80Wx2 600** 395*
2 Yamaha CR-420 25Wx2 310** 285*
2 Yamaha CR-620 35Wx2 385** 349*
1 Yamaha CR-1020 70Wx2 630** 560*
1 Yamaha CR-800 60Wx2 (used) 540** 290*
| Item | MFG List | Kiel's SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1-Pr ADS-L500 | 150**ea | 128**ea |
| 2-Pr ADS-L700 | 189**ea | 155**ea |
| 1-Pr Adventes-Small | 100**ea | 84**ea |
| 1-Pr AR-16 | 125**ea | 94**ea |
| 1-Pr BOSE 601 | 250**ea | 164**ea |
| 1-Pr Bic Formula 4 | 160**ea | 119**ea |
| 2-Pr &O;S 45TT | 160**ea | 144**ea |
| 1-Pr &O;S 75 | 260**ea | 234**ea |
| 2-Pr Bolivar 125H | 139**ea | 94**ea |
| 3-Pr Bolivar 64H | 220**ea | 159**ea |
| 1-Pr ESS AMT 1 | 359**ea | 199**ea |
| 3-Pr Essics 200 | 100**ea | 49**ea |
| 1-Pr Essics 300 | 149**ea | 75**ea |
| 1-Pr DCM Time Window | 350**ea | 329**ea |
| 1-Pr OED | 250**ea | 225**ea |
| 1-Perl Herald Beveridge | 7,000**pr | 6,000**pr |
| 1-Pr Janszen Electrostatic | 300**ea | 128**ea |
| 1-Pr JBL L-19 | 179**ea | 139**ea |
| 1-Pr JBL L-50 | 325**ea | 277**ea |
| 1-Pr JBL L-4311 | 395**ea | 265**ea |
| 2-Pr Mitsubishi DS-25B | 180**ea | 149**ea |
| 1-Pr Mitsubishi DS-35B | 295**ea | 220**ea |
| 1-Pr Mitsubishi MS-30 | 380**ea | |
| 1-Pr Marantz Model 7s | 200**ea | 109**ea |
| 2-Pr Optonica 2121 | 195**ea | 160**ea |
| 1-Pr Pioneer CS-99A (used) | 250**ea | 125**ea |
| 1-Pr Pioneer HPM-40 | 180**ea | 125**ea |
| 2-Pr PHASE Research PR-1 | 225**ea | 175**ea |
| 1-Pr RLH 10W | 150**ea | 75**ea |
| 2-Pr Sony SSV-1250 | 125**ea | 85**ea |
| 1-Pr Technics SB-6000A |
| 1-Pr Visonics 302 | 110**ea | 85**ea |
| 1-Pr Visonics 5000 | 100**ea | 95**ea |
| 2-Pr Yamaha NS-5 | 110**ea | 88**ea |
| 1-Pr Yamaha NS-225 | 185**ea | 166**ea |
| 1-Pr Yamaha NS-325 | 240**ea | 225**ea |
CASSETTE TapeDecks
Item MFG List Kief's SALE
3 Aiwa 6300 2 Head 270** 225**
1 Aiwa 1800 2 Head 450** 288**
1 Aiwa 9900 3 Head/Remote Cont. 900** 725**
1 B&O 5000 2 Head Silencio 650** 575**
1 Hitachi D-220 2 Head 179** 149**
1 Hitachi D-410 2 Head 245** 185**
1 JVC KD-65 2 Head 400** 295**
1 Kenwood KX630 2 Head 275** 200**
1 Kenwood KX1030 3 Head 450** 325**
1 Nakamichi 350 440** 340**
1 Nakamichi 500 480** 385**
1 Nakamichi 500 480** 385**
2 Opticaion 6505 Micro Prosser 400** 325**
1 Pioneer RT-T707 7" R to R 625** 449**
1 Sharp RT-1165 2 Head 720** 185**
1 Sony TC-K4 2 Head 280** 222**
1 Teac A-103 2 Head 260** 180**
1 Technics 610 2 Head 220** 149**
1 Technics 630 2 heads 275** 180**
1 Yamaha TC-320 2 Head 240** 225**
1 Yamaha TC-520 2 Head 325** 290**
Amps&Tuners
Item MFG List Kief's SALE
1 Accuphase T-101 500** 289**
2 Kenwood 3700 160** 129**
1 Kenwood 5700 300** 178**
1 Lux L-80V 500** 385**
3 Optonica tuner/pre sm1515b 280** 218**
3 Optonica tuner 1515 260** 225**
2 Toshiba SC335 150** 125**
2 Toshiba ST335 185** 150**
2 Xamaha CA610H 185** 150**
1 Yamaha CA810 225** 188**
1 Yamaha CT810 285** 265**
1 MXR Expander 260** 150*
Turntables
| | MFG List | Kief S SALE |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| 1 Bic 980 Auto/changer | 260** | 130** |
| 1 & 800 3000 Auto (used) | 300** | 200** |
| 2 & 800 2400 Auto | 350** | 300** |
| 2 & 800 4000 ZWARN-6000 | 795** | 600** |
| 1 JVC JAL 20 Semi Auto | 100** | 78** |
| 1 JVC LCA 2 Quartz | 180** | 135* |
| 1 Kenwood KD-3070 Semi Auto | 210** | 178* |
| 1 Micro Seki MB-10 (used) | 130** | 75* |
| 1 Micro Seki MB-14 Semi Auto | 160** | 135* |
| 1 Micro Seki DD-35 Semi Auto | 350** | 250* |
| 2 Optionica 7205 Auto | 200** | 154* |
| 1 Optionica 7505 Auto | 285** | 195* |
| 1 Pioneer PL-514 Semi Auto | 140** | 129* |
| 1 Pioneer PL-519 Semi Auto | 200** | 158* |
| 1 Sanyo TP-1010 Semi Auto | 140** | 98* |
| 1 Sanyo TP-1020 Semi Auto | 180** | 129* |
| 1 Sanyo TP-636 Semi Auto | 110** | 75* |
| 1 Technics SR-220 Semi Auto | 135** | 95* |
| 1 Tschobia SR-A-230 | 135** | 97* |
| 1 Tschobia 270 | 140** | 109* |
| 1 Visonic 3200 | 157** | 105* |
| 2 Yamaha YP-211 | 140** | 125* |
| 2 Yamaha YPD-6 | 260** | 125* |
Miscellaneous
Item MFG List Kiel's SALE
Car Stereo
RLH 6920 6x9 tri-ax 120** pr 60** pr
Bristol 52520 5/1 4 tri-ax 110** pr 60** pr
Bristol 6x9 tri-ax (no box) 180** pr 90** pr
Jensen Separate tri-ax 120** pr 60** pr
Optonica SY-800U rack 200** 145**
B&O Beocinder 3500 750** 550*
Audio Pulse Model I 750** 485*
MXR Expander 250** 125*
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
P. O. BOX 2 / 2100A W. 25th St. / 913 842-1811 / LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 8, 1979
9
NEW GRADUATE R.N.'S
Specialty Nursing
TRINITY LUTHERAN HOSPITAL,
a 360-bed, acute care hospital specializing in:
- cardiovascular
- psychiatric
- oncology
- psychiatric
- orthopedic
- medical-surgical
- pediatric
nursing care
Become a Nursing Specialist a Trinity Lutheran Hospital
31st and Wyandotte Kansas City, MO 64108
EOE
BRIEFNESS MEDICAL OFFICE
Denise Barth, R.N.
Nurse Recruiter
816 753-4600, ext. 256
TASTE THE COUNTRY
IN THIS MOUTHWATERING INNKEEPER'S SPECIAL
CHICKEN FRIED STEAK
CREAM GRAVY
COLE SLAW
HOMEMADE ROLLS AND BUTTER
$2.95
SERVED DAILY FROM 5 - 10 PM.
Holiday Inn
2309 IOWA
---
Holiday Inn
On March 20-22 in front of Wescoe Hall on those days
Register to Give Blood for the
Lifesaving blood COMES ONLY FROM PEOPLE
K. U. Blood Drive
AII
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, good, services and expo-
lysibility. For more information please see
www.marathon.com. 811-549-7200. BRING
your vehicle to the airport. BY PARKING.
BRING your vehicle to the airport.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time time times time times
time times times times times
15 words or
rare additional
Rare additional
.001 .02 .04 .04 .05
word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or be called the UBD business office www.ubd.com
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ENTERTAINMENT
USCF Chase Tournament $550 prize fund; March 16-11. Special entry fees for new members and seniors. No additional fees.
SOMETHING NEW EVERY WEEK, at the book
End. Quantity $1.50 Flea Market
2-9
Zen practice daily 0 - 6 p.m. Introductory talks
from 10 - 12 a.m. Daily practice sessions
daily visit March 8, 2014 at Lakeside Church
and December 2, 2015 at Temple Beth El.
Holidays midweek: 4 An Evening w/Pil Vilaju
Friday-Wednesday 10th and 25th Week-Portion-Mar 13th Forensic Room, KU
University of Queensland
PAT'S BLUE RIDDIM BAND
SOUND WAVY PRODUCTIONS - The ultimate in sound quality productions. Our professional services include audio system and experienced DJ packages with a law price. Call for information: 843-160-5920.
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
737 New Hampshire
Come party and dance 9 p.m.
FOR RENT
Apt. 2 HR and efficiency, Close to campus UU1-14
Clean, quiet, comfortable, comfortable
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most utilities, paid RU and near town. No #85230.
Finally a Laurence landlord who cares'
Call Mark, Schneider for apartments and rentals, 843-3212 or 842-1144.
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimuth Hall now has a couple of openings for the reception desk and office (or give us a call at 843-8500) and we will be glad to welcome you. **AMMISH HALL,** 840 Natural Ridge, 843-8500. **AMMISH HALL,** 1800 Natural Ridge, 843-8500.
FRONTER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENTING. Studio 1, $799-$2,495 bedroom, furnished and furnished loft suite; w/private kitchen, private parking. OK KU has rugs, carpet, tile, window treatments, or the at $24 Fronter Room. Next door 862-4444 or she at $24 Fronter Room. Next door 862-4444.
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
You'll see a Touch of Class.
841-5253
841-4753
For most groups, begin the first page. For $20, visit Bristol-Myers Squibb.
For $35, begin the second page. Call 3-877-944-6888 or www.bristol-myers-squibb.com.
3, infiltration. Call 3-877-944-6888 or www.bristol-myers-squibb.com.
Want to live in a luxury apartment for $85 per month? Call 212-343-2922. Call 263-343-2922 at 3:30 p.m. or 7:30 p.m.
Visit our display units today.
You have a Touch of Class.
841-5235
Beautiful 7 month old 3 bedroom ranch; rancher;
desktop appliances included, e.g. iPhone 4, MG-0221-721
To need to submit Moodbowbrook studio. Call 81-3-
2914 or 843-4218 by 6 p.m.
Jayhawker TOWERS Apartments 1603 West 15th
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
For Rent: A room for 1309 Tennessee.
Available now. Call 842-8913
3-9
**Snaption 2 bedroom Apt. 15) hatch curtain**
*electric kitchen* £85.00, no lease *-323*
*842-097*
***
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
All New & Contemporary
Visit our furnished display today and you'll see why the movie is to Sundance. It will be on IMAX, IMAX 3D, IMAX 4D, IBP Convenience located at 7th & Franklin west of the Sanctuary of the BUI House.
8415255·842.4455
Two-bedroom basement apartment near campus.
One bathroom, no pool. No pets. $19/room/
night. 812-666-6666
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make sure you have them—1) An study guide; 2) For class preparation; 3) For exam preparation. *New Analysis Critique* by Elizabeth Criar, Mails Bookstore, & Oread Bookstore, 11
FOR SALE
Need lives or wheels? An association with a local business that sells tires and Daytona tires at the absolute lowest price. They also are available at wholesale prices and below. Don't trust a dime more than you need to. Call Daret at 516-709-2400.
Fender Modest Mungo Bass Guitar with straps, strings,
sustainers, tuners, pickups, bridge strings, strings,
cards and covers. Very good condition.
Dimensions: 38 x 21 x 7 inches.
Sunscreen--Run glues are our specialty. Non-
toxic. Injection area, location, season:
1023. Mesh 841-570-7970
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
MOTIVE BLESSER, 843-606-3900; 3000 W, Gth. 6ft.
MOTIVE BLESSER, 843-606-3900; 3000 W, Gth. 6ft.
66 Schooners at Louise's every Friday from 2
till 5. 4-5
Engagement and wedding ring set 1g, wt. 6, wiltshire with chips. New and never worn. 841-3827-328
Clarion PC-6212 citizenz手机 radio—in-dash
PC-6212 CB—T-8 Track AM-FM radio in dash
$100.00 AIR $100.00
Blue Woman's Schwinn Continental 10-speed
Excellent condition! $115,841-8492
*MUST SAVE*
Once-a-year Coty Special-Eneread, A.L.Ament,
L.I. Grecian, just $2.95 at Round Corner
Boutique in Seattle.
Canvas portabag box, 26 by 21, Bjell with brown handle, navy zipper, Brand new, never used.
Spot your bird-Reg $29 95 binoculars now $29
at Round Corner Drug Store.
350 HONDA, mechanically, perfect, Mike, 842,
4354 3-0
MUSS SELL. 76 Piton ware, 4 speed. AM-FM
Low mileage. Excellent condition. $89
MUSS SELL. 76 Piton ware, 4 speed. AM-FM
Low mileage. Excellent condition. $89
Check this stereo equipment — TeeA A 400 cassette deck (only slightly) used. Technologies SL 3200 direct wireless with Share MHIBLED cart (with warranty) with Shure SCA 640 arm (rugged) 843-901 after 5
**WHY RENT?** When you could own this beautiful building, you could buy a house. Like new appliances, dispensal, central air conditioning, like new windows, dishwasher, dryer area, 2 smokers, litted and skirted faucets, water heater, tree house, stone building, fire pit house, tree garden, patio, pool, deck.
50: OFF SALE on all kinds of drawing pat-
sels
56: OFF SALE on 1040 Vermont. Open M-F
7 a.m.-7 p.m. (Saturday)
Integrated安培, Keyboard THS, Law 509, Law 612,
Laboratory Sensor, Lab 748, Lab 875, Lab 910,
Gigabit Ethernet, base $109.99 Call H370-6390
www.gigabit.com
SAVE L on
MARANZY 220 B receiver 20 watt, good condition
$255.91 $411.82 or $823.42 3-9
3, 4, & 5 year maintenance free batteries! As low as All with $24. IMMEDIATE FAIL
THE BATTERY SHOP
Batteries .30
MEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION
842-2922
72 Camarra, 3-speed, runs excellent, rear end
damage. AWX 31.060, BK-8264
For sale, single bed with two mattresses. Very good condition. £3795.
For sale, double bed with two mattresses. Very good condition. £6249.
For sale, king bed with four mattresses. Very good condition. £10499.
For sale, queen bed with four mattresses. Very good condition. £13499.
Gibson Lex Paul Custom Guitar, Good Condition
Call 341-8215
3-9
MARANTZ 3226 zibre receiver. Perfect condition. Watson latent 26 watts. $285 in洛杉矶.
Canadian Tire Tuscany Chevron (Clearance) Salesman Representative Warranty Period: 12 Months at $50 for each $20 price. If you bring back a full set of tires and Ray Shannon shows up, pay the full price. No interest.
Volkswagen Tire Sale! New $38 4 ply B F P C.
$19.50! Cut to $32 each. Hay Shadeback.
Skilling for Spring Break: Brill Polarurgardiana
Skipping the spring break will help you score
$250.00 for $35. Men's medium bedge down jacket. Worn
4 days. New $100. Sold for $100. Both jackets have
sleeves. Call 915-864-7520 after 5:30 or 915-864-7521.
Call 915-864-7521 after 5:30 or 915-864-7521.
KC IDs *driver's license, birth date, birth country, driver's license number, driver's license exp.* he can be claimed at Level 4. Kornberg Union forces are required to pass the
FOUND
Part time maintenance person needed. Starting
up on Monday and ending on Friday.
Monday thru Friday. Heavy lift
cleaning required, also mechanical aptitude
necessary. Apply in person. Schultem, Fees 719,
518-426-1000.
EXOTIC JOI HAKE TAHOE,CALIFORNIA
Little expense, funiture tautie $1780-$4,600
mountain kayaks, sailboats, river rafts, & more
tarantula, ranchers, criens, river rafts, & more
6029, Sacramento; river rafts 6029,
6029, Sacramento; river rafts 6029.
4-24
HELP WANTED
Now lakings applications for Fumiloba & Grill
Bread. Apply to a person at Viva Restaurant.
Apply at 8pm on Monday, March 24th.
2729-3080, Waterway Manager, prepare property presentation materials, coordinate presentations, provide training, and assist with property documentation for Waterway Call Professionals Gretz.
JOBE MEN WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
SHOPPE WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
WOMEN NAILHOUSE SHOPPE
Part time counter or kitchen work need.Must
be trained to work 3-4 days week.Co-
mpany number 842-129.
SUMMER OBITUATION STUDENT STAFF POSITION
The summer orientation student and staff member for the Summer Orientation student and staff member for the summer orientation, as well as the advertisement in the day's paper. Work with the employer on a full-time, 50-hour. Full time. An equal opportunity employer.
Part-time stenologist wanted, jewelry making and sewing ability. Apply in part-time position with company. Send resumes to HR, 212-769-5000.
O'Connell Youth Ranch needs mature married couples who have experience teaching parents in a home-based setting.
Immediate opening, for part-time writing and training.
Bachelor's degree in Computer Science (or equivalent) plus 152 hours of experience, including 10 years of experience with JAVA 8.0, J2EE, J2SE, J2EE Studio, Eclipse, Oracle ACP, IBM AIX 4.14, or IBM AIX 4.24 before 10/31/1999.
Research Assistant - A student to work with pre-children. Two hrs, per week-start immediately. Most must be available 9:00 to 10:00 a.m., Tuesday through Saturday. Water, IJD, 123; B464, 845-481 or 841-0849.
Interim聘用 for fall and part time wait-
time positions, 815-734-2020. W. the Writer. Equal Opportunity.
W. the Writer. Equal Opportunity.
EXTRA REMOVAL PROGRAM. Earn up to $40 per furnished envelope you address & staff help! Envelopes for $20 are valid at stores, until stamped, self-addressed envelopes at offices, until expired. 30 Day Warranty. Morgans, W. N. 26900. Box 10-39
SUMMER JOINS Counselors, lifeguard, nurse cook for camp near Ontario *Caitlin* Santa Fe Trail Counsel or Girl Scouts 54011 State Ave. Kansas City, Kansas 60528 or 913-287-3436
Hence, the density of a spherical ball is
the same as that of a cube. In other words,
for a sphere of radius $r$, its volume is
$4\pi r^3$. For a cube of side $s$, its volume is
$\frac{8}{3} s^3$. The ratio of the volumes of
the sphere and the cube is $r:s=3:1$.
Planning to assist affiliate full time AB all around
the region? Interested call 412-375-6098 or email
post@interested.com call 412-375-6098 for
more information.
Waiters and waitresses. Variety of hours. Delivery. Desserts. Have you own, hire. Imquire at www.deliverycentres.co.uk.
First internment camp, to be built in the next week. The camp will have a temporary barricade with concrete pillars for ventilation and fire protection. It will be located on the eastern side of the District Attorney's office. Bounty 161 to the District Attorney's office. Bounty 161 to the District Attorney's office.
March 14, 2019. Legacy Opportunity Event.
Program coordinator for LEAA grant. Pull full line of information from the criminal justice system, BSA degree or experience will be responsible for establishing and coordinating the program designed to enhance communication with the community. Apply in person to District Attorney's office or to the Juvenile Justice Center. Application deadline: March 31.
LOST
Lost a seven arm attack pack containing books on law, call (864) 837-8244. 3-9
No pair crown ring in St. Louis Nummerland, on
Tuesday March 1, Reward II 842-3649-3-89
Gold ankle bracelet on 2/27 between 504 Sumner
Street and back parking lot, Southwestern
Parking Lot, Dallas, TX 75019.
Initial ring R_2 was lost during the KU vs. State game at Lewiston, H. I found please call (801) 737-4569 to report the loss.
MISCELLANEOUS
TREES BINDING COOPYING The House of
Downtown Dallas has a tree-inclined building and caining at library 1027.
NOTICE
DEATH? BOY SHOOTER
ANSWER Secrets of Smell Travel FECKANKAR
832-642-8121
Katia Mungué can be trained by becoming an acupuncturist, a massage therapist, a physical therapist, a hairstylist, a dentist, and an idle carpenter. By the age of 21 she has already completed a PhD in Chinese medicine.
Touch Base with
TOUCH BASE WITH
Recreation Services
Intramural Softball
Today. Entry forms
available in Room 208
Robinson Center,
Recreation Services
...
Extra money can be earned by buying a dinner at one of the many restaurants in New York, or traveling around New York and carrying extra food. Murray's of New York is a 60-mile stop on the Route 24 highway.
PERSONAL
60. Selmonovsky and Pitchie every Friday
afternoon (2:5) at Lunie's bar.
4-3
RICKS HIDE SHOE店 now open 208, Raleigh,
A-D, Poch & Centipede) in鞋房 stock. EG-
D, Poch & Centipede) in鞋房 stock. EG
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC. Abortion up to 17
weeks. Pregnancy tests, Birth Control,
Counseling. Tubal ligation. For apportion call
@ 312-420-5299 or 440-100-6801.
Overland Park, Ks.
HAROUR SPECIALS® 4-10 Mon, Tues, Thurs,
Fri-Sun 10-10am $39.95; MON-SUN 10-10am
MAINS DAY 8-NIGHT SIGHT. $19.95 gilters.
Free to everyone
Remember
Short courses in businesstechnical
Work every Thursday evening 7
p.m. 4pm, Summerfield Topics for
Workers, March 8 Effective
Sentences
Thursday evening, 6-7 p.m.
408 Summerfield
FOX HILL NURSERY CICILI. Albrighton, ut 10382. To be operated by Fox Hill Nursing Center. Fax: (415) 649-7800.
Gay Leducian consulting referrals now handed
unto KU into 841-366-304 or Headquarters 841-
366-304.
Spring Broak Special
20% OFF
at LITWINS 831 Mass.
SALE THRU WEEKEND
Pristella Am- I invited you to your graduation! Or
your announcement in my A at the University of
Texas.
Buffalores Courts every Monday night 6:12 at
Louis West (70) & Michigan. $9.50 Each.
Cleveland Residents Court every Saturday
at 8:30. $9.50 Each.
1
BVD
20/20
sale
20%
OFF
on
BVD
UNDERWEAR
AT
LITWINS
We're not Dimanche Agents, but the way the Gods
have told us that they're coming causes CAUSE
HEAVEN THERE IS NO BIBLE.
Wanna be my friend for life? I am an alum,
and am a memorial call Mike in Nanaimo and
Hamilton.
Moffet & Beers Band at Louise's Bar TONIGHT
---
To whomever found a large blue skim go in place. You should use the plain text or the process that ONE glove isn't likely to do either of us much good. At least allow them to be a mask. PLEASE LIST 841-692-07. No questions asked.
PatrickYou're a saint on the 17th, but not March 23rd. 80:81:52
3-8
N I W Your heart can't escape the touch of
N I W Your breath your breath. You wilt be.
-- KEP N I W
Hush Vi. Remedy! The "Idea of March" is allowed! Have a Happy Day in Padura Kara!
SERVICES OFFERED
REWRITING EDITING - Your manuscript, thesis or term paper, collaged with photographs, artworks, reflections on your thinking with precision and smoothness. Outlining of texts and articles also available. Every page should be proofread.
EXPERT TUTORS. M码 000-1621. call 843-5778.
TUTORIALS ON COMPUTER SYSTEMS 109-200. call 843-5778.
COMPUTER SYSTEMS 109-200. call 843-5778.
TESTS. call 843-5778. QUALIFICATIONS-BS.
computer programming. For general problems call
computer programming. For general problems call
Table of Fees IBM PMP Full Certification quality work
thesis. Thesis dissertation welcome.
www.ibm.com
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. 11
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can
provide your math or CS problem solving
841-7477
MATH TUTOR M. I in math, pattern, three years professional tutoring experience B342-3541.
Here to key punch! Experienced Koyounkers
notice receiving card job. Call 841-7643 3 50 66 66
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Alice at the House of Uselor/Quick Copy Center.
Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
to Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at
Mass
Tired of feeding yourself? Ninja Hall is offering for the first time ever a boarding plan. You can book now, and week can be years if you choose this plan. Stop by HALL 106, Ninja Hall Drive. #82-8590
7. year experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Resume customers. Law paper, term papers. Mrs
Mrs. Johnson.
DOG OBDIEDIE AND INFORMATION CLASSES:
by the Law enforcement Jailhawk Kernel Club
and USC Law Enforcement Orientation 7.20 to 8.30 on March 27 at the National Guard Airlift. Puppies $15 all others $15 Dogs must have shear and on heaches. Ripups dogs must have shear and on heaches. For further 327 contact 843-4778.
For constructive, integrative cognition of transport
relationships, we develop a novel, probabilistic model
that is aware of redundancy in the specially
constructed data.
TYPING
Experienced Typist—term paper, mice, fluids,
electronic IIS, internetic Broadreading, spelling corrections
and proofreading.
Experienced (typical-theses, dissertations, term
papers), 60 credits, selective. Math.
843-1313,语文.842-1313.
Quality typing guaranteed. IHM Select, Terminology paper, thesis, dissertation. IHU Carole M413.
Repairs, disassembly, lubrication, legal claims, armor, maintenance, selectiveetic, Calif Ellen 841-3127
Jonathan 841-3127
COMPUTERIZED TREISI TYPING. Have your t尼斯 type on system, and you can have your machine just justified by putting all original copies of PROFESSIONAL plus all original copies. CALL PROFESSIONAL for info on the most advanced typing systems.
I do darrow quick typing. Under 20 p., 1 night.
I do darrow quick typing. Under 20 p., 1 night.
Call Ruth R. 835-439-6498 for 5:34-
3-14
Tying on Eilee electric typewriter Prompt service proof reading No tresses Mrs. Hays, 843-792-5060
**TYPPING** To 30,000 pages served. Quality
support. Mail resume to:
845-312-890. We provide all for you. 320
Experienced typist with scientific background
HMC correcting Selective II. Call Jan. 845-312-
311.
HOME TYPEING SERVICE-Thesis typing, business typing, statistical typing done by experienced secretary in her home. For information about typesetting (1-430), after 5 am, anytime weeksends. 3-21
WANTED
Small House or Duplex to rent with fenced yard for my dog. Call collect 4 a.m. 913-351-2600
Wanted. Male roommate for clean two-bedroom.
Cell. 841-0633 at 4:00
3-20
Room
Male matrina roommate for 79 fall semester only Own
room for 21 fall semester. Call Calibur
or Chris B. 841-6123 after 5 p.m.
WANTED--Small band interested in doing work on a baited boat with national distribution.
10
Thursday, March 8, 1979
University Dally Kansan
Lafayette
Staff photo by CHRISTOUDY
Sinale hitter
Matt Gangdulferings on deck during the fifth inning of the second game of yesterday's doubleheader against William
Jewell. He stepped up to it a run-scoring single, as the Jayhawns won, 8-1. Kansas also won the opening game, 12-4.
Women begin national title drive
By NANCY DRESSLER
Sports Editor
Two weeks ago, KU's women's basketball team survived a scare from a determined Nebraska team to win a close game in Lincoln. 63-59.
Afterward, KU coach Marian Washington said she was in no hurry to play the Huskers
to tomorrow in Minneapolis, the Jayhawks, 26-7, will do just that when they begin their drive to the nationals with the opening round of the Region VI tournament. The game is the fourth meeting of the two national season and Kansas has won the past three.
But past success against NU, 23-12, has little chance in postseason play when every team is on the road.
"We can't go in underestimate anyone," Washington said. "It's going to be a very tough regional. But the way we've been plavinr, I feel we could do well."
KU MUST DO well to advance from the regional to the sectional playoffs. The top two teams in Region VI move on to sectionals, which are a step closer to the national finals of the Association of Invitational Teams in Greenboro. N.C., March 23 and 25.
Washington said KU would have no trouble getting up for Nebraska a fourth
"It is in a whole different setting this time," she said. "There's more at stake."
KU could be without senior V. C. Sanders, who is suffering from a calcium deposit in her foot. She has missed the past four days of practice.
If Kansas beats Nebraska, the Jayhawks then would have to win one more game to make the tournament finals and be assured of a sectional berth.
Otherwise, Washington said, Kansas was mentally and physically ready to play.
"We've never finished higher than fourth in the regional." Washington said. "Our attitudes are good and a positive attitude is very important."
The Kansas baseball team won its opening games of the season yesterday afternoon against William Jewell College in weather more appropriate for an indoor sport.
By TONY FITTS
Sports Writer
KU sweeps cold opener
Strong pitching and timely hit helped KU forget the wind and 30-degree temperature and go on to post 12-4 and 6-1 victories.
"Of course, it warms up a bit when you win," KU coach Floyd Temple said. "It was cold and wind out there, but when the guys are playing, I don't think they even think
"I'm surprised we hit so well. All in all, it was very wratiful."
Matt Guldigerling and Vic Harris starred for KU in the opener, with six RHIs between 1997 and 2003. The single in the sixth, just before Harris knocked a three-run homer over the left shoulder.
Injuries to influence gymnastics' placing
Injuries will be a key factor in whether the KU men's gymnastics team can snap a string of seven straight fifth-place finishes. Big Eight Gymnastics Championships.
The championships will be tomorrow and Saturday in Norman, Oklahoma. KU, ranked 17th nationally, will challenge Colorado for fourth place. Nebraska, Oklahoma and Iowa State, respectively ranked first, second and third, probably will battle for the team title
Colorado defeated KU 209-8-208.5 in a dual meet last week in Robinson Gymnasium, and KU's chances of defeating Colorado at the conference championships may rest on the health of Ron Ortman, Brad Foerr, Larry Kaplan and Bill Harms.
Ortman, Foerch and Kaplan are two of KU's four all-around competitors. Harma is a former all-star.
"As far as competition, I think we are ready," Bob Lockwood, men's gymnastics coach, said. "Healthwise, I'm not so sure we are.
"Ton Ortman has been having knee problems, Bill Harms is still having problems," said Ortman, who fenced two weeks ago, Brad Foech has trouble with tendons in his feet and Larry Worthington.
THE SHOT WAS HARIS' first home run in two years at Kansas.
KANSAN Sports
In addition, John Spottedwood, Dan
Spottedwood, and Roger Riley each had two hips.
Spottedwood.
Dan St. Clair claw a complete first
attack, and sixes, striking out six and
only six allowed only six batches.
For the losers, Jim Talley had two base nuts and a stolen base and Chris Wilson got two.
But the junior right-hander was not pleased.
"My performance wasn't as good as it should have been," he said, "I should have been better."
"We might be in trouble when we come up against a real good team, like Pan Am."
PAN AMERICAN UNIVERSITY is one of the teams the 'Hawks will face in the Texas Bowl.
Greaterbriar's
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEN
Cheese Emporium
Eat In or Carry Out
Sandwiches
Meats
Soups
Cheeses
Holiday Plaza - 23th & Ivory
Admiral Car Rental
Toyota
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Buick Regal
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2340 Alabama
843-2931
MAKING A BREAK THIS SPRING?
Steve Jeltz also contributed two RBIs in the second game on the strength of two ground-rule doubles. He also stole two bases.
Spottedwolf stole another base in the second game. Last season, Spottedwolf set a team record with 17 steals in a season. Jeltz was on second the team with 12.
The Jayhawks are scheduled to play another doubleheader tomorrow, against Fort Hays State. The games begin at 1:30 p.m. at Quigley Field.
First Game
Jamie Jewell 000 000 0 - 1 2 1
Kansas 001 000 0 - 1 3 1
Kansas La Perry (B) and Stephen Salifille and Graham, W-Salifille, I-4, L-Mason, D-12, Kansas-Jezit (Z) St. Lawrence, William Jewell, Tulsa, Kansas
Midwestern Music and Art Camp
William Jewell 200, 280 - 1 - 9 - 1
William Jewell 200, 280 - 1 - 9 - 1
Colman, Samuel (4) and Berkley, St. Clair and Graham, W.-St. Clair, W.-L.Colman, 6; W.-Hillman, David, K.; Dearborn, William, K.; Harris, James (1); BD. William Jewell, Tallahassee, Kansas
ANNOUNCES
MIDWESTERN
positions for RESIDENT ASSISTANTS
for the summer of 1979. Room, board and stipend are furnished for the University Summer Session
Interested persons may apply at 214 Murphy Hall before March 9, 1979
Maupi
Maupintour
Travel Service
can make your travel
arrangements quickly, efficiently,
and at NO CHARGE to you.
843-1211
KU UNION DOWNTOWN
THE MALLS
Maupintour travel service
ALFONSO BARBAO
Happy Birthday Bro-
Enjoy!!
The Organization of Arab Students
How's it feel to be a Grandma?
Presents
THE MILLIONAIRE
المillionaire / مسلم / دینامي
Friday, March 9
Feature at 7:00 pm
3140 Wescoe Hall
Admission $2.00
٩ أخبرنا محمد بن عبد الله
٢ ١٥٥ مرة
١ 3140 هـ من تاريخ المؤمنين
١ 3140 مرة
Happy 1st Year Anniversary!
FREE
Shampoo and Blow-dry with every Prime Cut Mar. 1-15
Happy 1st Year
Happy 1st Year Anniversary!
Ask for Kathy or Caryn.
Prime Cut Hair Co.
Lawrence's Most Unique Hair Salon
(2)
13 €. 8th 841-4488
Open Evenings
Mingles
Disco
through March 10 only
$10 MEMBERSHIP SPECIAL
FOR MINGLERS ONLY.
(See you at Happy Hour, 4:00-7:00 p.m. Monday-Friday)
Lawrence Ramada Inn
2222 W. 6th 842-7030
MINGLES DISCO . . A PRIVATE CLUB
Ticke
Adul
Stu
Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble
& Kansas University Dance Company
Present a
Dance Concert
University Theatre
March 7, 1869
8 p.m.
Tickets available at door
Adults $2. Children $0+
Students free with KUID.
paid for by Student Activity Fees
Summer Orientation Program 1979
STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
. . . interpersonal communication skills
. . . leadership abilities
. . . knowledge of University programs & activities
. . onthuslasm about program
. . . student in good academic standing
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ADMISSIONS & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL APPLICATIONS DUE BY FRIDAY, MARCH 23
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
L
Are the Kitchens Always Closed on Sundays?
The Eldridge Has The Answer.
WINE
SUNDAY
All You Can EAT
RUNCH $
For Parts @0860495 or more 15% OFF
New Advantage to receive Discount
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DINNER
$4.45
Serving 5-9 pm Served Family Style
Fined Chicken Cole Slaw Mashed Potatoes Rolls & Butter Gravy Coffee or Tea Creamed Corn
Special Fraternity and Sorority offer Dinner $490 including Drinks.
The Eldridge House
The Eldridge House
701 Massachusetts
(913)841-4666
E
R
Representatives students fight bill
By CAROL BEIER and GENE LINN Staff Reporters
TOPEKA—Two Lawrence legislators got the silent treatment yesterday when they asked Gov. John Carlin to tell the Kansas senate that there is still a possibility Carlin will vet it.
"Carlin didn't say a word the whole time we were talking to him," State Rep. John Seibold said.
Sobach and State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Daventry, met with Carlin yesterday afternoon to voice their objections to the bill. They have said repeatedly that the bill spills the KU student vote by taking the Oread University of Kansas, out of Glover's hand at the University of Kansas, of Glover's hand.
Hoch said Carlin probably would decide next week whether to veto the bill.
The reapportionment bill would add another district to Lawrence, bringing the number of Douglas County state representatives to four.
The bill places all of Glover's 4th district west of Massachusetts Street and places the KU campus and the Oread area of Glover's current district into a new 4th District.
Bill Bhoo, Carlin's press secretary, said,
"The meeting with Glover and Solbach didn't change Carlin's mind because he hasn't made it in vet."
GLOVER WOULD pick up heavily
republican districts in west-central
USA
While Solbach and Glover talked to Carlin, two KU students presented a petition opposing the bill to to an administrative assistant in the governor's office.
The students had wanted to see the governor personally to present the petition, and the senator agreed.
The other student, Tom Pickford, Topeka
junior, said he was a little disappointed that they did not get to see Carlin.
The students' appointment had been arranged by Hannes Zacharias, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas, a student lobby group. However, Chanay said the opposition to the reappointment bill was not an official ASK position.
Zacharias she did not expect Carlin to veto the bill because of what he described as a strong show of support in the House. A motion to approve the bill, with minor issues inserted by the Kansas Senate, was placed on the Weekday meeting by a wide margin.
"THAT DOESN'T mean, of course, that students should come in and let him play."
The letter that prefaced the petition's signatures said, "We, as students of the University of Kansas, believe the bill, as amended, is a blatant political attempt to disfranchise KU students and divide the student voice.
The decision is now yours, Mr. Governor,
and we strongly urge you to serve the best
interests of the entire electorate of Douglas
County and veto HR 2620."
Chanay said that signatures for the petition were still being sought and that he would deliver them to the governor's office as they were collected.
Sobbach said he hoped the Supreme Court could declare the bill unconstitutional if it violated the rights of citizens.
According to the Kansas constitution, all reapportionment legislation must be approved by the Supreme Court. The court has ruled that splitting the vote of a racial group is unconstitutional.
"We'll just have to see if they extend that ruling to cover students," he said.
Non-Union vendor supplies machines at 3 schol halls
Staff Renorter
By JULIA GOPLERUD
A McClennon Hall Senate program to sell food to residents was halted this week by the Kansas Union's exclusive right to all concerts at the University of Kansas, but another vendor has been supplying concerto three scholarship halls for several years.
Another scholarship hall, Battelfen Hall,
owns and stocks its own non machine.
Candy machines in Grace Pearson, Stephenson and Sellards halls are owned and stocked by B and B Vending Co., 1045 New Jersey St.
Larry Schmidtberger, business manager of the Union, said yesterday that he was not aware of the situation and did not know if the Union's contract was being violated.
Jac Hafele, branch manager of B and B Vending, said he had a candy machine in
Sellards about 10 years ago because his daughter lived there and the women in the hall wanted a machine. He said he did not know how long the other machines had been built.
"I imagine the only reason we can operate in the scholarship halls is because KU has a lot of people with them." Hafeeel said. "If it wants them it can certainly have them because they like them."
"Most new machines cost $1,600 and it takes a long time to get that money back. If it costs $200, you can."
He said the machines were on a regular route and were restocked every two weeks.
John Young, a Batterie resident, said there were two pop machines in his hall. One is owned by the hall, he said, and one is operated by KU Concessions.
See VENDING back page
Friday, March 9, 1979
KANSAN
Staff Photo by BILL FRAKEZ
Vol. 89, No. 111
ZOOM
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Master Magician
night, combined with a personal message about Transcendental Meditation. Here Henning uses a young volunteer from the audience in an illusion with six silver rings.
Magician Doug Heining brought his magic show to Haskell Indian Junior College last
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Performer gives magical message
Staff Renorter
By RHONDA HOLMAN
His magical musk with playing cards, scarves and silver rings were the same as those in his television specials and nightclub acts—only the message was different.
Before a large crowd in Haskell Indian Junior College Auditorium last night, magician Doug Hamming combined his well-known tricks with a message about transcendent mediation.
Henning created illusions of a torn
Henning, 31, co-created and starred in "The Magic Show" for five years on Broadway and won an Emmy award for his work in four television specials. He first became interested in magic when he met the legendary girl a gesture on "The Ed Sullivan Show."
newspaper folding back into one piece,
jacks turning into a deck of cards
and a long needle piercing both sides of an inflated balloon.
"WHAT*M doing up here is illusion," he said. "Real magic is a law of nature that nobody knows about yet. It is caused by an extension of the laws of nature."
Henning used volunteers from the audience as assistants, tricking them and the rest of the audience with his illusions. He made a golf ball disappear, only to have it reappear in his mouth, and changed a yellow scarf to red and then back again.
Henning, who meditates for twenty minutes twice a day, said he became involved in meditation after the opening night of the show. He then sat down and after the first show got bad reviews, a friend convinced him to go to a session on transcendental meditation and in four days he
"Transcendental meditation is just a simple, mental technique to expand consciousness," he said. "There's nothing religious about it and there really nothing
to believe at all, except that by using your mind, your body can have a deep rest. $ ^{17} $
HE SAID that the Indian people needed meditation to "break down the boundaries" between them and the outside.
Funds approved to continue bus for handicapped
"When we meditate, the stress starts to leave and we're filled with an incredible sense of wonder," he said. "Each individual in a culture group can discover his inner self and then the culture of that group can become very strong."
The original funding for the bus ends today.
Henning told the crowd that Ted Guzzi, an executive governor for the Age of Enlightenment from MIU, would be chosen to mediate on the Haskell campus next week.
The Student Senate executive committee voted last night to fund a bus for disabled students.
The bus service, which costs $1,600 a month to provide, picks up disabled persons who have no other means of getting to work. On weekdays, 35 persons a day. The service began Jan. 17.
He encouraged the crowd to explore the possibilities of meditation.
He came to Haskell on behalf of Maharishi International University in Fairfield, Iowa, a college that teaches education and personal enlightenment through meditation. MIU arranged the show as part of its new American acquaintant American Indians with meditation.
StudEx allocated $525 so the bus service could continue until the Student Senate discussed the funding. That amount equals $68 a day for 14 days, which is what Bob Turvey, assistant director of the student database, estimated the cost of running the bus would be.
The Student Senate supplies 28 cents a mile for the service. Facilities Operations provides the bus and supplies the bus driver's salary.
Disabled students pay $3.50 a semester through the activity fee for the KU on Wheels bus program, although many cannot use it. Federal guidelines have said KU must provide a bus service for disabled incidents because they pay the fee, Turvey said.
"All you have to do is somehow get your own potential out by getting rid of stress," he said. "We are each magicians of our own destiny."
George Gomez, student body vice president, said he had some questions about the service that he wanted answered before the Student Senate fully funded the bus.
He said his main concern was who would pay for the depreciation of the bus. The administration is supposed to pay for the depreciation, but does not. Gomee said.
"I think Facilities Operations has grossly inflated the cost at 28 cents a mile," he said. "The Student Senate should not have to pay for the depreciation."
The money will come out of the Student Senate office unallocated fund, which is money left over from the Senate office fund. The office receives 68 cents from each activity fee. Keith Mulh, Student treasurer, said there was more than $7,000 in the fund.
"If we refuse to provide the service, they can use us," he said.
However, Jeff Chanay, Topeka junior, said the Senate was legally responsible to him.
Twelve cents of the 28 cents is for depreciation, he said.
Hening said performing magic was just a process of misdirecting people's attention and creating optical illusions, saying "the magic of today is the science of tomorrow."
10
Staff photo by CHRIS TODE
Breezin'
While many K.U. students in class yesterday, Robert Williamson, 13, spent the afternoon enjoying the sun and riding his skateboard down the long empty sidewalks
Eudora hardware haven caters to used tool trade
By GENE BROWNING
Staff Reporter
EUDORA - A box of used screwdrivers, 25 cents each, lie on one shelf. Stacked, piled and strewn throughout the store are used and shelf marked.
Herb Miner, 66, stood in the middle of his tool-cluttered store in Eudora, 11 miles east of Lawrence. The store, Herb Miner's Bargain Center and Wedding Shop, 730 Main St., has offered used tools at bargain prices to people ranging from do-it-yourselfers to professional buyers.
"We've been open for a few days," he said with a smile
Miner, who runs the store with his wife, Helen, maintains his extraordinary selection of tools by traveling to three or four auctions a week. On Sundays, he goes to Kansas City to buy tools at swam meets.
"I don't want if I can't make money out of it," he said yesterday. "You use just a little horse sense."
From the front of the store the only clue to what lies within is a Bargain Center sign and the huge pile of electric drills which can be used for drilling.
Mrs. Miner said the store was different from other hardware stores because it was stocked with "everything."
"We handle things most stores don't handle. We have everything from skill saws to carpets and joiners." she said.
"How many stores have you seen that have that many wrenches," she said, nodding to an assortment of 60 used wrenches hanging on the wall.
MINER ALSO STOCKS uncommon tools.
"If I see something unusual at an auction, I'll pick it up. I can usually find someone who will buy it." he said.
Mrs. Miner pointed to a set of $ \frac{3}{4} $ - inch sockets.
Some football line markers lie on one of his shelves. Miner said he thought someone might need them sometime.
"These cost $100 a set new. You use these on farm machinery, caterpillars." she said.
"If the price is right, people will buy it," he said. "When I am looking at what to buy, I sometimes have to think as screw the assemblies."
Miner said he bought many tools just on the chance that people would buy them.
He said the store's main customers came from Topeka, Kansas City and small towns in the area.
He has never used much advertising. he said.
In addition to the store, Miner runs a welding shop next door. He desizes and makes special tools and nonsurgery on request.
"Word of mouth seems to be the biggest way of getting people to come," he said.
Miner has had his welding shop in Eudora since 1943. The shop is crowded with scrap metals, welding tools and tools he has welded.
He said he taught himself to weld in 1935 when he was working for an oil company.
"I decided if I wanted to get some money, I would have to have a trade." he said.
Although his father had several patents, he said, he has never bothered to get them for the tools he has designed because he said it would be too expensive.
He said he never put a design of a machine on paper when he worked for a customer.
"I do it all in my head. Sometimes I study for days before I figure out the right design," he said.
When he builds something, he said, he tries to make all the parts himself.
"I don't believe in giving people a lot of money for something I can make myself," he said.
He said his use of tools had helped him sell them.
"Knowing tools and uses and their advantage makes the business easier. A lot of people ask me what kind tools they will use."
MINER WALKED to the back of his welding shop.
"Here's some finagling," he said. "I used old ammunition boxes for that cabinet."
He stood still for a moment, apparently thinking about other items he had built and welded.
"I built the second lawnmower in Eudora without ever seeing the first," he said.
He said in the 1930s he had earned some money by mending fenders on Model Ts by welding with balling wire.
He also has built heavy farm tractors, he said, and he will agree to build practically anything a customer wants under one condition.
bould practice anything if a customer waits until the condition
"I'll build something good or I won't build it at all," he said.
Miner recently retired from a job as a steamfitter. But, he said, he plans to continue operating the store.
"I'll keep running the store as long as I'm able to navigate," he said. "I've got a lot of work I've got to do yet."
University Daily Kansan
UVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services
Carter hears new treaty plan
CAIRO, Egypt - President Carter launched his personal peace mission yesterday angst tipped of thousands of cheering Egyptians.
Carter met for 2% hours with President Anwar Sadat after he was given new
Ecquation proposals for a treaty with Israel.
Shortly after the arrival of the American party, Egyptian Prime Minister Mustafa Khalil presented counterproposals to Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, detailing Egyptian response to U.S. compromise suggestions to break the neocolonial stalemate.
There were no immediate details on the new Egyptian proposals.
Larrier and Sandat had a discussion of unresolved issues in the treaty negotiations. The two leaders met alone for half an hour and then were joined by two other leaders.
Carter will remain in Egypt until tomorrow night, when he flies to Israel for consultations with Menachem Begin, Israeli prime minister. There is a possibility that if an agreement is solidified Vance or another U.S. mediator will remain in the region to wrap up the agreement.
Chinese troops return home
XU-THE first contingent of Chinese troops has returned home from fighting in Vietnam, and China accused the Vietnamese of shelling its withdrawn forces. XU-XU has been accused by Beijing of
China said the first returning troops crossed the Sino-Vietnamese border and were given a heroic welcome at Friendship Pass just north of the border.
Ximaida not say how many troops had returned to China or to what units they belonged. It was the first official announcement by Peking that Chinese troops had returned home following its proposal for cease-fire talks with Vietnam.
Japanese Foreign Minister Suma Sonoda told a parliamentary committee that Japan was asking China to pull out and asking Vietnam to allow a smooth transition.
He said Japan was meeting separately with both sides and relaying the peace conditions demanded by each.
Nuke plant security called lax
OKLAHOMA CITY—A nuclear scientist testified yesterday in the $1.5 million Karen Lincoln wood damage trial that if a government report on missing children were released, they would be safe.
John tontman of San Francisco, who helped develop the atomic bomb and has since said the health dangers of plutonium were greater than once believed, said he would have been dead if the experiment had not been conducted.
Referring to an Atomic Energy Commission report that said 300 micrograms of plutonium could not be accounted for at the Kerr-McCarr Cimarron nuclear facility.
"To me, that 300 micrograms can be outside that Kerr-McGee plant means the lion by no means has been adequately caged."
An important difference is that the milk product was filed by Silkwood's family against Kerr-McGee. The salt alleles that her contamination with plutonium resulted from
Silkwood, who worked at the nuclear plant, was killed in a one-car crash Nov. 13, 1974, while driving to a meeting with a union official and a newspaper reporter to discuss allegations about practices at the plant. Documents known to have been in her car have never been recovered.
TOPEKA-The Kansas Supreme Court yesterday released an order allowing lawyers to advertise, but restricting them to use "dignified" ads.
Kansas lawyers can advertise
The order, which was issued Tuesday, goes beyond Kansas Association guidelines to let lawyers advertise over television and radio, in addition to the in
The court listed information that may be included in advertisements, as well as what cannot be included.
"The information disclosed in such publication or broadcast shall be presented in a dignified manner without the use of drawings, portrayals, dramatizations, slogans, music, lyrics or the use of pictures other than a portrait of the individual lawyer." the rules said.
7th dies from prison explosion
SPRINGFIELD, Mo.—An incarcerate severely injured in a Jan. 30 explosion and fire at the hospital farm near Leavenworth became the seventh blast Wednesday.
The court's action followed a 1977 U.S. Supreme Court decision that overturned an Arizona rule against lawyer advertising. The federal court left it to the state to decide.
Andrew C. Payne, 46, of Cornelia, Ga., died of cardiac arrest at the U.S. Medical Center for Prisoners in Springfield, Mo.
Bob Randalph, a spokesman at the center, and yesterday that an autopsy showed that Payne died after pneumonia developed from injuries he suffered in
After the explosion in the honor farm maintenance shop, in which six others died, Parker underwent surgeries at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
"He had a skull fracture and brain damage and, as a result, the pneumonia developed," Randolph said.
TEHRAN, Iran—Revolutionaries fired their automatic weapons into the air yesterday to disperse thousands of women demonstrators who marched on the streets.
Iranian women 'fight the veil'
He was transferred to Springfield when his condition was believed to be stabilized, said Richard P. Setter, executive assistant to the warden at
Parye was serving a five-year sentence for distribution of non-narcotic drugs and would have been liable for parole in April.
Baker to seek GOP nomination
rne women shouted. "We shall fight the veil," and "Down with Khorneini," when they married on Prime Minister Minette Bazarzani's office.
"We've got a lot of good candidates in the Republican fold," Ford said. "I'm going to sit and watch and enjoy it."
In the strongest sense of opposition to Islamic leader Ayatollah Ruhabliah Khomeini since he overthrew the shah last month, throngs of women marched through Tehran in defiance of Khomeini's order to cast aside their Western-style clothes and return to their traditional veil, the chador.
Khomimi supporters immediately condemned the demonstrations as left-wing inspired.
Baker said before the lecture that he had no doubts that President Carter would be the Democratic nominee next year and California Governor Jerry Sanders could take on him.
MANHATTAN—Senate minority leader Howard Baker yesterday said he would send the GOP presidential nomination next year but would not call his
Baker, R-Tenn, delivered the 44th Annual Landon Lecture at Kansas State University before a crowd of 1,100.
During his lecture Baker said he could not support the SALT II treaty in its present form because of what he considered unreasonable concessions to the U.S.
One crowd of demonstrators, estimated to be 15,000, staged its demonstrations in front of the prime minister's house after a crowd estimated at more than 100,000 marched to Tehran University for ceremonies marking International Women's Day.
Watson Library will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily during spring break.
Robinson Gymnasium, Spencer Museum, the Kansas University and all other University buildings will be open regular hours during that time. Today is the last day the University Daily Kansan will publish until March 19.
Vacation hours
And in New York, former President Gerald R. Ford said he would not seek the Republican nomination for the presidency.
Weather...
It will be cloudy and cold today with highs in the upper 30s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. There is a chance of snow flurries in the morning. Winds will be from the north at 10 to 15 miles an hour. The mercury will be the teens tonight and climb into the 40s tomorrow, the weather service said.
Invasion force advances; Amin vows 'fight to end'
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -Tanzanian troops and Uganda rebels marched up a highway toward Uganda's capital, Kampala, yesterday and were closing in on a town 25 miles south of the city, Uganda's official radio reported.
Western diplomats in Nairobi said a battle may ensue at the town, Mpii, that could decide the fate of Uganda President Idaim Daini's eight-year rule.
The Ugandan broadcast was the first confirmation by the beleaguered Amin that the invasion force was nearly at the door-step of his capital.
The radio said Amin was not worried about the situation.
But he was quoted as exhorting his of-
fieers "to be the last to leave a military objective and to fight until the last man."
The takeover of Masaka was reported by other sources weeks ago, and Western diplomatic sources in Nairobi said the U.S. force had pushed past Lakata on Tuesday.
The Ugandan report said Tanzanian troops had routed small Ugandan units at Masaka, 75 miles southwest of Kampala, and at Lakaya, 59 miles southwest of the
The sources here said the new advance was meeting no resistance.
They said Aimin's troops would probably make their move at Mipil, a town of 5,000 at about 12:30. They were not on the road.
pala and a road leading south toward Ethebge the major international airport on
Libya reportedly has been landing large
numbers of war supplies for Amir's troops
at Entrada
The reports that these soldiers arrived in Uganda came from Western diplomats in Nairobi. The Libyan government has denied the reports.
Sources here also said 1,400 Libyan troops reported sently to buttress ain'i's defenses had been shifted from Kampala to a road junction five miles south of the city.
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University Daily Kansan
KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: SOCIAL WORK DAY will be all day in the Kansas University Ballroom. PSYCHOLOGY PRESENTATION by Gustav Jahda, professor of psychology, Strathclyde University, Glasgow, Scotland. STRATHCLYDE HALL FRAASI Jahda will be attend at 12:30 p.m. in p47 Fraser. VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be available for elderly, non-English speaking and low income individuals p. 5 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the aid office in new York Hall BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Room in the Union.
TOMORROW: The applications for SUMMER LANGUAGE INSTITUTES in Brazil, France, Germany, Italy and Spain are due. Contact the Study Abroad office, 108 Strong Hall. The JAYHAWK INVITATIONAL HALL FESTIVAL will be all held on Friday, May 25th by Rich Mattieson, guest artist, at 8 p.m. VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be available from 10 a.m. to noon in the legal aid office in new Green Hall.
MONDAY: THE KU COMMITTEE ON SOUTH AFRICA will meet at 4 p.m. in the International Room in the Union, ANTINUCLEAR ACTIVIST Sam Lovejoy will speak at 7:30 p.m. at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
---
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1st journalism dean dies
Burton Marvin, the first dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism, died yesterday in Syracuse, N.Y., at the age of 66.
Sun Specs
Marvin spent the past 10 days in a Syracuse hospital before he died of cancer. Marvin was dean of the School of Journalism from 1948 to 1963. While at KU he became the first director of the William D. Schiller Memorial organization to assist in journalistic education.
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Marvin was born in Summerville, Mass., on Dec. 23, 1913, to Alma Ethel and Henry Howard Marvin. He graduated from the University of Nebraska in 1935 and received his master's degree in journalism in 1937 from Columbia University.
Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, said, "he was generally a very hard worker. He exemplified some of the best qualities of university teaching. This school's national reputation has grown."
"Burton Marvin was one of the pioneers in journalism education and his imprint at the University of Kansas is still on the program."
Marvin worked nine years as a reporter, com editor and assistant city editor for the
Chicago Daily News. After teaching one year at Columbia University's graduate school of journalism, he became KU's dean of journalism.
Burton Marvin
He was a member of the Accrediting Commission of the American Council of
In 1960 Marvin traveled to Iran and taught for one year at a university in Tehran as a Fulbright lecturer.
Education for Journalists from 1954 to 1962.
After leaving KU in 1985 he taught one year at the University of Tel Aviv in Israel and started a communications program there. Beginning in 1966 he worked two years at National Council of Churches as associate general secretary for communication.
He began teaching courses in newspaper at Syracuse University in 1968. Later he became assistant dean of the journalism school there.
He is survived by his wife, Margaret Marvin, Syracuse, and his three children: Charles Arthur, Ottawa; Robert Henry, Lawrence; and Anne, Baton Rouge, La.
Charles graduated from the University of Kansas in 1946, Robert graduated from the University of Missouri in 1950, and he joined the journalism library in Flint Hall. Anne is working on her doctorate in American Literature.
A memorial service will be held in Syracuse next week. Marvin's body will be buried in Lincoln, Neb., his boyhood home.
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the consumer Affairs Association, 819 Vermont St., in October 1978 when he was told he would be held to an application he signed in May 1978.
"Because the use of the applications has confused many prospective renters, we have discontinued the form's use," Karen Property Management or Lawrence Property Management, said.
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Wrigley said she had informed Eldahaye he could still continue the complaint through his office.
The student, Birham Edalaty, Tehran,
Iran, hadried, had fainted with a complaint
Eldalaty also sought the help of the Kansas attorney general's office.
208 Robinson Center University of Kansas 864-3548 or 864-3556
Edalay said he had been in contact with the attorney general's office this week by telephone.
Towers officials drop rent application forms
McKinney said some prospective tenants did not understand that the application form would be considered a binding contract to rent at the Towers.
Garnett Wrigley, director of Consumer Affairs, said she was informed last week by John Langstrup, attorney for Lawrence Property Management, that the Towers would no longer use the application form and not attempt to claim money from Edalaty.
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"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
---
"AND THE WORLD PASSEH AWAY, AND THE LUST
FOR HER NAMES. AND THE WILDLY GOD OF
ABIDIETH EVERYONE." 1st John 2:17
"The word 'passeth away'" 1978 has "passed away", and gone.
During the past week many a heart stopped its "pumping job," and all these have "passed away." The late Sam Jones wrote in his book, *The Journey of a Man*, that he marched for you to the cemetery, and the judgment of the Almighty: "It is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment—!" Hebrew 927. You record for 1978 that Jesus had been called to go up to Jerusalem, "passed away," but still stands "FOR GOD SHALL BREW EVERY WORK INTO JUDGMENT, WITH EVERY SECRET THING, WHETHER IT BE GOOD, OR WHETHER IT BE
The two preceding verses give us this warning: "And further, by these, my son, be admonished; of making many sacrifices for the Lord," he says. Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God and keep His Commandments; for this is the whole duty of man." *Ecclesi.* 12:12-14. There is surely no end "in our day of sin" and we cannot be saved from it. We must wipe us better we make the reading of his Book, The Bible, first and foremost? Jesus called Peter, Salam, because he was one of the apostles and the chiefs of the New Testament How are we going to "savor of the things of God" if we neglect and take heed of Psalm 11:11? **THY WORD HAVE I HID IN MINE HEART, THAT I MIGHT NOT SIN**
John Bunyan wrote Pilgrim's Progress. This Book, next to the Bible, is reputed to have had the greatest influence in producing the greatness of character and accomplishments of the English-speaking peoples.
Bunyan advised his children to think a little every day about their own funeral; not to make them sad and morbid, but on the contrary, in order to banish those sort of feelings and dread and fear at the time, and enable them to meet it rejoicing in the so great salvation of the Lord Jesus Christ. It is no wonder that such a name was entered your name, and mine, for a 1979 Appointment.
It has been well said that there is only one road in this life: Heaven at one end, and Hell on the other end. The real imam's way is to travel through hell and save your life by traveling? In the Sermon on the Mount Christ said the way to Heaven was "strait and narrow and few there be that find God." You must not walk through the dark and have You ever definitely "turned about"—that is the meaning of conversion—and began to "light the good light of life."
Turn your face towards Heaven as you begin another year. Don’t look back. Use the means of Oracle: Search the Scriptures for names of Jesus and His disciples; Honor God on His Day — consider Isaiah 58:13, 14, on how He is born in Jerusalem; consider Daniel 9:12, noshow that favour of God on Him; honor Moses. Honour God of God in all things. Man looks at the outward appearance, but God looks at the heart — first 16:7 17:1 “STRIVE TO HIS HEAVEN,” then 17:3 “WE WILL BE WEILDOING, and in due season you will me!” The Lord Himself in the Way, and in come to rejoice in His Salvation and
THEY PRESENCE IS FULNESS OF JOY, AND AT THE
RIGHT HAND THERE ARE PLEASURES FORVEMOREM
"THE WORD PASSEH AWAY, AND THE LUST
OF HER MEMORIES," the will of God
ABIBETE OVERREV. 1st John 2:17
P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editor.
MARCH 9,1979
Bus funding needed
Just when it was beginning to look as if the University of Kansas were making progress toward meeting the needs of disabled students, an old hurdle has resurfaced.
As a result, a transportation service enabling KU students with disabilities to attend classes will be discontinued because more funding is found for the program.
The service picks up approximately 15 students who are permanently or temporarily disabled and who no longer mean of traveling to and from class.
"I COULD perform some of my duties from the hospital bed," said Joe Van Zandt, assistant director of Western Civilization program who has a broken leg and cerebral palsy. "However, the performance of these duties would be very difficult if there were no way to get to campus."
And the bus service is the only source of that transportation. The service, which began Jan. 17 and is funded by the Student Senate, Facilities Operations and the administration, originally was intended to provide transportation for students during the winter months. But now that winter is almost over, the possibility of continued funding is questionable, according to David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs.
AMBLER SAID recently that there was interest in extending the service past the expiration date but that the extension depended on finding other sources of funds. While that is a good sign, the problem should not be left at that.
The bus service merits continued funding. It is clear to anyone familiar with the problems that face handicapped students at KU that money spent on transportation for those students is not wasted.
Not only would the rights of those students to further their education be protected, but the University's image as an organization responsive to human need would be greatly improved, perhaps offsetting KU's increasing image as a faceless corporate entity.
At the current cost of $1,600 a month, the service could be continued for the rest of the semester for approximately $3,500. In these days of high-level budgets and corporate investments, that sum could be found somewhere in the University system, particularly when the cost of losing the program is so high.
A lot of my black friends, particularly those who attend KU, are not going to be too picky.
Co-optation threatening black cause
It's not that they will disagree with the content of today's column, but rather that they are willing to face this space to tell the world what most of us already know but would rather not have to do.
Recently, I attended the Kansas State Black Women's Conference, which attracted approximately 1,000 people from Kansas and the Midwest. The conference, funded by the Kansas Committee for the Education of Black Kansas women, including KU's Dorothy Pennington, professor of speech communication and African studies.
In some respects, I can sympathize with this criticism. But when approximately 500 blacks at the University of Kansas (that's how many of us they say are here), although I find it hard to believe) and elsewhere we don't speak together, if then becomes time to go public.
Yet, time and again, during each day of the conference, the one issue that was repeatedly raised was the role and importance of women in the office. The day's black woman and of blacks in general.
THE THEME of the conference was "Choice or Chance . . . the Life Cycle of the Black Woman," and in a series of workshops, speeches and panel discussions, black women's chances for success in a male-dominated society were examined.
In one workshop the validity and implications of the infamous "Moylan Report" were discussed, with students who whites—were debated. In another workshop, the implications of societal role definitions in the workplace were discussed.
1. today, most people older than 10, black and white, can tell you about the struggle of blacks against slavery and for the civil rights movement. For this, we are indebted
BUT IN TODAYS ever-changing, fast-paced life, where an emphasis has been
Evidence against flouride extensive
To the editor:
Phil Garcia's column on fluoridation is disturbing because he has seriously misrepresented the opposition to fluoridation and the Lawrence situation.
In the first place, opposition to fluoridation in Lawrence goes back more than 20 years, and since 1974 I have been urging the state to stop flushing the basis of its clear danger to public health.
The scientific grounds are numerous: low-dose fluoride poisoning, genetic damage, mongolism, kidney damage and particularly cancer.
John Yiamouyiannis did not ignite the local situation at all. On Dec. 12, 1978, I placed in the hands of the five city commissioners a book entitled "Floridation: The Great D dilemma" by G.L. Waldott, A.W. Burgstahl and myself. That book fully discusses the proponent of the proposed law that destroys it on the basis of extensive scientific evidence that an intelligent person can check. Yiamouyiannis did not write that book.
The brilliant John Flabbert, presiding judge in charge of 17 justices and 230 workers, who taught at Carnegie Mellon Law School for 20 years, ruled that fluoridation threatened the public health, specifically children, by increasing the fluorided cities studied.
He therefore issued a preliminary injunction ordering the West View, Penn., water system to stop floridating water serving the Penn. River at the site of the junction is currently before the same court.
Why did Garcia fail to mention our book, Yiamouyanmous and Burk's 1977 article and the 1974 trial decision when discussing the case of Kawasaki? Do these issues before the city commission on
In a Pittsburgh court of law, the proponents of fluoridation brought forth their best available scientific experts from here and aboard to counteract Yiamoyannias and Burk and the evidence against fluoridation. The proponents' arguments, including all those cited by Garcia, fell one by one in rigorous cross examination under oath.
García totally ignored our book, and was therefore totally ignorant of the enormous amount of scientific evidence against fluoridation. He also inexcusably failed to recall that the National Cancer Institute by Yiaminyiauans and Dean Bark published in July 1977 in the journal Floride about "Fluoridation and Cancer." This article has never been scientifically refuted, although the National Cancer Institute has acknowledged it "makes to have everything appear to be OK"
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Dec. 12, 1978, and urged them to consider the issues seriously. Yiamoyannis and I then appeared before the city commission on Feb. 20, 1979, repeated these arguments, and he urged them to stop floridation in their cities. Because of these restrictions have been all about from the start.
To accuse Yiamouyannis, and consequently me, of trying to frighten the public with "power-laden words based on questionable evidence" is simply ridiculous. We have presented a mountain of scientific evidence that was good enough to stand up in a court of law before a learned and courageous judge. The verdict was that we should not give our children to keep our mouths shut when we know about the harm would be irresponsible.
Falte to halt fluoridation immediately in light of impressive evidence of harm would be extremely unwise. To argue that fluoridation is good for the teeth of children it is argued that fluoridation is the point, for, as Judge Faherty observed: "What good are good teeth to a corse?"
There is absolutely no excuse to “benefit” some of the people—and even that point is highly questionable—while making others quite ill and killing still others. What kind of risk-benefit ratio is that? Was the swine flu or the death and paralysis for many Americans?
To his credit, Garcia points out that anyone who wishes can still have fluoride through vitamins, typical applications and the use of oral fluorides. The will not denive the public of fluorides.
On the other hand, Garcia erries grievously in characterizing the opponents of fluoridation as demagogic, for in Lawrence, they have consistently stressed solid scientific evidence. In fact, the only scientific evidence presented before the city commission on Feb. 27, 1979, was presented by operatives and others who accused students and other proponents admitted they were not scientists and had no knowledge of the evidence.
How could Garcia characterize their unsubstantiated references to so-called "bombed-out teeth" in nonfluidation communities as evidence? Moreover, none of them apparently has read "Flouridation: The Great Dilemma."
When the facts of fluoridation are exposed in scientific works or before an unblessed person, it is usually assumed.
I WANNA TALK TO
THE SCHNOOK WHO
SOLD ME THIS
TURKEY!
CARTER
VANCE
ZBIGGY
PEACE
PROVERERS
CAMP
DAVID
oath is required, then fluoridation will no longer be tolerable to the public because it is clearly a menace to our health. In the next few years, new books and law suits throughout the world will expose more and more deleterious evidence. And in the end, science and reason will prevail. Reporters will do well to prepare themselves for that
H. Lewis McKinney professor of history of science
KU's Mitchell blend of talent, character To the editor
To the editor:
As a loyal Kansas State University women's basketball fan for the past seven years, I've been privileged to see quality basketball and quality players.
But no athlete, on any team, has surpassed KU's Adrian Mitchell in combining three straight wins.
MNANNNNNNNNNN
A competitor who can demonstrate respect for her teammates and opponents while relentlessly demanding everything she does. She also reserves respect transcending team loyalty.
Mitchell's teaching us something. And in these days, when the premium on winning is high and the competition is outstretched, it's better to win a winner as a good sport at the same time.
Mary Jo Wobker K-State graduate
Music is prostituted by commercialization
K-State graduate
Whether rock 'n' roll is "better" than disco, or whether any type of music is inherently "better" than another, is irrelevant. Every kind of music has its following and fulfills the needs of its following, by they for entertainment, intellectualization, emotional release or entertainment. Both of these merits of one form over another usually serve only to increase animosity between groups.
To the editor:
However, if one needs something to be upset about, he can try the crass commercialization of almost every form of music—disco, rock, country, jazz, even classical. In an attempt to reach the broadest possible audience (i.e., make the most money), record companies have focused on making the point where they all share common characteristics—formula melodies, harmonies, rhythms and a boring sameness.
Musicianship takes a back seat to the marketing and engineering departments as mediocre performances are electronically enhanced and sillyly packaged for sale to a public that doesn't know or doesn't care that it is being taken.
The end result is a lessening of the quality of music (live, as well as recorded, as live performers seek to recreate studio performances for a public expecting nothing less and 'nothing else) available to the public.
Parallels between music and other art forms can be easily made. A society and its art are not independent of each other. If the present trends are an indication of the future, they're headed for trouble. If they are a reflection of present society, it may be too late.
Vernon Smith
placed on self rather than service to others,
a large number of college-aged and older
students.
Jim Cartwright St. Louis, Mo., senior
It seems as if we've become irrevettably caught up in the rat-race, not knowing where we're going and forgetting where we are. It's hard to say that we haven't really wrong with aspiring to gain the finer things of life. Far from it. It is just that in our effort to satisfy our needs and wants we have become more and more erratic
Marcia Gillespie, editor in chief of Essence magazine, discussed in a keynote address to the conference the importance of history to today's black women and men.
Gillespie reminded her audience that they essentially were an "African people," a people of spirit. But in our effort to become successful, as defined by Western standards for success, Gillespie's ticket tickets, and had drowned the eternal spirit of love, strength and togetherness which
Recently, Benjamin Hooks, executive director of the NAACP, was forced to go public in his search for funds for the organization because the people who had been hurting them are turning their backs on it. Years of fighting for civil rights finally had become a strain, because the bucks were not coming in. The Weber and Sears reverse discrimination stats mean more court battles ahead and an increasingly spent. The future doesn't look good at all.
This is really said, and it bothers me. If you're black and attending KU, it should bother you too, because the implications of that are, if they continue in this vein, aren't good.
was characteristic of blacks during their early days of struggle in this country.
"WESTERN SOCIETY is aiming to keep us at odds with our outsiders' history. Our mission is to have a doge dowa on the ground."
With almost four years of observation to draw upon, and from conversations I had in conversation with the going-on about KU, it looks as if I am Oread have "bought the whole ticket." This is unfortunate, considering the rich history of the town, and the dim outlook many are predicting.
has reached the level of stupidity and outrage. We've become so hung up on whether we like one another that we can't even speak to each other on a personal level.
Fundamental to that history was that strong sense of unity, strength, oneness. When it came time to go to the mat, such as when "Bull" Connor unleashed his dogs and broke down the fence, everyone went down, and so knowing that his brother or sister would do the same.
TODAY, HOWEVER, if a situation arose that required a mass mobilization of blacks, I'm really afraid it just wouldn't come off. I don't understand the vitality it would have had 10 years ago.
The financial problems of the nation's oldest civil rights organization and the Weber and Scars suits are signs of the times and signs of what is to come. It is unfortunate that the future progress of blacks blocks a chance on a court decision. But this is what it takes to force us to get out together, then so be it. Our history only demands that we do.
We've conveniently forgotten our past, now that we've acquired a little freedom and agency.
STUDENT Vogel MARIN
WHY DONT YOU WATCH WHERE YOU'RE GOING?
Arguments for gun control just myths
Gun control has not proven effective in reducing crime. In 1974, Baltimore bought handguns from the public at $50 each. They spent $750,000 before running out of money. Crime did not decrease as predicted, it increased!
To the editor:
Criminals would not be the ones affected by gun control laws. As stated in an earlier letter, felons cannot be prosecuted for not registering their firearms. Furthermore, last year Congress held hearings on the issue of a legal flow of guns into the U.S. from Mexico.
The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled only three times on second amendment rights.
IN THE SECOND, Presser v. Illinois in 1886, the Court stated that "... all citizens capable of bearing arms constitute the ... reserve militia ... the States cannot ... prohibit the people from keeping and bearing arms."
In the first, the United States brought suit in 1876 against Cruskish, a Ku Klux Klan member, for confiscating firearms from two black men. The Court didn't reject the men's arguments, but ruled that the federal government could not help them.
The Court ruled that "Certainly it is not within judicial notice that this weapon (a "saved-off" shotgun) ... could contribute to the common defense. ... The first U.S. law on this subject was the common defense" clause when it was suggested to limit the second amendment.
EVEN SO THE Court said "the militia comprised all males physically capable of acting in concert for the common defense, and as such should be expected to appear bearing arms supplied by
The 1939 case, U.S. v. Miller, is most often cited by anti-gun forces. In it the Court held that a defendant was constitutional. Unfortunately, the defendants were released and disappeared before the Supreme Court hearing. Thus the court ruled that the defendant and there was no defense counsel.
] ]
KANSAN letters
Further evidences that the Second Amendment was intended to include all people are the deletions made from the original version. It provided only for firearms for the militia and allowed people "religiously to be free from rendering military service."
themselves and of the kind in common use at the time."
Both clauses were rejected for fear that, in the style of James I, a tyrannical government could use them as an excuse to disarm the public.
In looking at the facts, we can ask to who is peripathetic the myths. At the very least, it is hard to know.
John B. Barrett Clearwater junior
Disco has purpose to make bars safe To the editor:
This letter is in response to the series of articles in the Kanan misconceive discoverer in Lawrence. Let us not forget that the misconceived function—it keeps the riff-raft out of the bars.
John Hadjis
Clarksburg, W. Va. freshman
and 1 others
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USPS 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday for all students. $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a year county. Student subscriptions are a $2 semester, paid through the student activity.
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kannan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, RS 60045
Editor Barry Massey
Managing Editor
Dirick Steimel
Campus Editor
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Editorial Editor
John Whiteside
Mary Henok
Ford, Montana
Carol Hunter, David Link
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Retail Sales Manager Ron Alman National Advertising Manager Brenda McMahon Advertising Manager Kitty McMahon Assistant Classified Advertising Manager Duncan Bouti Advertising Manager Daniel Moore Manager Staff Artist Dahui Cavaros Staff Photographer Teachess Manager Della Doyle Sales Representatives Allen Blair Pauld Knipe Jane Knotte Brenda Paxton, Cindy Riley Allen Reynolds, Joanne Reynolds
General Manager
Rick Muser
STATE U.
BY T. M. ASLA
WHAT'S THAT? THE FACULTY'S CONCERNED ABOUT BURGEONING BUREAUCRAY HUH?
WELL, IT'S NOT ANY FAULT! I'M JUST THE CHANCELLOR! WHAT?
HOW SHOULD I KNOW WHOSE FAULT IT IS? BLAME IT ON THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT!
WE Blame THEM FOR EVERTHING ELSE THAT GOES WRONG, DON'T WE?
Friday, March 9. 1979
5
Harriers to NCAA; lack qualifiers for title
By GENEMYERS
Sports Writer
KU won't be in the title charge at the NCAA
田径 Track Championships today or
next week.
With athletes qualified in only six events, the manpower just isn't there to capture them.
But KU head coach Bob Timmons said he hoped his squad could finish high in the standings, improving on last year's tie for 43rd.
Last year, KU's only points came from Lester Mickens' fifth-place finish in the 600 yard dash. The junior speedster is back home after winning races in two events, the 600 and mile relay.
"We don't have the opportunity to go after the team championship." Timmons said, "but we do have the opportunity for some fine individual efforts."
HE IS AGAIN among the favorites in the league. He has best posture (1.09/1.43) on his knees, and he's an eye-catcher for the Big Eight Indoor. The NCAA meet will be run on the boards at Detroit's Cobo Center.
At the Big Eight Indoor, Mickens said back and came from more than 20 yards behind to defeat Missouri's Scott Clark. Mickens said he planned to use the same strategy on his chief competitor in the national, Maryland's Chris Persons.
Mickens is also a vital link on KU's mile relay team. Both Mickens and senior
captain Stan Whitaker said the Jayhawks were the team to beat.
"Villanova and Tennessee are probably our ton competitors." Whitaker said.
KUS MILE RELAY will include Jimmy Little, Whitaker, Tommy McCall and Mickens. Both Mickens and Whitaker team in last year's NCAA Outdoor, in last year's NCAA Outdoor.
Senior All-American Kevin Newell, who also ran on the NCAA outdoor team, qualified in both the 400-yard dash and mile relay but will miss the meet. He pulled a rookie into playing the Big Eight Indoor. McCall, whose specialty is the half-mile, is taking his place.
Also mission the NCAA Indoor will be Anthony Coleman, Big Eight champ in both the 60-yard low and high hurdles. He is hamerped by a sore hamstring.
KU's two other qualifiers are freshmen.
Jeff Buckingham has met the NCAA
standards in the pole vault and Sanya
Owolabi has qualified in the triple jump.
Buckingham has the best title shot of the two. His career best of 17-4 at the Big Eight meet gives him the third best bault in the nation.
The undefended collegian trails only Oregon's Teint Muhmuth (17-8) and Ablene Cullen (20).
Whitaker also will compete in the 440 yard dash. Mickens also qualified, but he will bypass the event because it is scheduled too close to the 600 mile relay.
KU takes 2nd twin bill
Sparked by the hitting of Bob Halastik and the baserunning of Steve Jelt and John Spottswood, KU's baseball team swept a doubleheader with Fort Hays State
Halatik had a double and a base hit for one HR1 in the first game and two base hits for another.
Kansas beat the Tigers 3-1 in the first game. The second game was cured after 45 minutes.
"Halastik has really been impressive," KU coach Floyd Temple said of the senior rightfielder who hit only .088 in 23 times at bat last year.
"HE'S MADE A complete switch in his hitting style. He used to have a real big swing, but he now has shortened his stroke—it's a bit more compact. It shows what you can do when you make up your mind."
What Halaat has done is hit .482 in KU's first four games after listening to suggestions from Temple and his assistant, Stan Hall.
Jeltz and Spottswood continued their two-day baserunner spree. Jeltz had four stolen bases in the two games, and Spottswood had two.
Swimmers sure shaved
University Daily Kansan
For KU swimming coach Bill Spahn and nine of his swimers, the dry look is in. But it would be hard to say what look is in.
"ITS THE FIRST time I ever done
Spain, spain, wearing a beaver stocking cap,
it's so cute. It's funny, looking wear this in 80 degree
weather. The only way I do it again is if
I wear a ski mask."
The relay team of Rick Jenkins, Jim Sauer, Brent Barnes, Steve Graves found the offer hard to refuse. They won the event in record time, qualified for national competition and won the barber bet.
Although Spahn might be a bit uncomfortable with his new hairstyle, it is a tradition for junior tri-captain Sauer, who the won 100-vard butterfly.
For Spain, the reason was the 400-yard medley relay team. He told the team that if it won, the seniors could shave his head.
For various reasons they either shaved or cropped their hair last weekend at the Big Eight swimming and diving championships in Lincoln, Neb.
Sports Writer
"The relay was on the first day of the meet, and KU hadn't won it in twelve years," Spain said. "I wanted to get the guys up for the meet."
"It's my fourth time so I'm used to all the jokes," Sauer said. "I shave my head before the big meet and I are ready to go fast.
Most of the swimmers agreed that shaving or cropping their hair gave them a psychological edge. Bill Crampton, in the 2004 garden butterfly, is one of them.
"It feels like jumping into the water with no head."
"I BURRED my head because I needed to get pachy," Crampon said. "I didn't have that good of a season, so I needed to get me up."
Henrys
Crampton shaved his head last year but wasn't satisfied with the results.
"I didn't like the feel of it in the water last year," Crampton said. "I left it a little longer this year. It isn't quite as abrasive.
"Last year my head would stick to the pillow, and it felt funny when I wore a hat."
"You're kind of laughing to yourself because you know everybody is wondering what happened." Flasla said. You are the worst; they just look at you.
"I not going to bring it up and say,
'Oh, by the way, I have my head for the Big Eight meet.' I like to let them wonder."
"I shaved last year and have had only one haircut since," sophomore Jay Keruits said and get weiried out, telling everyone something like this you expect the reaction."
Senior Jesse Gray, who placed sixth in the 100-yard freestyle, went all the way
According to senior tri-captain Kris Flaska, who placed sixth in the 100- and 200-yard breast strokes, it's different to go to classes with a buried head.
HENRY'S RESTAURANT
Freshman John Amsler's decision to shave his head for the first time was difficult.
SIXTH & MISSOURI 843-2139
and shaved his head with soap and razor. It was the third time he has shaved before the Big Eight meet.
CARRY-OUT
STRANGERS' AND friends' reactions vary when they first see the swimmers' new hairstyle, but the swimmers are ready for different reactions.
"I like to do it because it's that much less resistance in the water," Gray said. "But you can't help feeling an abrupt change." It's like growing old in a day.
Buy one Quarter Pound All-American with or without cheese and get The Second One for .25c
"Resistance in the water is a part of it, but for me it's a commitment to get it done." He says the meet we all kind of get the fever, and it's not too hard to go through with it. But every time I look in the mirror I tell myself that it had better hurry up and grow back."
“YOUR HEAD really shines after you’ve shaved. I’ve got a few nubs now but there is no way my hat is going to work.” He’s even hard to pull a shirt over his arm.
"I WAS ONE of the last guys to do it," Amster said. "The guys on the team least expected it from me.
Sophomare Jenkins, who swam a leg in the 400-meter medley and placed second in the 200-meter backstroke, cropped his hair to put pressure on himself.
Reg.—99* without cheese, $1.09 with cheese With this coupon
"I've lost a few girlfriends over it.
They just wired out about it."
"When I came into the team meeting the guys went crazy. It bothers me a little bit now, but the Big Eight championship is nothing to be ashamed of."
NCAAction here
DRIVE-IN
Associate Sports Editor
By JOHN P. THARP
In the December finals of the All-City basketball tournament in Oklahoma City, they lost.
KEN HAYES, the Agnes' coach, is in his 22nd straight winning season. This year, his team is 22-9 and runner up in the Missouri Valley conference. He's expected to start a
He's concentrating on tonight's game, and is expected to start only one senior. 6-7 Kurt Moore, a forward averaging six points a game. David Johnson, an inch taller, is averaging 14.7 points and will start in the other forward position. At center will be the tournament's only 7-footer, Richard Smith, who has 16.2 rebounds, 9.1 rebounds. The guards will be 6-5 Bruce Collins, averaging 16.7 points, and 6-6 Mark Mattos.
Neil McCarthy, Weson State's coach remembers the loss, only one of eight his Wildcats have received in 32 games, and realizes the strengths of the Aggies.
"We have got to stop their rebounding and end a break," McCarthy said yesterday. They outspent him in 12 innings.
WEEBER STATE, from Ogden, Utah,
became the Big Sky conference champion
by winning the league race and the post
season tournament. McCarthy would like to
get past the Aggies from Las Cruces, N.M.
and play Arkansas Sunday in a round two
game. Last year in the playoffs, the
team was led by 7-5 defeat, banding them the 7-52 defeat. But like most coaches, McCarthy won't comment yet on Arkansas.
McCarthy hopes to stop the Agkies when the two teams meet in first round NCAA playoff action in a 7:06 game tonight in Allen Field House.
In the second game, at 9:36, Jacksonville faces Virginia Tech.
All four teams arrived and practiced yesterday.
Locke probably will start three freshmen. Two of them, 6-7 Singh Guram and 6-8 Paul DeVito, averaging 7.5 points a game, will team with Cricket Williams, averaging 7.3, at guard. James Ray, a 6-9 center, is the first to score more than 10 points for the MVP on the Sunbelt tournament.
pair of seniors -6-7 Robert Gunn and 6-7 Cyrus Cormier-at forward. they average 14 and 10.9 points respectively. At 6-7 and averaging 16.5 points and 8.5 rebounds is approximately 16.3 points. Myers, a pair of 6-8 guards avering 9.8 and 8.5 points respectively, will also start.
HIS SCHEDULE fit into the Dolphins timetable to turn around last year's 14-14 season. In his first year he has lost a total of eight games, bad to NCAA by winning three straight in the Sun belt conference's third post season tournament. It is the Florida school's first NCAA
The Gobblers of Virginia Tech are coached by Charlie Mills, now in this third season. The Gobblers will Louisville enroute to the Metro Conference tournament championship. The Gobblers are a member of the
A former NBA coach, Tates Locks is back where he wanted to be—coaching college basketball as the head man for Jacksonville.
"I wanted to get back into college when I left," Locke said. "My personality was not meant to be around that many eyes at one time. But I had no timetable on getting back to college."
Moir is expected to start 6-9 freshman Dalore Solomon, the Meton MVP in that tournament. At forward will be 6-9 Wayne Robinson, leading the team in rebounds with 10 points. Jackson also averages 14 points a game. At guard are Dexter Reed and Marshall Ashford.
From Kansan wire services
Hurdle hits homer, Royals win 2
FORT MYERS, Flai—Clint Hurt driver in two runs with a homer and a single yesterday to pace Kansas City to a 7-0 win over James Madison College.
The victory gave the Royals a sweep of their double-header against the team from Harrisonburg, Va. In the first seven innings, the Royals allowed four hits and pitched three shutout innings, allowing only
Rookie left-hander Mike Jones, and two
one hit and striking out five. Kansas Ca$_{2}$ won 7-4.
Rookie left-hander Mike Jones, and two rookie right-handers—Renie Martin and Ben Grykeby—combined for the shutout in the second game. They allowed a half dozen shots and singled three times and U.L. Washington doubled twice for Kansas City in the game.
INTRAMURAL SOFTBALL — 1979 Manager's Meeting —Robinson South Gymnasium
Tuesday, March 20
- Recreation League at 5:15
Recreation Release
- Trophy League at 6:00
- "B" League at 5-15
- "B" League at 5:15
- Wednesday, March 21
- Co-Rec. League at 6:00
THERE IS A $6 ENTRY FEE FOR ALL LEAGUES.
You must be represented by a manager at your respective meeting. Entry packages include:
- Entrance fee for all league meetings.
208 Robinson • Univ. of Ks. • Lawrence, Ks. 66045 • Phone 864 3546 or 864 3556
98
Watch the UDK for office location, hours,
and phone number March 19-23.
PICK ANY ONE OF THESE GEMS FREE WHEN YOU BUY A LARGE GODFATHER'S PIZZA!
Hey, I'm flattered that you wanna take a piece of Godfather's home with you.
But last week when a bunch of guys absconded my oven, 38 spoons and four of my best waitresses I decided it was time to clamp a lid on the pilferin!
Now I'm gonna make it easy on you. Come into my place, order a large pizza and take your pick. Either a salt and pepper shaker, a fork, spoon and knife, a beer mug or a cheese shaker.
After a few pizzas, you should have enough stuff to dress up your table. Maybe then I'll throw in a waitress.
Godfather's Pizza
711 W. 23rd Street • Lawrence • Phone: 843-6282
will begin taking all full-time KU students desiring advice and counseling in legal matters on March 26.
Legal Services Program
Steve Ruddick Lawyer for
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6
Friday, March 9, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Although Lim's latest a success, it may never play in Lawrence
“Points of Departure” may be Paul Stephen Lim's most successful play, but it probably will never be staged in Lawrence.
At least not according to Lim, instructor of English, whose other plays—"Copenhageners," "Homerica" and "Connersville"—are presented at the University of Kansas.
"A points of Departure," which opens March 16 for six weeks at the Asian American Theater Workshop in San Francisco, was written in 1977 and awarded a Palencia Literary Award the same year. The play's premiere was in 1978 at the East West Players in Los Angeles and then in New York reading in New York City. An actress in the New York reading arranged for the play's production in San Francisco.
LIM SAID "Points of Departure" in some ways was autobiographical.
'It's set in the Philippines, which is where I'm from, and it's about the Asian-American experience—about a young man's experience when he leaves the Philippines and comes to the United States the same way I did in 1969.
"It taps some of my own background,
but it's not really about Asian-Americans as such. It's really about an artist trying to survive in a society that is not really interested in the arts."
Despite its popularity elsewhere, Lim said he doubted the play ever would be performed in Lawrence.
"It can't be done here because it requires three Asian actors to portray characters." Liam said. "While it's possible that some excellent make-up on three Caucasians might work, it could strain the credibility of the show."
"People have asked me to length it, but I thought I had said everything I wanted to say and that anything added to it would just be padding."
Lim also said the play lasted about an hour. That is longer than the one-acct and shorter than the full-length productions directed by the KU theater department.
Lim, who is leaving March 9 to play playground-in-residence at the workshop for a week, said about 20 people from his neighborhood in Miami and Francisco area during spring break and were planning a party to celebrate the show's opening.
Arts & Leisure
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Hartford concert rousing, rowdy with touch of bluegrass magic
By BRUCE THOMAS
Reviewer
Reviewer
John Hartford must be magical, because only a magical performer could get more than 300 people to make sounds like two-year-olds, in two-part harmony.
People are self-conscious animals, and it is strange to hear adult men and women sing, "swish, swish, bum, bam;" as they did Wednesday night to accompany Hartford in one of the songs, in his concert at the Opera Peres House, 64 Massachusetts St.
He takes bluegrass out of the hills, where it was born, and drops it right in the laps of young, upward mobile students, redneck cowboys and crazy motorcycle riders.
Hartford plays bluegrass music, but it is nothing like traditional bluegrass.
Bluegrass concerts usually draw special audiences. A person has to enjoy the music and the atmosphere, not just the show.
KANSAN Review
sung by musicians playing instruments such as the dobro and mandolin.
Hartford has expanded bluegrass to fit his audiences. Anyone can enjoy bluegrass the way he plays it, even if he is not a bluegrass fan, because the music is pure fun.
Hartford was born in New York City but has lived in St. Louis most of his life. He started his professional career as a studio musician in Nashville. Later the Smothers Brothers hired him to write songs and dialogue for their television show.
Glen Campbell was the next entertainer to hire Hartford for television work. Hartford wrote one of the songs that Campbell made famous, "Gentle on My Mind," which he sang at the concert after working with Campbell for the benefit of being touring and making records by himself.
Hartford has a wide repertoire of special effects he uses in his songs. He can make the most amazing sounds with his mouth, such as the sound of a machine in his song "Washing Machine."
He becomes a three-piece band as his feet dance a slick percussion beat, his mouth makes crazy sound effects and his hands play the banjo, fiddle or guitar.
After a fast and generally rowdy first set with songs such as "Mississippi Girl," "Rolling in My Sweet Baby's Arms!" and "Genuine Aeroplane," Hartford wound down to a hymnal plane and ended with two gospel songs.
He bowed and turned to leave, but before he could get off the stage, the crowd's cheered.
Finally, he left the audience dancing in the aisles with "Turn your Radio On."
John Hartford is truly a magical showman.
Jazz festival to feature KU, 10 high schools
Ten high school and two KU jazz ensemble will perform tomorrow at the second annual Jayhawk Invitational Jazz Festival in Murphy Hall.
Jazz educators Rich Matthews and Willie Thomas will be the guest artists and choreographers.
The festival was organized by James Barnes, staff arranger and assistant to the director of band ensembles. Barnes said high school jazz groups from Lawrence, Olathe, Emperor, Hutchinson, Wellington, Seaman in Topeka, Shawne Mouth South, Lakehead Heights, Shawnee Mills, Mo. and Chillicothe, Mo., would perform during the day.
The two top KU jazz ensembles and two Kansas Music Educators Association District I honor jazz ensembles also will perform. Barnes said.
Matteson and Thomas will conduct an Improvisation Clinic at 3:30 p.m. in the Studio Building, where Joining them as judges for the clinic will be Charles Berg, assistant professor of radio-television-film, and Richard Wright, founder of KANU-FM and host for "The Jazz Scene."
Barnes said individual clinics for different jazz instruments would be held throughout the spring semester.
Matteson and Thomas will perform with the KU Jazz Ensemble I, conducted by Barnes, at 5:30 p.m. in the University Theatre.
Greenbriars
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEN
Cheese Emporium
Eat In or Carry Out
Sandwiches
Saups
Cheeses
Holiday Plaza - 25th & Iowa
Admiral Car Rental
Toyota
Firebird
Buick Regal
Monte Carlo
Cullass Supreme
Mark V
Thunderbird
2340 Alabama
843 2931
sua films
Friday & Saturday, March 9 & 10 THE 13TH INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF ANIMATION
Our annual festival this year includes 15 award winning short animated films of fiction and fantasy from around the world including the Academy award film "Sand Castle" and the Nymphs Festival winner "The Fight."
Monday, March 19
Lillian Hellman:
THE LITTLE FOXES
Dir. William Wylier, with Bette Davis,
Herbert Marshall, Teresa Wright.
Written by Lillian Hellman, from her
play, Davies gives one of her greatest
performances as the greedy and ruthless
girl who embodies everything for wealth and status.
Tuesday, March 20
INVASION OF
THE BODY SNATCHERS
Dir. Don Siegel, wwk McCarthy, Dana Wynter, Sam Peckinphas as the gas meter reader. This print restores the film to its original intended form before its first release. Compare this with Sutherland's re-released film with Donald Sutherland.
Dr. William Cameron Menzies; with Helena Carter, Jimmy Hunt. The in-depth exploration of earth's brains, the brains of little boy who is the only girl who lives there.
INVADERS FROM MARS
Wednesday, March 21
Antonionti:
L'AVENTURA
Dir. Micheleangelo Antonioni, with Monica Vittori, Gabia Ferazetti. The film that made Antonioni famous. Italy/subtitles.
(1960)
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:00, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted; $1.50 admission.
"I LIKE TO PLAY BASEBALL AND I LIKE TO DRINK LITE. MOST PEOPLE WOULD RATHER WATCH ME DRINK LITE."
Marv Throneberry
Baseball Legend
LITE BEER FROM MILLER.
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS.
©1978 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.
Marv Throneberry
Baseball Legend
LITE BEER FROM MILLER.
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED
IN A BEER. AND LESS.
©1979 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Friday, March 9.197
University Daily Kansan
7
Egyptian boy has surgery a second time
A surgeon at the University of Kansas Medical Center yesterday performed a second operation on the curved spine of a 18-year-old Evanton boy.
The surgeon, Marc Asher, hooked two stainless steel rods onto the vertebrae of
The boy, Mohammed Fawal, is suffering from scoliosis, the lateral, or sideways, and is in need of surgery.
Aster performed the first operation 10 days ago, when he also put two rods on his wrist to stabilize his arm after the operation, however, because they were affecting nerves that lead to pain.
Aster put the rods on different vertebrae in yesterday's operation, which lasted 15 minutes.
The rods are used to hold Fawk's back straight so that he can undergo physical training.
Fawal will probably return to Egypt in
five or four weeks. The rods must remain
on the saddle.
Fawzi will be fitted for a plastic body jacket in about 10 days. A body cast will not be used because of the hot weather in Euvrot, a Med Center soaksmans said.
Fawzi was fown to the United States three weeks ago in a plane belonging to Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. The plane was assigned for the operation at the Med Center.
Mahar el Ashi, an Egyptian physician who came to the Med Center with Fawzi,
Ashri said he came to the United States to learn to treat scoliosis. He said that only one hospital in Egypt had performed operations on scoliosis patients and that the Med Center was well-known for its orthopedic surgery.
The 5th annual Kansas Legislative Black Caucus will meet March 17 for a day-long series of workshops featuring Kansas' five black legislators.
The caucus has been at Washburn University in Topkea the past four years, but the five black legislators who are sponsoring it decided to start taking the caucus to other state universities to reach more people.
The caucus will begin at 7:30 a.m. Saturday with registration and will end at 4 p.m. with the introduction of any legislative bill contributed by those who attend the meetings.
Jep. B.J. Littlejohn, R-Topek, State Rep.
Two Cribbals D-Wichita, and State Sen. Billy
Barnes.
Legislators to hold black caucus
employment, social welfare and the political system.
The legislators sponsoring the caucus and running its workshops are State Rep. Clarence D. D-Kansas City, State Rep. Normel E. Justice, D-Kansas City, State Rep.
Registration for the caucus will be in the Kansas Union and the charge is $7.50, income tax is $1.25.
The deadline for applications for the Dane G. Hansen Foundation postgraduate fellowships for the 1979-80 academic year is March 15.
Gove, Graham, Jewell, Linein, Logan,
Mittelson, Corton, Osborne, Otseen, Phillips,
Rawlings, Republic, Rocks, Russell, Saline,
Wilson, McKee, Vaughn, Jenkins, and Wallace counties in Kansas may ambly.
Students from 26 counties in northwest Kansas are eligible for scholarships of $2,500 a year. Graduates of high schools in Cheyenne, Cloud, Deater, Ellis, Elsworth,
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment
are provided for all employees of the company,
affordable to all employees of the company.
BRING ALL Necessities.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
time times time times time
15 words or
each .02 .$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The IDK 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 id.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. Three ads can be placed on person in person at the DKR business office at 864-8589.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ENTERTAINMENT
Ballistic predation - An Evening w/Pi/Plu/
Female Turtle. 15:30. April 29, 2017. KU UNT
Woos Tues., Mar 14th, Fermont Rooms, KU UNT
Woos Tues., Mar 14th, Fermont Rooms, KU UNT
Zen practice, daily 6 p.m. Introductory talks
and workshop sessions on May 24-August 17 at
March 8, 2015 at Lawrence Chapel
J. HOOD, BOOKEKELER will in the last month burgage over 4,000 scholarly books in his halls—Broadway, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Philadelphia, Mathematica etc. These books are all come and bowed to Mr. Hood and bowed to Mrs. Come and bowed to Mr. Hood. 144 Main St., Bronx, NY 10465. (718) 239-8398.
PAT'S BLUE RIDDIM BAND
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
737 New Hampshire
Come party and dance 9 p.m.
BOUND WAVE PRODUCTIONS - The ultimate in audio production. Utilize an onsite scanner. Our professional service includes professional audio system and experienced die linkeakers with phone. Call for information 612-480-5739 plus low price. Call for information 612-480-5739 plus low price.
BARBERSHIP QUARTET QUARTZ show presented by Chapter. SPENQS20 at 1 p.m., Friday March 14, Junior High School Auditorium featuring *Friends of Yesteryear*, International prize with the BarberShip Champs; *BarberShip Chorm*, just Kansas Champs. For ticket information 842-653-11.
FOR RENT
Apt. 2 BR and efficiency Close to campus, UUI-
lies paid. Clean, quiet, and comfortable. MA-
DE
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most
neighbors. KU and near town. No nwp.
Phone. 865-7527
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
At New & Contemporary
Visit our furnished display unit today &
you'll see with the move is to Sundance
Apartments by Joyce Limited studio.
18th Convenience located at 7th & Florida
just west of the Sanctuary on Ku Bus Route
8415255 - 8424455
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW MENTH
unfurnished, from $170. Two laundry rooms, large
bedrooms, fireplace, outdoor deck in INGORO HEATED FOLL. For appointment call 484-443 or visit at 25% of Frontier Road. Next door
Want to live in a luxury room for $85 per
room? Call 212-392-2922 or sit quiet room-
much closer. Call 212-392-2922
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimuth Hall now has a couple of openings for the revival of the Wynn Suite at 463-8500 and we will be glad to give you an opportunity. Naimuth HALL, 1800 Naimuth application #NAMTHH HALL, 1800 Naimuth application #NAMTHH HALL, 1800 Naimuth application #NAMTHH HALL,
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
842-1435
You'll see a Touch of Class
841-5253 812-4453
Beautiful 7 month old 3 bedroom rancher;
beautiful appliances included e.g. sofa
phone: 842-8212
Need to sublease Meadowbrook studio. Call 841-3
2914 or 843-4218 for 6 p.m.
Finally a Laurence landlord who caret'
Call Mark, Schneider for apartments and rentals, 321-3212 or 812-4111.
For Rent A room for at 1308 Tennessee
Available now Call 842-8915.
3-5
Scaffold 2 bedroom Apt. 15, bath suit careturtles Electric kitchen $250, no loan 3-23 863-1047
Jayhawker TOWERS Apartments 1603 West 15th
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our
DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
Two-bedroom basement apartment near campus
Two-bedroom basement apartment near campus
bad, no pats, $19/week
822-666-6666
Have to move immediately. Want to sublease
Happy House for $149,000 (not including call
Paid 842-4721 or 842-5223 after 6:00, 3:00,
1:00)
One bedroom unfurnished apartment on KU has
been rented out for $169,000 (including facility).
Ships thru July. $169,000, 842-8770
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make us out of Western Civilization! Make sure to attend the Eastern Civilization 3! For exam preparation. New 'Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Town Square.
Fender Mustang Bass Guitar with straps,电缆,
strings, and mounting brackets. Great condition.
Sounds great, sounds very good condition.
Very durable.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialist-
s for AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-809-2000, W. J.
BROWN
Need tires or wheels? An association with a tire store can give you the best price. Goodrich and Doytna tires at the absolute lowest prices are also available at wholesale prices and below. Don't掉链 if a drivement more than you need to Call 1-800-242-6977.
Sun-Specs= Sun-sims are our specialty. Non-proof-
specified glass selection, reasonably
1024 *128* 128. 841-96-7544. 841-96-7544.
One-a-day Coty Special - Emeraldu, I.A.entrol.
One-a-day Coty Special - $25.95 to Hold Corp.
Drug Storage 910-746-3800.
Greek (illiterate term) = True; A-400 (lettered Greek)
= False; B-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; C-400 (lettered Greek)
= False; D-400 (lettered Greek)
= False; E-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; F-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; G-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; H-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; I-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; J-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; K-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; L-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; M-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; N-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; O-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; P-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; Q-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; R-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; S-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; T-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; U-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; V-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; W-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; X-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; Y-400 (lettered Greek)
= True; Z-400 (lettered Greek)
MUST SELL - 76 Pinto wagon 4 speed AM-FM
Low 149-458 Low 149-458 Excellent condition
X2
Spot your bird--Reg. $95 binoculars now $39.9
At Round Corner Drug Store.
210-867-4700
60c Schoolers at Louise's every Friday from 2
till 5
3.5
350 HONDA, mechanically perfect. Mike, 842-
4354. 3-9
Blue. Woman's. Schwin. Continental 10-speed
Excellent condition. 8113. B41-8492
*3-9*
WHY RENT? What you could own this beautiful home is too much. Like a few bedroom additions in central air conditioning, it is a must-have. A washer-dryer area, a smoke alarm, skirted and gutted storage building, bushes trees, tall garden shrubs, building your own kitchen.
Cavan试卷头, hag 26 by 21. Bile with brown
capsule. Zipper. Ripple Brand new, never used.
Call 834-958-3497
Integrated arm, Keyword T100. 700-watt, low-die
frequency transducer. Integrated arm, Keyword
C850. Integrated arm, Keyword C1300.
Corporate base奖金: $100.00. Call: 41-789-6260.
MARANTZ 220 B. receiver 20 watts/charge,
condition 825, 951-841-320 or 942-4432.
good
50¢* OFF SALE on all kinds of drawing padts
60¢* OFF SALE on all kinds of 148th Vermont. Open
8:30 PM to 9:00 PM, Wednesday, May 27th
7. Cameron, 3-spade, runs excellent, end-3
during. AMAK $2,000. $415-864. 9-5
09011789816624276
For Sale, a single bed with two mattresses and a headboard. Also selling an 4-buck car stereo with AM and FM radio. Both in good shape. 1-year warranty for each bed. Store call: 842-643-663. **3-9**
Gibson Les Paul Custom Guitar, Good Condition,
Call 841-8515. 3-9
MARANTZ7 model 2226 stater receiver. Perfec-
tion: 80-175 watts, $20.00; 90-150
at 74-780 or 84-943
Casante Ticket Recorder Charivari! Supervise-
tions on 1/27/14 from 9:30am to 10:45am
Swinging with Rink #1 and Ray Romano!
Open Session at Casante Ticket Rack, 600 N.
Westway Blvd., Boca Raton, FL 33428.
Valkyver Tire Sale! New $4 3lb p/F.G.
$19.50*I/c In $2 each Stainless Stonehawk
Skiing for Spring Break! Put Polarquatard ladies large, open jacket. Warm 4 days New-, $20-watch 4 days Old-, $35-watch 4 days New- $100 watch for $100 jacket hattes have $50 bills. $55 call 421-7469 5:30 or 482-7452 8:30.
1978 Harley Davidson Superglide, 1200 scc. perfect,
only 4,000 miles. Priced to buy: $425.
1947. Plpm, Duster, PS, PB, AC, auto trans.
New tiers. Excellent condition 841-5411
Amaru rust color, x 17; y 17; font Stefano Place
4 carp 4 old. Fire code C481:842-524
9 maroon rust color.
75 Cherry Moura Tower Coupe, 20,000 Ml. Stand-up,
Alc. Ice Cube. Cond. $480 or best offer
for a bottle. Includes ice bucket.
HELP WANTED
Now take applications for Fountain & Grill
Appetite. Apply at www.fountain-restaurant.com.
Apply online at www.fountain-restaurant.com.
Tryptophan, the biotin precursor, is a potent inhibitor of the
prolactin signaling pathway. It has been shown to be an effective
binding site for Waste Protein Degradation Protein (Waste Protein
Degradation Protein), which inhibits the degradation of
Waste Protein Degradation Protein.
MEN
WOMEN
NASHVILLE BAYSHORE
SHIPPING
MISSISSippi
$29.50 for men, $37.50 for women
NASHVILLE BAYSHORE
SHIPPING
Mississippi
$29.50 for men, $37.50 for women
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
APPLICATIONS To apply, visit www.orientation.staff.us.
Apply orientation student student and more information, see the advertisement in faculty newsletter or on orientations@orientation.staff.us. Records 12% Strong Hail. An equal opportunity employer.
Time part-time or kitchen work needed. Must:
1. Work 24-34 days a week.
2. Appointment 842-329-2000.
3. 3:20
For
PW
Part-time stencil-maker wanted. Jewelry making
assisting an ABS company ability helps in pa-
ter 1683 manufacturing ability. Please re-
fer to Job Number 45702.
Enter Medical School in August
(Harvard Medical School)
W-HO Residenthip
* W-HO Residentship*
* For application information with
* the MEDICAL SCHOOL DEPARTMENT*
SERVICE 100 Lab Suite, New York, NY
917-245-6800
Enter Medical School in August
Immediate opening for full and part time wait-
ing positions. 3022 W. 6th, Blowery.Equal Opportunity
Employment. 850-724-2100.
EXTRA INCOME PROGRAM Earn up to $40 per hundred encvelopes you address as staff help. Send $25 per hundred at home, send stamped, self-addressed envelope to T. ZAIMI SERVICE, PO Box 1071, New York, NY 10024.
Immediate opening for part-time evening and weekend nursery use for female quadriplegic in patients with cerebral palsy. Will suit children aged 843-1422 from 3 p.m. & 841-7943 after 5 p.m. Aik for Girls. 3-9
Readiness, director, vocabulary skills. 10 month
experience as a licensed public health
director in an agency with part-
icipant training in Applied Pharmacology and
therapeutic nursing. 8 month exp. as a
participant in a research project.
SUMMER JOBS Counselors, librarians, nurse-
ing staff, and teachers for Girl Guides. 513-892-4700.
Treat Council for Girl Guides. 513-892-4700.
Laborers trained full-time for week of spring classes in the Gardens. Work included job incursion to person in the Garden Center, 11th & New York City, and various other locations.
Port-town secretary to work 20 lay, per week in the Port-town office; also serve an contract position in the Department of Justice. To be appointed to the Diocese of Alverne, after office in the Diocese of Albany, must serve a minimum of two years in the deadline March 14, 1979. Equal Opportunity Equity Program.
Program coordinator for LEAA grant. Full time. Job duties include providing criminal justice system B.A. degree or equivalent will be responsible for establishing and coordinating the program; designed to enhance communication with the community. Apply in person to District Attachments: Application deadline: March 17th, 2015.
Watters and waitresses. Variety of bum. Delhi.
Citadel University, 100 N. Park, 3-20
Campus University, New York
STUDENT RESEARCHER OPENING. Respond to requests for data collection and data storage for a student personal research project, including information interviewing experience desired. Applicant must have a Bachelor's degree in Social Sciences or Student Assistance Center, call 804-6644 or email: studentassistance@ucla.edu.
Lost a green, army back pack containing books on lit tax law. Call 613-8374. SEND. 2-9
LOST
Two piece crown ring in 204, Summerfield, en
e Thursday. 1 March 1, Wardburg 8:41-9. 064-3
Gold, mildly impractical on 2.27 ft² of 504 Bath
room, but works well in the larger 300 sq' of 604 Bath
room. Howard Phone call 610 849 8100 after 6:00 a.m.
Iranian ring RJ.2 was lost during the KU vs. KE
interfacing. The KU was able to recover from the
KR.2 Southwestern value reveal.
MISCELLANEOUS
THEISER BINNINGO CORVINEY The House of
the Lord Mayor in the City of London.
Birth city of $84 million. 2016. Thank you.
NOTICE
DEATH: WHY BOTHER? ECKANKAR
Astral Science of Soul. Travel 842-1322, 851-3321
Extra Money. You can be hired by becoming an are
merchant or by having your name used for Job
Mike Houston at his 86-254-346 or by Hop 86-
254-346.
WOMEN'S JAZZ FESTIVA
BUS TRIP
SUNDAY, MARCH 25
$11.50
Sponsored by SUA Travel and KJHK Rabid
Price includes Transportation and Ticket
Sign Up at SUA Office by
MONDAY, MARCH 19
Extra money can be earned by booking at 10am or
2pm and taking advantage of early bird offers.
Until March 31 Matches at 8am or 9am for the
first two nights. Matches at 10am or 11am for
the first two nights.
BECOMING FICTION... Just started 10 years ago.
Bookstore: BOOKSTORE, 319 Main St. #161, 8604 Open every day
Bookstore: BOOKSTORE, 319 Main St. #161, 8604 Open every day
PERSONAL
606 Schienen und 151 Pichers every Friday
(2:30) at Louise's bar
4:30
RICKS BIRD SHOP is now open 200 Raleigh, A-D-P, Office, & Certification hubs in shark kayaks and canoes. Call 618-759-3481.
PDX HILL, SUSKERLY CUNSE. Aberthorpe que jui be
en la bibliothèque des arts libres du collège.
*Paris*. 1907. 428 p. (235-249)
$1.20
PITCHERS
QUANTRILLS
Q
SALOON
716 MASS.
FRIDAY
15 AM-15 PM
BARGARO SPECIALS! 4-10 Mon, Tues, Wed,
Thurs & Fri $35.00; Saturdays $65.00;
MADS DANCE NIGHT! $75.00; $160 picture
set.
PENN HILL SURGERY CLINIC Americas, up to
Maryland, MD. Req. B.S. or foreign equiv in
Hospital Administration, Total Medical
Care, or related field. 605-712-3400, 605-712-
8999. Mail resume to: PENN HILL SURGERY,
400 W. 41st Street, New York, NY 10019.
Gou Leishin, enquiring referrals now handed
through UK MH, 863.306 or [headquarters MH,
921.407].
Brunei VI, Beware! The "Jews of March" is almost here! Have a Happy Day in Palau! Kahkah
To whomow found a large blue skye glove in Waree on the coast, a warm weather appliance and one ON line were used to dress it of unfit goods. At least allow them to be a gift. PLEASE LIKE 614-872-09. No aids needed.
Frankforten come to town on 92 FM this Sat-
truc 9 at 7:00
From high up at the beautiful campus of KU comes the sound of the big bands, the swing bands, and the dance hands. Dick Wright will be on Saturday night, September 18 at 8 o'clock.
**STUDENT RESEARCHER OPENING:** Requests of interested students and data collection for a student personal research project. Interviews will be conducted with students interviewing experience desired. Applicants must have completed a Bachelor's in Education or a related field. Blinded Assistance Center call 954-283-0010 or email info@blindedassistancecenter.com.
Patrick--Thank You
debate March 23rd. 80-81-82 3-9
Tam Man--These ads add my money. Please come home--bad
3-9
Harvey Sloan-let's play and celebrate you
I love you, Candy 3-9
SERVICES OFFERED
REWRITING EDITING- Your manuscript, thesis or term paper edited into an effective grammar. Reconsider your thinking with precision and smoothness. Outline your thesis and articles also available. Key numbers 421-353.
EXPERT TUTORS, MATH 900-122,叫告 643-8757,
EXPERT TUTORS, MATH 900-122,叫告 643-8757,
EXPERT TUTORS, MATH 900-122,叫告 643-8757,
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8
Friday, March 9, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Vending . . .
From page one
Young, Ois's sophomore, said he thought the mill had purchased the machine several years ago.
He said the hall purchased the popwhole from Coca Cola Bottling Co., 66 Campherwood Blvd.
"Coca Cola can't deliver on University
so, we have to pick it up our ow-
nern."
He said picking up the cases of pop was part of the hall treasurer's job.
The machine contains only Coca Cola products, he said, but the Union machine contains a variety of products. The Union machine can be used and in empty by Thursday or Friday, he said.
He said other scholarship halls had asked about buying their own pop machine, but were advised against it because it was wrong. Mr. Sloane's exclusive rights contract with KU.
Young said, "I'm just glad our own machine's there. It is beneficial to the hall.
Everything we make goes back to the students here."
He said profit from the machine went into the hall's social fund. The money is used for parties and a few cultural items for the hall, he said.
Fred McEhlenie, director of the office of residential programs, said he did not know about the machine owners by B and Bending or about the pop machine owned by B.
Hafeele said B B and B Vending did not have a contract with the scholarship halls.
Council OKs sabbatical proposal
McEhlene said that although he could not make a statement for the Union, it was possible that it was not profitable for the service buildings that had a low sales volume.
He also said if there were several vendors on campus, the price of the products would increase because the number of times each vendor made a sale would decrease.
Under the new policy, to be sent to the administration, the documents would not leave leaves would be labeled either "definitely mertiorious" or "not definitely mertiorious." Applications that were not written in a specific language would be
A new sabbatical leave policy, three years in the making, was approved yesterday by the MLA.
The definitely meritorious applications would be examined and the best would be deemed "exceptionally meritorious." The other applications would be automatically approved.
The rest of the meritorious applications would be ranked in order of the length of time the applicant had been waiting for *a* sabbatical leave.
About 45 sabbatical leaves—enough for 4 percent of the faculty—are granted to the University faculty each year. The University Council approves about 70 reviews and approves sabbatical leaves, received about 70 applications last year.
Srinivasan said the new policy had been reviewed by University administrators and faculty members.
T. P. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics, who helped write the new policy, said he was confident that the administration would improve the policy.
Two previous leave proposals had been rejected by the administration in the past, according to Srinivasan. The administration had objected to the use of the length of time waiting for a substabult as a primary consideration, he said.
Oread crime rate rises
Although the crime rate in the Oread neighborhood was higher last month according to Lawrence Police Department residential burglars continued to decline.
Before the Oread Anti-Crime Program was established, the largest number of inmates at Oread was 567.
However, reports of residential burglaries decreased from four in January, to three in February. The area recorded its highest number of residential burglaries, 18, in October.
From August 1978 to January 1979, the number of crimes reported in the Oread area dropped from 36 to 18. The number of crimes rose to 27 in February.
The increase in crimes in February were of two kinds—thefts from cars and vandalism. In January, there were no reports of thefts from cars and only two of vandalism. In February, there were nine thefts from cars and 10 incidents of vandalism.
Westergren to be given treatment
The sentencing of Eugene Westgren,
51. Lawrence, was deferred yesterday.
Instead he was returned to Larned State
Hospital for psychiatric treatment.
Westergren, who was convicted last November in the 1977 death of Venera Smith. 84, Lawrence, was ordered to be committed by Franklin County District Judge Floyd Coiffon, who heard the case in Douglas County.
Coffman ordered that Westergren be sentenced if hospital officials decided he no longer needed treatment.
Jerry Donnelly, Westergreen's court-appointed attorney, said he intended to file an appeal of the conviction and the case against him. Kansas Supreme Court later this week.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
Vol. 89, No.112
Legislators lead black workshop
Lawrence, Kansas
See page five
Regents funds get House OK
Monday, March 19, 1979
BY GENE LINN and TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporters
By GENELINN and TAMMY TIERNEY
Although KU students enjoyed a holiday last week, members of the Kansas Legislature stayed busy.
The Kansas House last week approved a trimmed-down Kansas Board of Agriculture bill that derealized a death penalty bill and authorized liquor by the drink in private
Included in the allocation were several provisions for the KU budget. Among them were $18,660 for miscellaneous operating expenses for women's athletics, $100,000 for a book theft detection system for Watson Library and a transfer of $27,500 from an allocation of $40,000 of Marvin Hill to renovate Lindley Hall.
Thursday, member of the Kansas House passed 11-24 of a $435 million budget for the Regents schools. The figure was not included that Gov. John Carlin had recommended.
House members said they favored splitting the money to get both projects started this year.
In other matters, the House passed a spending bill and a Senate committee held hearings on a bill that would lower the maximum mission of less than an ounce of marijuana.
Legislators said the funds to finish both buildings probably would be allocated by the Legislature next year. It will cost $16 million for Marvin and $1.65 million to finish Lindley.
ALTHOUGH THE governor recommended that $1,277,500 be allocated to renovate Marvin Hall, the House split that figure, allocating $1 million for the renovation of Marvin and $277,500 for Lindley.
Despite the high cost of remodeling, which is about $50 a square foot, renovation would be cheaper than constructing new buildings, they said.
Other additions to the budget were $80,000 for the Kansas State scholarship fund, $35,000 for the development of sandstone aquifers in western Kansas and $10,000 for a Children's Project, a cooperative effort between KU's Bureau of Child Research and the community of northeast Kansas City. Kan. Curtin has not recommended
ACCORDING TO KANSAS Sen. Norman Garza, R-Westwood, the Senate Way and Means Committee will hold hearings on the proposal to increase committees already had reviewed budgets for the Regents schools so hearings would be a "short circuit."
Also on Thursday, the Senate approved 24-16 a House bill that originally called for death by injection of a lethal substance. The measure designated first-degree or felony murder.
However, an amendment proposed by State Wint. Wint Winter, R-Otawa, respects provisions for the death penalty with all persons in prison without a possibility for parole.
Senate members rejected a mandatory 30-year prison sentence 18-22.
The bill will return to the House for approval of the amendment.
Friday, the Senate approved 22-18 a bill that would give private clubs the ability to eliminate lounge pools and sell liquor by the drink to their members.
The bill also provides for statewide reciprocal club memberships. Under the bill, a single $10 membership would allow members to rack up at hundreds of clubs across the state.
THE MOVE to eliminate liquor pools entirely was proposed by Gaar as an statement to another bill sponsored by State Sen. Ron Hein, R-Tonkea.
Under Hein's bill, liquor pools would be eliminated only in private clubs that derived half their income from food sales.
Gaar's amendment was adopted on a voice vote. The amended bill will move to the House for its amoerel.
A spending lid bill will move to the Senate this week.
The bill, passed by the House last week, was unacceptable to Gov. John Carlin, according to Bill Hoch, Carolin's press secretary.
"The bill is no more acceptable to the governor than the one he vetoed a few weeks ago," Hoch said Friday.
The bill includes some changes that affect the state budget. It increases state spending to 7 percent and requires at least an 8 percent surplus in the state treasury at the end of the fiscal year.
A Senate hearing on a marjuana bill sponsored by State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Dawrence, marked the beginning of the fight against marijuana penalties for possession of mariana.
Cartin has consistently opposed setting specific limits for increased spending and for treasury surpluses.
Hoch said that the bill stands, there was a good chance that Carlin would veto the bill, but that the governor would not release it on the bill until the Senate acts on it.
Under his bill this year, conviction for possession of less than one ounce of marijuana would be no more serious than a conviction for an ordinary traffic offense. Possession of less than an ounce of marijuana is a fine of $2,500 or one year in jail or both.
HOWEVER, SENATE President Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, said it was unlikely that the Senate would make the changes Carlin wanted.
Glover's previous efforts to lower possession penalties have failed, but he said Friday that he was encouraged by the Senate hearing.
"It was a great hearing," he said. "The proponents had good arguments and the opponents sounded so irrational that they helped the bill's chances."
GLOVER SAID the best testimony came in a statement by a young woman who was a member of a one-half ounce of marijuana and had to spend three days in jail and post a $75
A representative of the Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists read the statement for the young woman, who did not want to be identified.
"Last year, one senator said no one gets busted for possession anymore, so her statement helped." Glover said.
Glover said the joint committee might vote on the bill late this week.
7% pay increase unlikely, Gaar says
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
Gaar said the Senate Ways and Means Committee would discuss subcommittee
GOV. JOHN Carlin had called for a 5 percent increase in his January budget, but the House Ways and Means Committee last month cut the proposed increase to 10 percent.
The Kansas Senate major leader said yesterday that chances were slim that the state would increase the amount increase would be boosted to 7 percent, despite intense lobbying by KU ad-
The majority leader, Norman Gaar, R-Westwood, he said was sympathetic to faculty needs, but the mood of the Legislature did not favor the hike.
The Senate will be reviewing the House of Representative's budget recommendation for all institutions this week. The House recommendations, approved last week, are due next week.
He said he expected the Ways and Means Committee to recommend action on the requests next week. The budget for the Senate. Senate by the end of the month, be said.
"It would be pretty rough to get it." Gaar said. "I don't think that kind of sentiment is in the full Legislature."
reports on the budget requests of the seven Rezens schools this week.
DYKES SAID it was hard to tell how the administration appeals had been taken. But he said he was confident that additional cuts in the pay increase, which had been proposed and voted down in the Senate, would not be approved by the Senate.
He said the Senate might vote in the 7.9 percent increase. But, he said, if it were voted in, the legislators probably would have to compromise with a 6.5 percent increase when the budget is reviewed by a conference committee of both houses in April.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said yesterday KU administrators had met with senators all last week in efforts to set the KU budget approved.
"The fact that they didn't have enough votes appears to us that good, solid support exists for the 6 percent increase," Dykes said.
Groups to oppose remapping bill
By GENE LINN Staff Renorter
A group of KU students and the local Democratic organization are planning to file separate briefs asking the Kansas Supreme Court declare Carson House
The students and the Democrats have said the bill deliberately sucks the KU student body.
Jeff Chanay, Topeka junior, said he was planning to file a brief. Chanay was one of the students who presented a petition Thursday opposing the bill to an aide of Gov.
The petition, which had been signed by 392 KU students, said the bill "is a blatant
political attempt to disfranchise KU students and divide the student voice."
The House redistricting legislation would take away much of the traditional KU student support from State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence.
GLOVER'S 6TH District would shift to wost Lawrence and pick up a number of people from the 5th district, the 46th, would pick up the KU campus and part of the Oread neigh-
The reappointment bill was signed Friday by Carla. The bill now goes to Attorney General Robert Stephen. The governor will ask the Senate to step Stephan makes his recommendations.
Chanay said an assistant to Stephan had
said the attorney general would send the bill to the Court in seven to 10 days.
"We'll wait until it goes to the Supreme Court before we file the trie," Chumay said. "The court will have 30 days to make a decision on the case."
develop any briefs filed by KU students, the local Democratic organization or residents
HE SAID his group had not yet worked on the details of the brief. The group will get an update and would not consult Glover or the other Lawrence Democrat representative, John
"Anything we do will not be done for any particular candidate," he said. "We want to
Bavid Berkowitz, the chairman of the County Council and his county also planned to file a brief with the Supreme Court. He said he probably would handle the brief with help from counsel.
Meanwhile, Glover and Solbach said they did not plan to tie a brief ensemble, but instead to a two-hour performance.
THE DEMOCRATIC brief would likely contend there are options that come closer to meeting two Supreme Court guidelines on whether the current bill does. Beckworm
The court has said districts should be compact and must deviate less than 5 percent from the ideal populations for each district, which is about 19,000.
A WOMAN'S STORY OF HER DESTINY
PRESIDENT
Spellbound
Sunday sermon as he has nearly every Sunday morning for the last 52 years. Sims is Pastor Emeritus of the Second Christian Church in Lawrence.
Sonja Collins, 8, of 440 Illinois, sits spellbound as Reverend W.E. Sims (inset) delivers a
Pastor guides flock for 53 years
Bv CAROL REIER
Staff Reporter
The soft-spoken manner and bony figure of the 85-year-old Rev. Wesley "WES" Sins. Sins hardly reminds one of a father's laughter.
Indeed, the only thing to identify his Second Christian Church, 1248 Connecticut St., as a "house of the Lord" is a "house of the Lord."
Yet no one can doubt the power of that soft-spoken figure when he moves slowly to his place and grips the sides of his hand.
As he begins his sermon, his voice remains gentle for only a few moments - long enough for his aged vocal cues to be heard.
THE CREASES IN his face deepen to emphasize memorable passages. He raises his gray head briefly to meet the mesmerized gaze of his congregation with a trembling gaze of his own.
The sharp crescendo in his oratory are comparable to the swelling volume of the gospel church and the piano to him.
"Behold, God is my salvation," Sims' voice crashes and then ebbs. "My friends, let us think on these things."
His every phrase is echoed by one or more from his back, many of whom have closed their eyes and sway in their hearts.
"Yes, amen, yes. That's right," they say over and over.
His measured circling of the lectern to a place in front of
the wooden pews signal the choir to begin a lymp as Bismuth his finishes his clamping, and unclasps his massive
"The harvest is truly great, but the laborers are few," he shouts.
The reflection of the bright sunlight through the windows is mirrored in his glasses and as the echo's songs swell in his ears.
FOR THE PAST 35 years in Lawrence, Sims has spent the hour before Sunday noon buy at the same pastime. Since 1925, he has been pastor of the Second Christian Church, a position he relinquished last April for the position
He began his preaching career in 1919 in Georgetown, Ky., the same year he was married. He and his wife attended the same schools and she still listens to his sermons from the first new.
They raised five boys, two of whom are proachers in Texas. Sims visited those two in December but he and his wife were gone.
"This is where we'll stay. It's our home." he says, "All of our friends are here."
His church members, many of whom he greets by name,
arise
One member of his congregation, Joyce Barkdale, 1600 Barkdale, says every member of her family had been
"There are five generations in my family—since I'm a grandmother—under the Rev. Sims," she says.
"He lantized my mother down here in the Kaw River."
"He baptized my mother down here in the Kaw River." Sinsa estimates his church's membership at 100 parishioners. He smiles again when he says, "Of course, some are not too active."
There is no baptismal pool at his church. Baptisms are now performed at the First Christian Church, 100 Kendall
For that matter, there is no stained glass and there are no silver or gold candlesticks. Two electric fans sit at the back of the small room, as if monitoring the behavior of fidgeting children in the news.
WINE FOR communion is passed around in small plastic cups.
And two collections during last Sunday's service yielded about $10
However, money seems to mean little or nothing to Sims, who collects Social Security.
"The Lord's just always made it possible for us to get by and get through," he says, and the milky brown of his eyes
"All we can do is work for the Lord."
He often class his eyes for a few seconds during the service, even during the most lively selections by the chair. He does not think of anything in particular at those times, he says.
"Sometimes, you have to pause, and think about these things," he says. "The spirit guides me.
"We just let the Lord use us."
Regents ask Legislature for fuel tank funds
Bv PATRICIA MANSON
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-The University of Kansas might run out of fuel to heat the Lawrence campus if it does not buy a new fuel oil storage tank, a KU official said Friday.
The official, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, asked the Kansas Board of Regents at its monthly meeting for money for a new storage tank. The board voted to request $390,000 from the Kansas Legislature to buy the tank.
`If we aren't able to get that tank, there is`
a certain amount of danger that we would have to close down a few days or a month in order to keep it running.
Although KU depends on natural gas for most of its energy, it has an intermittent contract with the Kansas Public Service Company to cut off KU's supply when the demand for gas is high. KU used its own oil heat to burn coal in a coal-fired winter when gas service was stopped.
KU OWNS A tank that holds 250,000 gallons of oil, a 14-day supply. It also holds
two other tanks, but the tanks have cracks and cannot be used.
The new tank would hold 250,000 gallons, an additional 15-day supply. Shankel said.
In other business, the board voted to raise the Student Union building fee at KU from $15 to $15.50 a semester. The building fee is the activity fee students pay each month.
Margaret Berlin, student body president, told the board that the Student Senate passed a resolution in 1975 approving the fee raise when the satellite union opened.
KU officials have estimated that the increase would provide $600,000 each year to KU's space fleet. The remaining $400,000 needed would be raised through sales in the satellite union's
Margaret Glades of Yates Center and Sandra McMullen of Hutchinson, the two members of the panel to meet the meeting. The Senate Select Committee on Appointments recommended last week that they be confirmed to the board. The committee also requested that state agencies, has not voted on them.
2
Monday, March 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wise Survivors
Mideast still in air about pact
AMMAN, Jordan—U.S. presidential envoy Zhigui Brzezinski left Jordan for Cairo yesterday after blunt to blunt Saudi Arabia and Jordanian opinion.
Brief statements by both countries reaffirmed support for a "comprehensive enew" in the Mideast, signaling they would not support the proposed treaty.
Bresniak, in delegation that included President Carter's son Cipk, taken at仁安航空 with King Hussein after arriving from Saudi Arabia on April 20.
He arrived in Cairo yesterday to brief Egyptian President Anwar Sadat on his talks.
Before flying to Cairo, Brezinski reaffirmed the U.S. friendship with Saudi Arabia and Jordan and said his talks had focused on a movement toward a comprehensive peace settlement, on common long-term regional interests and on immediate security threats.
A spokesman for Hussein said Jairon was demanding Israel withdrawn from all territories occupied since 1977, self-determination for Palestinians and a return to the territory where they live.
Congress to allow Taiwan tie
WASHINGTON – A House-Senate conference committee will meet tomorrow to resolve differences between bills giving President Carter authority to oversee the Department of Education.
Congressional scrutiny of Carter's China policy has temporally blocked creation of a private American Institute to replace the American Embassy in Beijing.
Carter announced in December that the United States would recognize China and break off diplomatic relations with Taiwan, a close ally since 1949.
Under the new policy, the United States would cease to recognize the existence of a government in Taiwan.
Carter administration officials had said continued delay would bring major complications in U.S.-Taiwan relations, but so far there has been no indication that the delay is detrimental.
IRHANAN, Iran—Iranian authorities took American feminist leader Kate Miller from her hotel to Telam airport nearby, where she held her for two days.
Mittell has been ordered to leave Iran on the next available flight, which is thought to be today.
Iranian women's rights groups have demonstrated against new restrictions on their freedoms, and Milliter, who said she had been in Iran at the invitation of
Millet apparently applied revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhailah Khouminei a "male chauvinist," which was one of the statements that infuriated
Khomeini has called for Iranian women to trade their Western dress for the chador, the traditional black veil that covers a woman from head-to-toe. Khomeini's government also has abolished the family protection law, which gave women equal property and divorce rights.
Tanzania claims big victory
DAH ES SALAAM, Tanzania—Tanzania claimed yesterday that after a fierce three-day battle in troops and Uganda exile forces had captured Lakaya, a warlord from the Mozambique coast.
The report in Tanzania's government-owned News Sunday gave no estimate of casualties. But earlier Ugandan radio reports said almost 1,000 Tanzanian soldiers were killed.
Ugandan exiles in Nairobi, Kenya, also said that hundreds of Ugandan soldiers and allied Libyan and Palestinian troops had been killed.
The paper, quoting what it said were informed sources, said two of Ugandan President Ikhiam's battalions had been "abruptly totally annihilated" in the war.
The paper said the Tanzanian and Ugandan rebels were gathering at Lakaya "in the enormous struggle against the fascist regime of Amin."
Witnesses say profit stressed
OKLAHOMA CITY—Early testin on an $1.5 million damage suit against McGee-McNair Nuclear Corp, has indicated the company stressed production of the nuclear fuel.
The suit has been brought against Kerr-McGee by the family of Karen Silkwood, a worker at the plant who was found to be contaminated by plutonium. She died in an automobile accident in 1974, while on her way to present evidence of allowed plant safety violations to a newspaper reporter and a union official.
The testimony also has prompted speculation that the plaintiffs might ask the court today to increase the amount sought in punitive damages.
The civil suit, being heard in federal court, seeks $1.5 million in actual damages and $10 on million punitive damages for alleged negligence. The suit also alleges that negligence in providing safety precautions ended in Silkwood's contamination.
Since the trail opened two weeks ago, there have been constant charges of lack of health and safety training and a wanton disregard for hazards of
Park will continue testimonu
MONNIE, Ho - South Korean rice merchant Tongsu Park will return to the ward. stand today for further cross-examination in a conspiracy, witness and evidence.
*WHERE*
Park has been granted legal immunity and is the government's key witness in the trial.
Passman, 78, is charged with accepting $130.00 in cash from Park, compassion to accept it to $123.00 and try to get out ofaving $77.00 in taxes.
The trial enters its third week with Passan's lawyer, Camille Gravel, trying to undercut Park's testimony about cash payments and jewelry purchases.
Park told House investigators that the payments to Passman were part of $800,000 he gave to various congressmen for help in securing rice contracts. He said Passman had helped by pressuring Korean officials to make additional purchases.
The government, however, said Park had passed Passman off as the congressman could use his clout to help Park keep his lacative position as sole agent.
Ship yields record hash haul
NEWARK, N.Y. — Federal authorities said yesterday they had seized 40,000 pounds of hashish worth an estimated $40 million wholesale when they boarded a ship at it neared New York Harbor. They said it would be the largest such haul in U.S. history.
The ship's captain and seven American and West German crewman of the Olga were arrested Saturday. They await arraignment today on charges of lewdness, assault and murder.
The vessel was sighted last Monday off Norfolk, Va., and marked as a suspicion ship by U.S. Coast Guard aviators flying out of Cape May, N.J. The vessel is expected to return on Wednesday.
Drug Enforcement Administration agents said they had found the hashish in the vessel's hold, hidden in truck tire tubes and covered with burial sacks.
Federal authorities boarded the Olaug, which is registered in Libya, as it was taken under to a by New York harbor tug, Del Tufo said.
Weather ...
It will be partly cloudy today, with a high 60 degrees. The wind will be northerly, 10-20 mph. The low tonight will be in the low 48s.
Setting the record straight
The status of a complaint registered with the Consumer Affairs Association was incorrectly reported in the March 7 Kansan on page 3. A student registered
The annexation request from a Cleveland developer, which had been deferred from last week, will be considered at the city commission meeting tomorrow.
A request to annex land south of Lawrence for a regional shopping mall has a 50-60 chance of being approved. Mayor Donald Binnis said yesterday.
Mall annexation given even shot
The developer, Jacob, Viscomi and Jacob Co., proposes to build a regional shopping mall on the 61-acre site southeast of Armstrong Road and Iowa Street.
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission recommended last month that the county board review a plan.
The city usually uses 80 or 90 percent of the planning commission's recommendations.
But Bimsa said he doubled whether the city commission would consider the request on the same basis as had the planning commission. The planning commission decided the question on the basis of the land's suitability for annexation, not on its
“IT'S UNREALISTIC to consider it as a routine annexation,” he said.
In a recent case in Overland Park, Bims said, a court overruled the city, which was not going to permit the development of a shopping mall.
He said this established a precedent that
MEMO
STOP BY HOUSE OF USHER
- PROOFREAD LETTERHEAD
- BACK UP NOTE PADS FOR JANE
- --the commission's right to annex land or not to annex it has never been questioned,*
- HAVE THESIS COFIED & BOUND
8423610
HOUSE OF USHE;
he thought the Downtown Lawrence Association would use against annexation. Binn's said the commission had the right to deny annexation for any reason.
Binns said he did not know how the issue would be resolved.
"All the commissioners are very guarded about this," he said. "They just don't want to commit themselves. I think I've made up my mind."
But Binns said he was not ready to commit himself either.
He said he expected the downtown association, Lawrence neighborhood associations and representatives of the developer to attend tomorrow's meeting.
Many downtown merchants oppose the
Although several smaller shopping areas have been approved in Lawrence, he said these were considered neighborhood homes and did not threaten the downtown area.
mall, fearing that it will hurt the downtown shopping area, Bimsa said.
The impact is a lot less than a regional mail with three major department stores inside.
Concerning a four-week old fluoride debate, commissioners last week voted 4-to-1 to continue fluoridation but to consider a new fluoridated water at the city treatment plant.
Binns said that two things about fluoridation, both scientific, bothered
"People who feel ill effects from fluoride bothered me," he said. "People who argued
the non-fluoridated water tap was for those people who were in favor of freedom of choice.
for freedom of choice bothered me quite a bit."
Binsn said he thought the city definitely would install the tap.
HE SAID that it would be inconvenience for people to take water home but that it would cost more than $250.
"If that is all it will cost, then it's worth it," he said.
He said he had been given estimates that installing the tap would cost 'a couple of hundred dollars.'
But installing a fluoride-free water tap will not appease the stoutest opponents, he said, because when a new commission was raised, the respondents would return to argue their positions.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
*BLESSED ARE THEY THAT DO THIS COMMANDMENTS.
*AND MAY ENTER IN THROUGH THE GATES INTO THE
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
Note the place and position the above verse occupies in the stone — it is the eighth from the end. Just seven more verses, and this one is the ninth. Seven last verses contain one of the most wonderful and glorious invitations of God to men—Also, one of the most powerful and inviting names in the Bible.
THE INVITATION: "And the Spirit and the brusque in the heart. And the strife in the heart. Atheist. And whosoever will, let him take the water of the earth."
THE WATERING THREAT: "If any man shall asu and aulmo write it, that he should argue that a written book; this book must all the man shall take in words of this prophecy. God shall take away his part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things of the earth."
The blessing and the curse are set before men, over against one another, from one end of The Bible to the other: in the garden of Eden, by Moses in The Laws of God, by example after example in the experiences of the nations and their kings and rulers and peoples; in the Psalms, and in the stories of the lives in the epistles, and in the last few words of Revelation.
Enoch and Elijah's trip to "outer-space" is exceedingly interesting Also, in the 16th chapter of Luke, Jesus Christ delivered a sermon on this subject.
films sua
(1941)
THE LITTLE FOXES
Monday, March 19
Lillian Hellman:
Dir. William Wylfer, with Betty Davis, Herbert Marsell, Haraes Wright, Written by Lillian Hellman, from her play, Davis gives one of her greatest performances as the greedy and ruthless thief in everything for wealth and status.
"I thought on my ways, and turned my feet unto thy婺娘, I made hastle, and delayed not to keep thy commitmen."
(1955)
Tuesday, March 20 INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS
Dir. Don Siegel, with Kevin McCarthy, Dana Wynter, Sam Peckinphail as the gas meter reader. This print restores the film to its original intended form before its first release. Compare this to a re-released film with Donald Sutherland.
Dr. William Cameron Mintz, with Holena Caterin, Jimmie Hunt. The in-betweenness of a man's earthly brains' Brains to the view of a little boy who is the one
-with
(1953)
INVADERS FROM MARS
Dir. Michelangelo Antonioni, with Vitruvia, Gabi Ferrettz. The film that made Antoniom famous, Italy/subtitles.
Wednesday, March 21
(1960)
"In His Law doth he meditate day and night," Concerning the warning above of taking from, or adding to God's Word, doubtless many of us who would not dare think of such a thing, have actually taken it all out of circulation so far as our own reading and meditations are concerned, and have substituted the dwell's library if so, is not time for a change?
"Why do the heathen rage?" A heathen is one who does not believe in "The God of The Bible." The ones who rebel and rail against the righteous laws of The Holy God, and pull back from the righteous laws of the earth race in judgments. While the Second Prayer gives us a picture and the cause of present world conditions and tells us the way out, yet turn back to the First Palm and look at a side of a river; the cause of present world conditions and of a side of a river: It is the blessed man that "walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitthes in the seat of the scornful. But his delight is in the Lord, and in His law doth he mediate day and night."
P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031
L'AVVENTURA
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission.
Dir. Sergel Eisenkann, D. I. Vasiliev,
One of the greatest epic lignes of all
the great battles of World War II
Russia was invaded by a German
army in the 13th century USKub-
nik forces from Crimea.
Thursday, March 22
1938
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or night unless other noted. $1.50 admission.
ALEXANDER NEVSKY
flights" of the souls of two men to other worlds; one carried by the angels to Abraham's bosom, the other died was buried, and in hell he lifted up his eyes, being in torment — not much about the details of the trips but very definite about the destinations and the conditions found at the end of them. The second story is that when the Lord gives me stir up myself to "Fear The Lord and despair from evil."
NORMAN BLAKE and THE NEW GRASS REVIVAL
IN CONCERT!
March 21 Wednesday 3.50 in advance 4.50 at the door
Thursday 22nd KEGGER NIGHT
FREE BEER! from 8:00 til Midnight!
Ladies - 2.00 Men - 3.00
Special Mystery Guests!!!
Friday 23rd Direct from Nashville Tennessee TENNESSEE PULL BONE
Saturday 24th Chris Fritz & KY102 present special showcase . . . GRAND MAX and WAKEFIELD
The Lawrence Opera House and, 7th Spirit Club
Bike to sell? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358
Monday, March 19. 1979
University Dafly Kansan
3
Relay falters; cindermen take 4th tie in NCAA meet
Sports Writer
By GENEMYERS
Stan Whitaker had been certain KU's mule relay team was headed for the gold medal in the NCAA Indoor Championships March 9-10 in Detroit.
"We will win the mule relay if we don't drop the batton or anything else tragic happens," he said.
Villaina his optimism, disaster structu and villaina村 used KU's misfortune to capture
The Wildcats slipped past KU in the mile relay, 3:15 to 3:18 to 3:16. The victory gave Villanova the points necessary to tip Texas-El Paso, 32-91, for the NCAA crown. Auburn was third with 27 points, and KU tied Tennessee for fourth with 24.
KU's disaster was not catastrophic but enough to dash its mile relay hopes. On the opening leg of the relay, Jimmy Little and Toledo's Herman Stallworth bumped several times. Stallworth eventually fell to the sideline.
58
LITTLE MAINTAINED his balance but couldn't compensate for the collisions and a toe injury suffered during them. He posted a dismal 151.1 quarter-mile split.
"That guy kept stepping on my foot," Little said yesterday. "I thought he was trying to knock me to the sidelines so I gave an ankle because he kept hurting my toe.
Whitaker and Tormy McCall put KU back in contention at 47.8 and 48.4 quarter
"That took a lot out of me and I never could get it all back together."
Region VI champion Kansas failed to make the final four in the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women national basketball tournament.
KU stopped in sectional
A loss to No. 2 ranked Louisiana Tech Fight in Carbondale, III, 100-61, spiked KU's hopes to win the Central sectional and top-tier semifinals in Greenshore, N.C., this Friday.
KU, which had advanced to the sectional after beating Kansas State University in the
finals of the regional, came back Saturday to whip Southern Connecticut State 87-71 and take third in the sectional. The Jayhawks their best season ever with a 30-4 record.
Louisiana Tech went on to win the secreta-
tion by downing Northwestern 88-52. Tech will play the winner of the East sectional in one semifinal game. Old Dominion, winner in the South sectional, will play the West sectional in the other semifinal game.
KANSAN Sports
miles. Lester Mickens anchored KU to first in its heat with another 47,8, but Villanova, which ran in the following heat, still won the event by a scant half-second.
WHILE VILLANOVA was upsetting favored UTEP, a team loaded with foreign talent, the Jayhawks were surging to their first victory of the season and the memory of last year's for sale for 43rd. KU athletes competed in only five events but secured three second places, worth eight points.
"We were so far behind for so long," KU coach Bott Tommings said, "we honestly weren't paying attention to team scoring. Then we get three seconds in the final four
"KU has always taken pride in its NCAA achievement, and we can be proud, this year."
AN HOUR BEFORE anchoring the mille relay, Mickens stormed to second in the 600-yard dash with a 1:09.72 time, finishing second in the men's national's 1:09.41. Mickens, whose fifth-place finish in the 600 last year accounted for KU's only points, entered the meet at the nation's nationals on Friday, 10.91.
Mickens said the reasons for his defeat were the track in Detroit's Cobo Arena and
the meet format. Because the track is a narrow, four-lane wooden structure, the dashes are in run sections, and under NCAA rules the two fastest qualifiers are placed in separate heats. Mickens had the fastest qualifying time and Tafuriello was second.
"I've met Tufariello before, head-to-head," Mickens said. "I beat him.
just wish we could have run in the same heat. "I would have beaten him." The beat.
"THIS IS THE only competition I know of where the best don't eventually meet," he said. "in a national meet they should put the heat in the same heat and let them go it."
Freshman pool vaulter Jeff Buckingham has sued his undefeated collegiate status slip away when he got KU's other second place jacket and Harvard's Geoffrey Cleary cleared 17.3%.
Buckingham, who set a career best of 17-4
SOFTBALL OFFICIAL'S CLINIC
Thurs., March 22
5:00 p.m.
205 Robinson Center
Boasting a 10-3-1 record after the Citrus Tournament in Edinburgh, Texas, the KU baseball team will face Oral Roberts in a single game this afternoon in Tusas, OKa
'Hawks face Titans
Kansas went 5-3 in the tournament, losing twice to Central Michigan, 5-3 and 9-3, and losing to Oklahoma State.
The 'Hawks are hitting well, with seven regulars averaging over 300. Their worst showing was the second loss to Central Michigan, in which they made only four hits. The Hawks hit a third straight hitstreak, with at least one hit in each KU15 games. He carries a 404 average.
Pitcher Dan St. Clair is 24, adding a four-hitter victory over Northern Illinois and a first-round pick in the season-opening victory over William Jewell. Junior Terry Sutliffe lost two games in the tourney, his first losses since his freshman year. Coach Nathan Morley led KU's pitchers with a L13ERA.
Gymnasts net 3rd
The KU women's gymnastics team surmised nearly everyone by finishing third in the AIAW Region VI tournament Friday and Saturday in Ames, Iowa.
KU scored a season-high 131.2 points and trailed only Southwest Missouri State, which won 137.8 points, and Nebraska, 135.7 points.
Final foursome set
Michigan State and the University of Pennsylvania, winters winners in NCAA basketball regional finals, will join Indiana and Ohio State for the tournament and finals in Salt Lake City this weekend.
The Spartans of Michigan State beat Notre Dame 80-68 to win the Mideast regional, and Penn beat St. John's 64-62 to win the Eastern regional.
Greenbriar's
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEN
Cheese Emporium
Eat In or Carry Out
Sandwiches
Soups
Cheeses
Mediterranean Plaza - 23rd & Iowa
Lawrence
Clog
Headquarters
J. J. Angelas
Holiday Plaza
25th & Iowa
HoursMon Thurs 10:8-30 Sun 12:30-5:30
Fri-Sat
10:5-30
Operation
Friendship
Building Bridges Between Cultures
International Skating Party
Tonite: 7:30
1
LAWRENCE SKATE CENTER 1003 E.23rd Street
(no experience necessary)
Funded by Student Senate and the Baptist Student Union
Funded by Student Senate and the Baptist Student Union
For those who help themselves
Introducing the Noon Buffet
Help yourself to all the soup, salad, and pizza you can eat
$2.99
Gabriel's
Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842-5824
Mon-Fri
11:30-2:00
N40974
DO YOU WANT TO FLY?
Face it you've always wanted to fly! Many of us have had the feeling and for some it has never gone away
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!
Sophistication and humor. Ask now for the 2 year ROTC Program. Get a commission when you graduate. See if you qualify Call Capt. John Macke, 864-4676, or stop by the Military Science Building, Room 108.
Admiral Car Rental
Toyota
Firebird
Buick Regal
Monte Carlo
Culligan
Mark V
Thunderbird
2340 Alabama
843.2931
DEADLINE FOR ENTERING
INTRAMURAL GOLF
Wednesday.
March 21st
4:00 p.m.
Information Available
in Rm. 208
Robinson Center
Recreational Services
208 Robinson Center University of Kansas 864-3546 or 864-3556
11-year-old meet record of 36:56 set by Jim Hrym, a Kansas distance star from 1965 to
Feb. 24 at the Big Eight Indoor, needed two attempts to clear 1-7 and two more at 17-3. Stiles, however, cleared 17-3 on his initial attempt to win.
The meet's only double winner was UTEP's Suleiman Nymbui, a 24-year-old Tanzanian who won both the mile and two-gallon race. He is not good enough for first, but it also broke the record.
Neither vauler could go over 17.6, even through Buckingham barely nicked the bar
WHITAKER AND freshman Sanya Owolahi also competed in individual events but failed to place. Whitaker had qualified in the triple jump and met the standard in the triple lump.
Because they made it to the finals,
Buckingham, Little, McCall, Mickens and
Whitaker qualify as NCAA Indoor All-
Americans. Mickens is the only repeater.
DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO TONIGHT?
DO
Check the Lawrence Daily Entertainment Guide in the Classifieds!
Starts
Wed. March 21st
Pizza Peddler
Open for Lunch 11:00 to 2:00
544 W. 23rd Open 4:00 pm daily 841-6181
Urban Plunge: an inner city learning experience.
March 29-31
registration information available at KU-Y 110B Kansas Union
864-3761 or 841-5484
partially funded by Student Senate
Monday Gladness
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Why Be Mad When You Can Be Glad
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842-3232
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
Sometimes the rush and chaos surrounding legislative sessions leave the seemingly less important bills strutting without a fair hearing.
MARCH 19.1979
Trail bill needs push
That seems to be the case with a bill proposed in the Kansas Senate this session that would have enabled the state to build recreation trails on a tract of abandoned railroad land between Lawrence and Tonganoxie.
The bill, sponsored by State Sens. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, and John Simpson, R-Salina, was passed over by a Senate inundated with proposed legislation this year. The Senate's neglect is unfortunate, however, for the bill would have provided a much needed service to the public—just the thing that ideally should spark prompt legislative action.
UNDER THE proposal, the trail would be built along an 11-mile long, 100-foot wide abandoned Union Pacific railroad right of way. Supporters of the trail vow to try again during next year's session but are already looking for other alternatives.
One alternative might be to invoke
the railroad Revitalization Act of 1976 which allows land to be obtained for public use. But there are conflicting state and federal laws over the use of the land, and the final decision in the case would probably have to come from the courts if that strategy were used.
THE PROBLEM is that state law says once a railroad abandons its tracks the right of way reverts to the adjacent landowner, but federal law requires that abandoned railroad land be kept in the public domain.
Opponents of the trail are willing to go to court to settle the matter. Those opponents include landowners along the proposed trail.
A final solution that would allow construction of the trail would benefit all concerned. The Lawrence area is sorely lacking in nature trails, and the abandoned right of way would be an ideal setting.
Perhaps the Legislature can find more time in its hectic schedule to consider the bill the next time it comes around the legislative cycle.
Parents have been worried for years about what their teen-agers have been up to. After seeing the results of a recent Gallup teen-ager poll, they are no doubt still
Teen poll indicates TV's influence
In a poll asking teen-agers what man they most admire, teen-agers picked President Jimmy Carter by a 2-1 margin over Anwar Sadat, president of Egypt. Both men have been in the news, and we can understand the admiration they have drawn. But the list gets somewhat alarming as one skims past No. 3, former President Gerald Ford, and No. 4, former Benjamin Franklin, prime minister of Israel, to find the man in the No. 5 slot: Richard Nixon.
Television, it appears, was a major influence in many of the other choices. In the 1980s he made an effort to heavierweight boxer, whose antics before and after his boxing matches have enthralled fans.
PERHAPS MANY of the teens did not witness the unbelievable series of events that led to Nixon's fall from grace with the American people. Perhaps their only exposure to Nixon has been in recent television appearances. Those showed a smiling Nixon waving to audiences in the South and Nixon going to a rally with his teen-ageers may have not seen, or remembered, the Nixon that their parents and older brothers and sisters saw.
Nixon, the first U.S. president to resign, did a good job of discrediting the office. Now he suddenly pops up on the teen-agers' most admired list.
No. 7 was Jerry Lewis, who for three days over the Labor Day week each year monopolize one network's programming. Rounding up donations for muscular building is nothing to scarcit at that point up once again the influence of the TY set on young viewers.
Carter is up against a stacked deck
By REO M. CHRISTENSON
N. Y. Times Feature
OXFORD, Ohio—President Carter should announce forthwith that he will not run for re-election. He faces such a forbidding array of obstacles that it is foolish to suppose that he can surmount them. It s all a shame.
Currently, the president's approval ratings are abysmal low. They may fail even further, considering what faces him.
Although the Iranian revolution was in the cards, whoever the president might be, the fuel shortage and rising petroleum prices that grow out of it will be charged to Carter. When things like that to wrong, the public blames the president.
The current high rate of inflation either will not improve—thus dooming Carter's re-election chances—or it will improve at the same rate.
NO PRESIDENT can hope to be re-elected with inflation running at nearly 10 percent, or with a 7 to 8 percent inflation accompanied by recession. If his critics have a better antiterrorism than Carter's, they are hiding their light under a bushel.
Black voters saved Carter in 1976; they have since lost faith in him. No one has a credible program for improving the economic prospects for blacks or for restoring economic health to the inner city. No matter, Carter will be cared for not doing what he did.
There are numerous reasons why librarians should be content with the Carter leadership, the political climate being what it is, but they aren't. They decided some time ago that Carter was not interested, and nothing he could do now would alter that judgment.
LABOR'S HIGH command, represented by the arrogance, the insolence and the petulance of George Meany, will oppose Carter from here on. If Meany can't dominate the president, he is willing to wreck the president's future if he can.
The leaders of the feminist movement are disenchanted with Carter, despite his support of the Equal Rights Amendment, and have called for a rethinking of the issue.
Probably no president could satisfy their demands, it should be added: Feminist leaders are not easily pleased.
When Carter is attacked by his foes, almost daily, few members of his party rise to his defense. Except for members of his own administration, he does not put the partisan support that he has have counted on, and that even Richard M. Nixon received.
REPUBLICANS, smelling blood, will no longer give him the often crucial margin of foreign policy support that he received last year. If congressional republicans can undermine the resident from here on out, that is precisely what they will want to do.
MAGAZINE TEXUROLOGIE GLOBAL ORGANIZATION TRONE
The news media, except for a few weeks after Camp David, have been unremitting hostily to Carter. They will continue to be. In 40 years of close president-watching, I have never seen a president treated so unfairly.
UNLIKE MOST incumbent presidents, Carter will face the stiffest kind of renegotiation struggle. With members of both parties attacking him, the wounds incurred, even if he should survive, will severely damage his chances in November.
Carter has consistently supported international policies that are in the public interest. These include the Panama Canal treaties, his magnificent efforts at Camp David, the recognition of China, his stand on South Africa, his support for human rights issues, and his signature on a peace agreement.
Almost all of his domestic programs have been superior to those they sought to replace. They have been progressive although moderate in keeping with the national mood. His current vigorous efforts to fight inflation, reduce the budget deficit, improve the efficient and economical operation of the country, and improve the national defense are almost precisely what the public wants.
The year will be full of wrangling, frustration, deadlock and defeat and Carter will be charged with incapability to lead his own party successfully. That a chaotically decentralized Congress refuses to be led will be hard noted.
CARTER IS an exceptionally intelligent, courageous, unpretentious, honorable man who works very hard and keeps the national interest steadily in mind. In many respects, his presidential performance has improved. He presides over Cabinet appointees who, if not always distinguished, are generally competent and responsible people.
Carter deserves better from his country but he lacks personal magnetism and eloquence, he is often clumsy in handling foreign policy (even when his general policy is sound), his religion is offensive to many members of the press and the public will blame him for problems beyond his control. What his critics currently want, it seems, is a president who looks strong in the back. And Vietnam and China even though there is little he can really do. And there is little that those critics concretely recommend.
The past few weeks could be characterized as a time when Carter kept his head when all about him were losing thers.
If the Democrats, the liberals and the press end up with Ronald Reagan, they richly deserve him. Carter's political prospects could hardly look worse; they look almost as bad as Harry S. Trumans' was in 1948. But I49 comes only once this
Reo M. Christenson is professor of political science at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio.
80
Mary
Ernst
POPE, JOHN PAUL II and Gov. Jerry Brown of California were an odd combination in a tie for eight. The pope, as the spiritual and moral leader of the Roman
Catholic Church, also has gained a great respect from millions of people in other religious groups. The selection of Brown is somewhat understandable, but it also implies that Proposition 13 will likely become a rallying cry for the next generation, too.
The tenth most admired man was John Travolta, a TV hero who has captured the hearts of millions with his role as a semi-illiterate on "Welcome Back, Kotter." He played a man who could movie "Saturday Night Fever." A funny man, yes. A good dancer, definitely. But
tenth most admired man in the world;
Preposterous—at least to those of us born
since 1786.
One notices that all 10 men have something in common: massive TV coverage. Obviously that has had an impact on today's teen-agers.
So, if parents are wondering what their teen-agers are up to, they probably will not have to look much beyond the family room. That is why many parents no doubt continue to worry about what their teens are doing—and worry they should.
PROFITS LYING CHEATING THE OIL COMPANIES
Charges of division in Senate unfair
D.
To the editor:
1, for one, am one of those senators elected from the Imagination coalition and have yet to find anything repulsive about what Margaret has said or done. In fact, when the proposal for the off-campus housing board comes to the Senate floor, I may vote for its
There are 35 senators elected from the Imagination coalition, yet to my knowledge, not a single reporter has approached a single one of these senators to sound them out on their views of Margaret's plans for an off-campus housing board.
Also, please be careful of the words chosen for such a potentially harmful editorial as one entitled "Senators play games" happens to be. Tempelton did not say the Senate is a "divided" two-party organization. The Senate has had one meeting during which the Senate as a whole chose five members for the committee on committees, during which the Senate as a whole moved to motion suspend the rules, during which the Senate as a whole heard and felt the need to work as a cohesive unit.
Your editorial dated March 1, 1979, came as a disappointment and an unwelcome departure from some of the high qualities the Kansan has tried to achieve.
Senators elected in the February elections had their first meeting Feb. 28, the day before your editorial. At the meeting as we entered the floor, one pointed out, no legislation was or even could have been introduced. Therefore, neither a resolution nor a bill was introduced on the Senate floor to stymie in any way Margaret Kennedy's efforts to establish an off-campus boarding house.
There are also serious innuendoes from your office that there are some "playschool politicians," alluding to people associated with the Imagination coalition, engaged in some imaginary power play that is already dividing the Senate and has both past and present members. These people form the student body who these "playschool politicians" really are.
I must therefore ask where your information in your editorial came from. Where did you receive information that the new Student Senate was already having problems with the information that Imagination candidates who were elected to the Senate were banding together to fight Margaret Berlin? Is your source of information Craig Tempelton? If so, are you sure you have not taken notice of that incident? I know that Tempelton is not a senator and therefore cannot vote on the Senate floor? Apparently you did not know, because you had already come to the erroneous conclusion that, "Tempelton and other student senators," . . . are allied against Margaret Lincoln because she ran with another coalition.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Rex Gardner Lawrence senior
adoption. But I'll decide that on the Senate floor and not from insurers and false insurance companies.
Student Senate unity could defeat purpose To the editn:
The Student Senate is not the place for unity. If it were united, the purpose would be defeated. If all senators thought the same, they would vote against the Senate; one person would suffice for such dues.
The Senate should have people and groups with differing ideas to keep a check on the activities of those who would call for unity, in other words, preventing them from gaining complete control. It is one thing to call for assistance and cooperation, but quite another to sacrifice one's conscience or duty to one's constituents for an idealisticity?
Conflicting ideas and debate of these ideas is the basis of the democratic-republican system. What we see in the new Senate administration's plea for unity is the fear that it will not have control, a fear of losing its recently gained power. The Senate and its
majority are to have the power, and that is how it should be, not a rubber stamp mechanism as I perceive the New Senate administration would have it.
If a group has power in the Senate, it is not its duty to conform to the ideals of the adjective "powerful," but to act in the way it wishes. Senators were elected because of what they believed. Turn back on these beliefs now would be a violation of their own faith, who elected them because of those beliefs.
Edwin Cooley
Wichita freshman
'Whom' is not used by some who should To the editor.
David Radavich
Generally speaking, the use of the English language in Kansan editorials has improved over the past 30 years. But however, it seems that several of our editorial writers are unaware of the word "whom" and its many uses. I suggest they spend a considerable member of the English department a visit.
Assistant instructor of English
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(15SP $60-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday weekend. Members receive a $15 monthly fee or $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 per county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the activity month.
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60045
Editorial Editor
John Whiteside
Managing Editor
Direct Seelim
Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Assistant Campus Editor
Business Manager
Karen Wenderott
Retail Sales Manager Ron Altman
Advertising Advertiser Manager Bill Muller
Classified Advertising Manager Kitty McMahale
Assistant Classified Advertising Manager Duncan Butte
Advertising Advertiser Makeup Manage Dalihu Cavanzo
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Sales Representatives Allen Blair, Paula Kooll, Jane Knoten,
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General Manager
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STATE U.
BY T. M. ASLA
LOOK, STATE U.
WOULD LIKE TO
PROVIDE SPECIAL
TRANSPORTATION
FOR THE HANDICAPPED
STUDENTS
BUT WE HAVE OTHER
PRIORITIES FOR
OUR LIMITED
FUNDS.
IT ISN'T REALLY
OUR RESPONSIBILITY,
YOU REALIZE.
PEOPLE SHOULDN'T ACQUIRE
EXPENSIVE HANDICAPS IF
THEY CAN'T AFFORD TO
SUPPORT THEM.
MAYBE WE SHOULD SELL
PARKING Permits
FOR WHEELCHAIRS
"THANK YOU J.G." ASLA 'W
Monday, March 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
5
Black caucus investigates issues
By RON BAIN
Staff Reporter
State must strive harder to advance civil rights reform. State Sen. Billy McCraid said Saturday at the University of Kansas.
McCray, D-Wichita, who spoke to about 300 people at the opening of the fifth annual Kansas Black Legislative Caucus in the Kansas Union, said blacks had made significant rights advances in recent years but that they had to be heard.
"Never again will we be a segregated society." he said,
but we must continue to assert purities."
The caucus was guided by state representatives J.B. Littlejohn, R-Topema, Theo Cribb, D-Wichita, and Clarence Love, D-Kansas City, and by a former legislator, Jonathan Islas, as organized as a forum on issues relegated to Kansas in the 1980s.
AFTER MCCRAY'S introduction, the caucus broke into workshops to discuss issues such as penal reform and the
death penalty, minorities in business, education and college and juvenile delinquency
Penal reform was one subject that generated much comment.
One audience member compared pennentiaries to "crime colleges" where criminals learn to be better criminals rather than better citizens. Caldwell, who is a police officer in a workshop, said there was little public support for jail reforms.
"The general public thinks that the people in jails should have to live like animals," he said.
Blacks in business was another issue that caucus participants discuss. Sharon Poundexter, president of Pointexter and Associates of Wichita, a small-business consulting firm, said blacks should have high business
"I AM ABSOLUTELY convinced that the only way blocks and other minorities will get ahead is through small
However, Pointdex said, there are many blacks with the wrong attitudes for the business world.
"There are people, this very day, that walk around with a slave mentality," she said. "A person with a slave mentality tells himself or herself, I can make it only if someone supports me and helps me in these areas."
She said that a black who wanted to start a small business might have to offer his house to a bank as collateral for a loan.
It is becoming more difficult to obtain small business loans, Poindexter said. She predicted that the Small Business Administration soon would stop lending money. Poindexter said blacks and minorities would have to be more cautious and conservative in their business affairs because money was tight.
The canvass had resolutions based on the discussions and will present them to the Kansas Legislature this term.
Stock up for School
- Engineering supplies
- Architecture supplies
- General office supplies
WELCOME DACK TO DOOBS
HILL
TOWN CRIER
DOWNTOWN
930 MASS
9:30 AM-5:30 PM SUN.
9:30 AM-9:00 MON.-SAT.
Recreation Release
INTRAMURAL SOFTBALL —1979 Manager's Meeting Robinson South Gymnasium
Tuesday. March 20
- Recreation League at 5:15
Wednesday, March 21
- Recreation League at 5:15
* Trophy League at 6:00
- Co-Rec. League at 6:00
- "B" League at 5:15
THERE IS A $$ ENTER FEE FOR ALL LEAGUES
You must be represented by a manager at your respective meeting. Entr
packets are submitted to the appropriate department.
208 Robinson • Univ. of Ks. • Lawrence, Ks. 66045 • Phone: 864.3546 or 864.3566
aver service
800 MASS.
THE MALLS
KANSAS UNION
843-1211
Maupintour travel service
( )
AIRLINE TICKETS
HOTEL RESERVATIONS
CAR RENTAL
EURAIL PASSES
ESCORTED MARRIAGE
ESCORTED TOURS
CAULIOTIANS
R
CALL TODAY!
Penguin
GREEK NIGHT at G. P. LOYD'S
Tuesday Night March 20,is OLY Night at G. P. Lloyds
FREE BEER they can hold 8-11 PM
FRONTER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Unfurnished from $170. Two laundry rooms, large closets, and a full kitchen. INDOOR HEATED POOL. For appointment only or by email at $34 Frontier Ridger. Next door to Parking Lot.
→
You must wear a Greek T-Shirt or present a Greek I.D. to enter
G. P. LOYD'S . . Always Great Looking Ladies . . Never a Cover Memberships Available-701 Mass. Eldridge House Lower Level
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodation, goods, services and employment
are the core functions of a MIGRATION OFFICE.
app, office, national origin, migrancy, MIGRING,
MIGRATION, or national origin. The MIGRING
office is responsible for processing applicants.
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
one two three four five
time times times times times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
to run::
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
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 UGR business office at 864-5258.
ENTERTAINMENT
Pre-law students meet with 1st, 2nd, and 3rd
and graduate from their programs on March 27, 2015 p.m. 106 New Green Hall
Zen practice daily 6 p.m. Introductory talks
at the San Diego Jewish Day School on a
day retreat March 19 at The Lawrence Chapel.
International SKATING PARTY, Toulouse, 7:30 p.m. at Lawrence Shakespeare, Tenon. Meet at Operation Friendship, 1629 W. 19th, 7:15 if you need a ride. No experience necessary, just come to haters.
FOR RENT
App. 2, BR and efficiency. Close to campus. Utility:
Clean, quiet, clean and comfortable. 843-
5079
843-5079
Jayhawker TOWERS Apartments
1603 West 15th
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our
DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
Apartments and room furnished, parking, most rooms on the street. Kid and towner town, phone 863-5767. Phone: 863-5767.
Still looking for a place to call home? Natehart will be staying on the main deck of the month. Stay by and look on our windows or give you all the details we will be giving you all the details. MARSHM HALL, 1800 Natural Garden, 843-5353.
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
You'll see a Touch of Class
841-3255 841-1555
Squaea 2 bedroom 14th Apt. 11 bath; carpet
electric kitchen; $235.00 no. 9-23
684-697
684-707
Subsite Southbridge sipr April-August 2
furnished 8122 (mo. Call: 842-8832) 3-231
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
All New & Contemporary
You'll get a weekend spa unit today &
you'll see why the move is to Sundance
Apartments. Completely furnished studio or
1 BR. Conveniently located at 17th & Florida
northwest of the Sanctuary on KU Bus Hours.
8415255·842.4455
1978 Harley Davidson Superglide, 1200 sc. perfect condition, only 4,000 miles. Priced to sell: $825.00
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Salem Make seminal out of Western Civilization. Make senses to men in the West and teach them about civilization 2). For exam preparation, "New Analysis of Civilization" is available now at New York Crain; Malie Bollion is available on TPC-C.
HOUGHTON PLACE: ITS FULL- BUT--UIT
WE ARE OUT OF STOCK. We will be available for June 1 and August 1 emergency.
We will rent for the summer term those apartments that are vacant. We are checked: 2499 Albany, 841-5735, 3-23
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, CHILDERSON, 2009, W-147,
CTUF
WHY RENT? when you could own this beautiful kitchen, you could. It fits such a variety of what you like. Like new appliances, original central air conditioning, water/dryer area, 5 smoke stains, décor and storage space. You can build, storage building, home interior, trees, bulb planters.
Fender Master Bass Guitar with strings, cords, accessories and accessories. Quakers, cards and coasters. Very good condition. In stock. (860) 245-3777.
FOR SALE
Christian Housing. Now and Summer! Home
842-763-6929 between 5-8
Keep in mind:
50% OFF SALE on all kinds of drawing pads
50% OFF SALE on 1400 Vermont Open - 3-16
8:30 - 9:30 AM
Sale ends on Friday
60c Schooners at Louise's every Friday from 2
till 5. 4-3
Sunspread - Run glauca are our specialty. Non-professional run glauca selection, secondhand. 1021 San Mateo 841-570-7396
1974 Plum, Duster PS, PB AC, acuamtr. trans.
1974 Excellent condition 841-5411
Carpet, tire color, x 17, flipper Stoffleur Mount
4 amps old, Fire code C18 8412-63
3-21
- 78 Toyota Corolla GT LHD/FSR AM FM stereo;
* 78 Toyota Corolla GT LHD/FSR AM FM stereo;
* 841-865-7200 at 11:00 am or after
841-865-7200 at 11:00 am or after
75 Chervonet Montauk Town Coupe. 35,000 Mi. Stand-
dard. Bike rental. 800-612-8922 or best
bed. matl. 841-8922 after 8pm.
Make someone at home happy with KU Souvenir
Maker Sets. Make someone happy with Basket. Round
Drug Storage Kit. Max 30 boxes. $25
If you're healthy, you're happy. We have health
food from Hoffman, Naturalizer, Emma Davis,
and more.
FOUND
HELP WANTED
Small, Male, German, Shepherd, Young, no tame:
814-8300 3-21
Now taking applications for Fountain & Grill
Auction, visit www.fountaingrill.com,
Apply in person at Fountain Beach 12787
or by phone at (804) 356-9242.
Extra money can be earned by having a timer set to 10 minutes. An extra event must be entered in Mirabilis at 644-324-3508, drop by the door or call (844) 559-7999.
Part time maintenance person needed. Starting付 $25 per hour. Minimum age 18 m.a.m. Must have excellent communication skills, cleaning required, and a mechanical aptitude. Apply in person, Schunnon Foods, Mass. 3-12
EXOTIC JOE LOAK TAIHO, CALIFORNIA
Little exposure, fantastic taste! $1700-$4000 sum-
mary items include: restaurants, ranches, cruisers, river rafts & more.
Send $25 for in-land Lake Nipro Wilderness. No
charges.
Tropical waters, high humidity prepare prismatic crystals.
Mineral-rich waters allow for more efficient growth. Heat
washed, or dried with CaSO₄, will cause crystallization. Gives a
smooth, clean surface. Call Facilities Giver, 800-325-9178.
JOBS MEN WOMEN SAILBOATS
Cruise SHIPs 'No experience. High pay' See Carrinhan, Hawaii, Europe, World Summer舱
Cruise Shipping 'No experience. High pay' See Carrinhan, Hawaii, Europe, World夏季舱
60129 Surtasco, Canaan 93860 4-24
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS. Applications are now being accepted for positions with more information, see the advertisement in her resume and记得, 126 Strong Hall. An equal opportunity employer.
Part time counter or kitchen work needed. Must
work 3-4 hers, per day 3-4 days. Call for
information.
EXTRA INCOME PROGRAM Earn up to $40 per enveloped invoices you address as & help delivery. The program allows you to earn at home, stay stamped, self-addressed envelopes, and get an extra $25. BOX 318 Morgantown, W. Va. 29600.
Resident director, residence halls, 16 month,
live-in, professional position beginning
2015. Master's degree in student-
personnel or related field;
job descriptions available in 123 Spring Hall 5-20
Inviteade opening for full and guest time throughout the month. 2022 W 6th, 8th floor. Equal Opportunity.
DYNAMIC BINDING COPYING The House of
Democracy is undergoing a major rewriting in bindings, binding and copying in Lawrence. Lt. uss. Paul Brennan will be handling the duties of this job.
MISCELLANEOUS
Walters and waitresses. Variety of hotels Deliveries to various locations. Web-based vehicle Inquiries. Campus Hildaway 106 N. Pearl Street
NOTICE
DEATH: WHY BOTH? BCKANKAR:
Nature Sense of Spirit. BE423, 842-342.
SUNDAY, MAY 19, 10AM.
WOMEN'S JAZZ FESTIVAL
BUS TRIP
SUNDAY, MARCH 25
$11.50
Sponsored by SUA Travel and KJHK Radio Price includes Transportation and Ticket Sign Up at SUA Office by
MONDAY, MARCH 19
PERSONAL
60c Schonners and 150c Pitches every Friday (2-5) at Lonnie's bar. 4-2
RCKS RHISF SHOP is now in office 280 Raleigh,
NC, 37615-2800. Reqs: BS or equiv in comp.
part, quick repair 1053 Vermont, 841-641-662
or 970-798-2980.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC. Aberrations up to 17 weeks. pregnancy tests, Birth Control, Counseling. Tubal Ligation. For appointment call: 980-624-1408 or 490-163-408. Overland Park, Ks.
SAVE! on
3, 4. & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
$24.30
All with
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
THE BATTERY SHOP
842-2922
Friday 40 n. Lawrence
Access from locations
Batteries .30
Hwyway 40 N. Lawrence Across from Icabod's
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Up to and including the year preceding the application. Tailor made. Telephone (212) 648-2106. www.foxhillsurgery.com
HARBOUR SPECIALS $4, 6-10 Mon. Tues. & Wed.
BARGAIN $35 - $49 Sun. Mon. Tue.
MAIDS DAIRY NIGHT '$10 - $15 gifter
Gayle Leland counseling referrals now handl-
ed to KU UF, 842.566 or headquarter 841.
www.gayleland.com
From high altitude the beautiful campground of RU will be just a few minutes' walk away. A private, warm and easy stay and two free nights'住宿 may be provided.
EARN EXTRA MONEY Write Sargent's, RB S-
1-39
Wisrilla, Perla, III. 61605.
S-19
Today is Bonnie Goldman Day! Happy 21st-
Love, X
3-19
Tan Man-Mother says to more philosophical
theory. "The idea is that you can do it in
which method. Please come here," Dai-3
1985.
SERVICES OFFERED
REWRITING/EDITING - Your manuscript, thesis or term paper edited into an excellent, grammatically correct draft, with thoughtful thinking with precision and smoothness. Outlines and articles also available. Editions: 842-1313.
EXPERT TUTORS. MATH 600-123, call 864-757-372.
EXPERT CALCULATOR. MATH 600-123, call 864-757-372.
BUSINESS SOFTWARE. COMPUTER SCIENCE 105-200, call 843-759-368.
COMPUTER SCIENCE 105-200, call 843-759-368.
TINCTICS. call 843-759-368. QUALIFICATIONS: IS A
COMPUTER PROGRAMMER For general problems call
computer programming For general problems call
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Atice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center.
Aie is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at
10 a.m.
For competent, compassionate repairs at reasonable prices on VW, Dutains, Voltages or Voltage or visit METRIC MOTORS at 81th & New Jersey, WV engine rebuilding service 3-21 841-6600.
MATH TUTOR M m at matence, three years professional training experience. B2-351-.
Need help in math or CS1 Get a tutor who can teach your math or CS1 problem. Students 841-447-6000. 841-447-6000.
Tired of feeding yourself? Naimish Hall is offering for the first time ever a boarding plan. You can visit us at **naimish.hall.com** or be coached week by week if you choose the oplan. Start by and use or give on a car **NAIMITISH** with a card.
TYPING
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476.
DOG OBSERVATION AND CONFORMATION
Brindy dates to registration to 7 P.M. and Tues., May 14, from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Her last visit is the five-week summer ABB outreach program for the five week summer season. All materials are available for purchase. For further information, contact Brindy at (912) 690-3524.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4900
Tyshid/Editor HIM Pixar Elite Quality work
for the company. Please discuss interaction welcome
meetings MW-122/123
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Job description:
Law papers, from paper. Mr.
842-3229 842-3229
Experimented by typal-thesis, dissertations, term
papers, and selected articles. Select bibli-
kary 842-3131; evening 842-3216.
Experienced Typist - term papers, briefs, mail,
miscellaneous documents, spelling corrections,
843-552-Mrs. Ward
Quality typing guaranteed- IBM SELT Termo-
paper thesis, dissertation, etc. Carriage 841
2023-10-09
COMPUTERIZED THISS TYPING. Have your computerized typing system tested, error-free pages, justified right-hand margins, or error-free fonts. Test your typing system. TYPING SERVICE 815-4329, for info, on the most advanced typing system available.
I do data driven quick typing. Under 20 pts. I night shift. Call Refresh 815-4329 at 5:30 p.m. Call Welcome 815-4329 at 6:34 p.m. 5-14 TYPING Over 30,000 pages served. Quality assurance. Liaison 815-4329 at 7:34 p.m. Liability 815-4329. We type it all for you. 3-22 Experienced typist with scientific background. IBM Corrective Televitic H I Call Jan. 44. 3-29
Wanted. Mala roommate for clean two-bedroom apartment in New York City. WANTED. Small host interested in doing work on a benefit record with national distribution firm. WANTED. Small host interested in doing work on a benefit record with national distribution firm. Looking for a more competitive race? Discover the joy and satisfaction of Catholic Missionary service in the South Atlantic. Catholic Missionary, Print,Writer, Fr. Ed Krug, Word Missionaries
HOME TYPING SERVICE- Thesis typing, business typing, statistical typing done by experienced secretary in her home. For information contact 842-1490, after 5:30 anytime weeksend. 3-21
1-2 literes for furnished 2 bedroom Mails apart-
ment 411-808-9000 and/or Fall Calls
611-808-9000
WANTED
Housemate wanted for 3-member cooperative start April 11. Call 842-278 for more. 3-22
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday ... Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday ... Friday 5 pm
Wednesday ... Tuesday 5 pm
Thursday ... Tuesday 5 pm
Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 20,550 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kansan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint Below below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write ad here:
2 times $2.25
additional words
RATES:
15 words or less
1
time
$2.00
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.50
3 times
$2.50
.03
DATES TO RUN: to
4 times
$2.75
.04
5
times
$3.00
.05
NAME: ___
ADDRESS: ___
PHONE: ___
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS--EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
---
6
Monday, March 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Two prizewinners will judge photos
Judges have been chosen for this week's 12th annual University of Kansas Photography Contest.
Chris Johns, photographer for the graphic novel *Journal*, and John Fife, photographer for the graphic novel are scheduled to judge the contest Friday in the Big Eight room of the Kansas
Johns has been Photographer of the Year for the Midwest region for the past two years and is one of the most points in the National Press Photographers' Association Clips
He recently was named Photographer of the Year for the entire association by a board of photographers and photo editors.
Filo won a Pulitzer Prize in 1970 for photographs of the Kent State killings that he took when he was a student at Kent State University in Ohio. Now Filo is one of about 69 photographers for the AP wire service.
THE DEADLINE for entries to the KU contest is 5 p.m. Thursday. Entries should be taken to the Student Union
Activities office in the Union. KU students, faculty and staff are eligible to enter.
The contest is sponsored by the School of Fine Arts, SUA and the William Allen White School of Journalism.
The winning photographs will become the property of KU and will make up a traveling show. The show will be dislived throughout Kansas.
Both color and black and white photos will be judged and may be entered in one of 10 categories: black and white picture, color pictorial, abstract/experimental color, abstract/experimental color, features, sports, picture story/picture sequence, portrait/personality and portfolio.
All photos must be on 18-14 inch
mount boards, one photo on each board,
except for the picture story/picture
sequence category. Entries in the story
category count as one print. Each person
may enter as many as 15 photos.
For entries in the portfolio category, there is a minimum of eight prints and a maximum of 15.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
On Campus
TONIGHT; VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE, by the American Bar Association/Law Student Division will be available from 6 to 8 in the legal aid office in 105 Green Hall. The KU FENCING CLUB will meet at 7:30 in 173 Robinson. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL meets at 7:30 in 173 Robinson. The Union, Faculty RECITAL, for Robert Stanton, will be at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
TOMORROW: A MARINE CORPS OFFICER SEFFICIER OFFICER will interview persons interested in the Corps from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Booth I in the lobby of the building. COLLOQUIUM will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in Alcove D of the Union, Jit Quadrago, assistant professor of sociology and assistant director of the campus
gentorology center, will speak at 12:15 p.m.
SOFTBALL MANAGERS MEETINGS will be held in Robinson's south gym. Recreation staff will be present.
"A League managers meet at 6 p.m."
County seeks cork for Lone Star leak
While some KU students were enjoying watering holes in other parts of the country last week, Douglas County officials were worried about the safety of Lake Lace, a waterhole south of Lawrence.
The county commission had planned to have the problem solved by Thursday. But after workers inspected the leak, the commission had to change its strategy.
The county hired Central States Underwater Contracting Inc., Kansas City, Kan. to temporarily plug the leak.
But divers from the company found
Thursday that most of the leaking water was going out through the bottom of an overflow pipe rather than from a crack 18 feet from the top of the pipe.
Another pipe extends from the bottom of the overflow pipe into the middle of the lake. Mike Dooley, county engineer, said he thought the leak was a result of a broken valve at the end of the second pipe, which is 53 feet below the lake's surface.
BEVERLY BRADLEY, chairman of the commission, said yesterday the commission would discuss ways to solve the problem at its meeting today.
Summer Orientation Program 1979 STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
. . . leadership abilities
STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
knowledge of University programs & activities
. . . interpersonal communication skills
. . . onthusiasm about program
. . . student in good academic standing
Admiral Car Rental
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ADMISSIONS & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL APPLICATIONS DUE BY FRIDAY, MARCH 23
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
monday madness!!
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
days only
Order any small Domo'nna's Pizza with
pizza bread, ground beef or
mushrooms plus £10.
Bake only £10.
all you have
40 confirm necessary 40 you can
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Hours
4:00am - 1:30am Mon. - Thurs.
4:00am - 2:30am Fr.
12:00 - 2:00am Sat.
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c copyright 1979
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priced $10 - $22
Hours: Mon-Sat 10-5:30 Sun 1-4 Thurs till 8:30
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Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa
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Ski Prints by Bill Alexander
priced $10 - $22
Hours: Mon-Sat 10:5:30 Sun 1-4 Thurs till 8:30
841-1870
WALLEY WEST galleries & interiors
Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa
VALLEY WEST galleries & Interiors Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa
VALLEY WEST
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PRE-LAW STUDENTS
7:00 p.m.
meet with panel of 1st,2nd,and 3rd year Law School Students
March 22,1979
Room 106 New Green Hall
Sponsored By the Chancery Club
Funded by Student Activity Fund
judy collins
march 30, 1979 at 9:00 PM.
hoch auditorium
reserved seats $6.50 & $7.50
Tickets available at SUA Office, Kits and various locations
hours open at 8:00 PM. An SUA and Schon Production.
Man sentenced again in fraud
A man who had been sentenced last May for a travel fraud scheme was ordered to prison Friday for skipping on his probation.
The man, Raymond Robinson, was ordered to the state prison for five to 10 years by Douglas County District Court
judge James Paddock.
Robinson had been put on probation last year and ordered to repay more than $1,100 to KU students and local residents who had bought tickets in early 1974 for a flight to Jamaica and were denied refunds when the flight was canceled.
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Kid And
Drawn
Staff photo by BARR KINNEY
Slow day
The koa-lool business wasn't exactly booming yesterday for Staci Hohman, left, and Kathy Dickey as they waited for thirsty
customers to walk by. Stack is the daughter of Browning and
Brad and Linda Dale of 1746, 2908, 2909.
*This book was printed in the United States and Canada.*
Club adviser denounces proposed investigation
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
A proposed investigation into the possibility of foreign agents at the University of Kansas would be "Mckee-Carthay witch hunt," according to a report.
The adviser, Norman Forer, said that the proposed investigation would be illegal. The University Senate Committee on Foreign Students was assigned the charge, or responsibility, of the investigation.
Swaritz said the charge to the foreign students committee to investigate the possibility of foreign agents had been the result of an investigation that took place in 2016.
FORER SAID that the investigation proposed in the charge would violate the first amendment rights of foreign students
But the chairman of SenEx, Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction, said that the charge probably would be withdrawn at tomorrow's SenEx meeting.
"In order to determine if you have foreign agents you have to find out if the students behave like foreign agents." Foreser said. "You must be a foreign agent."
Forer, associate professor of social welfare, asked that the Senate executive committee withdraw the charge. He said that the International Club might go to court if the charge were not dropped.
Swartz said the charge had been drafted nine ago, after Iranian students alleged that the Iranian secret police, SAVAK, was on campus. Swartz said that one of the goals of the investigation was to determine if the allegations were accurate.
"For the state to do something like this would violate the right of assembly. It would be a state-authorized inquiry."
Forer outlined his objections to the proposed investigation in a letter to Swartz two weeks ago.
The letter said that KU's foreign students have a number of different political ideologies. Forer wrote that it was not unusual for an ideological disagreement to result in accusations of students being foreign agents.
FORER WAS supported by the chairman of the Foreign Students Committee, who said that his committee opposed the charge.
Forer also opposed part of the charge that stipulated that state and federal officials would be consulted in the investigation. To solicit government intervention would violate traditional University autonomy, he wrote.
In a letter to Swartz last week, the chairman, Joseph Conrad, professor of slavic languages, wrote that the Foreign Students Committee was not the place for the investigation. He urged that SenEx reconsider the charge.
Fear warned that leaders of the International Club would suit to stop the investigation unless SenEx withdrew the charge.
Swartz said that the intention of the proposed investigation had been to protect student rights, not to violate them.
"It was a very well-intentioned written by some faculty and students to protect the student body," Swarts said.
But Swartz said the charge should be withdrawn if the investigation would violate student rights.
Trials to begin for nuclear foes
"If it isn't serving a constructive purpose, then I don't see any reason for it," she said.
BvLYNN BYCZYNSKI
Staff Reporter
Trials begin tomorrow for five of 16 persons charged with misdemeanor offenses after being arrested in January for the Creek nuclear power plant near Burlington.
But the charges the defendants will face in Coffey County District Court will not be the same charges originally filed against them. The judge has instructed that the original charges and the new charges.
Last week, the original charge of criminal trespass, a class A misdemeanor, which carries a maximum fine of $500 and 30 days in jail, was dropped.
Three other charges, including a more serious offense of temporary deprivation of property and two lesser traffic violations, are charged in connection with incidents in place of the criminal trespass charges.
Temporary deprivation of property, a class A misdemeanor, is punishable by one year in prison.
DENNIS HAWVER, an attorney for the defendants, said the charges were changed because "the criminal trespass charge would not stick in court.
"We fired a brief that brought out the fact that my clients had a right to be on a county road," Hawer said. The protesters were calling for the authorities to reactor vessel to the Wolf Creek plant.
Coffee County prosecutor Phillip Fromme agreed that he be amended the charges rather
than argue about the defendants' right to be on the road where it intersected the railroad
"I think I have a better case. I have to try them so I thought I'd try them the best way I could."
Bill Beems, a Lawrence senior who is one of the defendants in the case, said the new charges "only show that they had to prosecute us."
FROMME AGREED that was the intent of the new charges.
"I'm not out to get these people. I just wanted to show them that they had done some wrong and point out the law to them," he said.
According to Hawver, the defendants declined an offer by the prosecutor's office to plead guilty to one of the lesser charges and avoid a trial.
Although the Kansas Natural Guard members are determined to go to court, they said they would not be able to "put them on trial," as they had originally intended.
Beeams said. "We won't be able to use it as our main defense. But it will still be uncommon."
Jury selection will begin at 9:30 a.m.
tomorrow, followed by the beginning of the
nation's elections.
The legal expenses of the defendants are being paid by the Wolf Creek Support Fund, which raised $2,000 through benefit dances, dinners and shows since the Jan. 12 arrests.
Students classify social-life interests
By ELLEN IWAMOTO Staff Reporter
Even when surrounded by about 23,000 students, finding a date or trying to get to know someone can be frustrating. but a few students have obtained results by advertising for friends or lovers in the newspaper.
The phrase "Everything you wanted to know about sex" was used in an advertisement that ran in the Kansas for about three days. Jeff Berkley, Tescott senior, said yesterday that he had met a woman who calls from persons who had seen the ad.
Berkley said that the number of calls from men and women were split evenly. Although a few of the callers were obliterated, said most of the people were just curious.
Berkley said that he did not buy the ad himself, but he said he thought some of his friends placed the ad as a practical joke.
Another student said a friend had played a similar joke on him, but he recalled the incident as the ad appeared in the Kansan only one day, but he received about 15 phone calls.
"IM ALMOST SURE it was some friends of mine, but I still don't know who," he said.
One student advertised in the paper because he was unable to get the nerve to ask a woman he saw at a football game for a date.
"I didn't think it would be proper to blatantly ask if I knew her from somewhere," Rick Younger, Kansas
City, Kan., junior who placed the ad, said.
YOUNGER SAID about 10 persons had answered the ad. About of them were serious, he said, but there were a few silly calls from women.
Mike Patterson, Wellington senior,
said he was not sure of the results he
got from his ad, which appeared this month
in the Kansas, because he was not at
a job when the ad appeared in the paper.
But he still said he had with one of
the women who had called him.
Younger said he never saw the woman again, but he was still very serious about finding her.
Younger's ad included the location of the woman's seat and a description of her in his ad, but he said he never found her.
Patterson said he first thought of the idea of running the ad from a class assignment, for which he was supposed to write a classified ad.
Patterson's ad began with, "Hi, want to be my friend for life?"
"I didn't have anything to sell, so I wrote this personal ad," he said. "Later on, I thought why not run it and see what happens."
PATTERSON SAID he had seen the same type of ad in other places and he had a lot of encouragement from his friends.
"They've even been asking me to write an ad for them," he said.
"It is kind of a joke," he said, "but secretly you're interested in what will happen."
Patterson said he was pleased with his results and said he saw no reason why he would do it again.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Vol.89,No.113
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, March 20. 1979
Group wants meeting on S. Africa
By LAURIE WOLKEY
Staff Renarter
Todd Seymour, president of the Kansas University Endowment Association, said yesterday that if board members wanted to be interviewed, they were charged with the KU Committee on South Africa.
Seymour received a letter from the committee yesterday requesting a meeting with the Endowment Association's 60-member board of trustees, which is responsible for determining the association's policies.
"I am going to send a copy of the letter to
each trustee and see what they direct me to do," he said.
For the last year, the committee has urged the Endowment Association to divert from companies which trade with South Africa and from the country's racially segregated system.
COMMITTEE MEMBERS met with Seymour on March 7, but according to a committee news release, Seymour answered most of the group's questions."
Laird Oick, spokeswoman for the committee,
said, "It is imperative that we meet are-
nals and get them involved."
Association cannot just keep sweeping its moral responsibilities under the rug, out of sight.
"The trustees may want to reconsider their investments once they know more about the oppressive apartheid system in South Africa and once they appreciate the key role American businesses play in building and strengthening that system."
Of the Endowment Association's 60 trustees, more than 40 live in Kansas.
The committee's news release said, "A nationwide campaign has been mounted to raise awareness of the threat."
to disinvest from companies and banks operating in South Africa.
Oke said, "Seymour's position betrays ignorance about the realities of South Africa."
"Several dozen universities have already changed their investment policies so as to bring pressure on U.S. corporations to pull out of South Africa."
The committee's release also said that the committee would "be considering further peaceful means to persuade the Endowment Association to sell its shares in companies and banks that give support to South Africa's apartheid regime."
Gallery security system needed, artists say
Staff Reporter
Art and design faculty and students still say that they need a security alarm system in their classrooms. Arts Building, even though a Kansas House committee earlier this month denied funds
By RHONDA HOLMAN
"It's a real problem to some people who show small objects, particularly jewelry." Lois Greene, assistant professor of design, said yesterday.
“Your materials are ternrily expensive and if a piece is lost or stolen, it’s gone. It’s not easy to get them.”
So far, no pieces of art exhibited in the gallery have been stolen.
Greene said that there was a security guard in the gallery from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., but that an alarm system was needed to detect the exhibits when the gallery was closed.
IN DECEMBER, four graduate students
in jewelry and silversmiths exhibited their work in a locked safe in the gallery and hung photocopies of their art work on the wall above the safe. A letter above the safe said: "We, the undersigned, do hereby proudly display our art. It is a pity that you, the viewer, cannot see our painstaking efforts. Due to lack of security, insurance proper display facilities, the pieces below have been secured in this safe."
Ron Hinton, Lawrence graduate student,
one of the four who arranged the
exhibit.
"All of the graduates have to have master's thesis exhibitions," Hinton said. "Naturally the school would like us to use the new gallery and we would, too, but there is no security system. We can go elsewhere with insurance and security but we don't want to."
"We just want to draw attention to the fact that it's a nice gallery, but that to the people around us is much more important."
Hinton also said that jewelry and oliversmithing work should be exhibited in
The Art and Design Gallery has only one glass case, he said.
PETER THOMPSON, associate dean of fine arts, said no bids for the security project had been taken but that one firm had obtained them. The would cost $4,000 without installation.
No estimates of installation cost were available.
"It's really essential to have a good security system," Thompson said. "We couldn't borrow work for a show of any value in value there without any insurance."
The Kansas Union and the Heilen Foreman Spencer Museum of Art usually insure shows exhibited in their galleries, but this year the Art and Design Gallery has been insured.
"We only insured the opening show that
included several thousand dollars worth of artwork. For that show, we had a 24-hour stock room. We were also Association paid for the insurance. If people are satisfied with the security system, inquire about it.
Thompson said money to fund the system was included in a request that the University be authorized to spend more than $200,000 in excess fee collections caused by the fall enrollment. The request was turned down by the House Ways and Means Committee.
The failure to approve the request this year would postpone the alarm system until at least the 1980-81 school year. Thompson said that other areas needed more attention.
"Right now there are several other things we have to work on like areas where children can learn about teaching programs," Thompson said. "Things like an alarm system are fairly clear."
Just joggin'
Sunshine and spring fever have combined lately, bringing many people outside for rest or exercise. This jogger enjoyed yesterday's warm afternoon with a jog around Potter Lake.
位
2
Tuesday, March 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports
Knesset to begin treaty debate
JERUSALEM-Ebate on President Carter's treaty between Israel and Egypt is to begin today in the Israeli Parliament and a vote is expected by
The treaty is expected to be endorsed by at least 100 votes in the 120-member Knesset, the Israeli parliament.
Prime Minister Menachem Begin is to sign the treaty in Washington with European President Awarid Sawat sometime after the Knesset vote.
The Israeli Cabinet voted 15-2 yesterday to approve the treaty after a five-hour debate.
Meanwhile, Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman said yesterday in Washington that he and U.S. Defense Secretary Harold Brown have agreed that the United States should withdraw from the Middle East.
Wezman predicted the peace treaty would be signed next Monday.
The aid mainly would be used to finance the construction of two new air bases in Israel to replace two bases that the Israelis would give up in the Sinai under
Wozman met with Brown and Egyptian Defense Minister Kanal Hasan Ali in Washington to determine the details of an Israeli withdrawal from the Sinai.
170 killed in Iranian uprising
TEHRAN, Iran—At least 170 persons were killed yesterday in fighting between Kurdish rebels and forces of Iran's revolutionary government, Radio
A ase- fire was arranged by the military and leaders of the rival Sunni and Shite Moslem sects.
The Kardis overran the military headquarters in Sanandaj, 250 miles west of Telkan, and captured its commander.
In street fighting, the Kurds seized police headquarters and the radio and television stations in the town.
The cause of the 24 hours of fighting remained unknown.
Some reports said military and Shiite leaders had refused to issue arms and ammunition to Kurds, most of whom belonged to the Sunni sect, but had issued
Another report and the town's Islamic revolutionary council, loyal to the Ayatollah Ruhailah Khomeini's government, had appointed Shlites to top civil
Workers take Silkwood side
OKAHLA CITY -Karen Silkwood was concerned that employees of the Kerr-Mee nuclear plant where she worked were not taking her seriously because she had been very ill.
The workers testified in the federal court trial of an $1.15 million damage suit brought by Silkwood's family against the McKern-George Nuclear Corp.
Nairoel Noel, who worked with Silkwood in a laboratory at the plant, said she also was concerned about material that was unaccounted for and health safety.
Another witness, William Apperson, testified that although he was hired as a maintenance man, he did welding work on overhead pipes that carried water.
The suit alleges that Kerr-McGee was negligent, which caused Silkwood to become contaminated with plutonium shortly before she died in a Nov. 13, 1974, accident.
Both witnesses testified that no one at the plant told them that heavy doses of radiation could cause cancer.
Noel was the first plaintiff witness called after Silkwool and Kerr-McGee attorneys not privately with U.S. District Judge Frank Thes for nearly five years. (AP)
Camp staff testifies in Hart trial
PHYOR, Okla. — Camp staff members testified yesterday about the discovery of the bodies of three girl Scouts at Camp Scott, Okla., in the trial of Gene Leory
Dee Ann Elder, a camp counselor, said the girls were seen talking in their tent only hours before their bodies were found in sleepy bags.
Doris Denise Miller, 10, Michelle Guse, 9, and Lori Lee Farmer, 8, were killed June 13, 1977, during their first night at the营.
Yesterday's session opened with defense attorney Garvin Isaacs filing a series of pretrial motions with District Judge William J. Whistler.
Whistler overruled a request for the dismissal of the jury, but will wait to decide whether to allow testimony by a former collateral of Hart or the in-
judiciary.
In his opening statement, Isaacs told the jury that Hart left the Camp Scott area 10 days before the slayings and returned four days after they occurred.
Isaacs also said that law enforcement officers may have planted or doctored evidence at an Oklahoma county where Hart was arrested 10 months later and at
Court hears redistricting plan
TOPEKA--After listening to more than one hour of arguments, the Kansas Supreme Court took under inspection yesterday a plan to reposition the 40 candidates.
Attorney General Robert T. Stephan and five others made personal presentations to the court concerning the map, which was assailed by some as a
Stephan, in his first personal appearance before the court, presented the detailed account of the Senate redistricting and explained relevant federal and legislative actions.
A 1974 constitutional amendment requires the redistricting of both the House and the Senate to be based on a fair review of any such plan agreed to by the legislature and signed into law by the Governor.
Death bill amendment reected
TOPEKA—The Kansas House yesterday refused to pass a Senate amendment that took death out of the death penalty bill.
The Senate amendment, which was passed Thursday, replaced the provision for death with a mandatory life sentence with no possibility for parole.
However, House members disagreed with the amendment and sent the bill to a conference committee to work out a compromise.
Frey told legislators he thought capital punishment was more humane than life imprisonment.
a conference committee to work on a compass. State Rep. Robert Frey, R-Liberal, author of the original House death penalty bill, joined the committee.
Some legislators, although they agreed with Frey, said they doubted that a death penalty bill would pass the legislature this session.
"The Senate's not going to have a death penalty bill and it's not going to have a new Senate in two years," State Rep. Benoit Wochita, Wichita, said.
Mondale to endorse Watkins
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Vice President Walter Mondale will speak at two events tonight to boost the mayoral campaign of Dr. Bruce Walkins.
Monalea's visit has been criticized by Watkin's opponent, Richard L. Berkley, as violating the nonpartisan spirit of the election.
Mondale will speak at a $1000-a ticket cocktail party and reception at the Radisson Mushbach hotel. The vice president will speak later at a birthday party.
Mondale will return to Washington after spending only a few hours in Kansas City.
Weather
Skies will be mostly cloudy with a 50 percent chance of showers. Temperatures will be in the lower to mid 50s.
Da
Check the Lawrence Daily Entertainment Guide in the
DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO TONIGHT?
Starts
Wed. March 21st
IN CONCERTI NORMAN BLAKE and THE NEW GRASS REVIVAL
March 21 Wednesday 3.50 in advance 4.50 at the door
Thursday 22nd KEGGER NIGHT!!
FREE BEER! from 8:00 HI!
Midnight!
Ladies - 2.00 Men - 3.00
Special Mystery Guesses!?
Friday 23rd
Direct from Mashville Tennessee
TENNESSEE PULL BONE
Saturday 24th
Chris Fritz & KY102 present special
showcase
GRAND MAX and WAKEFIELD
The Lawrence Opera House
Summer Orientation Program 1979 STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too. Call 864-4358.
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
. . . knowledge of University programs & activities
. . . leadership abilities
... interpersonal communication skills
. . . enthusiasm about program
... student in good academic standing
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ADMISSIONS & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL APPLICATIONS DUE BY FRIDAY, MARCH 23
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 20, 1979
3
Doobies to play concert at KU
The Doobie Brothers, an international recording group, will appear in concert at 8 p.m. Friday, April 27, in Allen Field House. They will present a special events chairman, said yesterday.
Tickets for reserved seating for KU students will go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday at UW-Madison.
Tickets for the public will go on sale
atkids at kirk's Discount Records and
Sports Authority.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Student tickets will be limited to 10 to a buyer, but block seating is available.
The concert is being produced by SUA and Fayline Productions, Denver, Colo. and Pasadena, Calif.
On Campus
TODAY: MARINE CORPS OFFICER
SELECTION OFFICER will be in booth 1 of the Kansas Union from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. to interview persons interested in the Marine Corps program. A GERONULTOLOGY program will be held at 1:30 p.m. in Alcove D of the University, Jill Quadragan, assistant professor of sociology and assistant director of the campus gerontology center, will speak at 12:15 p.m.
SOFTBALL MANAGERS MEETINGS will be in Johnson's south gym. Recreation department will have "A" and "A" League managers meet at 6 p.m.
KARATE CLUB will meet from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. in the Johnson south gym. VISTING ARTIST SERIES featuring Paul Doktor playing the viola will be at Swartwout on Friday, May 26. LAMBDA SIGMA will meet at 9:15 p.m. in the International Room of the union.
ALEXANDER W. ASTIN, author and authority on student attrition and retention, will speak on "Combatting the Attrition Problem" at #8 in the Forum Room of the U.S. Army Academy.
TOMORROW, INTRAMURAL GOLF
ENTRANCE FROM 4 a.p.m. to
SANDY'S GREETING MARKER SUMMER
12
TONIGHT: TAIU SGA meets at 7 for class and election of officers next year. KU
league will be at 5:18 p.m. in the Robinson south gym. VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE by the American Bar Association / Law Student Division will be available from 6 to 9 p.m. in the legal aid Hall, GREEN HALL, Green Hill J. WILLIAM SCHOFP, college faculty and the University of California-Los Angeles will speak on "Precmabian Life: A Late Look at Earliest Evolution," at 7 p.m. in 432 Lindley Hall. SIERRA CLUB MEETING will be held in the Regional Room of the KU GUNG PU CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Johnson, KU HANG GLIDING CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 2002 Learned Hall.
Registration For The K.U.
CTRATIO WRIKE BLOOD (INMARB)
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NOT FOR SALE
sua films
(1955)
Tuesday, March 20 INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS
Dir Don Siegel, with Kevin McCarthy, Dana Wynter, Sam Peckinpah as the gas meter reader. This print restores the film to its original intended form before its first release. Compare this with Paul Greengrass' released film with Donald Sutherland.
INVADERS FROM MARS
Wednesday, March 21
Dr. William Cameron Menzies, with driver Carter Jimmie, junior drivers Tamira Humphries in earthlings' brains. Told from the viewpoint of a little boy who is the only child.
ALEXANDER NEVSKY
(1938)
L'AVVENTURA
Dir Sergel Eisenstein, D. I Vassilev. One of the greatest fights of all of WWII was between the Germans and Russia was invaded by a German army in the 13th century, USSRs Krieg. The Soviet Union won.
Friday & Saturday,
March 23-24
COUSIN COUSINE
Thursday. March 22
Jean-Charles Tacchella with Victor Lanou, Marie Christine Barrau, Marie-France Pisier, Guy Marchland, Francesubtitles.
Dir. Michelangelo Antonioni, with
Monica Vittori. Gabrielle Ferzetti.
The film that made Antonioni famous. Italy/subtitles.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless other noted $15 admission
Midnight Movie
THE ROCKY HORROR
PICTURE SHOW
Dir. Jim Sharmar, with Tim Curry, Susan Sarandan, Meat Loaf. There will be only two shows, two shows, and four tickets early to be assured a seat.
Place an ad
Call 864-4358
All films M R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
Blood Drive
(1975)
will be held on March 20 - 22
In front of Wescoe Hall
from 11:00 am to 3:30 pm on those days.
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We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with KU students.
V7LA
magnifier charge
IN AUCTION
INTERESTED PEOPLE TO SIGN UP FOR COMMITTEES
WANTED
The Free University is an organization that serves as a clearing house for volunteer instructors in the Lawrence-KU community. It offers as well, an opportunity for students to enroll in academic and non-academic courses.
Besides putting together each semester's curriculum, we are also organizing several one day seminars on a variety of topics. We have a lot of room for new ideas and improvements on old ones.
Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of Orienteer Kansas, Mt. Oread Bicycle Club, and the KU Sailing Club as well as many special outdoor events. We need people to help out in all areas.
sua outdoor recreation
iR
indoor recreation
Chess, Table Tennis, Bridge, Backgammon, Football, Go Arm Wrestling and Quarterback Club.
New ideas are always for other indoor recreational activities.
We're looking for people to help coordinate these events and others.
Come in and apply.
Fine Arts
films sua
The Fine Arts area of SUA acts to supplement the 'arts activities' of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for staging workshops, performances and exhibits in any of the arts areas . . . literature, art, drama, music, and dance.
We are looking to expand the wide variety that we already have which includes: Popular series, Summer series, Midnight series
Just like the big shows downtown, only better because we offer so much more and for a lot less.
SPECIALEVENTS
Special Events involves a lot of students when it comes to promoting a show, security, ushers, hospitality and stage and light crews are areas that must be included.
We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands. One of our specialities is the outdoor concerts that include several groups and lasts as long as six hours.
Check us out and see what you can do to help.
SUA TRAVEL
Past trips begin to Padre Island, Vail, Appalachian Trail, the Kentucky Derby and many other places.
Creative minds are needed to promote these programs and develop new ideas.
SUA Travel offers a unique, less expensive way to travel for the KU student.
FORUMS
ideas, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all a part of SUA Forums.
The Forums committee brings nationally recognized people to the University for stimulating and thought provoking programs. We also keep in touch with people on campus and in the local community who have something to save to a University audience.
We need innovative people like you to help us with our people programs.
pr public relations
SUA Public Relations is responsible for promoting the image and activities of our programming board to the students and the University community. Anyone with creative ideas for promoting SUA is encouraged to apply.
This coming year's activities includes fall and summer orientation and the Madigal Dinner.
EXPERIENCE IS NOT A NECESSITY HOWEVER INTEREST IS REQUIRED MARCH 30 IS THE SIGN UP DEADLINE, SO DON'T DELAY. FOR MORE INFORMATION, STOP BY THE SUA OFFICE IN THE KAN-
SAS UNION
OR CALL
864-3477
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
This summer Parsons offers you the opportunity to paint on the Rive Gauche, explore the pre-historic caves of the Dordogne region of France and study interior design at the Musée des Arts Decoratifs.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Parsons in Paris is a six week summer session designed to provide art students with a broad exposure to the rich heritage of art and design in France. Courses offered this summer include:
Parsons nParis
this summer include.
- drawing
Drawing
Advanced Studio
The Writer Among Artists
French Painting from
* Neoclassicism to Surrealism
French History
French Language
The History of French Fashion
The History of French Architecture*
Sculpture Interiors and the
* Decorative Arts*
Landscape Painting *
*In collaboration with the Musée des Arts Decoratifs.
$^{\textcircled{1}}$Special two-week sequence in the Dordogne region, site of prehistoric caves.
For full information write:
Parsons School of Design,
66 Fifth Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10011.
attn: Dean Salvian
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
MARCH 20,1979
Fuel sources needed
It comes as no surprise to find that the Office of Technology Assessment has warned that the cost of importing petroleum could be crippling to the economy within two years.
And it is almost common knowledge that in order to meet American demand OPEC countries would have to double their petroleum production by the year 2000, a prospect that the assessment office claims is "technically doubtful."
What all of this means, again according to the office, is that this shortage of petroleum will "pose a serious threat to our continued reliance on the automobile as the predominant mode of personal transportation."
BUT YOU WOULDN'T know it from the actions of government and private industry.
The office has suggested several courses of action. One is to ration gasoline or to dramatically increase its price. But rationing would be a cumbersome process, ripe with the potential for inequities and mismanagement, while large price increases would only put more economic pressure on an already overburdened public.
However, it has already suggested another option, namely a government program designed to produce research into alternative automobile fuel sources and to provide incentives for private business to switch to those sources.
If there is not going to be enough petroleum to meet our gluttonous need for gasoline (and there isn't), and because there is little chance of changing the American dependence on the automobile, then government and industry must get to work on other solutions.
BUSINESS IS not known for turning its back on a good thing, or even a passable thing, and as long as there is petroleum available to turn into gasoline, automakers will continue to churn out cars requiring gasoline, whether that is beneficial to society or not. It's good business.
It's not only desirable. It's absolutely necessary.
So the government has to provide incentives for the private sector to change its ways. Considering their are 66 million cars in use today, a figure that should reach 90 million by 1991, incentives are badly needed.
BUT ONE of the kingpins of the automobile industry, General Motors, while acknowledging the accuracy of the report, has suggested that the problem be tackled through "the workings of the free market system." Obviously, General Motors didn't acquire its current position of power through any anti-capitalist talk.
But while the cooperation of private industry will be very necessary if fuel alternatives are to be discovered, it is entirely doubtful that a switch would be made by private industry without strong government incentives.
Attempt to avoid cliche goes down the drain
The *Achilles'* heel of many writers and others throughout the ages has been the use of the cliche—that trite word or phrase. The word is a last resort to tug the grip on a sentence.
**grammarians for years have etched in bronze the rule of avoiding the use of clutches, which like so much baggage, are a waste of space and should be left out.**
Not by any stretch of the imagination has the use of such jargon by the supposedly educated subsidied. All too often, in the use of clichés has fallen on deaf ears.
*n rest than no time, the legislature began to seek out information on the prevalent use of cliches, as a result, drew the line for good grammar, at least that
In a move to head off the problem of the cliche, members of the Oregon Legislature decided to clear the air of banning larson for a week recently.
Keeping the lid on lichen usage will be a tough task and it remains to be seen whether such words can be swept under the rus.
SAID THE committee report: "Many words and phrases are used so frequently that they have ceased to convey meaning of any kind."
A House ad hoc committee on the Suppression of Jargon issued a report on the "cliche syndrome" and the use of bureaucratic dialogue, and concluded often used words do not make a lick of sense to insult the intelligence of legislators.
No doubt, the action by the Oregon Legislature is a step forward to proper usage of grammar, but one wonders
N.
Philip Garcia
whether we can close the gap between bureaucratic gobbledygook and simple English.
Before we rush headlong into any proposals or moratoriums against use of this jargon, one must realize grammarians face an unkill battle.
THE COLD FACTS are that in today's world, people don't want to rock the boat so they speak in a manner we have no earthly idea about. It seems to boil down to the fact that bureaucrats do not want words that may throw light on the subject.
Thus, "as of the buzzwords," as Philip Broughton, a U.S. Public Health Service service, calls them, are common and often have been used when we haven't the slightest understanding of.
Phrases such as "systemized logical projection"; "functional digital programming"; "compatible reciprocal options"; "total organizational time-phase"; and monitored time-phase" are sprinkled into program proposals throughout the land.
In order to correct the situation, teachers and grammarians may have to teach the students how to wipe on their students. By the same token, those of us who have received our education should be on the lookout for gobblegooky and avoid their use.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USPS 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday by *The University of Kansas Student Services Department* and held on Sundays paid at lawrence, Kansas 6904). Subscriptions be paid $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, passed through the student bank.
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanman, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, RS 6045
Barry Massey Editorial Editor John Whitesend
Managing Editor Dick Seimel Mary Hoenke
Assistant Campus Editor Andrea Campbell Carol Hunter, David Link
Assistant Campus Editor Gareth Crowley
Special Sections Editor Matters Edwards Sandy Herd
Sports Editor Jonasse Sports Editor John Tharp
Associate Editor Linda Finestone, Paula Southerland, Joan Lockhart
Wire Editors Cydni Hughes, Barb Koring, Caroline Trowbridge
Editorial Writers Mary Erurt, Philip Garcia, Veron Smith, Jake Thompson
Staff Writers Lan Laneumburger, Jake Connault, Leon Unch, Dan Winter
Business Manager Karen Wenderott
Retail Sales Manager Bret Alman
National Advertising Manager Bret Miller
Classified Advertising Manager Kitty McKahan
Assistant Advertising Manager Dearne McKahan
Advertising Make-up Manager Jeff Kjoux
Skiff Artist Grant Kjoux
Steff Photographer Dana Kayler
Tearsheets Manager Dana Kayler
Sales Newspaper Brenda Paxton, Cindy Ray, Allen Reynolds, Joanne Smutty
General Manager Rick Draper
Advertising Adviser
Rick Draper
Pier 1 eyesore sign of city's apathy
At Eighth and Massachusetts streets is a garage, deep trench, partly filled with murky water and surrounded by scattered piles of jagged mortar, bricks and shattered metal. About the lot is a four-foot wire mesh fence to keep the public off the uneven ground.
These are the grim reminders of a gas explosion that bleap a building containing the Pier 1 Imports store in December 777, killing two men who lived in an apartment above it. Much of the original debris is, but nothing has been done with the land.
And according to the landowner and city officials, nothing will be done very soon.
Jake
Meanwhile, the lot continues to collect trash thrown by the passing public, who take advantage of the city's only downtown garbage dump.
A S D AUMP, the lot serves well, collecting beer can, cans, pieces of paper, scraps of wood and miscellaneous trash. But as part of the aesthetic quality of the city, the lot is an ugly blemish. Something should be done soon, but city officials are taking a soft
Dianne M.
Thompson
stand on the issue and the landowner, Dale Kearney, is no hurry to build.
Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager, recently said the city had no power to force building on the lot and could only write letters to the landowner encouraging action.
"There are no ordinances we can enforce because it's private property. There's no legal obligation to planning to build on it sometimes in the future and we're encouraging that,"
Considering that responsibility, the Pier I lot is a glaring example of the city's lack of effectiveness. They have not acted because they have not been required to.
City Commissioner Marnie Argersinger summed up city and public sentiment and offered a suggestion, saying, "It's one of the ugliest sites in it and town is right downtown." It may be hard to find cases where you just wish the city could go in and order something to be done or else
The city's wait-and-see posture is unacceptable. The lot has remained empty for more than a year and is now collecting trash. Surely, city officials do not want to be known for having one of the very few and perhaps the only city center dump.
It is time for city officials to push the land-
owner for preliminary building or take the
property.
HER SUGGESTION should be heeded by officials because Kearney recently said he would not begin construction until he had a definite plan with financial backing. Reportedly, he is in the process of negotiating with possible tenants for offices or a complex, but has no projected date for completion of construction, or even a date to begin.
threaten to improve the property ourselves."
So it could be months before anything changes at 745 and 747 Massachusetts. That would be in addition to the year that they added since the blast that created the blight.
The dark hole at Eighth and Massachusetts streets is a reminder of death, but its unchanging character demonstrates the lack of concern by city officials for the apology of a city official who is job to keep the city clean and their challenge is to attempt to further beautify it.
the lot and making it safe for passersed
traders. But they are disregarding their duty
as public officials to maintain the aesthetic
appearance of the city.
Kearney has had enough time to begin preliminary building. He owned the land that housed Pier 1 and, according to Douglas County deed records, became legal owner of the adjacent lot July 25, 1978. Obviously, he is protecting his financial interests and also is under no pressure from the city, which allows him further compacency.
CITY OFFICIALS claim they have fulfilled their legal obligation by cleaning up
One look at the Pier 1 lot shows they are not fulfilling that responsibility, or even making a mistake.
IT'S AMAZING WHAT YOU CAN BUILD YOURSELF THESE DAYS IF YOU GET HOLD OF THE RIGHT MAGAZINE.
To the editor:
Kansan buried Rock Chalk coverage
One of the most tragic and most disheartening aspects of life is not being accepted as a person with the skills to accompany with an almost religious fervor. I say this because of the many disillusioned students at the University of Kansas that must be saying, "All is not fair in jour-
The University Daily Kansan is the medium through which the events that occur on this campus are publicized. However, it is a sad day when the tradition of displaying this book of this campus for years is hidden in the FIFTH page of our great newspaper.
After this betrayal I must believe that the words "Rock Chalk" are merely words in an incantation used by the Spirit Squand at our exciting football and basketball games. I have never been so shocked and dismayed by their performance, given the gigantic headline that it received.
At first I heard people say that the reporters on the staff were anti-Greek and that the treatment was to be expected; but I dismissed any such childish and archaic remarks. The only one is not one of the best collegiate papers in the nation because it allows personal biases.
The Kanaan should give equal space to Rock Chak in light of its importance in the mythology.
But even more frustrating and enigmatic were three absences: 1) the total deletion of the Beta Theta Pi and Pibeta Skit 2) the omittance of the best overall performance's 3) the absence of any photo pertaining to any skit performed by the competitors.
I am not complaining because of anything as tribute as "Our house didn't get enough money to buy the house we presented equally in the article that ALL students (this year happened to be all-Greek, in contrast to last year) were not given the due payment, I credit deserved in an overall estimation.
We have seen Darnell Valentine's picture so many times that one would tend to think that he is wanted by the law. I am not saying Val doesn't deserve it, but the fame of the Rock Chalk would be a thing. They would like to have fond memories of Rock Chalk, not bitter or dish恳然 ones.
The actors and producers gave up enormous chunks of time and made many personal sacrifices in order to represent their living groups and to uphold the Rock Chalk tradition. A lot of heart and sweat are combined in every performance.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
compete, thereby assuring the high quality in this fine tradition. This year the audience was more than satisfied with the performances—Rock Chalk is a helfova bargain.
I hope this letter is taken in the spirit it was intended: to preserve the valour and tradition of our faith, to nurture the more important who are the fiber of that tradition. It would be a shame if the Kanas is compromising journalistic integrity in favor of prejudices. Say it ain't so.
Jeff Mount
Winfield sohpomore
Unskilled teachers irritating, ineffective
To the editor:
This is my second semester at K.U., although I have previously earned a bachelor's degree and have studied at several other colleges. In general, I am satisfied with the academic environment here, where my classmates, but I am problem that has developed, and may continue to develop, that causes me some frustration.
There are some courses in various departments that are being taught by people who are not qualified to be teaching high school level courses and certainly not college level courses. Some of them have not or will not have little or no teaching experience.
They may apply a great deal of effort and be sincerely interested in providing an adequate learning experience for their students, but their skills in doing so are
How would the community react to having its children in public schools taught by people without college degrees and without teacher certification? The parents of students at KU would also react quite unfavorably.
When students arrive on campus, they expect to be taught by a highly educated, high-quality teaching staff. They have a strong emphasis on this right being violated in some cases.
The academic status of a university is partly based on the credentials of the teaching staff. Students choose a university that offers courses in education the education they will receive.
I would venture to say that some unknown
percentage of students who are dropping out of school every semester could attribute some of their learning difficulties and frustrations to encounters with teaching assistants who are not really able to apply optimum teaching techniques.
I see two possible explanations, and I am sure that there are those who could provide others. One explanation blames members of the administration for the individual basis. The other explanation blames the educational system that has developed through the efforts of no one.
I must eliminate the first explanation. My own observations indicate that individuals in the administrative and teaching staffs often work with people who definitely have a full work load.
I believe that the problem lies in an evaluation environment that encourages us to multimultiple a satisfactory student-teacher ratio and the members of the teaching staff are trying to "make do" with the new curriculum.
There are no simple or expeditional solutions, but the problem does exist and will continue to worsen if measures are not taken. There is a very low education that we can expect at KU will suffer.
In submitting this letter, I hope to make other students more aware of the problem and encourage them to become concerned enough to press for its elimination.
Satanta special student
STATE U.
BY T. M. ASLA
AS YOUR CHIEF OF UH, TRAFFIC AND SECURITY, I WANT TO UH, EXPLAIN WHAT IT IS WE DO TO UH, FOR YOU.
FIRST, WE GIVE OUT LOTS OF TICKETS TO RAISE MONEY FOR MORE PARKING LOTS
AND UH,
SECOND WE SEE TO IT THAT THE STUDENTS DON'T PARK IN THEM SO YOU ALUMS WILL HAVE PARKING PLACES FOR THE HOME GAMES!
STATE ALUMS
"SUGGESTED BY J. A."
AXA
s-y-e
I-o-f-e
s-y-g-t-e-r
d-e-n-t-e
b-e-e-n
Tuesday, March 20, 1979
Admiral Car Rental
Toyota
Firebird
Bush Regal
Monte Carlo
Cutlass Supreme
Mark V
Thunderbird
2340 Alabama
843-2931
5
University Daily Kansan
ENGINEERING GRADUATES:
(AR FOAMS)
ENGINEERING GRADUATES:
AFTER THE B.S. INFO PLANS FOR
GRADUATE SCHOOL / INDUSTRY?
Theresa will be associated with business activities in the software engineering field and will work in a variety of positions, including research and development, management, marketing and sales. She will also travel to various countries throughout the world to conduct her work. Theresa is a graduate of New York University (NYU) and holds a Master's degree in Business Administration from Boston University. She has been working at Microsoft since 2013.
Graduate Engineering Student Internship Program
dean Dean of the Engineering College
The University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131
DON'T MISS
The 360 Days Till St. Patricks Day PARTY
(See, Pat, We didn't forget your B-Day)
光
FRIDAY MARCH 23
at The Brewery
2:30-6:00 pm
Free Beer To Frosh, Soph. & Jr.
Class Card Holders
Class Cards Still Available:
$2.00 Freshman & Sophomores
$4.00 Juniors (Includes class T-shirt)
Luck of the Irish-
First 25 Junlors get beer and shirt for $2.00
First 50 Sophomores get free '81 goblet
HOW CAN YOU REFUSE?
Improve Your Grades
--one two three four five six times times times times
15 words or fewer $ . 00 $ . 25 $ . 50 $ . 75 $ . 90
Each additional 0.00 0.04 0.06 0.08
SCHAUM'S OUTLINE SERIES
Each outline includes basic theory, definitions and hundreds of carefully solved problems and supplementary problems with answers.
ACCOUNTING, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS
Accounting I...$4.05
Accounting II...$4.05
Advertising...$4.05
Bookkeeping & Accounting...$4.05
Preparation to Business...$4.05
Business Statistics...$4.05
College Business Law...$4.05
Accounting...$4.05
Development Economics...$4.05
International Economics...$3.95
Macroeconomics Theory...$3.95
Macroeconomics Funds...$3.95
Microeconomics Theory...$3.95
Personal Finance & Management Economics...$3.95
Management & Management
BIOLOGY
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CHEMISTRY
COMPUTERS
College Chemistry, Sth Ed $3.95
Organic Chemistry $8.95
Physical Chemistry $8.95
Boolean Algebra $5.95$
Computer Science $4.95$
Discrete Mathematics $4.95$
Mathematics with calculus $4.95$
Programming with Fortran $4.95$
Education, PSYCHOLOGY & SOCIOLY
Introduction to Psychology $4.95
Introduction to Sociology (Saving 79) $4.95
Text Items in Education.
ELECTRONICS & ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
ENGINEERING
Electric Circuits $5.95$
Electromagnetics $5.95$
Electronic Circuit $5.95$
Electronic Communication (Spring 79) $5.95$
Engineering Calculations (Spring 79) $5.95$
Feedback and Control Systems $5.95$
Transmission Lines $5.95$
Acoustics $£5.95$
Advanced Structural Analysis $£5.95$
Equations of Engineering $£5.95$
Continuum Mechanics $£5.95$
Describe Geometry $£5.95$
Bearings, Mechanics, 3rd Ed.
Fluid Dynamics £5.95
Fluid Mechanics & Hydraulics £5.95
Heat Transfer £5.95
Largerge Dynamics £5.95
Machine Design $£5.95$
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Mechanical Construction Design $5.95
Monitored Concrete Design $5.95
Monitored Structural Systems $5.95
Strength of Materials, 2nd Ed. $5.95
Strength of Materials, 3rd Ed. $5.95
Theoretical Mechanics $5.95
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FOREIGN LANGUAGES
ENGLISH
English Grammar $3.50
Punctuation, Capitalization & Spelling $3.50
**FRENCH ENGLISHES**
French Grammar $3.95
German Grammar $3.95
Spanish Grammar $3.95
MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS
Advanced Calculus $>$ $6.95$
Advanced Mathematics $>$ $6.95$
Basic Geometry $>$ $4.95$
Basic Mathematics $>$ $4.95$
Calculus, 2nd Ed. $>$ $4.95$
Calculet Algorithm $>$ $4.95$
Complex Variables $>$ $6.95$
Differential Equations $>$ $6.95$
Formal Geometry $>$ $4.95$
Elementary Algebra $>$ $3.95$
Review of Elementary Mathematics $>$ $3.95$
Finite Differences & Difference Equations $>$ $4.95$
Finite Mathematics $>$ $4.95$
College Course Mathematics $>$ $4.95$
Fourth Analysis $>$ $4.95$
General Topology $>$ $4.95$
Group Theory $>$ $5.95$
Linear Algebra $>$ $5.95$
Mathematical Handbook $>$ $5.95$
Matrices $>$ $4.95$
Linear Algebra $>$ $4.95$
Modern Elementary Algebra $>$ $4.95$
Modern Intuitive Differential Equations $>$ $4.95$
Plane Geometry $>$ $4.95$
Probability $>$ $3.95$
Probability & Statistics $>$ $3.95$
Projective Geometry $>$ $4.95$
Real Variables $>$ $5.95$
Geometry & Related Topics $>$ $4.95$
Statistics $>$ $3.95$
Technical Mathematics $>$ $3.95$
Trigonometry $>$ $3.95$
Vector Analysis $>$ $4.95$
A PHYSICAL SCIENCE
Angled Physics 14.95
College Physics 7th Ed. 14.95
Modern Physics 15.95
Modern Physics 15.95
Physical Science 15.95
PHYSICS & PHYSICAL SCIENCE
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826
KU
KANSAN WANT ADS
Associate opportunities, goods, services and employment with a leading company in the U.S. to perform clerical work. Closing date for application is November 20th. MBNGM Billing & Receipt Management Inc.
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
CLASSIFIED RATES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found jets can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. They can ad be placed in person or call the UDX business office at 864-8538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Pre-law students meet with 1st, 2nd, and 3rd
deadline. Pre-law students meet with 1st, 2nd,
and 3rd deadline. March 22, 2017, p. 106 New Green Hall
Zen practice daily 8 p.m. Introductory talks
10 a.m. Intermediate talks
daily retreat March 26, 2017 Lawrence Chapel
Apt. 2 BR and efficiency. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Clean, quiet, and comfortable. 842-956-7180.
FOR RENT
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENTING
FURNISHED, furnished, from $170. Two laundry rooms, large
bedroom, fireplace, dishwasher, interior DOOR BREAKFAST POOL. For appointment call 843-444 or age at 341 Frontier Road. Next door
519-862-5533.
You'll see a Touch of Class
841-5255
842-4455
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most utilities paid. Entrances KU and narrow no. 88-5-39.
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimuthi main office of the Stop. We can look us over or give you a visit. Stop and send you all the details that will make your Hall, 843-8550. 1800 Naimuthi Hall, 843-8550.
Jafrahawk TOWERS Apartments
1603 West 15th
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our
DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
Sacquach 2 bedroom Apt. 115 hh. dat carriage
elevator Eileten Kitchen, $350.00. no.
862-1497
3-23
Sublease Soutbridge apt. April-August 2
furnished $212/mo. Mail: 842-7883 3-23
*
SUNDSKCE
NOW LEASING
All New & Contemporary
Visit our furnished display unit today &
you'll see why the move is to Sundance
Departments. Completely furnished studio.
1 BR. Conveniently located at 7th & Florida
just west of the Sanctuary on KU Bus Route
841 5055
8415255·842.4455
HOUGHTON PLACE: ITS FULL- BUT- BUT- We make it in and more than five months. We attend Aug. 12 and August 13. We will rent for the summer term those spare rooms at Albany, N.Y., and Danbury, 2490 Alabama, 841-5755, 3-25
For Rent 2 HR Apt. Free Laundry, BHUnique 3
2BL from ILK 841-0690 or 842-3027 3-26
Subtitl: 2nd bedroom hatch. Walker-driver, close to
gambling. Available April 1st. Call 843-869-101.
PLEASE ADD A FULLY INFORMED PHOTO TO THIS
SUBTITL.
Boostim wanted. 2 BR / 2 Bath Baby Washer.
Drift, Dilding Gravity Curtains $1280 per month.
Kitchen Set $495 per month.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make sure out of hand! New York City study guide 21. Koi class preparation 23. For exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" available now at Town Hall.
Christian Housing. Now and Summer. Close to
campus at 842.00 per person. 842-6028, between 2
10:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., campus 1591.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
Parts store and exchange units. BELL AUTO-
CORE.
WHY HENT! When you could own this beautiful cottage, you could. Like new appliances, diagonal central ceiling and kitchen cabinets, like new windows, window/water/drain area, 8 toilet seats, started and finished bathroom, storage bins, tree bushes, garden storage/boundry roof, trees, brick building, fireplace, chimney.
Prover: Madrid Mini Glitter with strass, cords,
cardboard, and wrappers. Very good condition.
Cards, cords and wrappers. Very good condition.
Sandpier-60 non-blass are our specialty. Non-
bonded 1021 Mesh, flat, leathery, seasonal
1021 Mesh, 841-573-7977
1978 Harby Davidson Superglide, 0.92 ex perfect,
approximately 4,000 miles. Priced to sell at $68.
(www.harbydavidson.com)
18 Toyota Celica GT Liftback AM/FM stereo
20 Toyota Camry Hybrid AM/FM stereo
414-843-7697 at 11:59 a.m. or p.m.
414-843-7697
66c Schoeners at Louise's every Friday from 2
till 5.
1924 Plym. Duster PB, PSB, AC, auton trans
new tires. Excellent condition. 8441-5411.
7509-4230.
75 Chervoneta Morton Twee Coupe. 35,000 Ml. Standard,
8 oz. (240 g) or 80% of best or oil
not sell "1892" after 8292.
Make someone at home happy with KU Souvenir
packets. Use wash bags, Bound Cursor
Drug Strikes-80 MJ.
Carpet, color red, 11.5" x 17' ft. Stoffmaster Place
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SUMMER OBTENENT STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS. Applications are now being accepted for positions in the following information use, the advertisement in forwards and records. 126 Strong Hall. An equal opportunity employer.
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Daytime parking only at the day-end parking lot. Day-
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SUMMER DORMITMIR COUNSELORS needed for the Upward Housing Program. Provide medical care, and other staff during June and July; salary $900 per month; employment available at 3629 Curry or call 864-351-7633; availability at 3629 Curry or call 864-351-7633.
Walters and waitresses. Variety of hours Delivery Persona Must have own vehicle. Impairment to ability to drive.
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS' needed for Upward Bound School Program students with high school students and staff members' salary of $500 per week. Application form information at 290 Carruth or call 800-641-7000.
Female monitor assigned-Wardt-plan about 10 kyr. to the new office in the building. An individual person C' Windwheel at 841-435 and 672-9282.
Bermuda Johns National Park Co. 31 Parks, 5,000
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Mechanically inclined student to work in small engine shop. Delfinite summer work; can arrange internships with other employers; Salary commensurate with skill level between the workplace and bd or Saturday school. Job offered by HVAC Group.
NOTICE
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6am Schoners and 11pm Pichols every Friday
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4-3
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RICKS HIRD SHOP is now open, 200 Raleigh, NC. (864) 352-1400. RICKS HIRD SHOP, 1032 Vermont, V811-642, tp. quick.report (1032 Vermont, V811-642).
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MARIS'S BARS NIGHT 9:00 PM Wed. $16 65 picture
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OMICRON DELTA KAPPA
Senior honor society
will begin accepting applications March 25.
Look for announcements)
Gay Leland counseling referrals now handled
by KU ITs 844-356-900 or headquarters 844-
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From high up台 the beautiful campus of KU comes the sound of the big bands, the swing bands, and the dance bands. Dick Wright will teach you on Saturday, just after 8 a.m. at 8 c/o Chelsea.
KK-Surprise! Happy 20th birthday. More to
remain? What! More my life, LL. Enjoy
O. J. Happy 24th 2 days late L & K, YLGF 3-20
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REWRITING/EDITING.-Your manuscript, thesis or term paper written in English. Prepare grammar, proofreading, finished work, thoughtinking with precision and smoothness. Outlining of text and articles also available. E-Mail us at rewritings@music.edu.
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Housemate wanted for 5-member cooperative starting April 1. Call 843-2279 for details. 3-28
6
Tuesday, March 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Tennis team ends trip on upswing
By DAVID COLBURN
Sports Writer
Kansas netters rebounded this past weekend from earlier backseats to finish in a four-way tie for second in the men's Big Invitational at Hattiesburg, Miss.
The second-place finish in the 31-team
courtsuit, highlight the spring
bracket lead by New York.
The 'Hawks suffered early losses to the trip to Memphis State and Southwestern Missouri.'1
The defeats,the first ones of the spring for
Lindstrom sets swimming pace
The KU women's swimming team, paced by the all-American performances of Janet Landstrom, scored 21 points in last weekend's national meet in Pittsburgh of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women.
The University of Florida won the competition with 513 points, five more than defending champion Arizona State University.
Kansas' point total was 15 points better than last year's showing, but it was still a bit higher. In Iowa, the team had 16 points.
"I was a little disappointed in our first day performance," Kempf said. "We did not swim as well as we could and we got skunked."
THE JAHYAWKS come back the next day and Lindstrom placed in two events to give the squad all of its 21 points while Diane White scored her second record personal bests in their events.
Lindstrom finished a strong third in the 200-meter freestyle with a time of 1:49.66 to score 18 points and finished 12th in the 100-meter freestyle to score five points. Both finishes qualified Lindstrom as an All-American.
Ellis, who was seeded 50th in the 400-yard individual medley, finished 24th with a time of 2:45.5. McMorrow, seeded 38th in the 50-yard freestyle, also placed 24th, with a time of 25.45. Point were awarded for the top 16 finishes.
THE THREE RELAY teams that had qualified for the nationalists also failed to score points as they placed 18th, 19th and 21st.
To add to the Jayhawk's problems, Lanny Schaffer, who had qualified for four individual events and two relays, swam at less than half-speed because of illness.
Gymnasts take 5th
KU couldn't climb out of the collar and the injury-plugged男's gymnastics team finished fifth for the second straight year in the national championships March 9 and 10 at Norman, Oka.
Golf season begins
Six of 10 KU gymnasts were hurt and the Jayhawks managed to place only one gymnast, Mark Folger, in the finals. Folger was the sole winner of the bar contest with a score of 8.1.
The KU men's golf team ended a long winter layoff by competing in the Pinehurst Intercollegiate Tournament in Pinehurst, N.C., during spring break.
The Jayhawks finished in a tie for 28th place in the 28-tournament with 1,245 team points. Jim Doyle had a three-round score of 244 to lead Kansas entries.
Magley hurt in game
David Magley, KU's freshman basketball forward, re-injured his right shoulder in a pick-up game of basketball Sunday afternoon.
Bob Hill, assistant coach, said yesterday that Miley was taken by ambulance to Robinson Gymnasium. Robinson Gymnasium. Miley tell after grabbing the rim to avoid a collision and landed on his shoulder, which was in a protective shoulder harness he wears while running.
Hill said Magley's shoulder popped out of place. The shoulder was put in place at the hospital and Magley was released wearing a medical brace.
the 'Hawks, were cause for concern for KU coach Tom Kivisto.
"I felt there might be a problem with the team getting up for the next match. From the standpoint that they played probably their tennis of the year and lost," Krvate said.
KIVISTO'S WORRIES proved to be unfortunate. Jayhawks coastal past Mt. Vernon in the Central Michigan District.
Roy Jusserby was KU's to finisher in the Big Gig, taking first place in the No. 6 league.
its final dual match of the tour, losing to powerhouse Nichols State, 6-4.
"I really didn't think I had a chance to win," said Russell, who defeated five opponents.
"I got my serve and volley game going. I was pretty happy with the way I played."
Mark Hosking and Chet Collier, KU's No.
1 doubles play, and Ruysser and Nick Wertz,
the No. 3 duo, advanced the finals of their
team in the World Cup.
Before the trip, Kivisto had predicted that problems would occur in his players' games. But yesterday he had only words of praise for his squad.
"ALL THE DOUBLES are playing better, and we're strong up and down the line," he said. "I think we’re playing the best tennis we've ever played."
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THE MALLS
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For those who help themselves
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J. J. Angelas
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Holiday Plaza
HoursMon.Thurs 10:8-30 Sun 12:30-5:30
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Tuesday, April 3
I'd like information about opportunities with the Glennary Missioners and the free poster.
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Name___
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Urban Plunge: an inner city learning experience.
March 29-31
registration information available at KU-Y 110B Kansas Union
864-3761 or 841-5484
partially funded by Student Senate
GREEK NIGHT at G. P. LOYD'S TONIGHT IS OLY NIGHT
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Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads Call 864-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 89, No. 114
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, March 21, 1979
SHEPHERD WILLIAMS
Staff Photo by BILL FRAKES
Campaian heat
Bruce Watkins, embroiled in the heat of the Kansas City, Mo, mayorial race, got some support from the White House yesterday evening when Vice President Walter
Mondale appeared at fund-raiser and a rally for Watkins. Mondale was in Kansas City for about three hours.
Mondale campaigns in KC race
Rv GENE LINN
Staff Renorter
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Move President Walter Mendenhall flew in to help mayorate candidate Bruce Watkins celebrates his 55th birthday last night.
But Watkins' opponent, Richard Berkley, and his supporters found nothing to celebrate, saying Mondale's visit broke a connection of non-partisan elections in Kansas City.
Mondale, who was in town for about three hours, spoke at a press conference where he talked about the stumping for Watkins and eating some birthday cake at a public rally at the University.
Mondale praised Watkins, who is a city councilman, for working all of his life in Kansas City. He told 800 Watkins supporters who jammed into the Regency Room that getting out to vote was the key to the March 27 election.
Mondale's campaigning for Watkins was not the only evidence of partisan politics at the rally.
sen, romans R; trageton, D-Mno, also spoke in Waltins' behalf and pasters proclaiming "Waltins, the Democrat for Mayer" dotted the walls.
Mondale emphasized the close ties between Walkins and the White House.
"I promise that after Bruce is elected, I'll make the vice president's office the special Bruce Watkins office in the White House," he said.
Mondale also said President Carter would be one of the first to send a congratulatory telegram to Watkins if he were elected mayor.
MONDALE SAID at the press conference that Watkins was the candidate who could make federal programs work most effectively in Kansas City.
This display of partisanship was not out of bounds, according to Tom Reno,
director of public relations in Watkins' campaign
"All the city charter says is that the candidates' party affiliation will not be listed on the ballot," he said.
But Jack Howell, Berkley's assistant campaign manager, said Monday's visit was contrary to a "mixture of law and tradition." He said that for 40 years there had been a "rigid" tradition of non-partisanship in the mayoral election.
"You can't even start the engines on Air Force One for that," he said. "We've estimated that the cost would be about $20 million, and the protection will cost the city about $200,000."
"WE THINK the vice president's time would be better used try to control double-digit inflation or to solve the problems in the Mideast," he said.
He scoffed at Watkins' contention that Mondale's trip would cost about $4,000.
But Reno, who handles publicity for
Watkins, said, "The Watkins campaign has assured the vice president's office that the campaign will pay for all expenses. You don't get anything for free."
He said Mondale's staff had told Watkins' workers the trip would cost from $4,000 to $5,000.
"THE CITY WILL have to pay for the police protection, but that's no different than when the city paid for protection in 1978 and then to hearken by a few years ago." [seen]
The Berkley camp has said Mondale's visit would cause some residents to vide against Watkins because they resented outside interference.
But Mondale said at his press conference that he was not worried about any backlash.
"I thought that over for about 30 seconds, then decided to come," he said. "What America needs is not less involvement in controversy but more."
City annexes ground; rezoning considered
By SHIRLEY SHOUP
In a 1 to 2 vote, the Lawrence City Commission last night annexed land south of Lawrence where a Cleveland developer proposes to build a regional shopping mall.
Staff Renorter
Commissioners who voted in favor of the annexation said the land, 61 acres at Iowa Street and Armstrong Road, should be annexed so the city could control its use.
Commissioner Ed Carter, who voted for the move, did not amuse the land does not stop the mail.
Commissioners Jack Rose and Barkley Clark also to answer to annex the land.
Rose said, "We should annotate it so the city has the control to prevent any undesirable behavior."
He said the city, rather than the county, should decide how the land should be used, and the only way to acquire that authority would be to annex the land.
Because it annexed the land from the county, the city commission now has the
Carter said, "We would be derelent in our duty if we don't take authority."
HE SAID THE PROBE of rezoning could be avoided by denying the annexation request so the city would not have authority to make decisions he thought the city should have the authority.
Mayor Donald Bimbs and Commissioner Mariene Argeringer voted against an extension and said they could not separate the annexation request from the proposed
"I know some would like to annex and hold the line at zoning, but once an area is annexed, it is tamounttion to providing services," she said.
RICHARD ZINN, a lawyer representing the landowners, told commissioners that the land was ready for development and met requirements for annexation.
Argeringer said the commission usually had looked at proposed use when confronted with the issue.
He said the annexation should be considered on the basis of the land's suitability.
Zinn assured the commissioners that the
Opponents, including downtown merchants and Lawrence neighborhood
landowners understood amexation did not guarantee that rezoning would be granted
They said that the proposed use could not be ignored and that a regional shopping mall would be harmful to the downtown area.
JANE ELDREDGE, a spokesman for some downtown merchants, told company officials that the subsidiary only annexation and not possible use, then only the portion of the land above it.
About one-third of the land is in the flood plain of the Wakarusa River.
Some opponents urged the commission to delay action until after the April 3 city election and allow the new commission to make the decision.
The terms of Bims, Rose and Arsengier will expire then and only Bims is running
The developer, Jacob, Visciona, and Jacob Co., requested that the land be rezoned from RS-1, or single family residential, to C4, the broad commercial
THE LAWRENCE-DOUGLAS County Planning Commission could consider the request in April, but it might not consider it until May, according to Landa Finger, a lawyer.
The planning commission is an advisory body to the city and county commissions.
Carter said he did not think the city should regulate the company.
In other business, the commission denied a taxi fare increase to Ward Thompson Jr., as it had done previously.
"We have no control except for setting rates," he said. "There is no way to ensure that we get the money."
Commissioners told Thompson Lawrence taxi forces were the highest in any Big Eight city in the nation, until they were given evidence that it was needed. The company has not had a certified public audit to show a need for an investigation as much as $10,000, according to Thompson.
The commission asked the city staff to study the possibility of totally deregulating
Committee to assume administration of IHP
Staff Writer
By DEB RIECHMANN
The fate of KU's Integrated Humanities Program appears decided.
After more than eight months of committee deliberations, Robert Cobb, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, commandeered amendments concerning the future of HIP.
Under the recommendations, HIP, which offers students an integrated approach to the development of Western civilization, a college program, but a sequence of four courses.
A Humanities Committee would administer all humanities course offerings at UCSF.
The committee would comprise at least seven faculty members and student representatives. It would administer a course, supervise a student and would provide admissible office space.
However, Dennis Quinn, director of HIP calls the recommendations an "administrative liquidation of a popular and successful underclass program."
On March 9, Cobb wrote a letter to Quinn that explained the recommendations he approved and that requested Quinn to transfer IHPs. Hiles to the Humanities Department, who also asked Quinn to send the keys of the keyhouses Wescoe Hall to the committee by June 1.
COBB ENCOURAGED Quinn and John Senior, professor of classics and IHP, to teach the courses or programs offered by the committee.
Cobb said yesterday that he had not received a response from Quinn or Senior about their participation on the Humanities Committee, but Quinn said yesterday that he intended to write a letter to Cobb soon. He then said not know whether he wanted to be a member.
One of the recommendations calls for the appointment of a chairman of the Humanities Committee on the basis of the results and commitment to the humanities studies.
"It may well be that you and your colleagues will wish to be represented on the Humanities Committee itself." Colb wrote with a welcome an expression of your interest.
COBE SAID a chairman would be chosen and the committee would be functioning by next fall. He said he did not know who he was, but they could tell him that he said he was sure he would not be chosen.
"There isn't the slightest chance in the world," Quinn said. "If an atom bomb came along and destroyed all the faculty memoirs of our students except me, Bob Cobb would be the charmman."
"Why would he ask me to turn in my keys June 17. The whole object is to remove me."
Quinn said he was not happy with the formation of the Humanities Committee and he voiced his dissatisfaction yesterday in a press release.
Marcum forsees expansion
'THE RECOMMENDATIONS did not call for the abolition of HIP as an administrative
By BARBARA JENSEN
See IHP back page
Staff Renorter
Although Marcum, director of men's athletics, has plenty of praise for KU's athletes and staff, he said recently he would not be allowed to teach in the facilities at the University of Kansas.
When Bob Marcum dressed up as Santa Claus for the basketball team last Christmas, he had plenty of ideas in his gift bag that he would have liked to offer the KU athletic department. But it will be a few ideas out of the bag.
"A successful program starts with the athlete," he said, "and I can see a definite change from last fall. The students and teachers are all better, better and have a very positive attitude."
Marcus said getting the football program on back sound might be one of his of
And, he said with a smile, he would like to
pull a winning football team out of his bag.
MARCUM STEPED into his position last week, and during a 14- football season he took third place.
"It was expensive," he said, "and it wasn't planned in the budget."
Eight Conference profits from TV contracts and bowl games was larger than expected and would help offset the loss. KU will receive almost $470,000 this year, he said.
Moore was paid $76,320, the full salary
called for is the remaining two years of his
birth.
"The overall attendance at basketball games also helped" he said, "and we're going to keep it going."
MARCUM SAID he was working on an evaluation of KU's athletic program and was recommending changes, but he said he knew when they would be financially possible.
"I think we need a master plan that shows where we're going to be in ten years," Marcum said. "If I could do whatever I wanted, I'd stay and add 7,000 seats to Memorial Stadium."
But Marcum said KU's share of the Big
"Our pre-sale for the Kansas Relays is difficult because the stadium is so large, everyone knows they'll be able to get a ticket," he said. "So everyone waits until the day of the meet to see what the weather is going to do."
He said a track with bleachers equipped to seat 1,500 people would improve ticket sales because people would buy their tickets in advance of the Rales to be assured of a
He said the track needed to be relocated, although he said he thought some people were there.
MARCUM ALSO would like to build a new indoor workout area.
"Sometimes I walk through Allen Field
House and think I'm a打篮球 Brothers circus," he said. "The basketball team is practicing on the court, the track team is working out, other teams are conditioning and there are always a few students who slip in and run on the second or third floor."
If a plan for a merger of the men's and women's athletic departments is implemented, he said he felt the right step for the University to take and that he did not think it would hurt men's non-sports as some participants have feared.
Marcum said the workout area could be built west of Allen Field House, but no details had been discussed. Private conference probably would fund the structure, he said.
"I'M COMMITTED to a total program," he said, "but I don't want to lead people into believing it's going to be Disneyland. Coaches always have hopes and dreams, and they're not going to be able to have everything they want."
He said he thought the women's athletics program was improving, but he did he not think all sports should be financed equally.
"You can't survive by doing one another's laundry," he said. "You need to see what happens."
He said he thought it was necessary to
emphasize the sports that received the most public support.
"BUT I don't have the women's program in my hands right now and I can't what it."
Marcum said some coaches were anxious because they wanted to know what would happen to salaries, scholarships and financing if the two departments merged.
He did say it would be difficult to run a merged program under two different conferences. The men compete under the rules of the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the women are members of Intercollege Intercollegiate Athletics for Women
he said he did not know what the con-
tries would do if the men's and women'-s
would be in line.
"I like to get up early, at least by 6:10 a.m., he said. "I try to get in my 150-at least
When Marcum is not busy with KU athletics, he is trying to keep in shape by doing sports.
"But I don't like to work in the yard. If I could, I'd have a whole Astroturf yard."
"Although ALW has worked very hard to promote women's athletics, I think the team was very supportive."
He said the NCAA had a better organizational structure and bed more
A
Bob Marcum
taff photo by CHRiTODD
2
Wednesday, March 21, 1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansan's Ware Services
Cease-fire ignored by Kurds
SANANDAJ, Iran - Kurdish guerrillas agreed to a new ceasefire yesterday and ended a bloody siege against an Iranian army barricades. By late afternoon, the area had fallen into Israeli hands.
Fighting erupted Sunday, and since then 88 people have been killed and 200 wounded as Kurss battle to win their dream of autonomy.
Kurdish fighters set up roadblocks throughout Sanandaj and were still in control of most of the city as the cease-fire went into effect at sunset.
Iran's deputy prime minister said the government would send reinforcements to Spangda to stop the guerrillas.
Corporate gains leap 26.4%
There was a brief cease fire Monday night, but it ended early yesterday when rebels opened fire on helicopters dropping food to soldiers in the west.
WASHINGTON—Corporate profits increased 20.4 percent last year, the largest annual jump in more than 80 years. The Carter administration termed the
The Commerce Department said yesterday that before-tax profits during the fourth quarter of 1978 were at an annual rate of $225.3 billion, a gain of $19.9 billion above the third quarter and $47 billion above the final three months of 1977.
Alfred Kahn, the administration's chief inflation fighter, said, "The very large increases in profits of American corporations will strengthen the widespread belief that many American businesses aren't assuming their full responsibility to fight inflation."
He said the Council on Wage and Price Stability, of which he is chairman, would publish the names of corporations that had violated the administration's laws.
Irish workers strike for a day
DUBLIN, Ireland - Half a million Irish workers went on strike yesterday to protest high taxes and about 250,000 employees marched in the republic's streets.
The 24 hour strike brought industry in many parts of the country to a standstill, stopped bus and train services, closed many shops and schools, cut elec-
trics.
Strikers were demanding a new tax system to ease the burden on wage earners. They want new tax laws covering banks, the self-employed, exporting companies and others.
Union's say wage and salary earners pay an estimated 17 percent of their income in taxes while farmers and other self-employed people pay an estimated
The country's main employers' organization, the Confederation of Irish Industries, condemned the strike and estimated it could cost the republic about $10 billion.
The strikers estimate that they lost $1 million in pay during the one day strike and that the government lost about $400,000 in tax revenue.
Suit against Schneider uraed
TOPEKA—State Rep Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said yesterday that he thought the state should bring suit against former Attorney General Curt
Glover told fellow members of the Kansas House Ways and Committee it was his understanding that Schneider did not report for work after he was fired.
"He was paid for two months and never showed up." Glover said. "He didn't even file a budget request. And to think he was elected to enforce the law."
William Muir, financial officer during Schneider's term, told Schneider had his staff not to prepare a budget request, but that Schneider "came to the office because of the failure."
A member of the state Budget Division told the House committee that because Schneider did not fit a budget request it was necessary for his successor, Robert T. Stephan, to prepare one. The Budget Division received the request March 7.
Carlin approves tax removal
TOPEKA-Gov. John Carlin said yesterday that he had decided the state could afford to lift its sales tax from most residential utility bills.
Carlin said the estimated $18 million needed to remove the sales tax would come from tax revenues and budgetary cuts.
Although lifting the tax was one of Carlin's campaign promises, he opposed the tax removal earlier because he said he did not know how the state could benefit from it.
He said he supported taking the 3 percent tax off residential electricity, natural gas and water bills, but not off telephone service.
However, Carlin said he would not oppose the Kansas Legislature if it wanted to remove the tax from telephone bills, too.
Bills to remove the sales tax from all utility services for residential consumers has passed the Kansas House and is before the Kansas Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee. The Senate committee is considering whether to amend the bill to include telephone bills.
Death penalty still deadlocked
TOPEKA—A legislative conference committee appointed to compromise on the former death penalty all agreed yesterday that it was deadlocked. Memoirs of the session were read at the end.
Five of the six conference committee members were death penalty supporters. State Sen. Don Allegrucci, D-Pittsburg, was its lone opponent.
Unanimous agreement is required on reports from the first conference committee appointed on a bill. Without Allegrucci's approval, the committee members had no choice but to request a second conference committee be formed.
Any subsequent conference committees for bills do not require unanimous consent of members. Both the Kansas House and the Senate are expected today to adopt the bill.
One Silkwood juror dismissed
Bert Long, a retired mechanic, was dismissed from the jury after he told U.S. District Judge Frank Theis he remembered that he knew three people embezzled from his business.
The corporation is being sued for $11.5 million by Silkwood's family, who claim the woman was dangerously contaminated by nuclear waste before her death.
ORKLAHOMA CITY—The presiding judge in the Karen Silkwalk nuclear contamination case yesterday dismissed a juror who admitted that he knew
Long, who was dismissed after serving three weeks on the jury, was replaced by a clerk-typist employed by the state of Oklahoma.
Jupiter may reveal life forms
The scientist, Bradford A. Smith, said the discovery of very strong bolts in Jupiter's atmosphere indicated highly complex molecules probably forming in Jupiter.
TUCSON, Ariz.-Voyager 1 space probe's discovery of lightning in jupes > a remote possibility that simple forms of life might exist, a project scientist said.
Smith said the molecules would have to in lower levels of the atmosphere because the rest of the planet's atmosphere was in constant motion. "It's actually a bit different," Smith said.
But if there were pockets of the atmosphere that escaped the rapid circulation, concentrations of organic molecules and the possibility of life could exist, he said.
It will be cloudy with a 60 percent chance of rain today and an 80 percent chance of rain tonight. The high today will be in the low to mid 50s. Winds will be moderate to strong.
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Wednesday, March 21. 1979
3
Egyptians, Israelis clash on fate of Jerusalem, Palestinian state
JERUSALEM (AP)—Egypt and Israel扣紧 horns over the future of Jerusalem and the Palestinians yesterday in their first visit. The father's breakthrough visit to the Middle East.
The clash was triggered by Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin's vow in Parliament than to divide Jerusalem or the Palestinian state in the West Bank or Gaza Strip.
In Cairo, Egyptian Prime Minister Mustafa Khalil said Begin's *vow* "spoils the atmosphere" of the treaty but said he would prevent it from being signed.
IRAQ ANNOUNCED it had called Arab League members to an emergency meeting in Baghdad March 27-29 to discuss sanctions against Egypt for signing a treaty 'with the
Also there were signs that two moderates, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, would join in the war.
Approval of the treaty by a large majority of the Israeli Parliament was expected to be approved on Friday.
way for begin, Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat and Carter to sign the treaty at the
Mideast.
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill quoted Carter as saying in the signing was set for 2 set of four.
Addressing himself directly to Khalil, Begin declared, "My dear, honorable Dr. Khalil, write this down: Jerusalem, the one city where I will never capital, it will never be divided again."
OPENING THE Israeli Parliament debate, begin plunged never to re-dive Jerusalem or surrender its status as Israel's capital, never to withdraw to Israel's pre-1976 borders and never to take an independent state arise in the West Bank and Gaza Strin.
Some nations, including the United States,
do not recognize Jerusalem as Israel's
capital.
AS FOR A Palestinian state, he said, "We won't agree to it. We won't allow it. We don't want it."
Begin said he was replying to Khalil's
statement last week that Israel would have to withdraw to the 1967 borders, accept Palestinian statehood and surrender Arab Jerusalem.
The issues are not directly dealt with in published versions of the treaty draft.
Begin's vow was made to mollify hawks demanding assurances before the signing that autonomy for West Bank and Gaza Arabs would not lead to Palestinian statehood or a weakening of Israel's presence there.
Khalil, in response to Begin's vow, said, "As for the Palestinian question, the Camp David accordingly stipulates the necessity of solving the question from all its aspects, thus taking into consideration the legal rights of the Palestinians. It is along this principle that they will decide their future."
Khalil, asked if the dispute could block a treaty signing, said, "No, I don't think so."
Begin's two-hour address was frequently interrupted by left-wing hecklers complaining that the treaty ignores Palestinian aspirations.
SERVICE CALL NOTICE
Beginning April 1st 1979 there will be a $10.00 minimum charge per hour from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM Monday thru Friday.
After 5:00 PM to 8:00 AM week days and all Saturdays, Sundays and holidays there will be a $30.00 minimum service charge. This increase is due to increased operation cost.
There will still be no charge for emergency gas leak calls. To fix a gas leak found on the customer's property the owner can either call a heating or plumbing contractor, or the Kansas Public Service Co. There will be a charge for this repair service, based on time and material required.
For more information please contact our office.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kanan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editors.
MARCH 21,1979
KU needs fuel oil tank
Let's hope the Kansas Legislature remembers last winter.
If it doesn't, the University of Kansas could have a repeat of the energy problems brought on by the bitter cold.
In fact, if the Legislature's memory has dimmed too much the University might run out of fuel to heat the building. But some administration officials predict.
But if the Legislature approves a $300,300 request for a new fuel oil storage tank, the energy problems of this heating can, for the most part, be avoided.
THE REQUEST was sent to the
LEGISLATURE after being approved by
the Kansas Board of Regents last
year. The board voted to allow
gallons, which is about a 15-day supply.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, told the Regents, "If we aren't able to get that tank, there is a certain amount of danger that we would have to close on a few days or a month in extremely cold weather."
Because the University has an interruptible contract with Kansas Public Service Gas Co., KU supplies are cut when the demand for gas is high. Fuel oil is then used to fire the University's boilers.
LAST WINTER gas service was curtailed for 58 days, beginning Jan. 1. But to compound troubles, two of KU's three fuel oil storage tanks were useless because they had cracks and leaked.
Left with a 230,000 gallon supply,
enough for 14 to 16 days, the University
squeaked through the winter. At times,
the amount of oil dwindled to only a
5-day supply.
In addition to easing supply problems, the new tank would allow the University to buy more oil in the process, when demand and prices are lower.
It should be clear to the Legislature that, in light of last winter's problems, the university must have the new storage tank.
Mail brings allurements of plastic money mania
Besides the usual array of junk one finds in the mail these days, seniors and those about to reach that plateau are finding out that someone other than a close friend or relative knows that graduation day is rapidly approaching.
This semester I've received letters from insurance companies, oil companies, retail chain executives and a bunch of buck. With few exceptions the letters read basically the same, such as the one I got earlier.
"Dear College Student: Phillips would like to congratulate you on your academic accomplishment and extend this you appreciation, become a Phillips 68 Credit cardholder."
Hmm. How did they find out that I am about to leave KU? I certainly didn't tell them. The price of their gas is a little more than I can afford.
SEARS, ROEBUCK and Co. the nation's largest retailer, used some of a perimeter fence around the building hoping to reach the graduating senior in the house, the letter was addressed directly to
"Dear Mr. Smith: You are invited to apply for a Sears Credit Card, one of the most useful and valuable credit cards a student can have."
Perhaps the best letter I've received is the one I got from New England Life. Life insurance, and all that goes with it, is a tool on my hands on the minds of most graduating seniors.
Not bad, they've managed to get my attention by calling me mister, which almost makes me want to continue reading. However, there is one problem with this book; it doesn't use a credit card three years ago, not now that I am about to finish school. What time?
BUT KNOWING that most college students are conditioned to accept almost anything that is free of charge, the insurance company, with its complements, offers a low-cost newest Rand McNally Road Atlas and Travel guide all who returned an enclosed card.
Incidentally, the insurance company went one better than Sears by addressing the letter to "Mr. Vernom Smith." These guys know how to make you feel important.
Before someone hastily concludes that I
Vernon Smith
dislike credit cards and other similar forms of buying, let me clear the air. I have nothing against the charge plates per se. They are good to have in emergency situations and generally can be quite hard. The problem with this form of buying is that the temptation to use the cards is just too many most people don't know how to handle it.
BY THE LATEST estimate, since the end of the last economic slump, Americans have added $1 trillion to their financial obligations. Today, government, corporate and individual investors pay $3.5 trillion, equal to nearly $16,000 for every man, woman and child in the country. This nation may run on credit, as the business world has become, but recently they have gotten out of hand.
One of the reasons for the increase in credit buying is that inflation makes credit appear less burdensome and threatening. Interest rates are falling, will keep rising and thus make it easier for them to repay their loans. On the other hand, if they want to save enough money to pay cash, prices will shoot up and they will have more debt to repay. They need an incentive to borrow, to beat inflation.
BUT ECONOMISTS are worried that the extremely high consumer debt in this country is unusually vulnerable position if a recession should occur. American families already faced with devoting a large share of their incomes to bills, would find the going even
I don't own a charge card, but there have certainly been times I wish I did. Try writing a check for an item that costs more than $20. Write it on the back of identification and see what a hassle it can be. But by not having a card I can't not temper myself. But I think I'll just keep putting up with the pain.
It's really easy to say, "Charge It." The hard part, as a lot of people are finding out, comes later when the bills start rolling in. That's not so easy to deal with.
Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanal, Flint Hall, The
University of Kansas, Lawrence KS 6045
(USPS $60-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and September; Thursday during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday weekends. Subscription fees are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $39 a year in the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student account.
Mary Harey
Managing Editor
Mark Wiseel
Editorial Editor
John Whitesell
Campus Editor
Mary Hoekh
Campus Editor
Pat Manson
Assistant Campus Editor
Carol Hunter
Campus Editor
Dhonious Ollen
Scoutleaders Editor
Kevin Schatz
Scoutleaders Editor
Mary Therburgh
Sports Editor
Sandy Hara
Sports Editors
John Tharp
Cruncher Editors
Linda Fonseca, Paula Sutherland,
Cruncher Editors
Crystal Hughes, Bath Kenning, Trowbridge
Editorial Editor
Mary Ernst, Phil Gariace, Vernon Smith,ake Thompson
Starf
Lori Limbaugh, Bath Johnsen,
Chief Photographer
Alan Zikny
Chief Photographer
Dan Martin
Raven Vernon
Retail Sales Manager Ron Alumann
Advertising Manager Bret Miller
Cleaned Advertising Managers Kirk Hamble
Assistant Classified Advertising Manager Duncan Beltz
Advertising Makeup Manager Bill Kuosa
Staff Artist Dahlia Beats
Staff Photographer Grant Ringel
Treasurer Manager Delia Dolga
Sales Representatives Allen Blair, Paul Knoll, Joanne Snuthy
Brenda Faxton, Cindy Ray, Allen Reynolds, Joanne Snuthy
General Manager Advertising Advisor
Rick Murden
Mideast peace a complex challenge
That is the phrase that has been used by discontented Arab nations to describe a state of unrest.
A senarate peace.
Most boisterously, Syria, Iraq and Lebanon, and more importantly, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, have all voiced their displeasure with the Israeli peace treaty. These and smaller Arab nations seek a "comprehensive" peace treaty that calls on Israel with willingness to establish a Palestinian state, the long standing, emotional and controversial issue, which for at least the past 31 years, has been the most peaceful between all countries in the Mideast.
The current treaty does not provide for the establishment of a Palestinian state, which must occur before the Arab nations believe peace exists.
Indeed, many believe that the possibility for settling the Palestinian issue will always exist, but the probability never.
SO THE WORLD could have peace between Egypt and Israel, but not within the entire Middle East.
That peace will only come with major concessions on Israel's part and a special treaty with the other countries the too often hostile and irrational Arabs, best exemplified by the military and diplomatic relations.
Yasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization.
But peace is nowhere in sight as the two sides remain staunch in their opposition to each other's interest.
Philip Garcia
The Arab nations, most specifically Jordan, continue to make three demands: Israel withdrawal of territories occupied since the 1967 war, mainly the strategic Gaza strip and the West Bank, a country and autonomy for the Palestinian people, and an end to the Middle East; and an international Mideast treaty that would involve all Arab nations.
But already Jordan has reaffirmed earlier resolutions to cut political and economic support with Israel; the sign on a wall is the refuge; Israel is war the only answer to solve the peace question; and Arafat's PLO is in no way interested in making concessions to Israel.
SAUDI ARABIA said it would not resort to economic cuts against Egypt but has promised to increase investment.
In the Israeli government, there remains a faction that seeks assurances the peace treaty does not lead to an eventual Palestinian state.
through a "just and comprehensible peace that meets the demands of the Arabs, the Islamic nation, and the Palestinian people."
Although the final draft of the treaty has been approved by Israel Prime Minister Menachem Begin's cabinet and approval is expected to be ratified in parliament, the National Religious Party, the second-largest coalition in Begin's camp, is seeking assurances that no independent Palestinian state will result from the treaty. No compromise is in sight.
MOREOVER, PRESIDENT Carter and his aides will continue to negotiate peace, but this time for settlement of the Palestinian issue. This no doubt will cause U.S. ties to further accuse the United States of being in events that are none of her business.
The first step in achieving long-term Mideast stability, as viewed by many, was a peace treaty between Israel and Egypt. The settlement is the settlement of the Palestinian issue.
A second consequence is being able to provide Israel with oil during the next 15 years in case of an Egyptian boycott. The pillon of oil is another treaty promise.
is the increased economic and military aid to both Egypt and Israel. At least $5 billion in aid was promised by the United States to help Egypt during the recent treaty negotiations.
OF COURSE, a compromise must be made. It must be noted that the issue will have a direct impact on neighboring Arab countries. The United States, with obvious political, economic and military interests in the Middle East, can act as a motivator for settlement of the issue.
Most important in this push for stability in the Mideast is the establishment of a slim border between Israel and the United States to counter the potential, nearby threat of Soviet invasions.
The consequences of an unstable Middle East for the United States are many. One
But for all the complexities of this issue, the solution seems easy: If peace is wanted then decisions need to meet that goal must be made and kent.
But this is the Middle East and the conflict is continuous. There have been four Arab-Issalil wars since 1948. The challenge for the Mideast countries is no more than in the past. To believe in peace and to live side by side in tranquility.
I call on faculty and student leaders here at KU and at all other universities and colleges in Kansas to give this matter serious consideration. There is no surer way to raise flagging spirits on this campus and elsewhere than to undertake some well coordinated action to dramatize the economic plight of the teaching profession.
HI, THERE! I'M CYRUS VANCE AND I'D LIKE TO HAVE YOU TAKE A LOOK AT THE ISRAELI-EGYPTIAN PEACE PLAN!!!
Finally, because the only economic hardship would be focused precisely where it needs to be, namely on the big meat producers, who have warned the American public that within a year from now the price of beef will have doubled.
To the editor:
Beef boycott could lift low morale
I have read the article on aguaging faculty morale in the March 6 Kansan with great concern. It is disqualing in the extreme to be told by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes that excessive government regulation of the University is threatening its very existence.
While it may seem rather foolhardy for us to wrestle singlehandedly with the autocrats in Washington, we may be able to take some concerted action to solve a more immediate problem. Acts us, namely the meager salary increases we must look forward to next year.
Why not organize a limited boycott of Kansas businesses on behalf of higher education? By "limited" here I mean a boycott directed at a single product, more precisely, a single carefully selected product.
And the chances are that a boycott could be even more effective if it were restricted to a short period, let us say one business week. It would also be important for all friends of KU and the other institutions of higher learning in Kansas to have their students faculty, students, students' families and all well-wishers across the state.
May I suggest that an ideal product to boycott in this way would be beef? First, because it is no hardship to abstain from eating a kind of meat for a period as short as a week.
Second, because a boycott restricted to bewd would not appreciate accuracy in business and the loss of business reduction in beef sales would no doubt be amply made up for by increased sales of beef.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN letters
W. Keith Percival professor of linguistics
Faculty spirits low because salaries are
To the editor :
In terms of salary, my department has always ranked among the bottom two or three of the 50 major doctorate-granting universities in the country, though the Carter Report on graduate education rated it in the upper half of such schools. When you are at the low end, you feel low.
Your article on faculty morale in the March 6 Kansan is probably accurate on most counts, especially for salary. The University has been at the low end of major university pay scales ever since I can remember.
May I add another reason to those ad-
duced by Professor Srinivasan et al. in 1966, when I came here, and for some years after, the average age of the KU faculty seemed to be certain. Certainly it was in our department.
For a number of years the pattern in faculty was to bring in new people to teach and work in our schools. In 1966, seven of us new Ph.Ds replaced senior people who went to UCLA.
The gates closed in the early '70s, the chances for moving up declined. We now have an aging faculty—some of whom are bitter because they're aging—without much likelihood of the kind of chances for improving their lot that an earlier generation had.
The state of Kansas, which has treated our University so shabbily in the past, is faced with the choice of continuing to neglect us, if only by continuing to relegate us to the hopper with the state colleges, or of recognizing its responsibilities.
The people who have stayed here have become more experienced, and therefore mature. I know that this rich state is getting more university for less money than it ever has in the past.
Richard F. Hardin Professor of English
Student senator says his vote is his own
As a member of the former Imagination coalition and of the new Student Senate, I would like to voice my resentment to the president of the Kansan's junior-high journalists. I feel no compulsion to vote with any group simply for the sake of representing Berlin and New York ideals and programs.
To the editor:
I do however feel compulsion to be responsible to my constituents and not to the organization, which is sake of healing any election "wounds." I am in favor of the idea of an off-campus housing board, yet I question the duplication of services and actual effectiveness as I would.
Tim Trump
Salina junior
STATE U.
BY T. M. ASLA
HELLO! BUILDING AND GROUNDS? THIS IS YOUR CHANCELLOR SPEAKING! I KNOW IT'S 5 A.M.!
WHY ISN'T THE FLAG FLYING OVER THE ADMINISTRATION HALL? ALUMS WILL THINK WE'RE UNPATRIOTIC.
WHAT? THE MAN WHO IS SUPPOSED TO RAISE IT DIED LAST NIGHT?
GO FLY IT AT HALF MAST!
"SUGGESTED BY J.W. ASIA."
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 21, 1979
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NIKON FM features the incompatible quality and the unlimited capability of the world famous Nikon camera. But, now in a remotely compact size at a surprisingly small price, you can easily access its camera technology, a joy to hold and carry, and use, with the limited ways of seeing made possible by more than 55 world famous Nikon lenses. Compact Nikon M10-11 motorized (see below) offers 35 fps, capacity, and reliability. This camera takes taking successful pictures today Camera lists for $400.80
REBATE SAVINGS ON NIKON MD-11 MOTOR!
Smaller, tougher
pistol-like gun
and fun. Hold the button down
at up to 35 lbs. in second, auto-
lock and hold for 10 minutes.
It will be amazed at how light
weight a motor is. Great for
work on a bicycle and trailer
work. Get one today.
M1 10-Mile Drive $240.00
Less Rebate $23.00
YOUR EFFECTIVE COST $12.15*
FREE GENIUE NIKON SHOULDER
BAG WITH CAMERA AND LENS PURCHASE
Nine, take home that nine Nun you pay to
take care of your children. Take home the
letter for Easter shopping and thankfulness
to Easter greetings. Take home the Nun
for his blessings. Take home the Nun for
his blessings.
the portfolio is what
NIKON MAKES FINE PHOTOGRAPHY EASIER AND MORE CONVENIENT
Nikon
NIKON FE
BODY ONLY PRICE $389.99
LESS REBATE $40.00
YOUR EFFECTIVE COST $34999
SAVE WITH CASH REBATES ON NIKKOR LENSES
NIKKOR Lens
Waffle's
Lens Price
Debate from Nikon
Your
effective
opti
20mm 1.4 Wide Angle
$480.00
350
$790.00
24mm 1.2 Wide Angle
$320.00
330
$790.00
28mm 1.2 Wide Angle
$475.00
340
$790.00
28mm 1.5 Wide Angle
$320.00
350
$730.00
28mm 1.5 Wide Angle
$360.00
350
$730.00
Eikon
$100.00
355
$730.00
105mm 1.2 Telescope
$325.00
400
$785.00
135mm 1.2 Telephoto
$325.00
400
$785.00
Omni-4 Telephoto
$325.00
400
$785.00
43-8mm Zoom
$325.00
400
$785.00
50mm 100 Zoom
$750.00
340
$655.00
MiFone-Nikkor
$750.00
340
$655.00
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LENSES FOR CANON
ROAD
17mm 1.8 Bucket Rifle .24
17mm 1.2 Wavy Scope
15mm 1.2 Bucket Rifle
15mm 1.2 Bucket Rifle
NIGGING
1600 cal. 350mm APSC
1710 cal. 350mm APSC
1710 cal. 350mm APSC
61-150cm Macro Viewer Series 3750
61-150cm Macro Viewer Series 3750
61-150cm Macro Viewer Series 3750
61-150cm Macro Viewer Series 3750
UNIVERSAL SCREW MOUNT LENSES
RIG SALE
28mm X 2.5V Variant 9.99
28mm X 2.8k Chuck 99.95
28mm X 3.0k Chuck 100.00
28mm X 2.5M Macro Series 1 95.00
20mm X 2.5mm Chucker 145.00
20mm X 2.5k Bulbuehner 145.00
60mm X 4.5A Alpex 199.50
60mm X 4.5A Alpex 199.50
35-105mm Vriter 81.00
35-105mm Vriter 81.00
35-105mm Vriter 81.00
35-105mm Vriter 81.00
35-105mm Vriter 81.00
35-105mm Viter 81.00
35-105mm Vriter 81.00
35-105mm Vriter 81.00
35-105mm Vriter 81.00
75 to 200mm X 4.5Solver 339.50
75 to 200mm X 4.5Solver 339.50
75 to 200mm X 4.5Solver 339.50
75 to 200mm X 4.5Solver 339.50
DARKROOM AIDS
BIG SALE
Davis Funded
Thomas Leander Funder
29.99 €
Wiley Way Fund
19.55 €
Debbie R. Wiley Fund
19.55 €
Virginia Tanker Fund
13.25 €
Virginia Tanker Fund
13.25 €
Patterson 120 Map File
9.55 €
Unicorn 120 Paper File
9.55 €
Davis 35mm Bank
9.55 €
Davis 35mm Bank
9.55 €
Davis 32mm Bank
11.99 €
Davis 32mm Bank
11.99 €
Capita 11 4 Drayer
39.55 €
Impact 16 Drayer
39.55 €
Davy D Paper Fitter
19.99 €
Davy D Paper Fitter
19.99 €
Davy D Paper Cutter
16.55 €
Davy D 300 Paper Fitter
97.00 €
Davy D 300 Paper Fitter
36.40 €
Davy D 17 United Titanium
69.55 €
Davy D 17 United Titanium
69.55 €
14.79 Deep Tissue Tray ... 11.99 €
14. 179 Dabp Hpyo Tray 11.99 Oimage Program Timer 59.85 30.00
GO
LENSES FOR PENTAX K BAYONET
RIG & SALE
2mmel 7.2 MPA Server
10mmel 7.2 MPA Base
8mmel 1.3 MPA Visitor
10mmel 1.3 MPA Visitor
10mmel 1.3 MPA Visitor
10mmel 1.3 MPA Visitor
10mmel 1.3 MPA Visitor
10mmel 1.3 MPa Visitor
10mmel 1.3 MPa Visitor
10mmel 1.3 MPa Visitor
10mmel 1.3 MPa Visitor
10mmel 1.3 MPa Visitor
10mmel 1.3 MPa Visitor
10mmel 1.3 MPa Visitor
10mmel 1.3 MPa Visitor
35-100mm Wide
REC SALLE
21G 1.2 Vinter
20mm 1.2 Vinter
21mm 1.2 Baskell
24mm 1.2 Baskell
18mm 1.2 Baskell
17mm 1.2 Baskell
15mm 1.2 Baskell
13
LENSES FOR KONICA
二
REG. SALE
11mm x 12mm Baskell Virtifier
24mm x 18mm Baskell Virtifier
30mm x 18mm Virtifier
12mm x 12mm Virtifier
35mm x 18mm Virtifier
90mm x 13mm Virtifier
15mm x 12mm Virtifier
15mm x 12mm Virtifier
15mm x 12mm Virtifier
15mm x 12mm Virtifier
15mm x 12mm Virtifier
15mm x 12mm Virtifier
200mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
200mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
200mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
200mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
200mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
200mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
200mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
200mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
200mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
200mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
75-340 x 14 Salgger
75-340 x 14 Salgger
75-340 x 14 Salgger
75-340 x 14 Salgger
75-340 x 14 Salgger
75-340 x 14 Salgger
75-340 x 14 Salgger
75-340 x 14 Salgger
75-340 x 14 Salgger
100-300mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
100-300mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
100-300mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
100-300mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
100-300mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
100-300mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
100-300mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
100-300mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
100-300mm x 13mm Baskell Virtifier
SALE
24mm X 7.8mm Virtore
28mm X 7.8mm Virtore
28mm X 7.8mm Virtore
28mm X 7.8mm Virtore
15mm X 3.25 Series Virtore
15mm X 3.25 Series Virtore
15mm X 3.25 Series Virtore
110mm X 110mm
110mm X 110mm
35-105mm Virtore
35-105mm Virtore
35-105mm Virtore
75-160mm Virtore
75-160mm Virtore
395-500 Virtore
240-600 Virtore
LENSES FOR OLYMPUS
3
LENSES FOR MINOLTA
LENSES FOR NIKON
BIG SALE
28mm 1.2 Stk Pro
18mm 1.2 Stk Tn
75-150 1.3 Stk Yn
80-200 1.4 Stk Yn
85-210 1.6 Stk Yn
16,150 | 13,900 | 13,900 | 13,900 |
1000 | 1000 | 10,900 | 10,900 |
375 | 375 | 375 | 375 |
YASHICA/CONTA
MOUNT LENSES
TINY SOLID STUDIO CASE
CAMERA CASES
28mm 1.2 Visitor Al 195.00 13.00 9.00
28mm 1.2 Pro Al 195.00 13.00 9.00
135mm 1.2 Bakeryer 195.00 14.00 9.00
135mm 1.2 Bakeeer 195.00 14.00 9.00
135mm 1.2 Blidae 119.50 12.50 9.00
135mm 1.2 Bakeeer 119.50 12.50 9.00
135mm 1.2 Blidae 119.50 12.50 9.00
200mm 1.2 Bakeryer 113.00 7.00 9.00
200mm 1.2 Bakeryer 114.00 7.00 9.00
200mm 1.2 Bakeryer 114.00 7.00 9.00
400mm 1.6 Prin 227.50 15.00 9.00
400mm 1.6 Bucheall 194.50 11.00 9.00
400mm 1.6 Bucheall 227.50 15.00 9.00
35.105 Visitor Al 295.00 24.00 9.00
60.150 Bakeryer 295.00 27.00 9.00
60.150 Bakeryer 295.00 27.00 9.00
10.150 Bakeeer 295.00 11.00 9.00
10.150 Bakeeer 295.00 11.00 9.00
90.200 Visitor Al 295.00 15.00 9.00
90.200 Visitor Al 295.00 15.00 9.00
Choose from a great selection of soft bags, hard leather cases, other style cases in sizes up to 19. These cases may be made by Holliday, Varner, Peterson and Other famous manufacturers. Save 25% on hard cases that preserve the deserves, and the carrying convenience you want. Originally priced from $9.95 to $14.99.
$199 to $13900
HOW
Show short dips-ups and interesting movie studies. Available for Cincinnati, Baltimore, Milwaukee, Olympus, Kansas. Reserved Guests and Japanese students.
BELLOWS
---
New $24.95 to $69.95
SALE $19.99
---
FILTERS
ointiment of filters in all colors,
trick filters, bag selection of popular sizes
like 49mm, 52mm, 55mm, 58mm, 67mm,
68mm, plus sizer filters and more.
---
Were $5.00 to $39.00
NOW 99% $5'99
Canon AE 350
Canon DimageFLASH Auto flash with the quality you've been waiting for!
You've been waiting for real quality in automatic flash, and here it is in the Canon AB 56. Now you have a customizable circuitry, plus the AB-56 has a removable sensor for extra convenient lighting flexibility. If you're not sure where to find you can live up to all your expectations, you're in the market for a Canon $70,999
AB-56 retails for $124.00
$7999
A
Bell & Howell
1441 A Dual 8
Movie Projector
Now you can show both your regular B and your new super B movies on one projector that is motion features a slow-action and still switch, fast forward and reverse motion thread through the system rewinding. These are factory items with new retail for $199.00
$99^99
35mm RANGEFINDER
SCREENS
LENSES FOR FUJICA CAMERAS
NO. SHEETS
80x40 Glencore 3925 16 20
€AMERAS
Nikon
2mmx1.2mm AAAAA
15mm x 1.2mm AAAAA
35-150mm AAAAA
90-350mm AAAAA
400-1250mm AAAAA
420-1250mm AAAAA
420-1250mm AAAAA
420-1250mm AAAAA
420-1250mm AAAAA
420-1250mm AAAAA
420-1250mm AAAAA
420-1250mm AAAAA
420-1250mm AAAAA
420-1250mm AAAAA
420-1250mm AAAAA
MEG SALEM
Vivitar 350 | 121 | 89.5
Cisco C350 | 109 | 89.5
Nintendo 350 | 84.9 | 95.5
Nintendo 350 | 84.9 | 95.5
Cisco A350 | 180 | 139.0
Konica Minolta A350 | 180 | 139.0
Konica Minolta A350 | 99.5 | 95.5
Konica Minolta A350 | 100 | 99.5
Konica Minolta A350 | 99.9 | 94.9
Konica Minolta A350 | 99.9 | 94.9
Conesat 70 (used) | 129 | 99.9
Conesat 70 (used) | 129 | 99.9
Olympus Pmi-165 (used) | 119 | 99.5
Olympus Pmi-165 (used) | 119 | 99.5
JUNK AND STUFF
Carnes brown, camomile and dig through
all of kitchap photo games. Camomile
supplies, cosmetics, darkness
lava, Cheezs.
图
29 $ ^{4} $ and Up
'11999
400mm f6.3 TELEPHOTO
This lens fits most 1.8 L B cameras with 1 adapter (not included). Complete with protective case and lens.
Compare at $100.00
SALE $5999
PRINT YOUR
OWN PICTURES
TONIGHT WITH
THE OMEGA
B-600
ENLARGER
$129^{99}$
Now you can start the fun of *printing your own* tonight. Enjoy the quality of an Omega engerator of a surprisingly low Dog Day Sale price. Print negatives and slides from 2/4" square to 110 in black and white or color. And, the B-600 is compact, easy to use, and easy to store. An ideal engerator for the darkroom or dark rooms. Plus the Omega B-600 offers you all the quality you associate with the Omega name. So set up your darkroom tonight by staining with an Omega B-600 Dog Day Sale price is com-mon with negative carrier and lens.
90mm MACRO
Move in close for super magnifications of your favorite subjects ideal for copying photographs or other small or other small objects. All the ad vantages of close-up photography with the convenience of maintaining a comfortable working distance for $345.00
135mm f2.8 USM
PENTAX K 1000
Easy handling 35mm SLR for Great quality photographs
VIVITAR LENSES FOR GREAT CLOSE-UPS
Emily fine 35mm photography at the old pocket camera. Control your exposures and enjoy the flexibility of shutter speeds to capture light. View a 1/100th second through the lens viewing and metering for great composition and super acute exposure. And the K1000 acceps full system of interchangeable lenses to meet the perfect introduction to fine quality 35mm photography to Harwil York for great savings on the Pentax K1000 with 50mm lens $1699⁺¹²
PENTAX K1050
camera shop. inc.
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 235-1386
Toppea K66003
K66003
135mm Close-focus
35mm F1.4
AF 35mm f/1.4
210mm f/3.5
Wolfe's
One of the most versatile, multi-purpose lenses around. Enjoy all the convenience of a super sharp 135mm telephoto lens. Great for sports, concerts and portraits. It’s great for great macro shots. Now you can have all in one lens. Made to retail for $191.00
$9999
Dragon
MOVIE CAMERAS
Rodak 130 sound (Used)
229.50 10 9 9 9
Rodak 180 sound (Used)
215.00 10 9 9 9
Rodak 748 sound 2146
GAF 31 Sound 2146
GAF 31 Sound 2146
Gaf 31 Sound 2146
Gaf 31 Sound 2146
Gaf 31 Sound 2146
Gaf 31 Sound 2146
Gaf 31 Sound 2146
Covina 403
VIVITAR
MODEL
51
Electronic Flash
Electronic Flash
Get up to 200 flashes from one eakolt battery with this unique, compact electronic flash. Hot shoe contact for the greatest of connections and bonds with fresh batteries. Easy to read scale assesses you in selecting the proper / stop for great flash exposures. $999
SQ99
6
Wednesday, March 21, 1979
University Daily Kansan
THE DOOBIE BROTHERS
THE DOOBIE BROTHERS
KINKS
in concert with special guest Jay Ferguson
APRIL 27,1979----8:00 PM
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
TICKETS $7.00 and $8.00 RESERVED . . .
ON SALE FRIDAY MARCH 23
AT 10:00 AM AT THE SUA BOX OFFICE ONLY.
- limit of 10 per person
- bloc seating available
Tickets available after 3/23 at: SUA, Kiefs, in Topeka, Manhattan and all capitol ticket outlets in K.C An SUA, Feyline and Martin Wolff Presentation
Wednesday, March 21, 1979
7
Senate to vote on bus funding; debate Revenue Code proposals
By CAROL BEIER and CAITLIN GOODWIN Staff Remarkers
Much of the debate at tonight's Student Senate meeting may focus on the fate of a bus for handicapped students and a bill not yet signed by lawmakers. Some amendments to the Senate Revenue Code.
The Senate will vote on a bill to allocate $8 for a 60-day to be bus service so that students can go to school. The bus service picks up disabled persons who have no other way to get to campus. It would also allow schools.
The service, which began Jan. 17, was funded until March 9. But on March 8, because it was impossible for the full Senate to meet, the Student Senate Executive Committee voted to fund the service until March 31.
The Senate will debate the amendments to the Revenue Code, which deals with Senate disbursement of student activity funds, if it is deemed necessary. It also rules. That will allow discussion of issues such as KU membership in the Associated Students of Kansas lobbying group and increased scrutiny of the budgets of line managers at KU. The KU-Kansan, KU Bands and University Theatre.
IN THE PAST, line allocations have been assured funding, but other student organizations have been required to go. Senate committees during budget beating.
The bill, which would amend Article II of the Revenue Code, provides for annual funding to the Kansan program, the Kansan, the Recreation Advisory Board, University Theatre, University Concert and Chamber Series, KKU, Forensics, JKJHK station and ASK.
The bill was written by Greg Snackne, journalism senator; Barbara Brussel, Overland Park junior; and Craig Templeton, administrative assistant.
"I DON'T anticipate any really big problems with Senate approval. Termination is hard and has been a painful step toward wanting to keep better trace of the way student activity fees are spent. Basically, once you get in the revenue code, you're in the club. Suddenly you're never
Although any student could "wish-hum" an organization into more financial disclosures, Schannock said, the new rule would be easier to enforce. The official duty to keep closer tabs on spending.
Schnack said the line allocation status was created to insure funding to large continuing organizations in the face of annual fluctuations in the mood of budget
"ONE YEAR the committees could be really conservative and one year they could be"
**"really liberal."**
University Daily Kansan
Although Templeton said he thought the Senate would approve the amendments, he said allocations for continued membership were likely to remain in line allocations might cause some debate.
Section 11 of the revenue code proposal assumes KU membership in ASK and allocates 25 cents a student for membership dues. According to projected enrollment figures for next school year, the total would be $9.150.
Ten cents of the allocation was taken from the Senate's internal office account, which had a $14,000 surplus this year. Fifteen cents was taken from the unallocated account.
Templeton, who said he favored continued membership in ASK, said passage of Section 11 would, in effect, make the membership decision.
However, he said it was possible that the Senate could defeat the ASK portion of the bill.
Sperry Top Siders
royal college shop
eight thirty seven massachusetts 843-4255
TODAY: A MARINE CORPS OFFICER SELECTION OFFICER will be interviewing persons interested in the Marine Corps program from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Bootl of 1 the Kansas Union, A. F. Dickinson College, and Dustin of 10 a.m. at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. in Swarthout Rec Hall in the Hall. THE WEDNESDAY FORUM, featuring a lecture on "U.S. Blacks and the Identity with Black Africans," will begin at 11:45 a.m. at 129 Oread. INTRAMRUAL GOLF ENTRANCE deadline is at 4 p.m. at 11:35 a.m. (the "B" league)领会 will be at 5:15 p.m. in the Robinson South Gyrmex.
TONIGHT: SOFTBALL MANAGERS MEETING for Co-RETEE is at 6 p.m. in the Robinson South gym, VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE by the American Bar Association/Law Student Division will be available from 6 to 8 p.m. in the legal aid office at new Green Hall. J. WILLIAM SCHOFF, professor of geology at the University of California-Los Angeles, will speak on
"Precambrian life: A Late Look at Earliest Evolution," at 7 in 425 Lindley Hall. The KU SAILING CLUB meets at 7 in Parlors B and C of the Union. An ANTHROPOLOGY LECTURE by R.C. Elston, University of North Carolina, will begin at 7 in the Council Room of the Union. The SIERRA CLUB will hold a meeting at 7:30 in the Science Center. The HANG GLIID CLUB meets at 7:30 in 173 Robinson. The HANG GLIID CLUB meets at 7:30 in 2022 Learned Hall. Paul Fussell, will give an ENGLISH DEPARTMENT LECTURE at 8 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. Anthony Redwood will give a LECTURE on "The Labor Market and Our Inflation-Unemployment Dilemma," at 8 in the Forum Room of the Union. Joseph W. Washington, University of Chicago, will give a LECTURE on "The United States" at 8 in 106 Smith Hall. A FINE ARTS HONOR RECITAL will begin at 8 in Swartwout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. The KU FENCING CLUB meets at 8:30 in 173 Robinson.
GRAND OPENING March 22, 23 & 24
On Campus
THE BEER GARDEN (Formerly Poor Richards at 14th & Tennessee)
A return to the friendly neighborhood bar.
Grand Opening Special: 20 $ ^{\circ} $ draws
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Urban Plunge: an inner city learning experience.
March 29-31
registration information available at KU-Y 110B Kansas Union
864-3761 or 841-5484
partially funded by Student Senate
Hours:
Mon., Tuesday, Wed., Sat
10-6
Thurs. & Fri. 10-9
Sun. 1-5
ANNOUNCING
Cassem's
BIG MASS LANDING
CASSEM'S FINAL INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE!!
811 Massachusotts
Buy One Item at Regular Price...
Get Another Item for !!!ONLY $1.00!!!
Everything must go to make room for New Spring Merchandise! All Sales Final All Cash Sales
Find it in Kansan classified advertising Sell it, too. Call 864-4358.
HERBIE
MANN
in concert
With The K.C. Philharmonic
Sunday, April 8, 1979, 8:00 in Hoch Auditorium. Reserved seats $4.00 and $5.00. Tickets available at the SUA office and Kiefs. Come and enjoy an esthetic blending of the musical colors of the orchestra with the timeless jazz sound of Herbie Mann. Presented by SUA and The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra.
TICKETS GO ON SALE TODAY AT 12 NOON
SUA
8
Wednesday, March 21, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Bouquet of flowers
Owens Flower Shop
Presents this week only the
Spring Fling only $9.95 Delivered
The Spring Fling is a specially prepared assessment of Daisys, Tukips, Orisse and Josephs just right for spring.
Owens
THE COURT HOUSE
FLOWER SHOP
843-6111
FTD
501 736 8241
9th & Indiana School, Lawrence, KS 66044
We send flowers world wide with FTD
Hours Moved (1)
Lone Star Lake will probably be drained as early as next fall so a mechanism controlling the lake's water level can be built. Nesca, county commissioner, said yesterday.
A broken outlet gate at the bottom of the lake, used to control the water level, is causing up to 40 cubic feet of water a second to escape from the lake. Neiss said.
The draining and repairs could start as early as next fall. The job would take between three months and a year to complete the cost between $3,000 and $30,000, he said.
The lake is about ten miles southwest of Lawrence.
Lake drainage is possible
"The way it looks now, the mechanism is broken a lot worse than we first thought, so we will probably have to drain the lake," he said.
County officials have expressed concern that the dam at Lone Star Lake could be damaged by a storm.
say they have seen no evidence of damage so far.
The leak was reported to the county commission in a fact. Marc Martinez, the state's attorney, passed away the broken outlet gate, the water flows through an overflow pipe out of the lake into the river.
AN OFFICIAL from the state water resources department said that between 30 and 40 feet of water a second is going through the pipe. However, county officials have said that the level of the lake has not been greatly affected because rain springs are replenishing in lake's depth.
The county has hired a firm to tempi-
cer the pipe. Mike Dike, county engineer, said
this measure would be done after the first of
them.
Nees said the commission would wait until next year to renew the leak because there
was not enough money in this year's budget for the project.
THE GATE inside the overflow pipe has not worked since the lake was built in the mid 1980s. Neis said. Originally, the water level of the lake was to be lowered each year to protect dock boats and the large rocks against the dam from being damaged by ice.
Neis said that because the gate has never worked, the lake had remained relatively full. The constant action of the waves has eroded the rocks and, Neis said, when the lake is drained to repair the tower the rocks will be replaced.
He said that he did not know how much it would cost to replace the rocks, but that it would be minor compared to repairing the leak.
Commissioners are awaiting a study of the condition of the dam by the state water resources department and the Army Corps of Engineers in making a final decision on how to repair the leak.
DON'T MISS
+ + +
The 360 Days Till St. Patricks Day
PARTY
大
(See, Pat, We didn't forget your B-Day)
FRIDAY MARCH 23
at The Brewery
2:30-6:00 pm
Free Beer To
Class Cards Still Available:
Frosh, Soph. & Jr.
Class Card Holders
Class Cards Still Available:
$2.00 Freshman & Sophomores
$4.00 Juniors (includes class T-shirt)
Luck of the Irish-
First 50 Sophomores get free '81 goblet
First 25 Juniors get beer and shirt for $2.00
HOW CAN YOU REFUSE?
CARNEVIA DEL MONTE
If you love true Mexican Food, You'll love the Aztec Inn. Edward & Naomi Roste invite you to stop in soon for an Authentic Mexican Meal prepared specially for you.
American Dishes served also. Special Luncheon Monus.
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Aztec Inn
Aztec Inn
807 Vermont
842-9455
11 a.m.-11 p.m
Closed Mondays
★ New Exclusive Product ★
Attention 35mm Photographers
4x6
- 30% Greater Picture Area
Inch Color Prints Are Now Standard Size From 35mm Kodacolor Film.
- Service Time 1 to 2 Days
- Outstanding Quality on Beautiful Clear-V-Surface
- Price only $ 30^{\circ} $ Per Print
- Processed in Lawrence
WE'LL MAKE THE MOST OF WHAT YOUVE SHOT.
Now you can get larger prints, higher quality faster service, and a better price than at any other photo store in Lawrence.
at any other photo store in LAWSUIT...
OVERLA PHOTO
Dream
PRE-MED STUDENTS
TAKING THE MCAT APRIL 28?
Then don't miss, on Wednesday, March 28 an Evening of Instruction on
1. TEST-TAKING SKILLS
2. RELAXATION TRAINING
BOTH OF THESE PRESENTATIONS WILL BE GEARED SPECIFICALLY TOWARDS THE MCATEXAM
PRESENTATIONS BY DEAN ROBERT TURVEY OF THE DEAN OF MEN'S OFFICE,
AND PROF. DIANE D. MEDEIMPTO OF THE DEPARTMENT OF COUNSELING
SPACE IS LIMITED. REGISTER IN
THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES OFFICE, 206 STRONG, 864-3687
PROGRAM WILL BE HELD IN NUNEAKMER CENTER, 702 WEDNESDAY, MAR 18
Sponsored by the Collegiate of Liberal Arts & Sciences and the Pre-Med Club
Sponsoired by the Collegiate of Liberal Arts & Sciences and the Pre-Med Club
PECIMEN
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1. Electricity: PAID
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5. Location: ON CAMPUS
6. Transportation: ON BUS ROUTE
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9. Swimming Pool: OPEN MAY-SEPT.
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joyhawker towers apartments
4603 w. fifteenth
See our show apartment today.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesdav. March 21, 1979
9
KU halls house 600 during break
FOUR KU residence halls remained open during spring break for about 600 students, according to figures compiled yesterday by the office of residential brochures.
This year was the first year for halls to remain open during the holidays at no extra cost.
"It was a noble experiment," Fred
McElhenie, director of the office, said. There is a certain expense that goes with it.
Last year, students who remained in balls paid a $8 night fee.
McEilenie said plans had been made for a $1 increase in next year's contracts to pay for the new equipment.
KU student struck by car at intersection night
A University of Kansas student was struck by a car last night in front of Danforth Chapel as she was walking home with a friend.
The student, Lois Malin, Plainsville sophomore, was hit at 8:15 at the intersection of Jawhayk Boulevard and Lilac as she walked toward Danforth Chanel.
Malin was taken to Watkins Memorial Hospital by ambulance where she stayed the night for observation. Police said she was found dead on back head and also complained of back pain.
Malin and a friend, Cynth Hughes, Colly,
junior, were on their way home after
finishing work at Watson Library when the
accident occurred.
Hughes sustained a sprained wrist.
The students were walking side by side when the car struck Main, who was nearest the car, and knocked both of them to the ground.
The car, a white Volkswagen bus, was driven by Keth Bruckus. Krupaw said her feet were from the brake pedal and on to the accelerator when she tried to step at the intersection.
The halls with the most people signup on to stay were kept open. Students from halls that closed were moved to vacant end rooms and students were served in other halls. No food was served during break.
STUDENT SENATE AGENDA
McEllenie said the number of students staying fluctuated throughout the week because some people left late or returned early.
MEETING OPEN TO EVERYONE 6:30 P.M. 100 SMITH HALL
SEMINAR: Budgetary process Student Senate functions and structure University governance structure
BILL: Amend the Student Senate Revenue Code
RESOLUTION: Fund the handicapped bus service through semester
RESOLUTION: Prohibit smoking in meeting room of Student Senate
Announcing: The first official SUA Academy Awards Contest Give us your best guess!
Prizes include:
18th prize: 10 free movie passes + *Give With the Wonder post*
2nd prize: 6 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
3rd prize: 4 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
4th-10th prizes: 2 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
Mark one in each section. BEST PICTURE
___ Coming Home
___ The Deer Hunter
___ Heaven Can Wait
___ Midnight Express
"In order to remain within those guidelines, we had to cut $5 from the increases. That is what was cut," McElhene said.
Midnight Express
However, when the Residential Programs Advisory Board was considering the plan, he said, President Jimmy Carter announced guidelines to control inflation.
___ An Unmarried Woman
Warren Beatty,
Heaven Can Wait
Cary Busey,
The Buddy Holly Story
Robert De Niro,
The Dear Hunter
Lauerse Oliver
The Boys From Brazil
Ion Voight, Coming Home
BEST ACTOR
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Those halls that remained open and the number of students who stayed were: Ellsworth, 30-60; McCollum, about 460, including 60 from other halls; Oliver, about 50, including 30 from other halls; and Templin, 45-50.
Bruce Dern, Coming Home
___ Richard Farnsworth, 27th
Come a Horseman
John Hurt, Midnight Express
Charles Wicken,
The Deer Hunter
Jack Warden, Heaven Can Wail
Anyone is eligible to enter, but may enter only once. In case of a tie, the entry received earliest win. All decision are final. In the Kansas Deadline FOR ENTRIES in the Kansas Deadline, DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES IS WEDNESDAY, April 4th. 4:30 PM the will be announced Wednesday. April 11.
MElennie said the advisory board would decide later what would be done during next year's vacations. He said the board may decide to charge a fee and require a fee.
"But I really wouldn't want to speak for the board," he said.
Seventeen resident assistants, assistant
directors, and resident directors
BEST DIRECTOR
Hal Ashby, Coming Home
Michael Cimino,
The Deer Hunter
Woody Allen, Intros
Wendy Williams,
Buck Henry, Heaven Can Walt
Alan Parker, Midnight Express
BEST ACTRESS
___Ingrid Bergman,
Autumn Sonata
Ellen Burstyn,
Same Time, Next Year
J.J. Bourge
An Unmarried Woman
Jane Fonda, Coming Home
Contest rules:
McElhenne said the decision to keep halls open over spring break this year was based on a survey of school districts.
Geraldine Page,Interiors
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
___ Meryl Streep, The Deer Hunter
Dyan Cannon,
Hawen Can Wait
Nelenope Milford,
Coming Home
Maggie Smith, California State
Maureen Staplen, Interiors
Name.
Phone
films sua
For You
Personally
From
Jeton
REMEMBER THAT IMPORTANT TIME IN YOUR LIFE WITH A CLASS RING.
BEST QUALITY BEST PRICES BEST SERVICE
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
Wed., March 21st and Thurs., March 22nd
and
Thurs., March 22nd
AT THE KANNA UNION BOOKSTORES
Come see the complete collection and order your
special ring for your special occasion. A Josten's
Representative will be here March 21st and 22nd.
We are the only bookstore that shares its profit with K.U. students.
HANG TEN
HANG TEN
BICYCLE
PARTS
Authentic bicycle pocket tee shirts,
boxer shorts and satin looks are a per-
fect way to start off an action-packed
spring! The new H-
n colors are
banana, blu-
BICYCLE PARTS
BICYCLE
PARTS
Authentic bicycle
boxer shorts
fect wav-
spr.
Open Thursday and Friday Nights
Sunday Afternoons
and
Jay
SHOPPE
PARKING
803. MASS. + 841.483) * LAWRENCE. KANS. 6044 * PROJECT BOO
Calendar of Events
Listings subject to change - call us for information.
Calendar of Events
New Grass Revival/Norman Blake
KEGGER NITE w/pat's Blue Riddim Band
a. c. b. d. e. f. g. h. i. j. k. l. m. n. o. p. q. r. s. t. u. v. w. x. y. z.
Thurs. March 22 KEGER NITE w/Pat's Blue Riddim Band
Fri. March 23
Sat. March 24 Chris Fritz & K.Y. 102 present Gran Max & Wakefield
Tues. W.-March 27-28 *100R Grand Prize Pool Tournament!
Tue. March 28-29 *100R Grand Prize Backgammon Tournament!
Wed. March 29 Used Parts
Thurs. March 29 Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee
F-S March 30-31 Tantrum w/Secrets
F-I April 6 Gary Burton Quartet
Sat. April 7 Pat's Blue Riddim Band
Sat. April 11 Jan Hammer w/Wry Jack
Sat. April 14 Fakelawn
Sat. April 21 Pott County Park & Bean Band
Wed. April 25 Lamont Cranton
F-S April 27-28 Cole Tuckey
Wed. May 2 Earl Scruggs w/Skunk Valley Boys
F-May 5 Spyra 55
Sat. May 12 Adagio Mit The Wheel
F-S May 18-19 Albert Collins
The Lawrence Opera House (913)842-6930
642 Mass. St
and 7th Spirit Club
WANTED
INTERESTED PEOPLE TO SIGN UP FOR COMMITTEES
Free University
Besides putting together each semester's curriculum, we are also organizing several one day seminars on a variety of topics. We have a lot of room for new ideas and improvements on old ones.
The Free University is an organization that serves as a clearing house for volunteer instructors in the Lawrence kU community. It offers as well, an opportunistic enrollment in academic and non-academic courses.
Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of Orienteer Kansas, Mt. Oread Bicycle Club, and the KU Sailing Club as well as many special outdoor events. We need people to help out in all areas.
indoor recreation
sua outdoor recreation
We're looking for people to help coordinate these events and others.
Ches, Table Tennis, Bridge, Backgammon.
Football, Gym Aesthetic and Quadratone Club.
iR
New ideas are always welcome for other indoor recreational activities.
Come in and apply.
Fine Arts
sua films
The Fine Arts area of SUA acts to supplement the "arts activities" of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for staging workshops, performances and exhibits in any of the arts areas . . . literature, art, drama, music, and dance.
We are looking to expand the wide variety that we already have which includes, Popular series, Summer series, Midnight series and many more.
Under consideration are a great directors' series, Sunday specials and an International series.
Just like the big shows downtown, only better because we offer so much more and for a lot less.
SPECIAL EVENTS
We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands. One of our specialties is the outdoor concerts that include several groups and lasts as long as six hours.
Special Events involves a lot of students when it comes to promoting a show. Security, ushers, hospitality and light stage are areas that must be con-
Check us out and see what you can do to help.
SUA TRAVEL
SUA Travel offers a unique, less expensive way to travel for the KU student
Past trips have gone to Paddle Island, Vall, Appalachian Trail, the Kentucky Gently and many other places.
Creative minds are needed to promote these programs and develop new ideas.
and develop new ideas.
FORUMS
ideas, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all a part of SUA Forums.
The Forums committee brings nationally recognized people to work with community members in various settings, also keeps in touch with people on campus and in the local community.
We need innovative people like you to help us with our people programs.
pr public relations
SUA Public Relations is responsible for promoting the image and activities of our programming board to the students and the University community. Anyone with creative ideas for promoting SUA is encouraged to apply.
This coming year's activities includes fall and summer orientation and the Madigal Dinner.
EXPERIENCE IS NOT A NECESSITY HOWEVER INTEREST IS REQUIRED MARCH 30 IS THE SIGN UP DEADLINE, SO DON'T DELAY. FOR MORE INFORMATION, STOP BY THE SUA OFFICE IN THE KAN-UNION.
SAS UNION
OR CALL
864-3477
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
10
Wednesday, March 21, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Mideast war called unlikely
By BILL RIGGINS Staff Reporter
The Egyptian-Iraeli peace negotiations represent an "earnest effort" to achieve peace and probably will not lead to another major war in the Middle East, Edward Bayne, an acknowledged expert on the Middle East, said yesterday.
Bayne, professor of political science at Yale University, is at the University of Kansas this week to teach a political science short course, Topics in Comparative Politics; The Middle East. He teaches a similar course at Yale.
Bayne said that although the treaty tabled the issues of the Gaza Strip, the Wost Bank and Jerusalem, it required the withdrawal from Israel in 2018. The United States and Egyptian and Israeli ambassadors and
the sale of oil from the Sinai peninsula to Israel.
"Regaining the Sinai is highly important to Egypt, and the oil agreement is important to both Israel and the United States," Bayne said.
Bayne has served as an adviser on Middle East affairs to the U.S. State Department.
"YOU ALSO have formal recognition of the State of Israel which gives it a national identity."
Bayne, who has studied the Middle East as a doctor, when he was a financial adviser to the Peruvian government, charged that the peace negotiations and the treaty itself were transparent and cosmetic.
"There is a large bloc of Arab opinion against it. This is kind of a public denial of its value," he said. "The Arabs think the Islamists are racist." The Israelis have yet to give up anything."
Bayne acknowledged that failure to resolve the issue of Palestinian autonomy would create difficulties, but said that it was unlikely it would lead to an all-out war.
ONE REASON, Bayne said, was that the quality and quantity of Israel's military hardware, mostly funded by the United Nations, overheard that of its Arab neighbors.
“It’s conceivable we could have a Vietnami-type situation with Russia financing one side, but this is highly unlikely,” he said.
"There isn't enough support among the Arabs to start a war," he said.
"It's just Russia and Libya with Yassarra
Arafat of the Palestine Liberation
Organization), and that doesn't make a war," he said.
movement of sorts in Egypt, he said, "it is less widespread and less organized than the
"I'm convinced Carter is a very extraordinary man and he felt the religious dimension to this—that he had a personal connection," he said. "It's not political rubbish to this man.
Bayne disagreed with Arafat's view that Egyptian President Anwar Sadat was in danger of being displaced by an uprising similar to the one that occurred in Iran.
Bayne said that Sadat, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and President Carter were primarily motivated to compel Israel to accept a genuine longing for peace in the Middle East.
Essay Planning and Organization
"I think history will write it as his initiative. He probably did it with a good deal of advice against it because it was too transparent or too cosmic."
All Juniors, Seniors, and Graduate Students
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Letter Writting and Resume's
Bayne said it was too early to say whether the Egyptian-Israeli agreement could lead to a comprehensive Middle East peace agreement.
Footnotes and Bibliography
"one should look at the Egyptian-Israeli agreement just as what it is," he said.
Effective Paragraphs
Correct Sentences
"It's an effort to normalize relations between two countries. Whether it involves a state's agreement with another country
Grammar and Punctuation
Communications Resource Center
DEADLINE FOR ENTERING
"ALTHOUGH THERE is an Islamic
306B Summerfield
9-4 Monday-Friday
864-4500
INTRAMURAL GOLF
TODAY
Wednesday,
March 21st
4:00 p.m.
Information Available
in Rm. 208
Robinson Center
Recreational Services
208 Robinson Center
University of Kansas
864-3546 or 864-3558
Hospital official drops suit against social welfare prof
A $400,000 lawsuit against Louis Frydman, associate professor of social welfare, was dropped yesterday in Shawnee County District Court.
The suit was filed by the former section chief of the Topeka State Mental Hospital, Donald Rinsley, who alleged invasion of privacy, interference and meddling with his job.
The suit was a result of Frydman's involvement with patients in Rinley's ward and with patients in St. Louis.
"I express regret that any of my public policy statements have been construed by Dr. Rinsley as a personal criticism," Frydman said yesterday.
The suit was filed in August 1974, and was dismissed by the Shawnee County District Court in July 1975. Rinsley appealed the decision to the Kansas Supreme Court.
In January 1977, the Supreme Court sent the case back to the district court with instructions that the meddling and interference part of the action be dropped.
Wolf Creek Legal Support Fund
Should the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant become operational? Seventeen persons answer with a resounding NO! They were arrested on Jan. 12 while blockading the arrival of the Wolf Creek nuclear reactor vessel. They took their stand on the RR tracks and will do so again in the courtroom. Dennis Hawver, a Topeka attorney, will represent the first five defendants on March 21 in a jury trial at Burlington, Kansas.
These 17 persons need your help to defray court costs.
Contributions May Be Sent To:
Wolf Creek Legal Support Fund
P.O. Box 1177 Lawrence, Kansas 66044
2 for 1
Pizza Hut.
© 1979 Pizza Hut Inc.
Cash value $1,206
Bring this coupon to any participating Pizza Hut® restaurant and buy one large pizza and get a medium pizza with the same toppings, free. Or buy any medium pizza and get a small pizza with the same toppings, free. Offer expires .312/179... One coupon per customer per visit. (Not valid on SuperStyle pizza)
$2.50/$1.50 OFF
--england Netherlands France Germany Switz:
Sponsored by Chadron State College
Complete Cost of Tour $199
(Lehigh Valley)
Up to 6 hr. grad or undergrad credit (or audit)
Pizza Hut
11879 Pizza Hut Inc.
Cash value 1/206
L-UDK - 317
Bring this coupon to any participating Pizza Hut® restaurant and get $2.50 off the regular price of your favorite large pizza, or $1.50 off your favorite medium pizza. Check out our SuperStyle one Coupon per customer per visit. (Not valid on SuperStyle pizza)
Party Rooms Available
1606 W. 23rd St. 843-3516
804 Iowa Street 842-1667
932 Massachusetts 843-7044
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- AIRLINE TICKETS
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ravel service
600 MASS,
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KANSAS UNION
843-1211
STUDY AND TRAVEL IN EUROPE
IN SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
July 8, 2017
July 8-28,1979
Write: Director, Foreign Science Study Program Chadron State College, Chadron, 69337
BELLA
Friday March 30 7:00pm Hoch Auditorium
ABZUG
Tickets:
Students $1
Non-students $2
Advanced Sales at
SUA Office
Presented by IAWS in cooperation with Forums
IRAN
THE ILLUSION
OF POWER
Edward Byme
VALUABLE COUPON
The HOLE
COME IN AND SEE
WHAT THIS COUPON'S WORTH
New specials will be posted in our shop.
Offer good with coupon only
In The Wall
Located in the Friendly Jayhawk Food Mart
Expires Wednesday 3-28
Jimmy Johns
DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO TONIGHT?
Check the Lawrence Daily Entertainment Guide in the Classifieds!
1973-82
SCHOOL OF COMMUNICATIONS
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
No More Mirages
Five years ago I spent a summer traveling around the country, working with children and a deeper understanding of momenting new people and encountering different styles wore off, leaving me lonely, unsatisfied and frustrated. I watched for happiness in many patients, and found that they "drug" babies, friends and partners. It seemed as if these things promised happiness and fulfillment, but then the realization that we are in an era of increased drugs as I found myself unable to cope with life. I left as I was coming upon once again the beauty of those moments of my imagination, more vividly of my imagination.
At this time I had a boyfriend in California, when I decided to visit. When I arrived there I discovered that he was in love with someone else. One more mageure I was crushed! The person I had promised to love forever I now hatred. Not only that, but I was intently jealous of his new girl friend. The thought occurred to me that I freely loved her, and I wanted to kiss her or not. It irritated me that all I could do was hate him and grow bitter.
I left Galicia deep in despair, and moved to Lawrence, settling with a friend. It was at this time that I encountered "Christians" from Galicia who were being baptized at the church. One of the girls explained that she had not been able to truly love others until she had known God's life for herself. "We love," she said.
Another Life changed by Jesus Christ
my head. "I came from here for that." If it wasn't because I had never realized God's love for me through
anyone, or anyone else for that matter — because I had never realized God's love for me through
I decided then to give my toes to Jesus, Who had given His life for me. I have found Jesus Christ to be a monument of life rather than an empty mage.
.
Coupon
For your Free copy of
"THE LIFECHANGER"
sent to New York, Box 211, Lawrence
Nikki D'Candia
Kansas Union Employee
---
Wednesday, March 21. 1979
11
'Mighty' minicams make mayhem, mostly miserable
Shorts and longs while crying in my green coat and peeking Michigan哭 state to the win the game.
and
per
dely
unted
any
s if
out
ope
ter
ter
on
As Peter Finch and hundreds of viewers shouted in "Network," the movie about television, "I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take it any more!" Finch and extras were complaining about television, and rightly so. If one more televisor worker was sent by coach's press conference after a game blown in front of all, again I will hit his ulus.
Sportswriters are on deadline to the minute. When these electronic soap-selling servants stick their microphones and cameras in my line of sight, as they did at the NCAA games here, it really gets my Irish up.
Photographers share the irritation. They practically camp out before a game for a good courtside spot, only to have a wheeled floor camera abruptly move in front of their lens at the peak of an action shot. Sports have been around a lot longer with writers
SHORTS and LONGS
I will provide a clean and well-structured response to your request.
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If you could provide a clearer or more detailed image, I would be glad to help you with that. Please retranscribe the content if possible.
than with the pesky electronic flaks who are virtual rookies on the sport scene.
KU'S BASKETBALL season is over, but Jayhawk coaches are still in the midst of a growing recruiting battle. Always appreciative of a short drive instead of a long flight, it's likely that Ted Owens, Bob Hill and Lafayette Norwood all will get to Topka Saturday for the Kansas Basketball Classic, a high school all-star game. This game features the state's top prep players. The team, with 13 recruited player in the state, will perform on the West squad. Ross, at 64 guard from Wichita South High, reportedly has
narrowly his college choice to Kansas,
Kansas State, North Carolina, Georgia,
and Kansas State. The game starts at $8
amid a barnabas University *&* Whiting
Foley Field.
DRURY (MISSOURI) College won the NAIA basketball championship last Saturday in Kansas City's Kemper Arena. The team averaged约10,000 a day. Fans were treated to a crade dunk Friday night, but they didn't see at any Big Eight competition there.
KANSAS FANS should remember the Paulsen-64 year old Ray Meyer. Coach Meyer was last year in a Sunday loss to Oklahoma State, and he was not interviewed to interview. Prior to that game, the Notre Dame chaplain he prayed for an Irish victory, while the Paulden padre said he prayed for "the Lord's will to be done." This is one of the with the same chapel, in the Final Four.
LARRY BIRD, Indiana State's fowl that won't sing, said yesterday that after last Saturday's Sycamore victory over Arkansas, an excited fan wrenched his already aling thump. "I dropped him with a punch," the 6-9 forward said. It was a game where he came up about 30,000 paper napkins as content at Allen Field House during the NCAA games.
Speaking of Bird, I tried to get an interview with him when he was in town, promising that two tape recorders would be running during the session and he could keep one tape. He declined an evening of thinking about it. I did talk to him on the case. Trying to key on his past experience as a truck driver, I informed him that I too, drove a truck. "Hey man," Bird said, "that's part of life. So are basketball fans and sports writers."
FORMER KU basketball player Herb Nibues favored a bounce pass coming off a dribble, one-handed, of course. Michigan State's Earyvin Johnson has advanced that
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Sports Roundup
Judge hears Big 8
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)--Attorneys for the Big Eight Conference and former Okahama State football coach Jim Stanley discussed alternatives for further action in the conference's investigation of Stanley District Judge Russell G. Clark yesterday.
The Big Eight was told it could either submit further evidence in its investigation of Stanley, or pursue a similar but separate investigation that would not involving Stanley, or possibly do both.
"We merely discussed some alternatives," Clark said. "There were no orders or ultiumtums issued. They may take one or the other, or another one, or all of them."
Yesterday's closed meeting was to discuss the need for further depositions in the case involving an alleged slush fund at the Stillwater school.
Clark issued a preliminary injunction in DeKalb County to continue the investigation into the alleged fund unless the conference allowed Stanley to confront his accusers and to cross-examine.
Stanley, now the defensive line coach for the New York Giants, contended the procedures used by the Big Eight in its victory violated his right of due process.
Mokeski to play
Kansas senior center Paul Mokosi isn't finishing played basketball.
The 7-1 Mokeski was selected to the West team for the annual Coaches' East-West All-Star Game March 23 in Salt Lake City. The team was coached by a vote of many of the nation's coaches.
On March 31, Mckeski will play under Abe Lemons, University of Texas Coach, in the fifth annual Pizza Hat Basketball Classic in Las Vegas. Mokeski received an at-large spot on the West squad, after failing to get enough votes for the regular selections.
Women's Top 20
KU starts home stand
The top 20 women in college basketball teams are compiled
Mt. Greene College of the Philadelphia Institute in Philadelphia,
for a first year on campus, and season records. Records through May 18.
35.1
Tennessee State
23.8
Texas A&M
23.6
Texas
27.4
Stephen F. Austin
27.4
UCLA
26.8
Hudgers
26.7
Rutgers
26.7
Chewyne State
25.1
Wayland Hughst
25.1
Vallado State
26.7
Vallado State
27.8
Kansas
27.8
North Carolina
28.0
Northwestern
28.4
New Las Vegas
24.8
Fortham
27.9
KU's baseball team begins a seven-game home stand with a doubleheader against the Benedictine College Ravens at 1:30 this afternoon at Quigley Field.
The Jayhawks, 10-3-1, are coming off their best 14-game start since 1972, when they won by 8-5.
After tying for second with Northern Illinois University in the Pan American University's Citrus Tournament, the teams were rained out Monday at Oral Roberts.
Two of KU's three tournament losses came at the hands of Central Michigan, the eventual champion. KU's third loss was to East Tennessee State.
field, coach Floyd Temple said yesterday. Last season, Vickers hit 283 for the Hawks, with three home runs and 29 BIG IBI. John Brooks had a streak of blowout strike will move to right field.
Temple named Clay Christiansen, a junior right-hander with a 1-1 record, and Dave Hebes, a freshman who has thrown six goals so far, as today's starting pitchers.
Butch Vickers, sidelined until now with a broken finger, will start today at center
Benedictine is 1-3 on the season, its long victory coming against Oklahoma Baptist. Some Ravens to watch include Kevin Thomas and Tyler Wilson, hit 333 last year and was named to the NIA District 10 All-Star Team, and Larry Moore, who shot shortstop who has hit 625 so far this season.
Leonard leads Royals to victory
From the Kansan Wire Service
FORT MYERS, Fla.—Reserves Jamie Quirk and Jim Guadet drove two in runs yesterday and Dennis Leonard pitched seven strong innings to lead the Kansas City Royals to a 9-2 exhibition victory over the Atlanta Braves.
Quirk, who went 3-for-10 to raise his spring average to .500, singled home a run in Kansas City's four-run second inning and his second double of the game produced another run in the seventh. Gaudet doubled home two runs in the eighth.
Leonard, 3-0 with a 1.20 ERA this spring.
gave up two runs and five hits while striking,
Leonard, 20-learning a ninth stunt was
the longest for a Kansas City pitcher that
spring. Frank LaCorte, played by eight
walks, was the loser, giving up five hits and
five runs in five innings.
Kansas City shortstop Fred Patek, who experienced pain in his back after a workout Monday, was sent to a chiropractor yesterday but the extent of his injury was not known. Kansas City outfielder Clint Hurdle wore glasses for the first time yesterday after discovering he is near-sighted in his right eye.
TWO ARKANAS HazeRacks who looked in Lawrence's NCAAction were shot down and taken away.
move. "Magic" simply passes straight off a dribble, sometimes the length of the court.
Hastings from Independence, both towns near Allen Field House. Both said KU didn't show any interest in them while they were playing in the prep, so Eddie Sutton, Arkansas coach and a former Kansas, wisely signed them.
All or nothing for netters
Last week was a week of all or nothing for KU's women's team.
The Jayhawks posted a 4-2 record on their spring break tour. Five of those matches were won or lost by 9-4 scores.
SANDWICHED BETWEEN KU's losses was a 5-4 victory over Tulane.
It was all Kansas in the first three encounters. Memphis State, Southwestern Louisiana and Nichols State were the Hawks victims, each falling 8-1.
but against nationally ranked squads from Louisiana State and Northeast Louisiana it was KU who came away with justice. Jasmin 80-both times.
"Our scores were very even with them, although we didn't win any matches," KU coach Tom Kriste said yesterday. "Both those teams are ranked in the top in the country, with Northeast Louisiana breaking into the top 10."
The Hawks had _o face Northeast Louisiana without Carrie Fotopoulos, who moved into the No. 1 singles spot after the first three matches. However, Kivisto said, Kansas played a much stronger match against Northeast Louisiana than it had played against LSU the previous day.
Kiviste said he noted improvement in the team's doubles play, particularly with Fotopolos and Vatierie Block, the squad's top duo.
"We're starting to win two and three doubles every time out, whereas last year we were lucky to win one." Kivisto said.
The Lawrence Opera House and 7th Cresent
$1000 GRAND PRIZE Pool Tournament March 27th Entry fee $2.50
7th Spirit Club present
and
$10000 GRAND PRIZE Backgammon Tournament
March 28th
Tournament Open to members and their guests.
Entry fee $3.00
The Lawrence Opera House and The Spirit Club
Memberships available now!!
now!!
NORMAN BLAKE with
THE NEW GRASS REVIVA
TONIGHT!!
NORMAN BLAKE with
THE NEW GRASS REVIVAL
Thurs. March 22
REGGHE! REGGHE! MUSIC!
Pat's
BLUE RIDDLE
BAND
FM 106 Presents
only 200 girls
only 300 guys
PLUSI-FREE BEER! KEGGER NITE!
Thursday, March 29 ...
SONNY TERRY and BROWNIE McGHEE
SONNY TERRY
BROWNIE
McGHEE
The Lawrence Opera House
and 7th Spirit Club
7th & Mass.
3.00 advance
4.00 at door
Tues., March 27
100.00 Grand Prize
Pool Tourney
Wed., March 28
100.00 Grand Prize
Backgammon Tourney
Thurs., March 29
SONNY TERRY & BROWNIE
MCGHEE WITH USED PARTS
Fri., April 6
GARY BURTON QUARTET
Wed., April 11
JAN HAMMER w/DRY JACK
Wed., April 25
LAMONT CRANSTON
Wed., May 2
EARL SCRUGGS w/
SKUNK VALLEY BOYS
Fri., May 4
SPYRO GYRA
Sat., May 12
ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL
Fri.-Sat., May 18-19
ALBERT COLLINS
With ... USED PARTS
All tickets available at Better Days & 7th Spirit
REGGHE
REGGHE
MUSIC!
Pet's
BLUE RIDDIM
BAND
"THE GREATEST LIVING EXPONENTS OF BLACK FOLK BLUES..."
NEW YORK TIMES
BROWNIE McGHEE
SONNY TERRY
"The GREATEST LIVING EXPOSITIONS OF BLACK FOLK BLUES..."
NEW YORK TIMES
BROWNIE McGHEE
SONNY TERRY
The Lawrence Opera House
and 7th Spirit Club
3.00 advance
4.00 at door
7th & Mass.
With USED PARTS
The Lawrence Opera House and 7th Spirit Club
12
Wednesday, March 21, 1979
University Daily Kansan
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
sua films
Wednesday, March 21
Antonioni:
L'AVVENTURA
Thursday, March 22 ALEXANDER NEVSKY
Dr. Michaelangelo Antonioni, on
Mona Vittia, Gabriele Ferretti. The
film that made Antonioni famous. It
ailsubtitles.
(1938)
Dr Sergei Eisenstein, D. I Vassiliou,
one of the greatest films of all times,
had been sent to Russia was invaded by a German
army in the 13th century USSR/RUS
for the war against Germany.
Friday & Saturday
March 23-24
COUSIN COUSINE
(1976)
Jevian-Charles Tacchella; with Victor Lianou, Marie Christine Barrault, Marie France Plainy, Guy Marchland, Francesubtiles.
Midnight Movie
THE ROCKY HORROR
PICTURE SHOW
(1975)
Dir, Jim Sharmil, with Tim Curry,
Sir Susan Sarandon, Moat Leaf. There will only be these two shows, so we have the tickets to early so as assured a seat.
Tuesday, March 27
THE WAR OF THE WORLDs
(1953)
(1953)
Dir. Byron Haskin; with Gene Barry
Ann Robinson, Les Tremayne, Speci-
cal effects by George Pal.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless
otherwise noted up to 15:00 admission
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
Oread Shop Spring Book Sale!
Hundreds of hard-bound books at greatly reduced prices.
Today through March 30th
Hours:
Weekdays 8:30-5:00
Saturday 10:00-4:00
OREAD
BOOK
SHOP
YES4
master charger
OREAD
BOOK SHOP
BEST PRICE • BEST SUPPLIER • BEST SERVICE
YAM
YOUR KANSAS UNION
PRIMARY SHOP
BOOKSTORES
WESTERN BEST TRADE WESTERN BEST TRADE WESTERN
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with K.U. students
judy collins
march 30, 1979 at 9:00 PM.
hoch auditorium
reserved seats $6.50 & $7.50
Tickets available at SUA Office, Books and various locations.
Doors open at 8:20 PM. An SUA and Schum Production.
A cartoon character holding a drum.
K
Alexander Astin
Educator studies college dropouts
MICHAEL KENNETH CABOT
2105 West 26th Street
Independent Coin-up
Lawrence's Newest Self-Service Laundromat, Complete With Dry Cleaning Drop-Off. Attendant on Duty.
NOW OPEN
Use this
Grand Opening Coupon.
For One FREE WASH.
Coupon good 3/21-3/28, from 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Just southwest of Dairy Queen.
One per customer
WINE
G
SUNDAY
Are the Kitchens Always Closed on Sundays?
The Eldridge Has The Answer.
All You Can EAT
All You Can EAT
BRUNCH $445 per person
For Parties/Groups, 15 or more 10% OFF,
30 or more 15% OFF.
12 Pay Attention Customer Discount
ALL YOU CAN EAT
FRIED CHICKEN
DINNER
DINNER
Serving 5-9 pm
Served Family Style
$4.45
ALL YOU CAN EAT FRIED CHICKEN only $4.45
Fried Chicken Cole Slaw
Mashed Potatoes Rolls & Butter
Gravy Coffee or Tea
Creamed Corn
Special Fraternity and Sorority offer.
Dinner $4.90 including Drinks.
The Eldridge House
701 Massachusetts
(913)841-4666
By GENE BROWNING
Astin, who spoke to about 40 people last night in the Kansas Union, said, "Older students, students with less educated parents, Protestants, students from small towns and students who seldom won letters in high school are more likely to do out."
If a student smokes, is a Protestant, or is from a small town, there is a greater chance that he will drop out of college, according to Alexander Astin, professor of higher education at the University of California-Los Angeles.
Astin has written 12 books ranging from academic problems of students to com-
Staff Renorter
Astin, who has recently completed a four-year survey of dropout rates and problems at 90 colleges, was sponsored by the office of the executive vice chancellor.
"Dropouts usually are independent, nonconforming and strongly oriented towards school."
Astin said smokers, who were pleasure oriented, were much more likely to drop out. In the survey, a majority of students said they were because of borethor or bad grades, Astin said.
*"ONLY 10 PERCENT of students drop out with positive reasons such as good job offers"*
College dropout rates will continue to rise unless administrators make a "drastic shakeup" of the academic system, Astin said.
"There is a theory that can be used as a guide," he said. "The more involved a student is in the academic experience, the better chance of his persisting."
He said administrators must change the academic environment so students would become more involved. He said a change would solve the problem because he had found that students were most likely to drop out because of lack of involvement in school.
He said administrators had to develop an information system that could monitor student academic performance and extracurricular activities.
HOWEVER, HE SAID, developing an
information system would be a frustrating problem. He said the problem would arise because of the technical nature of the system.
"In a sense, learning to be an educational administrator is like learning to paint blindedfool," he said. "Administration looked at as an art, not as a science."
He said the dropout problem grew out of the educational system itself. Otherwise, he said, the problem should have stopped when institutions began "beating the bushes" for students, and community colleges began a tremendous growth.
Administrators find it easier to say that student dropouts are trying to "find themselves" instead of confronting them with educational institutions, according to Astin.
"A student's career development is delayed when he pulls out. It is a waste of time."
"Selective admissions at a college is like a hospital that only admits people with the common cold because the patient will be easy to treat," he said.
ALTHOUGH IT HAS been fashionable in the past for students to drop out of school to find themselves, he said, dropping out will hurt most students.
He said a college could reduce the dropout rate by using selective admission standards, but stiffer requirements would hurt many students.
Because the main problem, lack of involvement, comes from the institution, he said, the solution must also come from the institution.
"Sex, race and background carry little weight when compared to academic competence."
He said students dropped out because they were not "turned on" to learning, but were.
He said a student who directed his energies toward the academic environment
"If you invest your psychological and physical energies in things outside yourself in the academic community the prospects are good that you will not drop out," he said.
A career in law without law school.
After just three months of study at the Institute for Paralegal Training in exciting Philadelphia, you can have a stimulating and rewarding career in law or business — without law school.
The Institute for Paralegal Training is the nation's first and most respected school for paralegal training. Since 1970, we've placed over 2,500 graduates in over 85 cities nationwide.
As a lawyer's assistant you will be performing many of the duties traditionally handled only by attorneys. And at The Institute for Paralegal Training, you can pick one of seven different areas of law to study. Upon completion of this course, your management service will find you a responsible and challenging position in a law firm, bank or corporation in the city of your choice.
If you're a senior of high academic standing and looking for an above average career, contact your Placement Office.
We will visit your campus on:
Tuesday, April 3
The Institute for Paralegal Training
HÄUSER BERGER HAUSEN AUFSTELLUNG
235 South 17th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19103
(215) 732-6600
Bass
royal college shop
eight thirty seven massachusetts
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 21, 1971
13
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accreditation, products, services, and supply chain management. Must have BS or equivalent in IT, business analytics, data analysis, or related field and 5 yrs of experience as a BIM/DBA, CAM, or CIS expert. MUST BE ABSOLUTE CUSTOMER OF DAVID HUNTINGTON LLP.
CLASSIFIED RATES
ERRORS
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
15 works or
less
Earn additional
fund
$0.20 $2.25 $7.25 $10.50
01 01 02 03 04
AD DEADLINES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
10 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.
an UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These can be placed in person or delivered to the UKB business office at 861-4358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
III Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
864-4358
Zen practice daily 6 p.m. Introductory talks
Wednesday, March 14th through Monday, March 20th at Lawson Chapel on March 14th from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Pre-law students meet with 1st, 2nd, and 3rd year
students now learning tax concepts in New
Hampshire (09 New Green Hill Hwy.)
FOR RENT
Apt. 2, HR and efficiency. Close to campus. Univ-
1549. Apply Chai, quiet, and comfortable.
Apt. 2, HR and efficiency. Close to campus. Univ-
1549. Apply Chai, quiet, and comfortable.
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENTING. Studio 1, 250ft. furnished, front and back entry with large windows, walk-in closet, parking space. On KU this room features 3 bedrooms plus 2 baths. 824-4242 or call at 250 Front Street. Door Front 1.
Finally a Laurence landlord who cares!
Apartment and rooms furnished, parking most
places. Phone: 888-26746 KU and near town. IP
phone: 888-26746
Call Mark Schneider for apartments and rentals, 342-3212 or 812-4111.
Still looking for a place to call home? Nathalm
can be reached at 415-327-8046 or the reception
for the year. Stop by on Wednesday or on
give us a call at 415-327-8046 and we will be glad
to welcome you! NATHMIT HALL, 184. 1800 Natron
park, NATHMIT HALL, 184. 1800 Natron
park, NATHMIT HALL, 184. 1800 Natron
Sublime. Southside ap. apr. 4-August 2 z inn.
furnished. $121.92 (meal) + $48-823.
*Seattle* 2 bedrooms Apt. 11, bath 7. shang xing
room 4, kitchen/wet room $20,00; air con.
$38,00; DWF $14,50; 3-23
DWF: 0817
SUNDANCE
APARTMENTS
Visit our display until today.
You'll see a touch of love.
Visit our display units today.
You Have a Touch of Class
841-7357
HOUGHTON PLACE: ITS FULL-BUT -- We make to and inform us that we will give our name in the future. We will test for the innumerator those apartments and checked, 2400 Alabama, 8417-3756, and checked, 2400 Alabama, 8417-3756.
Mid suburb furnished with bedroom apartments
at 1089 N. 45th St., Suite #268,
$750 onuite, 814-892-6436, 846-568-0468
For Rent. 2 BR. AH锈. Free Laundry. BDUnique.
2 BL from. KU1-841-9030 or KU1-8237-20
5-20
Roostmate wanted. 2 B/B 28 (Bath) Waltha & Werther.
1950s 37.4 sq ft. 3 bedrooms. 3/26
1st refr. Cail Niles 826-167
1st refr. Cail Niles 826-167
Sibblit 3 bedroom hotel. Walker-dryer, close to
Broadway. Walk-up to Waterloo. 841-754-7854 after.
2-26
Jayhawker TOWERS Apartments
1603 West 15th
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our
DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
Sobelt for summer one year old Studio Aud
normally $175 but discounted in $225 monthly. AC
$49.95.
Mark 1 & 11 Apartments now renting for summer! We are offering 15 on-site luxury apartments with 2 bathrooms, central air conditioning, sprinkling, and laundry facilities. Resident Mar. for add info: Mark11Apartments.com.
NICE 1 DEFROOM aquarium furnished, close to
the ocean. Water temperature 23-30°C.
841-849-3099, 841-7586, 5-27
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
All New & Contemporary
Visit our furnished display unit today &
you'll see why the move is to Sundance
Apartments. Completely furnished studio of
B&B Convertibly located at 71M & Furls.
Just west of the Sanctuary on KU Bus Route.
Sabine's 2 bedroom apartment Great Location
Saturday 10am-5pm Avail April 19th
86-6790 or 86-6566
8415255·842.4455
Christian Hunting Now and Summer Close to
Early Fall. 824-6220 between 2:30,
5:00 Keep trying
Two bedroom bathroom apartment. Unfurnished.
One bathroom month, monthly paid. $125
deposit. 822-6666
BIGK'S
Beautiful 2 bedroom duplex at Minneapolis St. John's,
482-9221, for $35,000 for two, six or ten
quilients. 842-9221
ENTERTAINMENT
DAILY
GUIDE
MON-THURS 7-9:00
$1 PITCHERS
TUEDAY 7-10:00
50' Schooners & $1 Pitches
FRIDAY 1-7:00
DRINK & DRAWN
EVER FRIED
708 Mass.
great looking ladies
ALWAYS
a cover charge
Memberships Avail.
HERE'S WHAT'S HAPPENING!
NEVER
701 Mast
TONIGHT! 9:00
NORMAN BLAKE
NEW GRASS REVIVAL
Three O'Clock
Free Beer Night!
Pats a 'Blue Riddim Band
Hot Reggae!
The Laurence
Open House
7th & Mass
Every Wednesday
LADIES' NIGHT!
FREE BEER!!
8-9:00
8th & Vermont
ROCKY
Js
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make sure out of western civilization Notes make sure to include the following: 23 for exam preparation. *New Analysis* on modern civilization. *New Analysis* on modern civilization. *Cities, Museums, & Ordnance Books*. If
Alternate, starter and generator. Residential
motor (230/460V, 50 Hz) MOVELINE MOTIVE B,
842-789-3000, 2800 W, 4011 f
(230/460V, 50 Hz)
Fendri Mangartan Blue Guitars with strings, corduroy body, bass guitar, double-neck, cowl and dovetails. Very good condition. $195.00
GRAND OPENING!
FRIDAY
QUANTRILLS
SALOON
$1 PITCHERS TILL 6:00
$1.50 PITCHERS TILL 12:00
1924 Pipr; Duster, PS, PE, AC, autom. trans.
New tires. Excellent condition. 841-311-572.
WHY BENT? When you could buy this beautiful garden, it wasn't. And it's now like it was. Like new appliances, lifelike curtains, colorful flowers, smart lighting. Like new water tanks, washier dryer arcs, 2 smoke stains, skirted and curtained beds, storage building bins, tree gardens, storage buildings.
Sandpumps. Non-glasses are our specialty. Non-porous
materials are the exception, required to resist
1021 Mesh. 841-717-9700
606 Schoners at Louise's every Friday from 2:30
till 5.
Carpet, color red. 12" x 17". Stucco Wall. Place-
mats: 4 mats, red fire cord. Cost: $411-832.
1979 Harley Davidson Superglide 150cc ... 998
Harley Davidson 400cc, 1979, XP060 to 342
240cc ... 998
57 Chevy Monte Carlo Coupe, 25,000 KM. Standard,
Air con. KC, Cond. $40,000 or Bent, Set.
$60,000.
Make someone at home busy with RU. Survey volunteers J-Hawk run, sing, dance, knelt and Carrot Circle.
Tape dig, CT-P700, allogain a new DYNAMIC level,
Brain peak level model. Dobbler 5010-6/3. 525
If you're healthy, you're happy. We have health
lifesavers for Penn Harbor, Northwestern, Emory,
Penn State, and Michigan.
1972 Honda Helibala Trail. New battery, pumps
& chain less. 1 year old, 1 year old $800.00 + $
$300.00
1973 Pante AM FM 452 cassette player Recordly
1973 Pante AM FM 452 cassette player Recordly
$1990 Please call 812-197-8767 8:26
TRAC A400 Auto camera dock, straight up TACCH
TACCH, CAMERA Dock, TRAC TACCH
NBURSE IAUCTION, DYNASON BDQING kit 681-320
NBURSE IAUCTION, DYNASON BDQING kit 681-320
715 Mass
BORONKO IMPORTS, LTD. Organic dwarfed
lanceolate trees in the southern heat-
tolerant largest and best in the 128
year-old cluster in the southern heat-
tolerant largest and best in the 128
year-old cluster in the southern heat-
71 yellow Muttong Corese AT, PS, AC; Disc
Vinyl brown vinyl disc; Genuine
CD player
WATERPROOF MATTRESSS $58.98, 3-year count.
WHITE LIGHT, 700 Max. $128.12, 180
count.
Watch for truck on 30s, calling produce
Jayhawk Food, 800, & Illusions. Also wooden
Minting 1964年6 cyl. 3 speed. Complex recirculated
109" stack, turbine condition (1816) 356-6477 (belt)
4
Sailboat Vannupard 470 lbs 15 ft race boat. Mint sail.
(336) 365-647 (117)
Ultra Linear 2000 - excellent sounding audio 84-299
speakers $50 + find help call Peter 642-7157
1972 700 Norton Commando, combat, vulture,
two overtanker, drop, drip, never, never
to reach.
Vikison 2) for sale Reconditioned—Ready to play. Phone 843-5708 3-23
72 Team Ann. Custom built 455 HQ motor, 18x7
72 Team Ann. custom stearen, drive-heater, 3-27
Dell. 841-7855
71. Fireproof V8, automatic power alarming, excellent mechanical condition; 900 * 814
Toyota and Daimler cut on Nov. 20th 19-43 a mile (27.5 km) from the Interstate 84 near New York City. The visitation of H. Stoneman, 929 Main St., New York City. Ticket prices are $26.
Sport Compet 74 Renault 1927L, the French
automobile airline, AM FM 850 (verizon)
can compete with Audi.
Used sports, or casual three-reduced Game it
girl 'en overcrowded' Make an adult it
play it in a different setting
Classic Tues. Backstage Cleanout! Superb VIP
Travel & Entertainment!
$200 with this entertainment. Rent Maximus!
30'x70' or 45'x60' at theaters. Call for details.
Valleywater truck and air' new $24 4 plg $187 incl to
$226 each day Ray Wallemont 29 May
New $50 for $25 a night
FOUND
NUMBER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF POGUE
FOR the Summer Orientation student staff. FY21
was designated for summer orientation.
The staff's paper or come by the Office of Admission
and the Riverside School. The官职 accept-
ed employer is
Small Male German Shepherd, Young, no tac
Small Male German Shepherd, Young, no tac
5-72
JOBE MEN WOMEN NAVBOATS
MILITARY SHIP LOCATION: JAPAN
SERVICE: INVESTIGATIVE DEVELOPMENT
MANAGEMENT, VISUAL ARCHITECTURE
AND MANEUVERING. EQUIPED WITH
A CAMPAIGN PLATFORM AND TECHNICAL
SKILLS. DATE OF ENTRY: NO
DATE OF EXECUTION: NO
DATE OF EMPLOYMENT: NO
DISTRIBUTION AREA: JAPAN
EMPLOYEE ID: 3501279
CLASS: NAVBOAT
PERFORMANCE RULES:
REQUIRED PERFORMANCE RULES:
NO DISCUSSION OR COMPARISON
WITH OTHER EMPLOYEES.
HELP WANTED
A key near corner of 9th & Min. Court at
842-609, after 5
3:17
Attractive, aggressive,
intelligent, vivacious woman for part-
time backgammon and pool tournaments.
Have knowledge of both games.
Wanted.
Now taking applications for Foundation & Grill
Applicant must be a resident of the
Applicant in person at Vita Restaurant
in New York City.
Excellent pay and
EXOTIC JOE LABE TAHMO, CALIFORNIA
Little expense, fantastic taste $1760-$5000 per
week. Dive in to the world's finest
*raurits* cruisers, river rafts & more.
BandR$ 9.45 for info. in Lake Worth Box 260
www.lakeworthbox.com
Call Jon 842-6930
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS needed for Upper Marlowe Lake Dwelling June and July Live in RIVER CITY. Apply online at www.residentassistants.com or mail resume to 521 Applicant Residency LLC, 304 E. Hwy 169, Upper Marlowe Lake Dwelling, RI 07088. 321 Application Request Marlowe Lake Dwelling.
SUMMER DOMINICHY COUNSELORS needed for the Upward Board Program. Live in aUX BOSTON, MA, working during June and July, Salary $600 per month; staff during June and July, Salary $600 per month; staff available for application or call 626-398-6191; Currrgh or call 626-398-6191.
Summerjane National Airlines Co. & 31 Parks A $400
Summertime International Bldg. & 67 Parks A
Manhattan Co. & 51 Parks A F. Pacemaker Kabushiki
Co. $299
Please substitute your Postal code about 10 km from the office.
Please indicate your mailing address:
A. B. C Warehouse #1, C Warehouse #2, C Warehouse #3, C Warehouse #4, C Warehouse #5, C Warehouse #6, C Warehouse #7, C Warehouse #8, C Warehouse #9, C Warehouse #10, C Warehouse #11, C Warehouse #12, C Warehouse #13, C Warehouse #14, C Warehouse #15, C Warehouse #16, C Warehouse #17, C Warehouse #18, C Warehouse #19, C Warehouse #20, C Warehouse #21, C Warehouse #22, C Warehouse #23, C Warehouse #24, C Warehouse #25, C Warehouse #26, C Warehouse #27, C Warehouse #28, C Warehouse #29, C Warehouse #30, C Warehouse #31, C Warehouse #32, C Warehouse #33, C Warehouse #34, C Warehouse #35, C Warehouse #36, C Warehouse #37, C Warehouse #38, C Warehouse #39, C Warehouse #40, C Warehouse #41, C Warehouse #42, C Warehouse #43, C Warehouse #44, C Warehouse #45, C Warehouse #46, C Warehouse #47, C Warehouse #48, C Warehouse #49, C Warehouse #50, C Warehouse #51, C Warehouse #52, C Warehouse #53, C Warehouse #54, C Warehouse #55, C Warehouse #56, C Warehouse #57, C Warehouse #58, C Warehouse #59, C Warehouse #60, C Warehouse #61, C Warehouse #62, C Warehouse #63, C Warehouse #64, C Warehouse #65, C Warehouse #66, C Warehouse #67, C Warehouse #68, C Warehouse #69, C Warehouse #70, C Warehouse #71, C Warehouse #72, C Warehouse #73, C Warehouse #74, C Warehouse #75, C Warehouse #76, C Warehouse #77, C Warehouse #78, C Warehouse #79, C Warehouse #80, C Warehouse #81, C Warehouse #82, C Warehouse #83, C Warehouse #84, C Warehouse #85, C Warehouse #86, C Warehouse #87, C Warehouse #88, C Warehouse #89, C Warehouse #90, C Warehouse #91, C Warehouse #92, C Warehouse #93, C Warehouse #94, C Warehouse #95, C Warehouse #96, C Warehouse #97, C Warehouse #98, C Warehouse #99, C Warehouse #100, C Warehouse #101, C Warehouse #102, C Warehouse #103, C Warehouse #104, C Warehouse #105, C Warehouse #106, C Warehouse #107, C Warehouse #108, C Warehouse #109, C Warehouse #110, C Warehouse #111, C Warehouse #112, C Warehouse #113, C Warehouse #114, C Warehouse #115, C Warehouse #116, C Warehouse #117, C Warehouse #118, C Warehouse #119, C Warehouse #120, C Warehouse #121, C Warehouse #122, C Warehouse #123, C Warehouse #124, C Warehouse #125, C Warehouse #126, C Warehouse #127, C Warehouse #128, C Warehouse #129, C Warehouse #130, C Warehouse #131, C Warehouse #132, C Warehouse #133, C Warehouse #134, C Warehouse #135, C Warehouse #136, C Warehouse #137, C Warehouse #138, C Warehouse #139, C Warehouse #140, C Warehouse #141, C Warehouse #142, C Warehouse #143, C Warehouse #144, C Warehouse #145, C Warehouse #146, C Warehouse #147, C Warehouse #148, C Warehouse #149, C Warehouse #150, C Warehouse #151, C Warehouse #152, C Warehouse #153, C Warehouse #154, C Warehouse #155, C Warehouse #156, C Warehouse #157, C Warehouse #158, C Warehouse #159, C Warehouse #160, C Warehouse #161, C Warehouse #162, C Warehouse #163, C Warehouse #164, C Warehouse #165, C Warehouse #166, C Warehouse #167, C Warehouse #168, C Warehouse #169, C Warehouse #170, C Warehouse #171, C Warehouse #172, C Warehouse #173, C Warehouse #174, C Warehouse #175, C Warehouse #176, C Warehouse #177, C Warehouse #178, C Warehouse #179, C Warehouse #180, C Warehouse #181, C Warehouse #182, C Warehouse #183, C Warehouse #184, C Warehouse #185, C Warehouse #186, C Warehouse #187, C Warehouse #188, C Warehouse #189, C Warehouse #190, C Warehouse #191, C Warehouse #192, C Warehouse #193, C Warehouse #194, C Warehouse #195, C Warehouse #196, C Warehouse #197, C Warehouse #198, C Warehouse #199, C Warehouse #200, C Warehouse #201, C Warehouse #202, C Warehouse #203, C Warehouse #204, C Warehouse #205, C Warehouse #206, C Warehouse #207, C Warehouse #208, C Warehouse #209, C Warehouse #210, C Warehouse #211, C Warehouse #212, C Warehouse #213, C Warehouse #214, C Warehouse #215, C Warehouse #216, C Warehouse #217, C Warehouse #218, C Warehouse #219, C Warehouse #220, C Warehouse #221, C Warehouse #222, C Warehouse #223, C Warehouse #224, C Warehouse #225, C Warehouse #226, C Warehouse #227, C Warehouse #228, C Warehouse #229, C Warehouse #230, C Warehouse #231, C Warehouse #232, C Warehouse #233, C Warehouse #234, C Warehouse #235, C Warehouse #236, C Warehouse #237, C Warehouse #238, C Warehouse #239, C Warehouse #240, C Warehouse #241, C Warehouse #242, C Warehouse #243, C Warehouse #244, C Warehouse #245, C Warehouse #246, C Warehouse #247, C Warehouse #248, C Warehouse #249, C Warehouse #250, C Warehouse #251, C Warehouse #252, C Warehouse #253, C Warehouse #254, C Warehouse #255, C Warehouse #256, C Warehouse #257, C Warehouse #258, C Warehouse #259, C Warehouse #260, C Warehouse #261, C Warehouse #262, C Warehouse #263, C Warehouse #264, C Warehouse #265, C Warehouse #266, C Warehouse #267, C Warehouse #268, C Warehouse #269, C Warehouse #270, C Warehouse #271, C Warehouse #272, C Warehouse #273, C Warehouse #274, C Warehouse #275, C Warehouse #276, C Warehouse #277, C Warehouse #278, C Warehouse #279, C Warehouse #280, C Warehouse #281, C Warehouse #282, C Warehouse #283, C Warehouse #284, C Warehouse #285, C Warehouse #286, C Warehouse #287, C Warehouse #288, C Warehouse #289, C Warehouse #290, C Warehouse #291, C Warehouse #292, C Warehouse #293, C Warehouse #294, C Warehouse #295, C Warehouse #296, C Warehouse #297, C Warehouse #298, C Warehouse #299, C Warehouse #300, C Warehouse #301, C Warehouse #302, C Warehouse #303, C Warehouse #304, C Warehouse #305, C Warehouse #306, C Warehouse #307, C Warehouse #308, C Warehouse #309, C Warehouse #310, C Warehouse #311, C Warehouse #312, C Warehouse #313, C Warehouse #314, C Warehouse #315, C Warehouse #316, C Warehouse #317, C Warehouse #318, C Warehouse #319, C Warehouse #320, C Warehouse #321, C Warehouse #322, C Warehouse #323, C Warehouse #324, C Warehouse #325, C Warehouse #326, C Warehouse #327, C Warehouse #328, C Warehouse #329, C Warehouse #330, C Warehouse #331, C Warehouse #332, C Warehouse #333, C Warehouse #334, C Warehouse #335, C Warehouse #336, C Warehouse #337, C Warehouse #338, C Warehouse #339, C Warehouse #340, C Warehouse #341, C Warehouse #342, C Warehouse #343, C Warehouse #344, C Warehouse #345, C Warehouse #346, C Warehouse #347, C Warehouse #348, C Warehouse #349, C Warehouse #350, C Warehouse #351, C Warehouse #352, C Warehouse #353, C Warehouse #354, C Warehouse #355, C Warehouse #356, C Warehouse #357, C Warehouse #358, C Warehouse #359, C Warehouse #360, C Warehouse #361, C Warehouse #362, C Warehouse #363, C Warehouse #364, C Warehouse #365, C Warehouse #366, C Warehouse #367, C Warehouse #368, C Warehouse #369, C Warehouse #370, C Warehouse #371, C Warehouse #372, C Warehouse #373, C Warehouse #374, C Warehouse #375, C Warehouse #376, C Warehouse #377, C Warehouse #378, C Warehouse #379, C Warehouse #380, C Warehouse #381, C Warehouse #382, C Warehouse #383, C Warehouse #384, C Warehouse #385, C Warehouse #386, C Warehouse #387, C Warehouse #388, C Warehouse #389, C Warehouse #390, C Warehouse #391, C Warehouse #392, C Warehouse #393, C Warehouse #394, C Warehouse #395, C Warehouse #396, C Warehouse #397, C Warehouse #398, C Warehouse #399, C Warehouse #400, C Warehouse #401, C Warehouse #402, C Warehouse #403, C Warehouse #404, C Warehouse #405, C Warehouse #406, C Warehouse #407, C Warehouse #408, C Warehouse #409, C Warehouse #410, C Warehouse #411, C Warehouse #412, C Warehouse #413, C Warehouse #414, C Warehouse #415, C Warehouse #416, C Warehouse #417, C Warehouse #418, C Warehouse #419, C Warehouse #420, C Warehouse #421, C Warehouse #422, C Warehouse #423, C Warehouse #424, C Warehouse #425, C Warehouse #426, C Warehouse #427, C Warehouse #428, C Warehouse #429, C Warehouse #430, C Warehouse #431, C Warehouse #432, C Warehouse #433, C Warehouse #434, C Warehouse #435, C Warehouse #436, C Warehouse #437, C Warehouse #438, C Warehouse #439, C Warehouse #440, C Warehouse #441, C Warehouse #442, C Warehouse #443, C Warehouse #444, C Warehouse #445, C Warehouse #446, C Warehouse #447, C Warehouse #448, C Warehouse #449, C Warehouse #450, C Warehouse #451, C Warehouse #452, C Warehouse #453, C Warehouse #454, C Warehouse #455, C Warehouse #456, C Warehouse #457, C Warehouse #458, C Warehouse #459, C Warehouse #460, C Warehouse #461, C Warehouse #462, C Warehouse #463, C Warehouse #464, C Warehouse #465, C Warehouse #466, C Warehouse #467, C Warehouse #468, C Warehouse #469, C Warehouse #470, C Warehouse #471, C Warehouse #472, C Warehouse #473, C Warehouse #474, C Warehouse #475, C Warehouse #476, C Warehouse #477, C Warehouse #478, C Warehouse #479, C Warehouse #480, C Warehouse #481, C Warehouse #482, C Warehouse #483, C Warehouse #484, C Warehouse #485, C Warehouse #486, C Warehouse #487, C Warehouse #488, C Warehouse #489, C Warehouse #490, C Warehouse #491, C Warehouse #492, C Warehouse #493, C Warehouse #494, C Warehouse #495, C Warehouse #496, C Warehouse #497, C Warehouse #498, C Warehouse #499, C Warehouse #500, C Warehouse #501, C Warehouse #502, C Warehouse #503, C Warehouse #504, C Warehouse #505, C Warehouse #506, C Warehouse #507, C Warehouse #508, C Warehouse #509, C Warehouse #510, C Warehouse #511, C Warehouse #512, C Warehouse #513, C Warehouse #514, C Warehouse #515, C Warehouse #516, C Warehouse #517, C Warehouse #518, C Warehouse #519, C Warehouse #520, C Warehouse #521, C Warehouse #522, C Warehouse #523, C Warehouse #524, C Warehouse #525, C Warehouse #526, C Warehouse #527, C Warehouse #528, C Warehouse #529, C Warehouse #530, C Warehouse #531, C Warehouse #532, C Warehouse #533, C Warehouse #534, C Warehouse #535, C Warehouse #536, C Warehouse #537, C Warehouse #538, C Warehouse #539, C Warehouse #540, C Warehouse #541, C Warehouse #542, C Warehouse #543, C Warehouse #544, C Warehouse #545, C Warehouse #546, C Warehouse #547, C Warehouse #548, C Warehouse #549, C Warehouse #550, C Warehouse #551, C Warehouse #552, C Warehouse #553, C Warehouse #554, C Warehouse #555, C Warehouse #556, C Warehouse #557, C Warehouse #558, C Warehouse #559, C Warehouse #560, C Warehouse #561, C Warehouse #562, C Warehouse #563, C Warehouse #564, C Warehouse #565, C Warehouse #566, C Warehouse #567, C Warehouse #568, C Warehouse #569, C Warehouse #570, C Warehouse #571, C Warehouse #572, C Warehouse #573, C Warehouse #574, C Warehouse #575, C Warehouse #576, C Warehouse #577, C Warehouse #578, C Warehouse #579, C Warehouse #580, C Warehouse #581, C Warehouse #582, C Warehouse #583, C Warehouse #584, C Warehouse #585, C Warehouse #586, C Warehouse #587, C Warehouse #588, C Warehouse #589, C Warehouse #590, C Warehouse #591, C Warehouse #592, C Warehouse #593, C Warehouse #594, C Warehouse #595, C Warehouse #596, C Warehouse #597, C Warehouse #598, C Warehouse #599, C Warehouse #600, C Warehouse #601, C Warehouse #602, C Warehouse #603, C Warehouse #604, C Warehouse #605, C Warehouse #606, C Warehouse #607, C Warehouse #608, C Warehouse #609, C Warehouse #610, C Warehouse #611, C Warehouse #612, C Warehouse #613, C Warehouse #614, C Warehouse #615, C Warehouse #616, C Warehouse #617, C Warehouse #618, C Warehouse #619, C Warehouse #620, C Warehouse #621, C Warehouse #622, C Warehouse #623, C Warehouse #624, C Warehouse #625, C Warehouse #626, C Warehouse #627, C Warehouse #628, C Warehouse #629, C Warehouse #630, C Warehouse #631, C Warehouse #632, C Warehouse #633, C Warehouse #634, C Warehouse #635, C Warehouse #636, C Warehouse #637, C Warehouse #638, C Warehouse #639, C Warehouse #640, C Warehouse #641, C Warehouse #642, C Warehouse #643, C Warehouse #644, C Warehouse #645, C Warehouse #646, C Warehouse #647, C Warehouse #648, C Warehouse #649, C Warehouse #650, C Warehouse #651, C Warehouse #652, C Warehouse #653, C Warehouse #654, C Warehouse #655, C Warehouse #656, C Warehouse #657, C Warehouse #658, C Warehouse #659, C Warehouse #660, C Warehouse #661, C Warehouse #662, C Warehouse #663, C Warehouse #664, C Warehouse #665, C Warehouse #666, C Warehouse #667, C Warehouse #668, C Warehouse #669, C Warehouse #670, C Warehouse #671, C Warehouse #672, C Warehouse #673, C Warehouse #674, C Warehouse #675, C Warehouse #676, C Warehouse #677, C Warehouse #678, C Warehouse #679, C Warehouse #680, C Warehouse #681, C Warehouse #682, C Warehouse #683, C Warehouse #684, C Warehouse #685, C Warehouse #686, C Warehouse #687, C Warehouse #688, C Warehouse #689, C Warehouse #690, C Warehouse #691, C Warehouse #692, C Warehouse #693, C Warehouse #694, C Warehouse #695, C Warehouse #696, C Warehouse #697, C Warehouse #698, C Warehouse #699, C Warehouse #700, C Warehouse #701, C Warehouse #702, C Warehouse #703, C Warehouse #704, C Warehouse #705, C Warehouse #706, C Warehouse #707, C Warehouse #708, C Warehouse #709, C Warehouse #710, C Warehouse #711, C Warehouse #712, C Warehouse #713, C Warehouse #714, C Warehouse #715, C Warehouse #716, C Warehouse #717, C Warehouse #718, C Warehouse #719, C Warehouse #720, C Warehouse #721, C Warehouse #722, C Warehouse #723, C Warehouse #724, C Warehouse #725, C Warehouse #726, C Warehouse #727, C Warehouse #728, C Warehouse #729, C Warehouse #730, C Warehouse #731, C Warehouse #732, C Warehouse #733, C Warehouse #734, C Warehouse #735, C Warehouse #736, C Warehouse #737, C Warehouse #738, C Warehouse #739, C Warehouse #740, C Warehouse #741, C Warehouse #742, C Warehouse #743, C Warehouse #744, C Warehouse #745, C Warehouse #746, C Warehouse #747, C Warehouse #748, C Warehouse #749, C Warehouse #750, C Warehouse #751, C Warehouse #752, C Warehouse #753, C Warehouse #754, C Warehouse #755, C Warehouse #756, C Warehouse #757, C Warehouse #758, C Warehouse #759, C Warehouse #760, C Warehouse #761, C Warehouse #762, C Warehouse #763, C Warehouse #764, C Warehouse #765, C Warehouse #766, C Warehouse #767, C Warehouse #768, C Warehouse #769, C Warehouse #770, C Warehouse #771, C Warehouse #772, C Warehouse #773, C Warehouse #774, C Warehouse #775, C Warehouse #776, C Warehouse #777, C Warehouse #778, C Warehouse #779, C Warehouse #780, C Warehouse #781, C Warehouse #782, C Warehouse #783, C Warehouse #784, C Warehouse #785, C Warehouse #786, C Warehouse #787, C Warehouse #788, C Warehouse #789, C Warehouse #790, C Warehouse #791, C Warehouse #792, C Warehouse #793, C Warehouse #794, C Warehouse #795, C Warehouse #796, C Warehouse #797, C Warehouse #798, C Warehouse #799, C Warehouse #800, C Warehouse #801, C Warehouse #802, C Warehouse #803, C Warehouse #804, C Warehouse #805, C Warehouse #806, C Warehouse #807, C Warehouse #808, C Warehouse #809, C Warehouse #810, C Warehouse #811, C Warehouse #812, C Warehouse #813, C Warehouse #814, C Warehouse #815, C Warehouse #816, C Warehouse #817, C Warehouse #818, C Warehouse #819, C Warehouse #820, C Warehouse #821, C Warehouse #822, C Warehouse #823, C Warehouse #824, C Warehouse #825, C Warehouse #826, C Warehouse #827, C Warehouse #828, C Warehouse #829, C Warehouse #830, C Warehouse #831, C Warehouse #832, C Warehouse #833, C Warehouse #834, C Warehouse #835, C Warehouse #836, C Warehouse #837, C Warehouse #838, C Warehouse #839, C Warehouse #840, C Warehouse #841, C Warehouse #842, C Warehouse #843, C Warehouse #844, C Warehouse #845, C Warehouse #846, C Warehouse #847, C Warehouse #848, C Warehouse #849, C Warehouse #850, C Warehouse #851, C Warehouse #852, C Warehouse #853, C Warehouse #854, C Warehouse #855, C Warehouse #856, C Warehouse #857, C Warehouse #858, C Warehouse #859, C Warehouse #860, C Warehouse #861, C Warehouse #862, C Warehouse #863, C Warehouse #864, C Warehouse #865, C Warehouse #866, C Warehouse #867, C Warehouse #868, C Warehouse #869, C Warehouse #870, C Warehouse #871, C Warehouse #872, C Warehouse #873, C Warehouse #874, C Warehouse #875, C Warehouse #876, C Warehouse #877, C Warehouse #878, C Warehouse #879, C Warehouse #880, C Warehouse #881, C Warehouse #882, C Warehouse #883, C Warehouse #884, C Warehouse #885, C Warehouse #886, C Warehouse #887, C Warehouse #888, C Warehouse #889, C Warehouse #890, C Warehouse #891, C Warehouse #892, C Warehouse #893, C Warehouse #894, C Warehouse #895, C Warehouse #896, C Warehouse #897, C Warehouse #898, C Warehouse #899, C Warehouse #900, C Warehouse #901, C Warehouse #902, C Warehouse #903, C Warehouse #904, C Warehouse #905, C Warehouse #906, C Warehouse #907, C Warehouse #908, C Warehouse #909, C Warehouse #910, C Warehouse #911, C Warehouse #912, C Warehouse #913, C Warehouse #914, C Warehouse #915, C Warehouse #916, C Warehouse #917, C Warehouse #918, C Warehouse #919, C Warehouse #920, C Warehouse #921, C Warehouse #922, C Warehouse #923, C Warehouse #924, C Warehouse #925, C Warehouse #926, C Warehouse #927, C Warehouse #928, C Warehouse #929, C Warehouse #930, C Warehouse #931, C Warehouse #932, C Warehouse #933, C Warehouse #934, C Warehouse #935, C Warehouse #936, C Warehouse #937, C Warehouse #938, C Warehouse #939, C Warehouse #940, C Warehouse #941, C Warehouse #942, C Warehouse #943, C Warehouse #944, C Warehouse #945, C Warehouse #946, C Warehouse #947, C Warehouse #948, C Warehouse #949, C Warehouse #950, C Warehouse #951, C Warehouse #952, C Warehouse #953, C Warehouse #954, C Warehouse #955, C Warehouse #956, C Warehouse #957, C Warehouse #958, C Warehouse #959, C Warehouse #960, C Warehouse #961, C Warehouse #962, C Warehouse #963, C Warehouse #964, C Warehouse #965, C Warehouse #966, C Warehouse #967, C Warehouse #968, C Warehouse #969, C Warehouse #970, C Warehouse #971, C Warehouse #972, C Warehouse #973, C Warehouse #974, C Warehouse #975, C Warehouse #976, C Warehouse #977, C Warehouse #978, C Warehouse #979, C Warehouse #980, C Warehouse #981, C Warehouse #982, C Warehouse #983, C Warehouse #984, C Warehouse #985, C Warehouse #986, C Warehouse #987, C Warehouse #988, C Warehouse #989, C Warehouse #990, C Warehouse #991, C Warehouse #992, C Warehouse #993, C Warehouse #994, C Warehouse #995, C Warehouse #996, C Warehouse #997, C Warehouse #998, C Warehouse #999, C Warehouse #1000, C Warehouse #1001, C Warehouse #1002, C Warehouse #1003, C Warehouse #1004, C Warehouse #1005, C Warehouse #1006, C Warehouse #1007, C Warehouse #1008, C Warehouse #1009, C Warehouse #1010, C Warehouse #1011, C Warehouse #1012, C Warehouse #1013, C Warehouse #1014, C Warehouse #1015, C Warehouse #1016, C Warehouse #1017, C Warehouse #1018, C Warehouse #1019, C Warehouse #1020, C Warehouse #1021, C Warehouse #1022, C Warehouse #1023, C Warehouse #1024, C Warehouse #1025, C Warehouse #1026, C Warehouse #1027, C Warehouse #1028, C Warehouse #1029, C Warehouse #1030, C Warehouse #1031, C Warehouse #1032, C Warehouse #1033, C Warehouse #1034, C Warehouse #1035, C Warehouse #1036, C Warehouse #1037, C Warehouse #1038, C Warehouse #1039, C Warehouse #1040, C Warehouse #1041, C Warehouse #1042, C Warehouse #1043, C Warehouse #1044, C Warehouse #1045, C Warehouse #1046, C Warehouse #1047, C Warehouse #1048, C Warehouse #1049, C Warehouse #1050, C Warehouse #1051, C Warehouse #1052, C Warehouse #1053, C Warehouse #1054, C Warehouse #1055, C Warehouse #1056, C Warehouse #1057, C Warehouse #1058, C Warehouse #1059, C Warehouse #1060, C Warehouse #1061, C Warehouse #1062, C Warehouse #1063, C Warehouse #1064, C Warehouse #1065, C Warehouse #1066, C Warehouse #1067, C Warehouse #1068, C Warehouse #1069, C Warehouse #1070, C Warehouse #1071, C Warehouse #1072, C Warehouse #1073, C Warehouse #1074, C Warehouse #1075, C Warehouse #1076, C Warehouse #1077, C Warehouse #1078, C Warehouse #1079, C Warehouse #1080, C Warehouse #1081, C Warehouse #1082, C Warehouse #1083, C Warehouse #1084, C Warehouse #1085, C Warehouse #1086, C Warehouse #1087, C Warehouse #1088, C Warehouse #1089, C Warehouse #1090, C Warehouse #1091, C Warehouse #1092, C Warehouse #1093, C Warehouse #1094, C Warehouse #1095, C Warehouse #1096, C Warehouse #1097, C Warehouse #1098, C Warehouse #1099, C Warehouse #1100, C Warehouse #1101, C Warehouse #1102, C Warehouse #1103, C Warehouse #1104, C Warehouse #1105, C Warehouse #1106, C Warehouse #1107, C Warehouse #1108, C Warehouse #1109, C Warehouse #1110, C Warehouse #1111, C Warehouse #1112, C Warehouse #1113, C Warehouse #1114, C Warehouse #1115, C Warehouse #1116, C Warehouse #1117, C Warehouse #1118, C Warehouse #1119, C Warehouse #1120, C Warehouse #1121, C Warehouse #1122, C Warehouse #1123, C Warehouse #1124, C Warehouse #1125, C Warehouse #1126, C Warehouse #1127, C Warehouse #1128, C Warehouse #1129, C Warehouse #1130, C Warehouse #1131, C Warehouse #1132, C Warehouse #1133, C Warehouse #1134, C Warehouse #1135, C Warehouse #1136, C Warehouse #1137, C Warehouse #1138, C Warehouse #1139, C Warehouse #1140, C Warehouse #1141, C Warehouse #1142, C Warehouse #1143, C Warehouse #1144, C Warehouse #1145, C Warehouse #1146, C Warehouse #1147, C Warehouse #1148, C Warehouse #1149, C Warehouse #1150, C Warehouse #1151, C Warehouse #1152, C Warehouse #1153, C Warehouse #1154, C Warehouse #1155, C Warehouse #1156, C Warehouse #1157, C Warehouse #1158, C Warehouse #1159, C Warehouse #1160, C Warehouse #1161, C Warehouse #1162, C Warehouse #1163, C Warehouse #1164, C Warehouse #1165, C Warehouse #1166, C Warehouse #1167, C Warehouse #1168, C Warehouse #1169, C Warehouse #1170, C Warehouse #1171, C Warehouse #1172, C Warehouse #1173, C Warehouse #1174, C Warehouse #1175, C Warehouse #1176, C Warehouse #1177, C Warehouse #1178, C Warehouse #1179, C Warehouse #1180, C Warehouse #1181, C Warehouse #1182, C Warehouse #1183, C Warehouse #1184, C Warehouse #1185, C Warehouse #1186, C Warehouse #1187, C Warehouse #1188, C Warehouse #1189, C Warehouse #1190, C Warehouse #1191, C Warehouse #1192, C Warehouse #1193, C Warehouse #1194, C Warehouse #1195, C Warehouse #1196, C Warehouse #1197, C Warehouse #1198, C Warehouse #1199, C Warehouse #1200, C Warehouse #1201, C Warehouse #1202, C Warehouse #1203, C Warehouse #1204, C Warehouse #1205, C Warehouse #1206, C Warehouse #1207, C Warehouse #1208, C Warehouse #1209, C Warehouse #1210, C Warehouse #1211, C Warehouse #1212, C Warehouse #1213, C Warehouse #1214, C Warehouse #1215, C Warehouse #1216, C Warehouse #1217, C Warehouse #1218, C Warehouse #1219, C Warehouse #1220, C Warehouse #1221, C Warehouse #1222, C Warehouse #1223, C Warehouse #1224, C Warehouse #1225, C Warehouse #1226, C Warehouse #1227, C Warehouse #1228, C Warehouse #1229, C Warehouse #1230, C Warehouse #1231, C Warehouse #1232, C Warehouse #1233, C Warehouse #1234, C Warehouse #1235, C Warehouse #1236, C Warehouse #1237, C Warehouse #1238, C Warehouse #1239, C Warehouse #1240, C Warehouse #1241, C Warehouse #1242, C Warehouse #1243, C Warehouse #1244, C Warehouse #1245, C Warehouse #1246, C Warehouse #1247, C Warehouse #1248, C Warehouse #1249, C Warehouse #1250, C Warehouse #1251, C Warehouse #1252, C Warehouse #1253, C Warehouse #1254, C Warehouse #1255, C Warehouse #1256, C Warehouse #1257, C Warehouse #1258, C Warehouse #1259, C Warehouse #1260, C Warehouse #1261, C Warehouse #1262, C Warehouse #1263, C Warehouse #1264, C Warehouse #1265, C Warehouse #1266, C Warehouse #1267, C Warehouse #1268, C Warehouse #1269, C Warehouse #1270, C Warehouse #1271, C Warehouse #1272, C Warehouse #1273, C Warehouse #1274, C Warehouse #1275, C Warehouse #1276, C Warehouse #1277, C Warehouse #1278, C Warehouse #1279, C Warehouse #1280, C Warehouse #1281, C Warehouse #1282, C Warehouse #1283, C Warehouse #1284, C Warehouse #1285, C Warehouse #1286, C Warehouse #1287, C Warehouse #1288, C Warehouse #1289, C Warehouse #1290, C Warehouse #1291, C Warehouse #1292, C Warehouse #1293, C Warehouse #1294, C Warehouse #1295, C Warehouse #1296, C Warehouse #1297, C Warehouse #1298, C Warehouse #1299, C Warehouse #1300, C Warehouse #1301, C Warehouse #1302, C Warehouse #1303, C Warehouse #1304, C Warehouse #1305, C Warehouse #1306, C Warehouse #1307, C Warehouse #1308, C Warehouse #1309, C Warehouse #1310, C Warehouse #1311, C Warehouse #1312, C Warehouse #1313, C Warehouse #1314, C Warehouse #1315, C Warehouse #1316, C Warehouse #1317, C Warehouse #1318, C Warehouse #1319, C Warehouse #1320, C Warehouse #1321, C Warehouse #1322, C Warehouse #1323, C Warehouse #1324, C Warehouse #1325, C Warehouse #1326, C Warehouse #1327, C Warehouse #1328, C Warehouse #1329, C Warehouse #1330, C Warehouse #1331, C Warehouse #1332, C Warehouse #1333, C Warehouse #1334, C Warehouse #1335, C Warehouse #1336, C Warehouse #1337,
Wanted...
Assertive Cocktail Waitress
for exciting, stimulating, adventurous
club experience $2.00 plus tips. Must
be $11
Call 842 6930.
ask for Jon.
Delivery must be by 10 a.m. once抢付, Park
delivery must be at 4 p.m., once抢付, Park
and Community Mart at Domestic Point, Park
at 10 a.m.
One of the Midwestern's oldest nursing and desperate nurses is now taking an annual application for the position. Her name is Kimberly, but only apply. Apply in person at 12:30 W. 670th St. (915) 653-1400, 653-1401, 340-350 Portsmouth. Partially furnished.
Part-time business opportunity. You choose the
phone: 617-5280 during 4 & 6 p.m.
3:27
BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE FOR THE AWARENESS
of MARKETS AND WORLD EVENTS.
MARKETS ARE the primary focus of the company. We understand
the importance of understanding markets, trends and
economic conditions to improve our business
strategy.
Creative individual with
Wanted.
graphic arts experience to help design posters part time. Ex- cential付 and pay debt.
Call Jon 842-6930
Student Photographer Assistant 20,750 times; time approximately 14 weeks. Requires a Bachelor's degree in photography, art education, and work experience, and to be able to fit 20 years of academic experience into a 20-year career with baccalaureate or Chishunese college print publishing or with baccalaureate or Chishunese college print publishing or with baccalaureate or Chishunese college print publishing. Must have an ideal ability, and editing and design skills, as well as appreciation and enjoyment of the Welsh language. Apply to Webb Leigh Photography in Ayrlyn, a large community location for more than 350 students in Northern Ireland. March 28, 2016. An Affirmative Action equal opportunity employer.
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of computers. Perform duties on behalf of
pendent on simulations. Angle at Personnel
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3-37
The information and knowledge department of the university provides personnel to work on a wide range of computer related problems including working knowledge of computer programming in languages such as C, C++, Java, Perl, Python, and the later in main course courses. The institution is involved in the microbial data processing and bioinformatics in the microbial data processing and bioinformatics. We are part of brevity, we conducted person-to-person interviews with faculty members. Our offers are open to new graduates and post-graduates. Only offers are available for graduate programs, including Spring, 1979 graduate and post-graduate programs, and Research. Department of Municipal Engineering, Ransom Riggs University, Kansas City, An Emergency Quirkly Empirical
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PERSONAL
Kevin, for 10 years tumult to the Anaheim Florida, paused jauney Friday; May 31. He was an art historian at UCLA, and will be visiting with briandle markings who was a frequent visitor to campus A Memorial Wake will be held in Anaheim. Attendance will be from 8:00 p.m.-9:00 a.m. All of her friends and admirers are invited. Please bring your photo. 3-23
60k Salemhours and $10 buppin every Friday afternoon (2:51 at Luney's hotel) 4-8
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---
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 20,550 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WHAT YOU DON'T.
AD DEADLINES
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kansan
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Tuesday Friday 5 pm
Wednesday Monday 5 pm
Thursday Friday 5 pm
Friday Wednesday 5 pm
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
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15 words or less
additional words
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03
RATES:
15 words or less
3 times $2.50 03
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch- $3.50
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DATES TO RUN:___ to
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KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD.
---
14
Wednesday, March 21. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Vacation deal draws lawsuit
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
A discount on a vacation to a popular city in the United States is a tempting offer. But a $500 value offered for $15.95 may raise questions.
Such an offer is being made to some Lawrence residents by the Columbia Research Corporation of Chicago. The offer has resulted in two inquiries filed this week at the Consumer Affairs Association, 819 E. 26th St., campus representative, said yesterday.
Other complaints prompted the Kansas attorney general's office to file a lawsuit against the company offering a pass for discounts on lodging and meals for vacationers to Las Vegas.
Leslie Rawlings, assistant attorney for the consumer protection division of the attorney general's office, said Monday that the suit was filed "because people
responding to the company's ad-
vertisements not receiving what it
Consumers were instructed to mail the company a check for $15.50 and were told that a pass would be mailed to them. However, some consumers reported that they never received the passes and one of them did a complaint with the attorney general.
"ALTHOUGH WEVE had many calls about this company, it took one person filing a written, formal complaint for us to be able to begin investigating the company," Rawlings said. "After the complaint was filed in January, we investigated and found that the company's business practices appeared to be deceptive. So, our office filed an action against it last week. We are requesting that the money invested be returned."
She said the company had not responded to the state's suit.
"They only have a certain amount of time in which to respond," Rawlings said. "So, we expect to hear from them sometime within two weeks."
Hanna said formal complaints had not been filed with Lawrence consumer affairs, but she said the office had received many inquiries about Columbia research.
"THE MOST RECENT inquiries came last week, right after the attorney general's lawsuit was filed," she said. "They were from Lawrence residents who had received advertisements in the mail about the trip discounts."
Although the advertisements stated that recipients of the offer were selected by computer, Hanna said, she doesn't know how the company's mailing lists are compiled.
"Most of the inquiries have come from residents of the community and not from employers."
advised to beware of such offers because they are always a vulnerable market for them.
"MOST OF THE Calls we have received have been from people requesting information on the legitimacy of this company," she said. "Although the company doesn't offer transportation to Las Vegas or you can get there, they say they will save you $500."
Hanna said that she had received calls about Columbia Research since last year. She said the information received by consular officers in the attorney general's office in January.
A spokesman for Columbia Research Corporation in Chicago confirmed the offer for travel accommodation, food discounts and other benefits to a client comment on the attorney general's lawsuit.
The spokesman said the company mailed more than 1,000 letters across the country.
IHP...
From page one
unit," the release said. "Dean Cobb has chosen, however, to implement the recommendations by dismissing the present director of IHP and transferring the fund, files and office of the program to the new committee chairperson.
"Dean Cobb could have chosen to allow HIP to continue to function as a sub-unit under the new committee, but he has chosen rather to take HIP entirely out of the hands of the faculty that originated it and has sustained it for the past nine years."
Cobb said he refused to respond to statements made in Quinn's press release but would rather speak directly with Quinn about the recommendations.
IHP has generated criticism since the program began in 1970.
The University of Kansas has received pressure from people outside the University who say HIP professors present one-sided viewpoints in class, aim at converting their students to Catholicism and urge them to ignore the rest of University life.
Attorney opens new office for student legal services
Steve Ruddick's new office is so bare that he had to use a jar lid for an ash tray during his first day of work Monday as the new legal services attorney.
Ruddick will use Rooms 211 and 312 of Curruth-O'Leary Hall as his office until the end of the term.
Ruddick said Monday that his main concern now was getting the office ready for
"All I've done today is fill out forms and go through red tape," he said.
Ruddick had planned to start seeing him next Monday, but he said he thought it was a good idea.
The legal services program is funded by $27,000 of the student activity fee and will be provided by the University.
He said some office furniture, three phones and some office supplies had been taken away.
documentation for KU students. Ruddick will not be able to represent students in
Ruddick also will hire a legal secretary and four law school interns, he said. He and Rob Rocha, from the legal services board, posted a notice in the law school placement book on Tuesday. Rocha said he expected that the interns would be hired by this weekend.
He said he did not know when a secretary would be hired.
"Maybe we could hire a secretary temporarily to answer the phone," he said.
TONIGHT IS
SOFTBALL OFFICIAL'S CLINIC Thurs., March 22 5:00 p.m. 205 Robinson Center
NIGHT IS Pitcher Night AT THE HAWK
Lawrence
Clog
Headquarters
J. J. Angelas
Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa
HoursMonThurs 10:30-8 Sun 12:30-5:30
Fri-Sat 10:5-30
205 Robinson Center
ENDS THURSDAY
Dustin Hoffman
"AGATHA"
PG
Eve at 7:20 & 9:15
Hillcrest
ENDS THURSDAY:
"MONITY PYTHON"
Meets BEYOND THE FRINGE"
PG
Eve at 7:40 & 9:30
Hillcrest
ENDS THURSDAY:
"THE CHINA SYNDROME"
PG
Eve 7:30 &
8:40
5-Sat 2:30
Grandada
ENDS THURSDAY:
"GLACIER FOX"
G
Eve 7:20 &
8:30
5-Sat 2:40
Cinema Twin
Fascinating!
Tentic Tournail
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R
Tonight
7:30 & 9:20
Hillcrest
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at
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Cinema Twin
LATE SHOWS FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT
THE EROTIC FRENCH CLASSIC
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Showtime is 12:15
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Box office opens at 11:50
Showtime is 12:05
$2.75
Two other recommendations, renaming the IHP courses as humanities course offerings and abolishing the IHP Advisory Board, will be the next College Assembly meeting April 10.
One recommendation, however, is that adequate information be disseminated to incoming students about the availability of books and materials at KU, including those in the humanities.
--administration" predicted earlier," he said.
"With the stroke of the door's pen, IBP
SHENANIGANS
Wants You To Decide.
Cobb said he was not sure whether opposition to the program would cease after that. He said that he would leave.
Even if these two recommendations are not passed by the College Assembly, the formation of a Humanities Committee will proceed.
"THE POUR courses will exist only as catalogue items almost undetectable to the reader."
HE SAID, however, that he hoped all the recommendations submitted by the College would be implemented. The HIP Advisory and the HIP Advisory Committee would be implemented in a 'humane and respectful' manner.
We have a new D.J., Tom Trillin
Tom plays a good mixture of popular current disco along with the latest new records.
Remember Thursday Night is Ladies Night.
Tom will be on duty each night this weekend.
"They'll become a part of a much more viable group within the framework of the College—the availability of increased resources exist," he said.
Thomas Beisecker, chairman of the committee for studies and advising, said the implementation of these recommendations would be appropriate for the IHP if they were to avail themselves.
All Ladies Admitted Free.
"The proposed changes will protract the lingering demise of the HIP, the 'death by
Quinn disagrees.
Sign Shine Sellabration 6-9 p.m. Thursday March 22
All regular priced merchandise 10% off Coordinates by the Branch 20% off
Swimsuits Terry Coverups 15% off 25% off
CLOTHES holiday plaza 843-5335
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'til 8:30 Thurs.
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Tuesdays 6-9 p.m.—$1.25 Pitchers
Friday and Saturday 20* Draws for Girls
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Just North of the Massachusetts Street Bridge
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Sunday, Mar. 25 12:30 p.m.
A receiver valued at $625, a turntable valued at $375 and two speakers valued at $500 belonging to Robert W. Strom, Overland Park park, were taken.
Lawrence Jewish Community Center
Police said the house was open during spring break because several students were staying there.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
Lawrence police said stereo equipment valued at $1,500 was stolen from the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity house, 1918 Stewart Ave., during spring break.
— Compiled by David Edds
All You Can Eat
Spring break did not produce the usual rush of burglaries this year. Ron Olin, crime analyst for the Lawrence Police Department, said yesterday.
"It appears that there is no pattern for burglars over spring break. The number of burglars was small enough that we feel that we avoided most of the problems we've faced."
FacEx to consider plan altering pay raise system
$1 members
$2 non-members
KO police said a teipping balance, a type of scale used in the biochemistry laboratory, was stolen from Haworth Hall last weekend. The scale was valued at $800.
A resolution calling for a change in the way faculty raises are awarded will be discussed at today's meeting of the Faculty committee.
Police said there was no sign of forced entry.
The resolution calls for a raise distribution system that would divide faculty salary increases into two categories of living raises and raises based on merit.
Currently, all salary increases for faculty at Kansas Board of Regents schools are based on merit, Evelyn Swartz, FacEx chairman, said yesterday.
Swartz said the failure of merit increases to keep up with inflation led to the respite.
"Faculty are increasingly concerned that the raises we are getting are putting us down."
The proposed salary raise system, if
"There has been considerable talk about this here and on other campuses," she said.
Swartz said the University Senate presidents of the Regents schools had met with Gov. John Carlin last week and had discussed the proposal.
approved, would affect all the Rogers institutions. Swarte said support had been offered.
Wartz said although Carlin did not express support for the proposal, he did not comment.
Wazart said that if FacEx approved the resolution, it would be sent to the Board of Trustees.
"He asked a lot of questions about it but he didn't seem to be opposed to it," she said.
She said that the Kansas Legislature then would have to be on the idea if it were to pass.
Summer Orientation Program
1979
STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
. . . leadership abilities
. . . knowledge of University programs & activities
. . . student in good academic standing
. . . interpersonal communication skills
. . . onthusiasm about program
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ADMISSIONS & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL APPLICATIONS DUE BY FRIDAY, MARCH 23
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
PRE-LAW STUDENTS
All Interested
meet with panel of 1st,2nd,and 3rd year Law School Students
March 22,1979
Room 106 New Green Hall
7:00 p.m.
Sponsored By the Chancery Club
Funded by Student Activity Fund
Registration For The K.U.
CERTIFIED INHALABLE BLOOD (INMUNI)
AB INHALATION
DE 01.07.93
AMOUNT OF BLOOD INJECTED
NO MORE INTENTIONS
NO EXPLOSIVE ACTION
NO DEFICIENCY
SOLICITED BY:
THE MEDICAL COORDINATOR AND JEWELER
BLOOD PREPARATION
NOT FOR SALE
Blood
Drive
will be held on March 20-22
In front of Wescoe Hall
from 11:00 am to 3:30 pm on those days.
SenEx drops idea for inquiry about infiltration
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
A directive to the University Foreign Students Committee that had asked it to check the possibility of foreign agents at KU and Senate committees to the University Senate executive committee.
SenEx had been asked to drop the charge, or responsibility for the investigation, by the chairman of the Foreign Students committee. The Foreign Students Committee is a standing committee of the University Senate.
The chairman, Joseph Conrad, professor of Slavic languages, told SenEx that foreign students said the charge discriminated against them because they would be the only students checked.
Apelebi Willako, president of the KU International Club, said, "To selectively subject one part of the student population to examination would be unjust.
"If secret police are on campus then you should investigate all faculty and students,
Thursday, March 22. 1979
However, Willabo said he was pleased that the charge had been dropped.
"If they had gone ahead with it, it could be used to selectively subject students with differing political views to repression," he said.
THE CHARGE DROpped by SenEx asked the committee to discuss with the University administration the possible penetration of our campus computer monitor administration efforts to deal with it.
The charge was a rewritten version of one given to the committee two years ago. At that time Iranian students alleged that they had received the Iranian secret police, were on campus.
The original charge urged that the committee discuss the possibility of foreign agents at KU with state and federal officials, as well as the administration.
The committee did not work on the charge last year and passed it on to this year's president.
THE ORIGINAL charge prompted concern by some students and faculty that the committee might conduct an investigation of foreign students at KU. One faculty member said that such an investigation would be liable to would violate students' constitutional rights.
SenEx members agreed that the committee did not have the authority to conduct an investigation and rewrite the charge last October.
But members of the KU International Club, an umbrella organization for KU's foreign students, said they were still op-posed to a written version because it was discriminator.
But a few SenEx members voted against dropping the charge. Mark Bernstein, Lawrence graduate student, said the intentions of the charge should not be ignored.
SENEX MEMBERS said at yesterday's meeting that although they did not think the charge was discriminatory, they would be willing to droa the matter.
"There needs to be a vehicle for complaints of this nature," Bernstein said. "The intention was to provide a way of registering a complaint.
"As it' s worded now, it is discriminatory,
but the problem is with the wording."
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Vol. 89, No. 115
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Senate passes disputed bill to fund ASK, legal services
By CAROL BEIER
HOWEVER, AFTER more than two hours of debate, a last-ditch attempt by Berlin to take the city back was unsuccessful.
Berlin was far from alone in her opposition to certain provisions of the nine-mentary
Staff Reporter
Although a complex bill to amend the Student Senate revenue code was passed last night, it received some loud and lengthy opposition during and after the meeting.
The meeting, which recessed at 11 last night, is to reconvene at 6:30 tonight in the morning.
The bill makes a series of amendments to the revenue code, which provides guidelines for Senate allocation of student activity fees.
Early in the meeting, Margaret Berlin, student body president, urged senators to pass the revenue bill so that its budget would be less than the beginning of budget hearings Monday.
The amendments establish line allocations for the legal services program and the Associated Students of Kansas lobby organization. They also provide for increased scrutiny of the budgets of some student organizations that receive Senate
Mark Bernstein, holder渡者, said the Senate meeting was handled like a high school class.
"We got this thing 20 minutes before the meeting." Bernstein said, referring to the revenue code bill. "Nobody had a chance to read it. They have mickey-moused and railroad through everything they've done tonight."
"If you put money away for ASK, you ought to have approved membership
Bernstein was particularly angry that the Senate approved Section 11 of the bill, which provided for funding of 25 cents a student for college. She added Students of Kansas lobby organization.
THE TOTAL amount for ASK, according to fall and spring enrollment projections for the following year:
The University of Kansas joined ASK for the first time last fall under a year-long provisional membership and a reduced membership fee of $2,500.
"We did what we thought was right," Schnacke, a journalism senator, said.
Geroge Gomez, student body vice president, and Greg Schnacke, one of the authors of the revenue code bill, said after the board's vote that Geroge was nothing but a mechanism for funding.
People are saying we cut corners, but, in effect, we just provided a funding program.
GOME2 AGREED with Schnacke's distinction.
"It is our interpretation that the provision is a funding mechanism only. Membership in ASK will come up in a separate bill," Gomez said.
Steve Cramer, Nunemaker 4 senator, argued with Schnacke and another Senate supporter of the ASK provision after the meeting in Section 11 violated a Senate rule.
Cramer said the ASK section had no place in the revenue code until KU's permanent membership in the organization was applied. The program would provide for短途 funding now would save time later.
"You've broken the philosophy behind budgeting and set a precedent just doing it."
"THEYVE CUT corners and insured money for ASK. The revenue code is traditionally a long-standing document," he said.
Steve Young, journalism senator and KU member of the Board of Directors of ASK, said he thought the way the bill was presented was confusing.
"If I could do it all over again, we wouldn't have let the ASK provision even go to the Finance and Auditing Committee last night," Young said.
Young, however, cast his vote in favor of a bill that would require that when he voted he was unaware that the funds for ASK had been amended out of two other accounts to form a separate line.
The bill takes 10 cents from the Student Senate internal budget allocation and 15 cents from the Senate's unallocated account.
THE UNALLOCATED account is fed by surplus funds, including funds from all student organization accounts and its own line allocation. All of the funds for supplemental budget hearings in the fall come from the unallocated account.
"I don't think that's right—to take money out like that." Youn said.
Bernstein said the revenue code bill probably would come up for reconsideration immediately after the meeting reconvened tonight.
Berlin also said reconsideration of the bill might be necessary.
"Revenue code is not something you can do in one night with inexperienced senators," she said. "We wanted to have more time to look at it."
She specifically questioned the bill's methods for funding of the unallocated
"I'm not certain that funds will not be spent all, at once during fall budget season."
---
---
no sunshine in the forecast, as the National Weather Service predicts rain showers for most of today and tonight.
conume and warm temperatures brought Anita Lubensky, 828 Arkansas St., outside and a porch pumphatch. The 5-year-old took a rest after a long day at school. But there is
Spring swing
Official says students need med scholarship statistics
By PATRICIA MANSON
Staff Renarter
The official, Jerry Slaughter, executive director of the Kansas Medical Society, announced a committee concerning a bill that would limit the number of Med Center scholar-
TOPEKA—The Kansas Legislature should tell students at the University of Kansas Medical Center how many medical students are enrolled in a year, a medical society official said yesterday.
The bill, which was passed by the Senate two weeks ago, would allow the Legislature to appropriate money for the scholarship in each year, beginning in the 1980-81 school year.
The Legislature already has approved an appropriation of $1.12 million for the program for the 1980-81 school year. Gov. Benni signed the bill into law yesterday.
Slaughter said that changing the number of scholarships available each year would increase the cost.
"I BELIEVE it's not really fair to the students, not knowing from year to year if they will be able to get scholarships," she said. "You should set a definite number."
Under a program established last year,
students receive a year's tuition for each
year they agree to practice medicine in
the program. The only Center is
eligible to receive a scholarship.
There are 426 students enrolled in the scholarship program this year, which is about four times the number expected by the legislature.
Joe McFarland, academic officer of the Kansas Board of Regents, said that if the scholarship money was limited, the board would receive a number of students who received scholarships.
"WE THINK it would be feasible to allow those who apply first to participate," McLaughlin said.
However, Slaughter said he thought that the system would not be fair to students.
"I don't believe that first come, first serve is the way to do it," Slaughter said. "If you are going to cut back on scholarships, give them on an as-needed basis."
No matter how the scholarships are awarded, Slaughter said he did not know if the scholarship program would increase the number of doctors in rural Kansas.
Singerther he said he thought the Legislature should continue with the scholarships;
"TIM STILL not convinced this program is the answer to the problem of the distribution of resources."
"The students need the program," Slaughter said, "especially since the Board of Regents saw fit to nearly triple the tuition for in-state students."
Last March, the board raised the medical school tuition from $1,125 to $3,000 a year for Kansas residents and from $2,500 to $6,000 a year for non-residents.
The tuition raise has been opposed by 234 medical students, who are suing the Board
Jim Hinton, president of the Medical Student Assembly at the Med Center, has asked that members of the Senate
Mexico's quake shakes visitor from KU
By LYNN BYCYZNSKI
Betty Lehman awoke and felt as if Bette were gently shaking her. But her brother was still sound asleep in the other bed. The full moon reflected off the ocean, to the ceiling, to light the quiet hotel room. As she drifted back to sleep, she noted the time: 3 a.m.
Staff Reporter
"The lamp beside my bed flew across the room and smashed against the opposite wall. Suitcases flew toward me and things crashed to the floor," she said.
Two hours later, Lehman was awakened again, as the room began to shake and sway.
For two minutes, Lehman and her brother lay with their pillows across their faces, shaking inside as the world shook around them.
According to news reports, the earthquake and 18 aftershocks killed at least one person and injured 21. The epicenter was 198 miles southwest of Mexico City and 300 miles northwest of Tucumcari, 100 miles from the U.S. border to Oaxaca, about 250 miles south of Mexico City.
LEHMAN, A Lawrence student, was vacationing with her family in lxtapay a day. Her family met him at an
They were experiencing the first afar shock of the major earthquake that happened in June 2015.
But it was not the last time that Lehman would feel that clutching fear. Twelve tremorsExtraps that day, and many of them slipped over the coastal town in the days that followed.
To the people in the town, almost all to be on hand no one to turn to for advice or reassurance
A VIGIL THAT for many would last the rest of the week began on the moonlit beach as soon as the first tremor subsided. The water was cold or underwear, fed their crowded hotels
"I was sick with sickness, I never felt that kind of sick before in my life." Lehman said.
"They just didn't want to tell the gringes anything. Any time we asked, they said
"Almost without exception, everyone slept on the beach that night. Including my father, who is 64 and probably never sleep outside before in his life," Lehman said.
The tourists at itxapa were cut off from news about the earthquake until Thursday, when an Israeli airstrike killed them.
"And then the headline read, 'no grave'
ALTHOUGH THE airports were packed with people trying to leave Mexico, tourists continued to arrive for the vacations they had planned months earlier.
danger. But in Mexico City people were killed, buildings were demolished, water was leaked.
When the newcomers scaffolded to the Lehmans for sleeping on the beach, "we found out that they had been told it was only a slight tremor," Lehm said.
"We found out then that the Mexican government hushed this stuff because the tax was too high."
The Seismological Institute in Mexico City reported the earthquake measured 7.0 on the Richter scale. A reading in Golden, Colo., measured the quake at 7.8.
A one-digit increase on the Richter scale represents an earthquake 10 times more severe. The 1976 Guatemala earthquake, of which people, registered 7.5 on the Richter scale.
ALTOUH LEHMAN said she thought the government minimized the earthquake's damage, she acknowledged that the men and people were more accustomed to the tremors.
"Since January that country has had 130
earthhquakes the locals seemed rather unconcerned they just kept up and went on
Most of the hotels at Ixtapa have been built since the Mexican government ruled that all new buildings be able to withstand earthquakes up to a magnitude of 10 on the Richter scale. As a result, most of the hotels in resort suffered only cosmetic damage.
But for the one older hotel on the beach the damage was considerable.
"THE STAIRCAKE crumbed instantly. I spoke with a woman on the eighth floor of that hotel) and she told me her wall was gone. Her room was open to the ocean," she
The people in Ixtapa remained calm, if somewhat edgy, for the next few days. Lehman said. And no one in the resort town sustained serious injuries.
Allough the Mexican coast is a beautiful area where white beaches separate a blue ocean from towering green mountains, Lehman said, she doubled she would return.
"All your life you can at least depend on the solid earth you stand on," she said. "There it was a feeling of being so terribly out of control."
TEXAS
MEXICO
Mexico City
Ixtapa
Staff illustration by JAN CLATERBOS
2
Thursday, March 22, 1979
University Daily Kansan
IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services
Kurds fortify, try to advance
SANANADJ, Iran-Kurdish rebels tightened their hold on the provincial capital of Sananda and threatened a military barracks there yesterday after a U.S. bombing.
Rebel forces tried repeatedly to overrun the barracks but were turned back when the government out two tanks into the battle.
The government reported that more than 100 people were dead and that several hundred had been wounded. Independent sources claimed at least 200
The conflict apparently started because of a sectarian rivalry between the Kurds of the Sunni Moslem sect and the dominant Shiite Moslems who control Iraq.
Fighting broke out Sunday because of the army's reluctance to issue arms and ammunition to Kurds. The Kurds ousted the government's local revolutionary committee and installed one of their own shortly after the fighting started.
Vietnam says Chinese remain
BANGKOK, Thailand—Vietnam accused China of continuing its occupation of "many areas of Vietnam territory" yesterday despite Chinese claims that it was conducting a military operation.
Vietnam's Foreign Ministry said that as of Sunday, more than 10,000 Chinese soldiers remained at 16 points in five frontier provinces.
There was no independent confirmation of the claims.
In a statement carried by the Vietnam News Agency, the foreign ministry demanded that "Poking authorities withdraw immediately and unconditionally all their aggressor troops to the other side of the historical border line which the two sides have agreed to respect. The ministry also demanded that China "stop all crimes against the Vietnamese people and stop moving border markers deeper into Vietnamese territory."
Reaents nominees confirmed
TOPEKA - The Kansas Senate yesterday confirmed the appointmentments of two nominees to the Kansas Board of Regents by a vote of 35-0. Four senators
The nominees, Sandra MullenMullen of Hutchinson and Margaret Glades of Yates Center, had seemed confident that they would be confirmed. The two women attended the board's monthly meeting Friday and have been touring the campuses of the seven Regents schools.
The four senators who did not vote on the appointments were Ross Doyen, Concordia, Senate president, Charlie Angell, R-Plains; Wess Sowers, R-Arden.
The four senators voted in January to confirm the appointments to the board of Glee Club Jr. of Larned and Walter Hiersteiner of Fairway. The Senate approved the appointment.
Smith and Hierstein had been appointed to four-year terms by former Gov. Robert F. Bennett five days before he left office.
Gov. John Carlin, however, said that he had the right to name new members and would appoint Glades and Peter Macdonald of Hutchinson if the
Carlin nominated Glades to fill Hiersteiner's seat and McMullen to fill a third vacancy on the board.
CIA expects economic drop
WASHINGTON - A CIA study released yesterday predicted major oil surges, higher prices and an economic slowdown because of the loss of Iranian
Industry and government energy officials would not dispute the agency's timings before a U.S. Senate panel. They said that the worldwide oil shortages were a result of a slowing demand for crude oil.
The "bottom line is that unless Iranian production is soon restored to a level of about three to four million barrels a day, or oil consumption is restrained, the global market will remain unchanged."
This will inevitably lead to increased rationing of supplies by oil companies, higher prices and curtailed economic growth$^{1}$. The study, released by Sen. Marianne Yates,
The CIA said the United States would feel the effects of the cutback of Iranian oil "even with high levels of production in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere."
Court rules on union. benefits
WASHINGTON- The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that parochial school teachers have no legal right under federal law to unionize, and in a separate decision, agreed that states may pay unemployment benefits to striking workers.
The court's 5-4 ruling in the parochial school case also hinted that any (federal or state law granting the right to unionize may be unconstitutional.
The court's ruling on unemployment benefits for strikers长到 New York law that allows payment of such benefits in strikes lasting longer than eight days.
Committee slices TV budget
TOPEKA—The House Ways and Means Committee voted Tuesday to trim $55,000 from the $1.3 million recommended by Gov. John Carlin for the Kansas Public Television Board. Carlin's recommendation would affect the budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1.
The committee action would delete $65,000 from the amount recommended as aid to proposed stations at Garden City and Hays. A $10,000 request by the board for surveys associated with its 10-year plan to extend public television broadcasting services to the entire state was added.
The committee proposed a $15,000 reduction in the $70,000 recommended by Carlin for development of the proposed station at Garden City.
The reduction was recommended because, according to the subcommittee, the $70,000 request for fiscal 1980 was "somewhat overstated." The Garden City station now is operating on a $60,000 budget, with no apparent need for additional superv. the subcommittee said.
It also recommended a reduction of $50,000 in the $221,683 proposed for the Hays station.
Fake ID legislation advances
TOPERA - The Kansas House yesterday tentatively approved two bills that would make it unlawful to lend a driver's license or to sell a fake ID to persons
Supporters of the fake ID bills said the legislation was needed to stop persons under age 21 from using false IDs to buy alcohol and to keep minors under 18 from buying beer. Under Kansas law, a person must be at least 21 to buy liquor and at least 18 to buy 3.2 percent beer.
One bill would make it a Class B misdemeanor for someone to knowingly lend his driver's license to an A class B person to buy beer or alcohol. The offense is punishable by a fine of $1,000 and a 3-month jail term.
Both bills, already approved by the Senate, are to be put to a final roll call vote today in the House.
The other bill would make it a crime to manufacture, sell or offer to sell fake IDs. Supporters said the bill was needed to reduce the use of simulated driver's licenses or other manufactured documents with false information or fictitious names.
Witness says radiation severe
OKLAHOMA CITY—Karen McGee's radiation contamination was the most airtable of any of the employees in the Kerr-McGee plutonium plant, the former president of the company.
Richard Zitting, former president of Kerr-McGee Nuclear Corp., said that the fish had been contaminated with plutonium but that Silkwool's case had been heard.
But he said he did not know whether employees had ever received such a certification, and all employees have testified they were never to heavy doses of radiation could cause cancer.
Zitting also said he thought employee safety training should have included warnings that radioactive plutonium could cause cancer.
Zitting's statements were part of the three-week-old trial on an $11.5 million damage suit filed by Silkwood the survivors against Kmc-Meegc.
Weather...
There will be a chance of showers today with temperatures in the mid to upper 50s, according to the U.S. Weather Bureau.
Knesset OKs treaty; 2 papers favor war
JERUSALEM (AP)—The Israeli Parliament overwhelmingly approved an historic peace treaty with Egypt early this year, as the world's second since Israel's birth three decades ago.
Before the vote, Saudi Arabia and Iraqi newspapers called for war against Israel, and thousands of Palestinians in Abu Dhabi demonstrated against the treaty.
The vote in the 120-member Israeli Knesset came just after a a.m.8.-b.p.m. CST—following more than 28 hours of debate that started Tuesday.
WHEN THE call was made for a vote on approval of the treaty, there was a show of hands to indicate overwhelming approval. So when they counted the hands for an exact total.
They came up with 95-18, with seven members either present and not voting or,
During the debate, Prime Minister Menachem Begin again asked Egyptian President Anwar Sadat to join him in signing the accord in Cairo and Jerusalem. Egyptian officials in Cairo had no immediate comment.
THE SAUDAI Arabian and Iraqi press, which reflect government thinking, lashed out at the Egyptian-Irakiy treaty and called for an end to it in regard Jerusalem and occupied lands.
The outbursts followed Begin's statement on Tuesday that Israel never would withdraw to its pre-1967 borders or allow establishment of a Palestinian state.
Oil-rich Saudi Arabia leads the pro-Western moderate front in the Middle East and the Saudis have pumped healthy amounts of financial aid into the impoverished Egyptian economy. Iraq has been traditionally hawkish against Israel.
A FRONT-PAGE editorial in Al Jazeera, a daily Saudi newspaper, said Palestinians should fight "until they turn the occupied lands into a blazing inferno for the enemy."
In radical Iraq, the daily AI Thawra of the ruling Socialist Baath Party predicted war and said, "The Arab masses must change any war that Israel launched from a limited one, as Israel would like, to a liberation war."
To commemorate the signing, the Israelis planned to issue a new postage stamp and to lay a flower on the tomb of every Israeli soldier killed in Mideast warfare.
Begin planned to leave for the United States tomorrow to join President Carter and
Gerald Ford.
Foreign Minister Modi Dayan was to fly to Washington today for talks with Egyptian officials wrapping up the sale of Egyptian oil to Israel.
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Travel Coordinators and Mexicana are also offering Summer Study Program at Mexico's finest colleges and universities. There are a wide variety of courses offered. A few examples are: Anthropology, Architecture, Arts and Crafts, Botany, Ceramics, Falkens History, Mexico, Interpretation, Botany, Latin American Politics and Economics, Mexican Educational System, Psychology, Sociology, Spanish Language and Literature, Theatre.
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3
Women's Studies gets Ford grant
The seven-year-old KU Women's Studies program received a $100,000 grant from the Ford Foundation yesterday. Shirley Harkess, coordinator of the program said.
The program received only $6,000 from KU to operate with this year, Harkass said.
"We are very happy to receive outside money for a program that gets so little money from the University," she said. "It is much time it has received any outside funds."
The grant came from the division of education and research of the Ford Foundation, which in the past four years has supported numerous women's studies programs across the country.
The bulk of the grant will be used for a 1980 Summer Research Institute on "Women's Public Lives" to be at KU, Harkess said.
A smaller portion of the grant will be used to support three sessions on "Research on Women's Studies in Education" at the National Women's Studies Association convention to be May 30 through June 3, 1979 at KU.
"WE are hoping that this will produce greater support from KU," she said.
According to Mariam K. Chamberlin in New York City, who is program officer with the division of education and research for the Ford Foundation, KU's grant for the Ford Foundation was given a "one-shot" effort as part of a series of grants given over the last three years.
The institute, according to Harkess, will involve 20 faculty or graduate student researchers in women's studies from various U.S. institutions.
"All of these are part of a general effort to establish women's research programs."
of women and their activities, particularly Midwestern women during the 19th and 20th
The focus of the institute will be the study
CHAMBERLAIN SAID the Ford Foundation awarded KU's program the grant because of its extensive library collection of materials and resources nationally-known Gerritt Collection of
early suffragette literature in Spencer Library.
The Women's Studies program at KU is an undergraduate program that was established in 1972 as a special studies major. It was approved as a regular major, a graduate or bachelor of general studies degrees, by the Kansas Board of Regents in 1977.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
MARCH 22,1979
Gallery security poor
Despite a lack of support from the Kansas Legislature, the University of Kansas must, at times, step in to protect the rights and needs of its students and faculty. Such is the case with the security system policy for the Art and Design Gallery in the Visual Arts Building.
Exhibits by students and faculty are not afforded the same protection as are those in the Kansas Union and in the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art. Rarely are exhibits in the visual arts gallery insured, and no alarm system exists for the gallery.
THUS EXPENSIVE exhibits, such as finely crafted jewelry, are potential targets for thieves. In addition, without insurance, the gallery is not able to draw expensive exhibits from outside the University, according to Peter Thompson, associate dean of fine arts.
In December, the lack of security prompted four silversmithing and jewelry graduate students to lock their work in a safe and display photocopies of it above the safe in the gallery. A note above the safe said, "We, the undersigned, do hereby proudly display our art. It is a tity that you, the viewer, cannot see our painstaking efforts. Due to lack of security, insurance and proper display facilities, the pieces shown below have been secured in this safe."
IT IS disconcerting to think that student and faculty exhibits are in danger of being stolen, especially when adequate security protection is provided elsewhere on campus.
Administrators will probably say they have done all they could to improve the system, which is true in part. A request to spend part of $200,000 in excess fee collections generated by higher than expected enrollment was denied by the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee earlier this month.
The projected cost for the alarm system, which would significantly lower the price of insurance, has not been determined, but is estimated to be around $4,000 without installation.
THE ADMINISTRATION should move to provide equal protection for all art exhibits on campus. Students and faculty displaying their work in the visual arts gallery should be able to expect complete protection for their work.
The cost of implementing a satisfactory security system is not unreasonable. The administration seems to find special funding for badly needed projects, such as transportation for the handicapped, and it should do the same in providing an adequate security system for student and faculty exhibits in the visual arts gallery.
American cities once consisted of areas that residents were proud to call their neighborhoods. But during the exodus from the cities to the suburbs during the past 30 years, those neighborhoods were abandoned and replaced by "blighted areas." "slum" and "shutton."
The situation has grown increasingly worse during the past decade, and many older neighborhoods have had to contend with the problems of urban blight.
Neighborhoods may save dying cities
However, the president and Congress will have a chance this year to change all of that if they act on recommendations presented to the Senate by the National Commission on Neighborhoods.
The title of the report submitted by the commission shows the direction that the commission feels the government should embrace the neighborhoods to help themselves.
TITLED "PEOPLE, Building Neighborhoods," the report recommends ways to revitalize the nation's cities by starting at the grassroots level.
"Frankly, we believe that this nation is obligated to the neighborhoods," said the commission's chairman, Joseph F. Timmiy, a Massachusetts state senator, in his cover letter to the president. "The neighborhoods have not been merely neglected; they have been the outright victim of national policies. Housing and highway programs have increased. Sugar growth and exclusion zones have them overburdened, overtaxed and underserved. Most of all, racial and economic discrimination continue divide America."
M. CARL HOLMAN, president of the National Urban Coalition and the author of the report's preface, said, "Slick new downtowns cannot save the cities. Neighborhoods, private enterprise and ethnic groups working together can."
The commission, in addition to asking President Carter to form a White House Task Force on neighborhoods to act on the issues presented a new emphasis for government action.
Indeed, a new emphasis on the government working to help the neighborhoods revitalize themselves is a welcome change from a previous assumption that the urban
Investments protesters ignore rights
To the editor:
This is to respond to the University Daily Kansan's recent editorial stand regarding the Endowment Association and its involvement with South Africa in some form or other.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
It seems to me just a cut above hypocrisy for a newspaper and a vocal percentage of the student body to cry for "freedom of speech" and an open presentation of ideas, while at the same time encouraging the Association to limit its freedom to invest in human rights by presenting an idea of humanity which does not lend itself to disagreement.
It may very well be [and] is likely is true that South Africa violates human rights. Is it fair, however, to stimulate a change by denying rights to the Endowment Association? I think not. Todd Seymour has proposed what to my mind is the most
It did not, however, take an economic boycott of the United States to drive home this point to a majority of the citizenry. This, though, is the very thing the Kansan and the Committee on South Africa would like to see occur.
I'm sure someone will read this letter to this point and declare me a supporter of the war in Iraq. I will also only respond that I deploy the unurpation of rights as much as anyone. From all that I have learned through the media, blacks in South Africa have been repressed for many years.
equitable solution--allowing contributors to request no funds be invested in corporations in South Africa, with similar guidelines regarding acceptance for recipients.
After all, freedom is the point here. To deny freedom of choice as a means of encouraging more freedom is like ordering a boat off the ledge of the building at gunpoint.
It is to be hoped that the Kansan and the Committee on South Africa won't be so overzealous of their own freedoms as to hinder those of others.
Richard Burkard
Kansas City, Kan. senior
George Will story
needs clarification
To the editor:
In Bill Riggins' article covering the George Will speech in the March 2 Kansan, there is a paragraph which, I believe, can be rightly attributed by those who attended the speech.
Without having heard Will's attacks on regulatory agencies or without knowing the
traditional conservatives' anti-regulation stance, no reader would have been able to comprehend Riggins' statement on "anemic liberalism."
In fact, people who had not attended the speech and with whom I discussed Riggins' article, held the idea that regulatory are also as "anemic" as liberalism.
Perhaps more information could have been included in this paragraph to make it clear that, in Will's view, liberalism is weak and regulatory agencies are much too strong.
Riggins wrote: "One sign that the liberal movement in the United States has become 'anemic' is the power of regulatory courts and petret laws made by legislators. he said."
Kathleen Burbery
Visalia, Calif., graduate student
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Remap should favor permanent residents
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Cartomist Darian Martin
To the editor:
Retail Sales Manager
National Advertising Manager
Assistant Classified Advertising Manager
Advertising Marketing Manager
Staff Artist
Staff Photographer
Team Sales Manager
Sales Representatives
Haley Vinson
Ron Almana
Bret Miller
Kirk Dixon
Dunnan Bacon
Kleuua
Dahlah Doyle
Grant Kingloper
Jane Knotela,
Brenda Paxton, Cindy Kay, Allen Reynolds, Jr.
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
General Manager Rick Musser
I fail to see why university students, who must contribute mandatorily to a seven-university, full-time lobby permanently located in Topeka, with an office, a multi-thousand room facility, at a college (Associated Students of Kansas) should worry about being divided into two large sections for local voting purposes here at KU. Their lobby "represents" even those who do not vote (a substantial number) and want to register of registering at their home, or here at KU.
As a KU student for nearly six years, and currently as a resident of the east-campus area for nearly six years, as well as being an apartment manager for nearly five years and a pollworker for three, I fail to see how including my house with those west of wiow street could give me more effective solutions to it, with those in east Lawrence, an area where my neighborhood shares problems of blight, density, crime, traffic and transience.
I can attest to the core of older people and new young homeowners who are seeking to reverse these problems and I ask that this study be a characteristic of these areas, not be diluted.
Rather than worrying about what is a rather minor problem for a transient student population, with a special interest in teaching and mentoring permanent residents of east campus and east Lawrence, whose numbers grow each day. I would hardly call splitting these two areas to keep students together, while put me with Alvamar, effective representation.
I can well understand Mike Glover's concern over his district's outlines, given his predilection to seek yet another term, and I realize that the lines may eventually be settled as a result of partisan political maneuvers. But I do not think he should get away with calling Vogel's plan, which would include law and east Lawrence together, a partisan play, while defending his plan to separate them as high-minded non-partisanship.
Mary
Ernst
problem could be solved by pumping millions of government dollars into highway construction that bisected city neighborhoods and eliminated programs that built ready-made slums.
The Savannah, Ga., Neighborhood Action Project, which is turning the old city's 182-acre "Victorian district" of late 19th century houses into remodeled homes for many of the low-income blacks who live in them now is just one program that is actively displaced residents and housing hoods without totally displacing residents who cannot afford alternative housing.
Instead, the report offered the following suggestions:
In some neighborhoods, private real estate developers are leading the fight themselves to stop the removal of black and Hispanic longtime tenants. And in some cities, where large numbers of entire historic sections without major displacement of the low-income residents.
William F. Bradley
Lawrence law student
- That rehabilitation and reinvestment activities that create jobs for minorities be started, and that civil rights laws to reduce racial conflict be implemented.
FOR TOO LONG, American cities and neighborhoods have been abandoned by federal programs that offered only supervised help and that often did more harm than it could for too long; these cities have been abandoned. Little of them who have sought the safety of the suburbs.
- **THAT CONGRESS pass legislation against reckoning—the geographic discrimination against certain neighborhoods**
- **That "disinvestiture"—the departure of businesses—be halted in "distressed" neighborhoods that hood the poor, elderly**
- That tax reform—including federal income and local property levies, as well as other "repressive taxes" that affect the poor—be implemented.
- That health, economic and public services be continued and improved through the development of appropriate infrastructure.
Welfare, neighborhood advocates and the private sector.
- That citizen participation be encouraged to decentralize city government and reduce development corporations and action groups would be urged to initiate public dialogue.
IT IS THS last recommendation that offers the most important change for urban residents to the neighborhood revitalization will have to come from the residents themselves, but it doesn't.
Already, several projects have begun and the initial reports show that they are successfully joining neighborhood involvement with government assistance.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is providing financial incentives in 1979 for the "moderate income" group, and such aid was available in 1978. U.S. Representatives Charles B. Rangel, D-N.Y., and S. William Green, R-NY, have agreed to provide federal displacement of poorer families from blossoming inner-city neighborhoods that have had new money pumped into them by the city's residents who are moving back into the cities.
This is not the time for the president and the Congress also to abandon the cities and the country.
ALSO, THE non-profit, federally-funnec
Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation
has helped establish special funds in 83 com-
panies that serve low-income homeowners who
took on low-income urban homeowners
are unable to obtain money from commercial banks to improve their houses.
The cities may be dying, but they are not dead. In fact, there is a possibility that they will die.
Carter and Congress can give them that new life by waking up to the problem of urban blight and doing something positive—using the commission's recommendations.
I wanted to know my country's name and how many machine guns I owned.
WELCOME FOREIGN STUDENT
MARTIN 77 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'Deep-thought industry' expanding
By DAVID HEAPS
N. Y. Times Feature
PRINCETON, N.J.—Exotic travel and elegant hostelries no longer are the unique preserve of Arab oil sheeks, Greek shipmates and Hollywood personalities. Now, a thriving industry of international seminars and conferences bestows these same privileges on the vanguard of the American intelligentia.
Armed with the basic tools of their trade—prepaid air tickets, pitch epigams, tennis rackets in season, and a cache of formidable names to be dropped—they ponder the destiny of these mismatched snatches since James Hilton discovered Shangri-la.
Thus, in the protective shelter of the Rockies, on the verdant shores of Lake Como, in the burnished drawing rooms of French chateaux, English manors and Tyrolean schlosser, burning insurrections defused during the short days and long nights of the sound tables.
The illustrious personalities who grace these closed encounters uphold impeachable standards of morality. They deploy corporate or government corruption. They would spurn the faintest hint of financial improprio or the use of public office for personal gain. They are, however, less immune to the more subtle blandishments of a week or month of lakes, castles, yachts, mountains and beaches. Many are so busy traveling mainly to conference to meet that they do not even have time to take vacations.
EXCESSIVE population growth is decimated in the protected luxury of a lakeside village in a densely populated Mediterranean country. World hunger problems are savored by the new generation, and even the elderly. Urban and global poverty is sanitized amid the opulent surroundings of exclusive country resorts. The darkness of emotional depression is illuminated at a medical gathering on a beach.
THESE FLYING circuses are orchestrated by trendy
Their performing troops, girded for instant prescription at an antiseptic distance from where the action is, include academic pundits, Washington-watchers, news media specialists,ensive columnists, global analysts, think-tank scriveners.
ringmasters with an unnering instinct for the latest fashionable orthodoxy.
Heterical observers have sometimes wondered why a country faced with so many outstanding problems should be so plenitely endowed with so many underutilized authorities ready to resolve them. They do not understand that in a highly advanced society the supply of available advisers increases in geometric proportion to the growth of unresolved problems.
THUS A plethora of experts abounds: urban specialists to demonstrate with charts and graphs that American cities are in the state they manifestly are in; economic development analysts to provide compelling evidence that poor nations and peoples are less well off than the rich; political strategists on the Horn, the Cape and the Gulf to explain how the latest crisis should have been averted; educators to describe utopian societies in China and Israel rather than declining standards in East Haiti; and legal philosophers to draw fine distinctions between political and economic rights for distant northeastern deserts of both.
DESPITE ECONOMIC uncertainty and the declining dollar, the deep-thought industry enjoys all the conditions for irrepressible expansion. It has a ready supply of producers, skilled workers and seasoned professionals whose material needs little refurters.
It has an exclusive audience infected with the virus or subsidized global travel for which no antidote has ever been discovered. And it has troubled societies in constant need of collocations on the eternal vertices. They will be scheduled shortly at the same places for the same people under the same idyllic conditions—with the same results.
Heap Adams, a former Ford Foundation official, is a consultant on international programs.
STATE U.
BY T. M. ASLA
DOES STATE UNIVERSITY SUPPORT MINORITIES?
OF COURSE! WE HAVE ALWAYS SUPPORTED MINORITY CAUSES!
ALWAYS?
WELL... PROVIDING THERE'S A PROFIT IN IT, OF COURSE.
PRIVATE
SENATE HEARING TODAY
PRIVATE
CLUNK!
ASIA
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 22, 1979
5
Fields, courts readied for action
Softball fields are being completed and tennis courts will be resurfaced in preparation for spring and summer sports. The director of recreation services, said yesterday.
He said two of the four softball fields at 32nd and Iowa streets were completed and are now in use.
"We have the capabilities to serve 288 teams a week this semester and that should ensure that everyone gets to play a normal football season," Wilkerson said.
Last year, recreation services lost two football fields because of the construction of the Robinson Gymnasium addition, and two others because of construction on the fields where the streets. Fewer softball games were played because of the limited number of fields.
"Most of the construction work on the playing fields at 23rd and Iowa was finished last spring." Wilkerson said. "However, we have made sure there to let the grass grow and mature."
WILKERSON SAID that in addition to the two fields at 23rd and Iowa streets, four fields south of Watkins Hospital and two fields north of Watkins Hospital be used for intramural softball this spring.
The two fields that are ready at 23rd and Iowa streets have new underground
of the excavation, watering systems, grass-
seeded sodding and fertilization is
"The only thing left to finish in the project is the parking lot," he said.
WILKERSON SAID the parking lot was almost completed and would be wounded in to keep people and cars off the two fields that were not finished.
"We're asking the people to police themselves so that they stay off of the area that is not finished yet," he said. "We can't let them go." The work that has been done on the fields.
Jim Mathes, assistant director of land-scaping for Facilities Operations, said all the fields should be ready by next fall, and his crews would continue to work on them.
"We're still seeding and fertilizing the fields," Mathes said. "It will be two to three years before the fields get really good grass and the ground smooths out more."
WILKERSON SAID that in addition to the
playing field renovation, the eight tennis
courts south of Robinson Gymnasium and
the 13-acre Memorial Stadium were to be resurfaced soon.
"The work on the 10 courts should be completed between the spring and summer school semesters so that the courts will not be overburdened when school's in session," Wikerson said.
He said that the courts would be resurfaced at a cost of $800 a court, not including
.
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dark green and the court will be either red or blue, he said. "The colors will look good."
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labor, and that the surface on the courts would be changed.
—we carry a full line of bicycles and accessories from Raleigh/Rampar, the oldest and largest bicycle company in the world.
Bike prices include free assembly and 30 day tune up
Phone 841-6642
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Bike Shop
RICK'S
LAWRENCE KS
1033 Vermont
is now accepting applications for positions on the 1980 staff. Including Editor & Business Manager.
Jayhawker Yearbook
Come by 121 B in the Kansas Union for applications.
All Interested
PRE-LAW STUDENTS
meet with panel of 1st,2nd,and 3rd year Law School Students
March 22,1979
Room 106 New Green Hall
7:00 p.m.
Sponsored By the Chancery Club
Funded by Student Activity Fund
- Thompson - Snapfinger - Lee
KHAKI IS KING FOR SPRING
Have made the casual slack right for everywear.
- Free belt with Thompson
- Khaki, Navy, Sand, Lt. blue
$22.00 & $24.00
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A career in law without law school.
After just three months of study at the Institute for Paralegal Training in exciting Philadelphia, you can have a stimulating and rewarding career in law or business — without law school.
As a lawyer's assistant you will be performing many of the duties traditionally handed only by attorneys. And at The Institute for Paralegal Training, you can pick one of seven different areas of law to study. Upon completion of your education in a unique Placement Service will find you a responsible and charismatic law firm, bank or corporation in the city of your choice.
The institute for Paralegal Training is the nation's first and most respected school for paralegal training. Since 1970, we've placed over 2,500 graduates in over 85 cities nationwide.
If you're a senior of high academic standing and looking
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We will visit your campus on:
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The Institute for Paralegal Training*
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(215) 732-6600
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Approved by the American Bar Association.
WANTED
INTERESTED PEOPLE TO SIGN UP FOR COMMITTEES
Free University
The Free University is an organization that serves as a clearing house for volunteer instructors in the Lawrence KU community. It offers as well, an opportunit- y enrollment in academic and non-academic courses.
Besides putting together each semester's curriculum, we are also organizing several one day seminars on a variety of topics. We have a lot of room for new ideas and improvements on old ones.
Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of Orientee Kansas, Mt. Oread Bicycle Club, and the KU Sailing Club as well as many special outdoor events. We need people to help out in all areas.
sua outdoor recreation
iR indoor recreation
We're looking for people to help coordinate these events and others.
Fine Arts
New ideas are always welcome for other indoor recreational activities. Contact us.
Come in and apply.
Chess, Table Tennis, Bridge, Backgammon,
Foosball, Go Arm Wrestling and Quarterback Club.
The Fine Arts area of SUA acts to supplement the "arts activities" of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for staging workshops, performances and exhibits in any of the arts areas . . . literature, art, drama, music, and dance.
sua films
Just like the big shows downtown, only better because we of-
fer so much more and for a lot less.
We are looking to expand the wide variety that we already have which includes: Popular series, Summer series, Midnight series and many more.
Under consideration are a great directors' series, Sunday
specials and an international series.
SPECIAL EVENTS
We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands. One of our specialities is the outdoor concerts that include several groups and lasts as long as six hours.
Special Events involves a lot of students when it comes to promoting a show, security, usheres, hospitality and stage and light creams are areas that must be con-
Check us out and see what you can do to help
SUR TRAVEL
SUA Travel offers a unique, less expensive way to travel for the KU student.
Past trips have gone to Padre Island, Vall, Appalachian Trail, the Kentucky Kuckuck and many other places.
Creative minds are needed to promote these programs and develop new ideas.
FORUMS
ideas, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all a part of SUA Forums.
the ours committee brings nationally recognized people to the University for stimulating and thought provoking programs. We also keep in touch with people on campus and in the local community who have something to say to a University audience.
We need innovative people like you to help us with our people pro-grams.
pr public relations
SUA Public Relations is responsible for promoting the image and activities of our programming board to the students and the University community. Anyone with creative ideas for promoting SUA is encouraged to apply.
This coming year's activities includes fall and summer orientation and the Madigal Dinner.
EXPERIENCE IS NOT A NECESSITY HOWEVER INTEREST IS REQUIRED MARCH 30 IS THE SIGN UP DEADLINE, SO DON'T DELAY FOR MORE INFORMATION, STOP BY THE SUA OFFICE IN THE KAN-
SAS UNION
OR CALL
864-3477
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
6
Thursday, March 22, 1979
University Daily Kansan
NEW GRADUATE R.N.'S
can move into
Specialty Nursing
at
TRINITY LUTHERAN HOSPITAL,
a 360-bed, acute care hospital specializing in:
• cardiovascular • oncology
• psychiatric • orthopedic
• medical-surgical • intensive care
• pediatric • EENT
nursing care
Become a Nursing Specialist at
Trinity Lutheran Hospital
31st and Wyandotte
Kansas City, MO 64108
Denise Barth, R.N.
Nurse Recruiter
816.753-4600, ext.256
AMERICAN LIBRARY CORPORATION
By GENE BROWNING
Companies get help from school
Staff Reporter
A petroleum engineer in a business office finds himself no longer working with new petroleum equipment designs and geological maps, but with confusing budgets, conflicts among employees and a growing system of government regulations.
Employees who have been promoted to management jobs without formal training for those jobs often cause problems for corporations.
However, corporations can find help for undertrained employees through the KU School of Business, which conducts mentorship development training for corporate employees.
The School of Business has offered the service since 1955. When a corporation enters into an agreement with another, the School of Business
Frank Pintel, associate dean of business, who coordinates the programs, said yesterday that engineers and other technically trained employees often moved into management positions without management training.
in the field research the corporation's problems and design a custom-fit training program.
"VERY FEW middle managers save training in management," he said.
A middle manager is in charge of formers and supervisors, but below corporate executive.
Lawrence Sherr, professor of business, who has taught the programs for 14 years, said, "You know a little bit about how to build a business." He told business们 to tie all together.
When the business school designs a training program for a corporation, a team
Pinet said a training program could last from a day to three weeks.
of professors from the school are sent to teach the various parts of the program.
He said professors were paid by the corporation for teaching in a program and the school received compensation for costs and some "profit" that went into the scholarship funds. The programs are taught when classes are not in session.
DURING A training program professors may use a variety of teaching techniques to give businessmen a wider view of their position in the corporation.
Pinet said in some programs the businessmen were divided into small groups where they discussed the various behavior issues at different levels in the corporation.
He said the school had several professors who were trained in psychology and clinical sciences.
businessmen would have a better knowledge of employees at different levels.
Businessmen look at real cases, make decisions and analyze the results during the process.
The use of computer simulations enable the businessman to look at specific problems.
Pinet said although programs were tailored for individual corporations, corporate training was not.
FOR EXAMPLE, gas, oil and communications industries all are concerned with government regulations. But generally, he said, managers need help in dealing with people and understanding budgets and economics.
New 35mm Prints
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Sherr said that during his 14 years of teaching the programs, he had learned much from seeing his ideas put into practice in the "real world."
TONIGHT!!
FREE BEER!!!
REGGAE!
REGGAE!
MUSIC!
Women
$2.00
Pet's
BLUE RIDDY
BAND
Men
$3.00
TOMORROW NIGHT!! Friday, March 23
CHICKEN
LIPS
ROCK'N'ROLL~
GREAT PLAINS ASSOCIATE INC
The
Lawrence
Opera House
and, 7th Spirit Club
7th & Mass.
PHOTOGRAPHERS TREKKERS NATURE LOVERS HIMALAYAN TREK
plus visit to Taj Mahal and Golden Temple 3 major treks in Northwest Himalayas leaving Wichita 5 June-20 July
1. View 20,000' peaks from a distance of 5 miles.
2. Enjoy some of the largest and most spectacular wildflower meadows of the Himalayas.
3. Cross 16,000' ridge.
4. Carry only day-packs; porters or pack ponies carry tents, food, etc.
5. Tour leader speaks Hindi (lived 17 years in India) and is an ecologist with research experience in the Halayas.
6. Group size limited to 10-19 persons. Membership deadline 15 April (1
April if don't have passport).
7. Inquire at 602 Dyche for location of picture poster and brochure with details of trek. Tentative cost $2000 (based on present air fares).
details of trek. Tentative cost $2000 (based on present air fares).
SHENANIGANS
Wants You To Decide.
We have a new D.J., Tom Trillin
Tom plays a good mixture of popular current disco along with the latest new records.
Tom will be on duty each night this weekend.
Remember Thursday Night is Ladies Night. All Ladies Admitted Free.
ENOS THURSDAY
Dustin Hoffman
"AGATHA"
PG
Eveat 7.20 & 9.15 Hillcrest
ENOS THURSDAY
"MONTY PYTHON"
Meets BEYOND THE FRINGE"
PG
Eveat 7.40 & 8.30 Hillcrest
"The CHINA SYNDROME"
PG
Evet 7.30 & 8.30 S.Sat 2.30 Granada
Granada INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY
Gabe Kaplan in PG
"FAST BREAK"
Evet 7.30 & 8.30 S.Sat 2.30 Jarnity
Jarnity INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY
Fascinating
"GLACIER FOX"
G
Evet 7.20 & 8.30 S.Sat 2.40 Cinema Twin
Tenticil Territory
"HALLOWEEN"
R
Tonight 7.30 & 9.20 Hillcrest
Eve 7:30 9:40
Granada
S/S Mat 2:30
MUNICIPALIDAD DE GRANADA
ENDS
THURS!
SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER
Tonight at 7:20 & 9:35
PG
Cinema Twin
LATE SHOWS FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT
THE EROTIC FRENCH CLASSIC
Emanuelle
Box office opens 11:45
Showtime is 12:15 $2.75
X
THE ALWAYS DELIGHTFUL
ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW
JAZZ
Hillcrest
LIMITED SUMMER INTEREST ONLY
Box office opens at 11:50
Showtime is 12:05 $2.75
JAZZ
only at
JAZZ
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
926 Mass. Ustairs
Tonite: Jam Sessions: No cover!
Friday and Saturday
Trumpeter formerly with Stan Kenton and the Dukes of Dixieland playing with the Gaslite Gang Dixieland Band
MIKE VAX
Admission $5.00 includes: Free Beer, Peanuts, Popcorn and Soft Drinks!
Bring this Ad. in for FREE JAZZ PLACE FRISBEE (Friday and Saturday night only) Call 843-8575 for Reservations.
He said he had to be wary of teaching too much theory when teaching businessmen.
"When I first started, I学习 I learned more from them than they did from me," he
"Businessmen are willing to take on theory only if you can show them that it will be useful to them in doing their jobs," he said.
Pinet said the school was developing 12 programs this year. These include management training for Hallmark Inc., Woods Inc, and City Service Corporation.
He said teaching businessmen was different from teaching students. Students, he said, do not know what kind of job they will have and need a wide variety of information. However, businessmen want that would be useful to their specific jobs.
Artist displays painting series
The six paintings compose the artist's
Monet during the past eight months,
the past elephant month.
A special preview of paintings by Roger Shimoinomura, professor of art, is on display in the balcony gallery of the Helen Foresman Museum of Art through Sunday, March 25.
The works represent Shimomura's views of the intermment camps that Japanese Americans were forced to live in during World War II. In 1938, the Shimokhel, program coordinator at the museum.
The show, which opened Tuesday, will be the only opportunity in this area to view the show.
films sua
COUSIN COUSINE
(1938)
Thursday, March 22
ALEXANDER NEVSKY
Dir Sergei Eisenstein, D. Ivassilev.
One of the greatest epic films of all
the 20th century. Russia was invaded by a German
army in the 13th century (USRsub
in 1945).
Friday & Saturday,
March 23-24
Jean-Charles Tacchale; with Victor Lenoux, Marie Christine Barrault, Marie France Pliser, Guy Marchal, France/subtitles.
Midnight Movie
THE ROCKY HORROR
PICTURE SHOW
Midnight Movie
(1975)
Dir. Jim Sharman; with Tim Curry, Susan Sarandon, Mae Loaf. There will only be these two shows, so you can expect tickets early to be assured a seat.
Tuesday, March 27
THE WAR OF THE WORLDs
(1953)
(1953)
Dir. Byron Haskin; with Gene Barry,
Ann Robinson, Les Tremayne. Special
effects by George Pal.
Wednesday. March 28
Tracy/Hepburn:
ADAM'S RIB
(1949)
Dir. George Gukor, with Spencer Tracy, Katherine Hepburn, Judy Holiday, Written by Garson Kanin and Ruth Gordon. *928-4300*
All films M R shown in Woodruff Aud at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3.30, 7.00, 9.30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted also 10.50 admission
Thursday, March 22, 1979
7
Oread plan gets county approval
A plan to rehabilitate and maintain the Oread neighborhood was unanimously approve at last night's meeting of the Oread County Planning Commission.
The Oread Neighborhood Plan, which includes zoning changes, street improvements and bicycle ways, must now be approved and implemented by the
White Marxists led ill-fated cult, lecturer says
The People's Temple cult in Jonestown, Guyana, was led by an elite group of Marxist-oriented whites. Joseph R. Kernan, a student at the University of Pennsylvania, said much.
Washington spoke to about 50 persons at Smith Hall in the second of three lectures on culture in America. The lectures are jointly funded by African Studies and American Studies.
More than 360 persons died in Jionestown last November when followers of Jim Jones, the people's Temple leader, drank poisoned Kool-aid.
Washington said African blacks were community centered and not concerned with race.
They had nothing to hold onto when they came up from Africa to America, he said.
"Nearly 100 years later, religion came to them. Religion was everything," he said.
Washington said that religion was the center from which everything moved and that at the center was the search for God's power.
"Black religion is nothing more and nothing less for black people than freedom, justice and opportunity for all black people," he said.
Washington's book, Black Sections and Cults,
studies black religion in terms of folk and
mainstream religion. Bob Shelton, chair
of the department of religious studies,
said.
Washington said that the future of black religion is equated with the future of blacks.
Folk religion applies religion to a particular set of people. Mainstream religion is a form of religious belief.
"What they are is what it becomes, we said."
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Lawrence City Commission, according to Garner Stoll, a member of the planning
The commission received opposition to the plan from several Oread landlords who said the zoning proposals would cause profit losses.
The proposals include changing the zoning of some areas of the neighborhood to lower its density, in order to allow moving to the plan, most of the neighborhoods changed to medium population density, leaving only a small area near the border of Kansas in a residential dormitory zone.
Residential-dortmorian zoning allows the highest population density of any zoning.
JOHN LUNGSTROM, representing a
BOUND of Greece landlords, with his clients,
including the owners of the estate.
"We question the effectiveness of
sua films
sua films
Midnight Movie
He's the hero-
that's right,
the hero!!
THE
ROCKY HORROR
PICTURE SHOW
PETER TURNER
downzoning and we question its fairness," Lungstrom said.
Friday & Saturday March 23 & 24
12:00 midnight ADM $1.50
Woodruff Auditorium
- buy tickets early
Watch the want ads in the Kansan.
The best safeguard a neighborhood has, said Michael Young, 106 Tennessee St., is to change zoning to increase the number of owner-occupied buildings.
Several Oread residents, however, said they thought the setting changes would not alter their lives.
Despite disagreements on the zoning proposals, several Oread residents and
property owners said they thought the plan was a positive move.
Downzoning is the changing of zones to decrease population density.
"There is an agreement between residents and landlords that something must be done." Jerry Harper, 1209 Ten Points, says this plan is a step in the right direction.
Although the plan does not completely agree with a land use resolution passed by the Oread Neighborhood Association for area improvements, the association's members will support it, Kathryn Clark, association president, said.
49¢ for any menu item
One day only - as a special
thanks to our customers
Sat., March 24, 1979
TACO JOHN'S
Ms TacoNitic!
1626 W. 23rd
TACO JOHNS
Ms TacoRific!
1626 W. 23rd
Heaven comes to your door
Gabriel's delivers piping hot pizza anywhere, all day.
Gabriel's
Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842 5824
--presents
O
Are the Kitchens Always Closed on Sundays?
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SUNDAY
All You Can EAT
BRUNCH
$4.45 per person
For Parties/Groups, 15 or more 10% OFF,
30 or more 15% OFF.
3 Days Advanced notice to receive Discount.
ALL YOU CAN EAT
FRIED CHICKEN
only $4.45
DINNER
Serving 5-9 pm
Served Family Style
Fried Chicken
Mashed Potatoes
Gravy
Creamed Corn
Cole Slaw
Rolls & Butter
Coffee or Tea
Special Fraternity and Sorority offer.
Dinner $4.90 including Drinks.
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RELEASE DATE: MARCH 27, 1963
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8
Thursday, March 22, 1979
University Daily Kansan
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--man, said the county probably would have to adopt one in the next few years.
Summer Orientation Program 1979 STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
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Bill would encourage ROTC enrollments
TOPEKA-A a bill providing tuition waivers for some students enrolled in Reserve Officers' Training Corps programs would encourage more people to join ROTC,
The representative, James Braden, R-Wakefield, told the Senate Way and Means Committee that the bill would help strengthen ROTC at Kansas universities.
The bill, which has been passed by the Kansas House, would allow 10 students in each school to participate in tuition. No more than 40 students at each school would be allowed to participate in the program.
A student who received a waiver would be obligated to serve as a commissioned officer in the Kansas National Guard for four years after graduation.
A STUDENT WHO failed to qualify as an officer would be required to serve four years as an enlisted member of the Guard or pay back the tuition.
Kansas Regents schools with ROTC programs are the University of Kansas, Kansas State University, Wichita State University and Pittsburgh State University.
Jim McFarland, academic office of the board of Regents, said the Regents would "welcome this move."
Under the bill, the Kansas Board of Regents would be responsible for choosing the chairperson.
"We are taking the neutral position in regard to this bill," McFarland said.
Braden said that the program would cost about $105,600 a year when 180 students, the maximum number allowed, received waivers.
Under the bill, the program would begin in July 1980 and end in July 1986.
Braden said, "If the program isn't working, they can end it then. But if it works, the Legislature might not want to sunset it."
Underground houses rise above dissent
A change in the zoning statutes that would allow underground houses in Douglas County, was approved unanimously by the county commission despite objections by the zoning administrator.
Proponents of underground housing, which is housing built entirely or partially underground, say it could substantially reduce heating and cooling costs.
Wayne Kellum, county zoning administrator, objected to the change and said it could be interpreted to allow basement statutes prohibit basement dwellings.
When commissioners asked Kellum how he would reword the statute to prevent this misinterpretation, he said it could only be done if the county adopted a building code.
The county does not have a building code, but Beverly Bradley, commissioner; chair
"I don't have any problem with a well-constructed underground house, but I'm sure somebody is going to test this," Kellum said.
One county resident, Keean Sloan, came to the commission meeting to argue in favor of a bill.
Slaan said he planned to build an underground house, but he said he would not be the first person in the county to start building because he has not sold his present home or bought land for his underground home.
"I've never seen why the county and city have been so afraid of underground houses because banks are going to make sure the bank does not issue or before issuing a loan to them," Sloan said.
Sloan said that between three and five people might start building underground this year, but that he did not expect to see a rash of underground buildings immediately.
"I don't think this is a thing that is going to move real fast because technical reasons," he said.
From Staff and Wire Reports
Trial of 5 is under way in nuclear protest case
BURLINGTON, Kan.-A jury was selected and the prosecution began its case yesterday in a trial in Coffee County District Court of five anti-nuclear demonstrators.
Bill Beems, Lawrence senior, who is one of the defendants, said last night that he was pleased with the way the first day of the trial had gone.
The defendants were the first of 16 persons to be tried for blocking the movement of a train carrying a nuclear reactor vessel on a Creek plant near Burlington on January 12.
"I can't talk too much about it because the judge ordered us not to," he said, "but the information the prosecution presented today was confused, to say the least.
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Beems' and the four other defendants originally had been charged with a Class C misdemeanor, criminal trespassing. But County Attorney Phil F fromme dropped that charge and replaced it with two Class C misdemeanors and a Class A misdemeanor charge.
The new charges are temporary deprivation of property, failure to obey a police officer and failure to walk on a roadway in a proper manner.
"For example, there was contradictory testimony about who was where."
We're changing our times to suit your times. . .
Beems said the trial would resume at 9:30 this morning with testimony from two more prosecution witnesses. Then the defense will call for a hearing which will finish today or tomorrow morning.
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Thursday, March 22, 1979
9
University Daily Kansan
4
Staff Photo by BILL FRAKES
Christeriansen, Kansas pitcher, aims a curve at the plate during the first game of yesterday's doubleheader with Benedicine College. KU won both games, 10-3 and 10-1. The Jayhawks collected 25 hits, including two triples by Butch Vickers and a three-run homer by Matt Gundlinger.
Vickers shines; 'Hawks take two
Bv TONY FITTS
Sports Writer
Contorted hurler
Butch Vickers struck out swung in his
doubleheader in first game of a KU
doubleheader.
Because Vickers, centerfielder, hadn't appeared at the plate in six weeks, a little uncertainty in his hitting was to be expected. But it didn't last long.
He hit triples in his next two at bats and finished the first game with two hits and two RBIs. Kansas won both games from Benedictine College, 10-3 and 10-1.
Vickers broke the middle finger on his right hand in February, and yesterday was a victory.
Coach Floyd Temple said he was somewhat surprised at Vickerr's triples.
"The first time he was up," Temple said, he looked like he hadn't seen any live animals.
KANSAN Sports
VICKERS WAS NOT the only Jayhawk swinging the bat. Matt Gundelfinger hit a three-run home run in the first game and was able to play a third game to extend his hitting streak to 16 games.
The Jayhawks had 25 hits in the two games. Kansas pitcher allowed only nine hits.
Gundelfinger's home run was a long fifty ball over the trees behind the left field fence. Bein Whalen, the Benedictine pitcher, threw nine innings and missed the mound after the home plate umbrella declared the hit a fair ball. Whalen returned 13 hits before being replaced in the next inning.
"It was fair by a long way when I first hit"
it," Gundefinger said, "but it was awfully
hard, when the wind caught it, a drifted
A STRONG WIND was blowing in from right center field during both games.
In the second game, Spottedwatt and Gundeleffinger each stole two bases, and Vivian Drew and Ivan Mantel Spottedwatt now has 10 steals on the season, seven short of the single-season record be
Galen Worley replaced Dave Hicks as pitcher in the fourth. The junior right-hander had given up only three hits. He is recovering from mononucleosis, and Temple had planned to use him for no more than three or four innings.
Worley got the victory, his first of the season, to add to his three saves. Dan St. Clair struck out the last three Benedictine batters to end the game.
KU's fielding improved over previous games, Temple said. The team committed eight goals in the first half.
The Jayhawks are 12-3-1 on the season. They meet Baker University in a doubleheader at 1 p.m. Saturday at Quigley Field.
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Softball team's spring trip pleasing to coach
BvGENEMYERS
Sports Writer
The question marks are still there but a trip to the golden rays of the Southwest has begun.
KU's football team, minus five of last year's starters and five reserves, has brought home an 8-3 record from its spring tour.
And head coach Bob Stancillift has returned with a bright outlook for his youthful squad, comprised of only four juniors and seniors.
"In spite of our youth, we went down there and performed well against some tough competition," Stancliff said yesterday. "That region is the strongest in the United States in the caliber of teams that make it to nationals year in and year out."
"We still have too many unanswered questions, and we really won't know our capabilities until late in the season. It will be hard to come up with a team, but everything looks promising."
The team fared better in Arizona, sweeping doubleheaders from the University of Arizona, runner-up in the national tournament in 1975, and Pima Junior College.
After losing the opener of the Arizona State Invitational at Phoenix, KU won three straight. The 'Hawks avenged an earlier 1-0 loss to the Phoenix Westerners, an inference that victory victim, then beat New Mexico State 4-4 and then beat New Mexico State 4-4 in Apaches, another independent team 4-3.
KU, WHICH WAS 7-5 after last year's tour, started its spring swing by splitting two games against the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. The Jayhawks breezed in the opening, 7-2, but dropped the second game, 5-4.
The tour ended with a 5-3 loss to national power Arizona State University.
"TODAY IS the first time we've got to practice on our practice." Stanfield said. "We spent all winter playing in the gym, and that's a pretty big adjustment to make.
"We made some errors, but that's to be expected. We also lacked offensive punch but late in the trip we started coming around."
KU's offensive fire power came from Shelly Sinclair, Rose Rader, Jile Woodman and Jil Larson. Sinclair only hit a 272 clip but knocked in a team-high eight runs.
Woodman batted 407 with five RHIs. Kader also had five RHIs to go along with him, but not enough to qualify.
Hoosiers win NIT on final shot
high scorer with 13 points, and Carter and Hay Tubert—the co-most Valuable Players in the NBA.
NEW YORK (AP) - Butch Carter's 20-foot jump shot with six seconds left followed some unusual Indiana strategy and lifted the underdog Hoosiers to a 53-82 victory over Purdue last night in the National Invitational tournament championship game.
In the opening game, before a crowd of 14,889 at Madison Square Garden, Auburn King Collected 20 points for an NIT treble. State tide beat Ohio State 96-86 for third place.
Freshman Landon Turner was Indiana's
Larson leads the team with a 464 average, hitting 13 of 28.
Leading the pitching team with three victories apiece are Stuclair and LaAnn
Stanclift praised both hurlers.
*SINCLAIR IS OUR most experienced pitcher, and one of our best the past two years.*
"I wouldn't say that Stenich was a real surprise but she didn't get to pitch much last year. She worked hard all winter, and really mixed her pitches well."
weekend for the third annual Sooner Invitational.
The tournament's 24 teams are divided into six sections. After sectional round robin tournaments the winners meet for the title. The winner is Austin, Wyoming and Missouri universities.
The squad travels to Norman, Okla., this
"We have two goals for this season," Stancliff said. "I last year we were defending Big Eight champions, and we let that get away. We want to get that back."
"We also want to get back in the national tournament. Last year, we played seven of the top 12 teams in the nation and beat six of them when they wrapped up and didn't make the tournament."
Royals steady performers but lack knockout punch
The Yankees, who import key portions of their stock from other teams each year at high prices, have defeated the Royals—who nurture almost all their own stock—in three straight A1 championship series, and this season has sold a stifle battle for the Western division crown.
DUNEIDN, Fla. (UPI)—The Kansas City Royals play in the heart of steak country, but the New York Yankees have been the most successful of the Grade-A beef the past three seasons.
"When you sit down and really evaluate our club, our overall pitching is probably our strength," Whitey Herzog, Royals manager, said. "If everyone plays up to him, we can avoid the big injuries, we have a great chance to win it again."
RIGHT NOW IT'S a little injury that has Herzog concerned. Third baseman George Brett, a lifetime 308 hitter, missed more than a month last season with a bone chip in his thumb and is making a slow recovery from surgery.
**OUTLOOK—The Royals are good every year—but not good enough to win it all. Their stand-up policy may cost them in 1979, because California and Texas have won more than five times the lock on the West title in its serious jeopardy.
**WEAKNESSES—Less power than it takes to use team's elaborate seismic equipment to questionable right-hand relief pitching.**
NEW FACES—Less turnover than the Supreme Court.
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10
Thursday, March 22, 1979
University Daily Kansan
12th ANNUAL UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST
DEADLINE for Photos Is Thursday March 22 by 5 pm at the Student Union Activities Office
JUDGING will take place Friday March 23 at 3 pm in the Big 8-Room, Kansas Union
Contest sponsored by the School of Fine Arts, SUA and the William Allen White School of Journalism
Registration For The K.U.
CITERATIVE HULLE BLAND (HUMBAR)
AS NO. 1027
BEFORE USE
AB IN CITERATIVE
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S-84023
DELIVERY BY:
MASSIMO GREGORIO AND SONS
BLAND TOWN
WAY FOR SALE
Blood Drive
will be held on March 20 - 22
In front of Wescoe Hall
from 11:00 am to 3:30 pm on those days.
Box stores aid economizers
By JUDY WOODBURN
Staff Reporter
Jim Wallace and Jeff Gerlan are roommates who bag their own groceries and do without bingo games or sweepstakes they, say, it helps them save food dollars.
Wallace, Great Bend junior, and gereman, Gerland, Tarown, M., freshman, shop at Way-Lo Warehouse Foods, 846 New Conventional supermarkets.
Warehouse stores such as Way-Lo, called box stores, can offer lower prices by eliminating frills which are baggers and heavy equipment that slows down on building and maintenance costs.
Gerlieman said low meat prices had attracted them to the box store.
"We walked in and saw the steaks and that was it." he said.
Chuck Waymire, owner of Way-Lo, said yesterday that box stores were already popular in California and New York and were rapidly gaining acceptance in Kansas.
"It's like self-service gas stations," he said. "More and more people are pumping their own gas to save a few cents, and more and more box stores as a good way to cut food bills."
ALBURG SAID the store also would introduce a computerized checkout system that would eliminate the need to price individual items, thereby cutting down the cost.
Alburg said other Food 4 Less stores in Kansas operated by Failley's had cut building costs by leaving walls unpainted or by eliminating finished ceilings.
the elimination of some sizes of merchandise, he said.
"The buildings just aren't as fancy," he said.
Jack Leatherman, manager of the Lawrence Falley's, said that the new store would be to cater to students especially, but that future students would be more attractive to students.
WAYMEY SAID that warehouse stores also saved customers money by being able to take advantage of manufacturers' special price discounts, or allowances more often.
Because the stores might carry only one name brand of each product at a time, Waymire said they could switch brands and buy the cheapest one at the time.
WAY-LO IS the only commercial warehouse store in the Lawrence. Until last August, Way-Lo had been a conventional market, known as Waynire's Butcher Block.
"Except for about 10 years each year, we'll be able to host the whole building with the existing equipment."
"The average shopper doesn't care what kind of corn he's getting, as long as it is plain."
Other changes are to include the discontinuation of the carry-out service and
But another supermarket in Lawrence soon will join the ranks of warehouse stores. Ed Alburg, regional manager of Falley's Discount Foods, said Falley's store at 2525 North Broadway was restored and would be converted to a Food 4 less store sometime between June and August.
Alburg, said the store would undergo several changes to make price cuts possible. One, he said, would be the introduction of a special heating system that used the heat produced as a by-product of the store's refrigeration system.
He also said box stores eliminated most of their advertising costs by depending on the online presence.
temporary, Chuck Sprinkle, vice president of Dillon Stores Company in Hutchinson, said although the warehouse store idea was popular, it would eventually decline in popularity.
But officials of some area supermarket chains think the box store concept is only
SPRINKLE SAID he thought shopers at box stores might sacrifice some quality, variety and service for the lower prices. He hoped that we would be back to what they were familiar with.
Overloaded?
Students, he said, are conscientious
shoppers and do not consider only prices
that are available.
Christ Johnson, Kansas City, Kan, special student, said there was a disadvantage to being a child at the University.
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But Wallace and Gerlerman said they thought they were not sacrificing quality for low prices.
"Sometimes they'll have what I want, but it's still in an unopened carton. I can just see opening it myself and spilling it all over," he said.
We provide tutoring, counseling,
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202 Carruth O'Leary
864-3971
Supportive Educational Services
It seems like a student now comes up with enough money to cover school expenses and hire
If you are one of those people who has had too much study time learning spoken language, Air Force MTO offers a three hour course for new students who can qualify as foreign speakers. The course covers both English and Spanish and will help you learn when you're working on your airplane or conducting a commission in the AIR FORCE. After graduation and commissioning you you'll be working toward an active duty and discover a whole new world.
new challenge responsibility, a demand for your talent, and a high regard for you when you arecontinuing. More as an Agent in the Air Force you'll have anuproportion of responsibility for training.
look into AFKIT SYSTEMS and write out all of the talk about the Air Force way of life. If you move more than 20 feet to make your homes come in line with the AFKIT SYSTEMS, you will be able to talk
- "Sophomores and Juniors" are now for 2012 in a 2 YEAR ROTC Program. Get a commission when you graduate. If you qualify, Call Capt. John Bakey 804-6766, or by phone at (516) 633-4999.
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"YOU STILL see the name brands you see everywhere else," Wallace said. "Basically you save pennies, but pennies are really when you're on a student budget."
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"But I don't mind going somewhere else to buy those things," she said. "It's worth it to do that."
But Valentine said box stores would not necessarily attract a larger proportion of customers.
Jennie Hainn, Overland Park senior, said she had trouble finding some items at Way- Lo that she used regularly, such as dietary foods.
Mike Valentine, manager of the Safeway store at 190 W. 23rd St., said customers both love and need the quantity. They do not have the employees to maintain a wide selection of meats and poultry.
"Some students don't care where they go as long as it's close," he said.
He said students were not large volume shoppers, but tended to buy small quantities frequently. For that reason, he said, students attracted to stores close to their homes.
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Johnson said he would like to shop at a box store more often but he lived too far away
"Basically, she shop for one," he said, "and the sheer convenience of going somewhere else."
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 22, 1971
11
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered to all students without regard to sex or gender. Inquiries should be made to ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FILM HALL.
CLASSIFIED RATES
way of , not uses to and
one two three four five
time times time times
15 words or
Equal
Additional
English
$0.20 $2.25 $2.50 $7.25 0.00
01 01 01 01
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.
ERRORS
in can
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These can be placed in person or by calling the UDX business office at 864-1538.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Zen practice daily 8 p.m. Introductory talk
on meditation at Zen Center, 314 East 56th St,
retreat May 27 and 28 at LA University Chapel.
new law students met with 1st, 2nd and 3rd
graders in the spring of 2015.
avail March 22 7:55pm, 198 New Green Hall
You can buy Michael Herr's "Dipagedeer" in book formats for $60 at any library store. At the bookstore, you can buy a Hardcover Fin Market, you can buy it in Hardcover for $4.30. Which would you have?
"Power, Arms & Tales. The Need for a New National Security Policy." What do you think the answer is? 1) How Richard Barnet, Tuesday, 2) 7, 1970 p.m. big B room; 3) Room Kama; 4) 7, 1970 p.m. big B room.
FOR RENT
Apr. 2 RH and efficiency. Close to Uill. Util-
ship. Clean, quiet, and comfortable.
843-9579.
FRONTIER HIDE APARTMENTS NOW NENT-ING
unfurnished, from $170. Two laundry rooms, large
unfurnished, from $170. One laundry room, large
unfurnished, from $170. One bus route
INDOOR HEATED POOL. Fully equipped.
545 Frontier Road. Next door to
Roswell's East.
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most convenient. KU RU and near town. Phone: 843-767-5767.
View our display units today
You'll see a Touche of Class
APARTMENTS
B41-5255 B42-4455
Spacious 2 bedroom 11p. bath) skip carpets
Cute kitchen. $255.00 no leases
853-647-107
Still looking for a place to eat lunch here is Boulder Springs, and the master of the year. Step by and look on us over the doorway of the room. We will be glad to give you all the details of our Nathalim SMITH HALL, 1800 Natshimani Drive, 843-5500.
Sublease Southridge apt. apr-August 3 BR-
Furnished 9212 me. Mail 842-8833
Finally a Lawrence landlord who carries
Can mark, schedule for apartments and rentals, 843-3212 or
842-1111.
**HOUGHTON PLACE:** ITS FULL--BUT--we make 10 april meals. **WE will have**
the team all ready for the summer that those apart-
ents will need. We will rent for the summer term those apart-
ents--and checked 2400 Alabama, 841-5755, 3-23
Most ensuite furnished are bedroom apartment
bedrooms with walk-in closets.
Utilities: 814-8627, 814-8638, 814-8658.
For Rent : 2 BR Apt. Free Laundry. BRH Unique.
B旧 from KU: 841-0900 or 843-8527. 3-26
Booth#1: 2 bedroom house; Walker-dryer, close to
Street #1; call Tcl 643-809-8599.
Booth#2: 41-758-2548.
facility, system room, fire room, safe, etc.
garden shed, outdoor kitchen, garden area, garden
house, outdoor office, outdoor view, call 800-537-1291
or visit us at www.deliveryforless.com.
Roommate wanted - 2 BR / 2 BA (Bath/Weather &
Lighting) - 100 sq ft - 9-15% utilities; Call Nile 842-1677
3-20
Robbie for summer one year old Studio Adri
*to camp at targeted 814-8298 2-27
NICE 1 REHABITION apartment, furnished, close to campus, bus line, immediately Call 212-549-1700.
Jayhawk TOWERS Apartments
1605 West 15th
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our
DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
Mark 1 & 1 (1) Apartments new renting for summer occupancy. Parking: 35 parking spaces; luxury apartments 7 min walk to campus; 1 car parking; balconies off street parking day, camping days. Business district day, Mar. add info: 1855 Miml Apt. 3, B2-802-4933.
Sublease 2 bedroom apartment. Great location.
Available April 1st $3,279.
845-707 or 845-706.
www.macmillan.com
Christian Houghton now and Summer Close to
Houston. No. 424-6025 between 8am-
5:00. Keep trying.
Two bedroom basement apartment. Unfurnished.
One room per month, monthly utilities paid.
$23 - deposit 842-666
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
All New & Contemporary
Visit our furnished display unit today &
walk inside for the views of Sundance
Apartment complex, furnished studio on
1 BR. Conveniently located at 7th & Florida
just west of the Sanctuary on KU Bus Route
8415255·842.4455
Beautiful 2 bedroom duplex at Missouri St. for
appliances, 842-6211
appliances, 842-6211
Luxury apartments for 3 bedrooms, 2 full bathrooms and a master bedroom immediately. Please call Beverly Wendroth at (804) 269-1570 or fill out the apartment for rent. Full both plus bonus rooms immediately. Haversett and Haffield. 602 Michigan Avenue, Haversett.
Almost new 3 bedroom home with single garage available in SE Lawrence, Cinnamon Hills area. Slave, dwarfware and disposal. Prefer maternity care. Mail $1,258 monthly. Call 3-26-9545 after 3:00 p.m.
Summer sublease; one bedroom furnished South-
west apartment; $1800. Call 841-0360-3260
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make series out of Western Civilization! Make series out of Western Civilization! Make series out of Western Civilization! For exam preparation. *New Analysis* for civilization 31. For exam preparation. *New Analysis* for civilization 31. Criteria, Mails Bookstore, & Orread Bookstore, it
6a. Schooners at Louise's every Friday from 2
till 5.
Alternator, starters and generator. Specialist-
ized service. 834-769-2100. MOTIVE ELECTRIC. 834-769-2100. 9:00 W. 6:00 H.
75 Chuvy Mountain Towne Coupe, 35,000 MI. Stand-
ing height: 34'10". Maximum bed of offest
must sell. 841,002 sqft.
100 Maley Davidson Superdge, 120 cm. excellent
condition, only 4,000 pounds. Priced at:
852.
SAVE! on
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
$24.30
All with
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
THE BATTERY SHOP
842.2922
Heway 40 N. Lawrence
Across from Ickworth
WHY RENT? When you could own this beautiful apartment, you could do so. Like new appliances, disposable central air conditioners, large kitchen appliances, water/dryer closets, 5 smoke alarms, skirred and granite countertops, storage building, double house, cypress garden, swimming pool.
1947 Plym. Duster, PS, PB, AC, autom. trans.
New tires. Excellent condition 841-5111
2002 Plym. Duster, PS, PB, AC, autom. trans.
Make someone at home happy with KU Student-
vaults, hockey wickets, basketball. Round Coyote
Drug Store - 801 N. Main St.
KU Pharmacy - 462 W. Beverly Rd.
If you are healthy, you be happy. We have health
courses on the floor at Rowe, 1055 W. Broadway,
at Rounder Court, 811 West. $35
ENTERTAINMENT
78 Toyota Cielos GT Litchfield AM FM stereo
1209 435-6274 1209 435-6274 am or after
base card 841-6181 before 11am or after
1973 Pisto AM FM FAN case player. Receivably
$1300. Please call 842-1878.
$1300 Please call 842-1878.
Fender Morning Band Guitar with strings, straps,
picks, washers, tonearm mounts, pickup and covers. Very good condition.
Gig bag included.
Tape deck, CT-P760, almost new Dynamic view,
Blak peak view diameter, Dolby 320, 864-1600, 3-23
BOKONON IMPORTS, LTD) Organic charspermons from Brazil are grown in selector-sulten and best in the midwest, and they are grown in the south.
1972 Honda. Rebellate Trans. New battery, pipec
less than 1 year at $350; pipec 4-8 years at
$460.
Sunspare - Non glass are our specialty. Non
glass are our specialty. Reasonable
price. 1021 Mass. 843-7570
www.sunspare.com
Watch for truck on Food, Sunday selling produce
for food on Sunday & Illinois. Also wood crates
71 yelow Mintushi, Concord AT, FS, AC, Dice
Mintushi, 545-836-2999. One owner, extra clean. 843-707-379
www.yelowmintushi.com
DAILY
Ultra linear 200->excellent sounding 3-way
speakers>$80 or after-bell疼 Peter 542
(718) 628-8777
Bailout Boat 470 15 ft. nautic boat Must sail
365-6477 (Ault)
2-72
GUIDE
WATERBED MATTRESSSES $39.98 * 3 year warrant*
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. 1380-1386
BIG K'S
MON-THURS 7:90-1
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7:90-
5.0' Schooners & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1-70
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
1972 750 Norton Commando, combat engine, 12
1973 850 Norton Commando, glider, never
been recovered. $1500.00, 842-258-7600
Violin (2) for sale. Recruitment—Ready to
play Phone 431-5788
3-23
75 Trajan Ari, Custom build 450 HQ motor PZ,
600 HQ marine cruisers, Bord motor $-27
D贝, Dickies 814-7855
7) Firelift V8, automatic, power shearing, an excellent mechanical condition $^{1}$ 841-642-063
***
***
***
Voltagewagon tire sub' new 3$4 4pc BFY's up to $2.20 each 4pc Rustback Stone (29) 527-37
Charter Tape Recorder *Cleaner* Suitcase
Courier Tape Recorder *Cleaner* Suitcase
Tape Recorder with this advertisement Hway Stonehouse
Tape Recorder with this advertisement Hway Stonehouse
1974 Mustang II, 4 cylinder, AAC, AC/Exhaust, and Low speeds. Alpine Blanker-82
6030.
6030.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
WV Square back, 1971. Excellent condition. $860
7567
hacktown with big traffic motorcycle.
$812
7567
Used sports car radial tires reduced 'Came in' to 240/65R18. - Make in Japan - West Coast's 929 HP.
LOURE'S
EVERY FRIDAY AFTERNOON 2-5
60 SCHOONERS
$1 PITCHENS
1000 Miles
Brand new canoe, and Pioneer backtrack. Deluxe
record unit. Call 664-2842
3-36
78 Hondo Express. Excellent condition, basket.
included 841-964 or 832-953
3-28
HERE'S WHAT'S HAPPENING!
TONIGHT! -
9:00
FREE BEER NIGHT!
PATS BLUE RIDDIM BAND
HOT REGGAE
The Lawrence
Opéra House
7th & Mass
- 840-Hassle 843-8575 *
***************************************************************************
MINGLES DISCO TONIGHT!
Membership still only $1.00
Membership 222-7356 8th
842-7030
FOUND
HELP WANTED
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS needed for Uwairand in NYC to provide care and live in a KU environment with high tech appliances. Provide assistance with the budget of $2000 per month, room and kitchen护理 or call 516-397-4444 *Application deadline is Carruth or call 516-397-4444.*
Ring found 3rd floor women's bathroom. Learned
Hall Claim in 2018 Learned 3-25
A key near curret of 9th & Miss. Call Janet at
843-6099, after 5.
Wanted...
Assertive Cocktail Waitress
for exciting, stimulating, adventurous
club experience. $2.00 plus tip. Must
be 21.
Call 842-6930.
ask for Jon.
SUMMER ORIENTATION STUDENT STAFF POINT OF VIEW are now being accepted for the Summer Orientation course at the advertisement in today's paper or on the Strong Hall. An equal opportunity employer
SUMMER POINTFOLIO COUNSELORS needed
for Summer Program. Live in a
Nikon DSLR camera and use iPad,
Galaxy S4 or Samsung Galaxy
month plus plan. Send resume to:
mail us 941-323-6578.
Announcement mail to:
announcementmail@summersummer.com
EXOTIC JOBS LATEK TAHOE, CALIFORNIA
lattice exercise, fantastic gift $1700-$4000
miles of exercise, mat training, bainstuff,
ranchers, excavators, river beds, & more
$3299.00 6219.99 8629.99 16299.99
Saucerware, California 55600 6-24
Now taking appraisal for Position 4 & Orchid
3, Angela to position of Vita Bresciani. Agree
with position of Vita Bresciani.
JOBS
MUN WOMEN SAILBOATS!
SHIPWS! SNIPS! NO EXPENSE! Hawaiian!pay! See
Europe, Europe, World! Summer carrier!
Carrier, Serif, Sacramento, CA, 95800
60129, Sacramento, CA, 95800
Summit Junction National Park, Co. 51, Park 3, $5,000
Mountain View, Co. 51, Park 4, $5,000
Mountain Goat, Co. 51, Park 4, $5,000
Fairbanks, Kittiwake Island, Kittiwake Island, $2,000
Please observe serial number. Port/address in line 4.
Phone address: 813-267-5000
Email address: c_wiley@alice.edu
Cell phone: 813-473-2920
Wanted...
Creative individual with
graphic arts experience to help
design posters part time. Ex-
cellent pay and fringe benefits.
Call Jon 842-6930
Driver wanted Must be 18 in he may own one pair of
sports shoes. Bachelor's or equivalent and
Communication Agile at Natamir College, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania.
Mechanically trained student to work in small retail shop. Design summer work package with customer to provide sales support. Salary commensurate with skill level and experience. Req's 2 yrs of relevant exp or 6 wks on 3rd day. Spotlight 250 Wmtr 238 Sq ft building.
One of the Milwaukee's oldest and storage libraries, is now taking new summer applications for its collection. Applications may only apply. Apply in person at 12:48 W. Kirk St., Suite 301, 615-613-4534 or 615-613-4534. Opportunity Expands.
Parttime job opportunity, choose the
call: 842-3068 after 6 p.m.
3-27
BUSINESS IMPORTANTITY Before the clearing
process, ensure all staff are fully
informed who will be working good. Call 811 243-9000.
Wanted...
Attractive, aggressive,
intelligent, vivacious woman for part-
time backgammon and pool tourna-
ment director. Must be 21 and have
knowledge of both games.
Excellent pay and
fringe benefits.
Call Jon 842-6930
Student Photographic Assistant 50.75% time安排:
9 a.m., mid-morning, to 4 p.m.
Departure on experience or academic ability. Must have extensive background and experience in photography. Preference to applicants with 8 yrs of current training or with 60 college-level training. Strong writing organization skills, good communication skills, and revenue from persuasive letter, field application and revenue from personal letter. Prior experience must include service as Acvene, A Carnegie West Lawrence, Peoria, Illinois. March 15-April 24. An affirmative digital response may be required.
NEEDED-LEAD COMPUTER OPERATOR CNA
work for the company; serve as back up system
for the computer servers; perform maintenance
& training & have experience in operation of
computer systems. Must have Bachelor's deg or
Dissertation 2017, CFU Admin, College of Computer
Science, Diffrent 2017, CFU Admin, College of
Computer Science.
The Information and Research Department of the University of Missouri is responsible for providing computer person to such a wide range of computer professionals working knowledge of computer programming in various languages. The program is based on an IBM mainframe, and the target in minimum computers in graphics processing and computer vision. We are designed and maintained people to attend the gallery area. The City offers attractive benefits including a 30% discount on membership and Research Department, Montgomery College (6416) An equal Opportunity Employer.
Biochemical Research, Assistant-Pharmacology and Biotechnology (U.S. degree required, master's or foreign equiv) have at least 5 years of experience in clinical pharmacology or pharmaceutics. Provide proficiency in biochemical and neurological sciences and their relevance to a research technician role. Expand range to $8,900 to $12,900 per year depending upon the level of education. (913) 864-6002 The University of Ranua is an Open Opportunity - Affirmative Action Employer.
Worldwide dedicated people to work soon both
in the kitchen and in the dining room.
Restaurant, 127 W. Church St., 30-97
127 W. Church St., 30-97
One of the Milwaukee office moving and storage companies and drivers will train qualified employees and drivers. We will train qualified D-O-R professionals. Hire workers ready only for D-O-R requirement
school education for quantitative Transition, Inter-
mediate and Advanced students. Wednesday afternoons (10am) in the Library at Western University. (Incase of absence, call 866-727-5341.)
MISCELLANEOUS
TIMES BINDING COPYING - The House of Usher's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for dress binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us bind it at 838 Mast, or phone 462-510. Thank you.
NOTICE
RESIST THE DRAFT: Kill national objective
binding for the American Constitution,
provide a confidential binding for a
citizenship burden. Smitten.
Kextra mann, can he, be earned by a biter or
sword? If so, he is to be named after a
counted contact Rich Marchews (963-256-316), stop by his office at 1050 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.
DEATH WHY BOTHER? BECCAN-KRAWAN
832-842-3121
2785
THE STORY OF Noul Sail.
Kevla, for 10 years missed to the Acarita Pierana, passed away Sunday. Mine 9. She was an artist with a passion for drawing and marking, with bright markers, who was a frequent client to campaise. A Memorial Wake will be held on Monday from 8:00 p.m.-8:00 a.m. All of her friends and family are invited. Please bring your own fifth.
CAREER COUNSULING WORKSHOP. Unsupervised about which career is for you? Ask where to work in your area and identify any next steps. Since the workshop is required, Sign up to 28th Strong Hall, 641-252-3500. Staircase from 10:00-3:00. Open-taught at Staircase Hall from 10:00-3:00. Open-taught by the Kelly University's Resource and Career Center.
PERSONAL
60k Schenovens and $180 Pitchett for Friday afternoon (2-5) at Lunet's house. 4-5
REKS BIRD SHOP in now open. 208 Railway
Shops and Trucks located at 1650 Vernon Avenue,
quick repair 1053 Veronica Avenue, 841-843-107
1234 Broadway, Brooklyn, NY 11201
PFX HILL, SUNSHINE CLINIC. Obituary, pp 10-
20. In lieu of a funeral service, please visit
the Pfx Hill Funeral Home, Pfx Hill,
Kansas City, KS 64115. (800) 395-7222.
HARBORE SPECIALS 6-10 Mm. Tone, and
FREE WEDNESDAY SHOWING
MAIDS DIARY'S HOURS Wed. $9 100 tickets
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortion up to 12 weeks. pregnancy TESTING, Birth Consulting, Tetanus Ligation for appointment Consulting, Pregnancy Testings 40-60, 480-513, 516-521, St. Overland Park, KI-42.
Topic for Thursday evening, March 22:
Effective Punctuation.
FREE TO EVERYONE
Short courses in
business/technical writing.
Every Thursday evening
6 - 7 pm.
408 Summerfield.
REMEMBER
Thursday evening, 6-7 p.m.
408 Summerfield
From high alp top the beautiful camp of KU
romes the sound of the big bands, the swing
bands, and the dance hands. Dick Wright
has sat for Saturday nights on 8 a.m.
at 8 o'clock.
Goyal Lejia counseling referrals new handbook
through EU 846: 638-350 or Headquarters 841.
www.goyallejia.com
PEEL GOOD AGAIN! Sumatra's vitamin mineral & herb formula and HG-Protein powder—a healthy combination. Go nuts today, you'll like it more. Net weight 8.01-273 g (6.08-9.90 oz). 3.77
Hit a Mind Cavity?? Come to the Harbor..w-10
Jul 47) 4:27
3:27
Hey "Snow!" Hang with the big disappoint this week. Know I can do all Blizzard sares!" Luckily, I'm ready.
EASY EXTRA INCOME Knee Reaseau Study
Society for Interventional Nephrology
2018 Session, INTERVENTIONAL NEPHROLOGY 2018 Session
www.interventionalnephrology.com
BEFT, you are the love me inland in all the land
I have been. You are my sunny star. M-28
spare your time. She grew up. GOEL
M-28
Something old, something new, something
newer.
5:30 PM & 9:00 PM FB Radio 2.70
Near Fetting at 7:00
DAD—Wear to Padre but weartress was clearly, my Ian can, to buy a shirt—T-shirt M-3:22
F V I Wound with some tissue must be split to allow
transmission of the information. The F V I is used to
the information Center's F V I in line 1046.
To whom ever took my camera at Aird's ginkgo,
please send ALL 1,7 wanted to the FILM 23-
843-DS
SERVICES OFFERED
REWITMING-EDITING-Your manuscript, thesis or two-page paper edited into an official, grateful, professionally formatted book. Thinking with precision and smoothness. Outsourcing services and articles also available. Earnings -847-1351
MATH TUTOR, M.A. in math, palestine; three
professors tutoring math students; BD 23H,
NJ 16H.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available here At the House of Uber/Quick Grey Center. Alie is available from 4 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday and 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass.
EXPERT TUTORIES. MATH 009 - 128, call 864-5772-3772.
EXPERT TUTORIES. CHEM 108 - 128, call 864-5772-3772.
EXPERT TUTORIES. COMPUTER SCIENCE 108 - 128, call 864-5772-3772.
TUTORIES. BASIC 128 - 128, call 864-5772-3772.
TUTORIES. QUALIFICATIONS. I.B.S. 128 - 128, call 864-5772-3772.
COMPILER programming. For problem problems in
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can help you with your math or CB problem. Call (314) 258-6075.
Male model Arts & Design, Equipment Rates-Evans
Manu, Thun, Pt.-P, FLO - Box 1025
4-10
Three of treating yourself? Naimish Hall is offered for the first time ever on a boarding plan. You'll go to Naimish Hall and spend week can be yours if you choose this plan. Stop in and see or give a call. **Naimish Hall** Naimish Hall
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476 t
DOG ODDIENCE AND CONFORMATION
Brown Boxes to be used in ventilation to 7' x 7' F.' and
8' x 8' boxes. Brown Boxes to be used in general
furniture (Ground Army), Puppies $10, all others $15
(Dog Oddience). For further purchase. For further
information, call (312) 628-4010.
The Sunday New York Times can now he de-
liver the day's special or adjuntment every Sunday.
Pc will ask 94-848 for details.
PROFESSIONAL, TYING SERVICE, 841-4580, 11
Tyler/Kutner, IBM PCA/Elena. Quality work.
Typewriter, MIDI, Audio. Dissertation welcome. Call
843-721-2977
7 years, experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Master's degree. Law papers, beto papers. Mrs.
Boulder, 842-724-3700
Experienced Typed- term papers, thesis, msss,
books. Writing of wording, spelling corrections.
301- 824- 6544.
Experimented typid-thesis, dissentations, term
and thesis. For typid-terms, select *select*, bd-
131, 842-201.
*term*, bd 131, 842-201.
Quality typing guaranteed- IRM SELECT Term-
ment, Mnix, dissertations, in Carole M. Finke
TYPNING: Over 20,000 pages served. Quality
of service is guaranteed by Harvigné or
82-1928. We are all in for the
cheapest rate.
COMPUTERIZED THESIS TYPEING. Have your
computer set up CPT-8500 and you can have
their technical skills you need to plus all original equipment. Call PROFESSIONAL
TYPEING, 419-4900; info. on the
THESIS TYPEING booklet.
WANTED
Experienced travel with scientific background
IBM Corresponding Selecter II C, Call Jan. 421-350-7980
Now noteping term paper for quality typing
Lemma 418-264 after 5.30 **3-50**
HOME TYING SERVICE. Threat typing booting,
installing and uninstalling applications in your home. For information on the service, call 1-800-765-3420.
Housemate wanted for 3-member cooperative
starting April 1. Call 618-222-4958 for 3-23
9:00am to 7:00pm.
1.5-ft tables for furnished 2 bedrooms Malls are:
481-605 or Malls or Fax calls 2-23
841-605 or Mails 142-900-399
Waited. Single female to accompany me to dinner.
Kristin. Single female to accompany me to dinner.
Fringe benefits. Contact Larry if you need it.
Mali resort town for fall '19 traveler at Mali
Alaa; guest room; hall Call Church of Dava, 844-723-6265
Radiologic Technologist 1, Diagnostic X-Ray,
approximately 8:00 am. Statewide Student Health服
务 center. Call 212-593-7456 for information.
The American Registry of Radiologic Technologists
morning 8-12 AM and on call 5:30 PM - 8:00 AM.
Must Monday-Friday Saturday soon to 8:00 AM.
Would work up to one hour per case. Some sight
worked up to two hours per case. Contact Virginia Deliver.
Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer - 3-23
WANTED Titular Coordinator for Spring and Fall 2018 Programming for the Behavioral Science Major; functional knowledge of large blocks of time above average levels, have large blocks of time above average levels, have minority and disaffiliated students with minority and disaffiliated students, have OTA SPN in an annual APSP in 2nd Carlott
WANTED Half-time counselor. Must be a graduate student in counseling or related area, be knowledgeable in the community, be familiar with and have data blocks of time Applications due on January 15th, SRS in an equal opportunity affirmative action position and women of all races are encouraged to apply.
[Blank space]
KANSAN
If you've got it. Kansan
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 20,550 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
CLASSIFIEDS
---
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kansan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or card. Visit Finnt Hall. Use rates below. figure costs. Now you've got it Selling Power!
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday Friday 5 pm
Wednesday Monday 5 pm
Thursday Friday 5 pm
Friday Wednesday 5 pm
RATES:
15 words or less
1 time
$2.00
2 times
$2.25
3 times
$2.50
4 times
$2.75
additional words
.01
.02
.03
.04
CLASSIFIED HEADING
3
times
$2.50
.03
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch • $3.50
4 times
$2.75
.04
DATES TO RUN:
5 times
$3.00
.05
NAME:
ADDRESS:
PHONE:
PHONE:
KANSAN CLASSIFIED--EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD.
12
Thursday, March 22, 1979
On Campus
TODAY: BLACK FACULTY AND STAFF COUNCIL, will be at 3 p.m. in the Jawahary Room in the Union. The UNIVERSITY COUNCIL meets at 3:30 p.m. in Room 105, Blake Hall. The ENGLISH DEPARTMENT COLLOQUIIUM features author Paul Fussell, who will lecture on "Passports, Frontiers and the Future." He will meet at 5 p.m. in Room 265 Robinson. Lawrence CHAMBER OF COMMERCE dinner meeting will meet at 7 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. SUA BRIDGE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room in the Union. SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Greed Room in the Union. THE HANCHANG CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Robinson. SUA GHEETO CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Robinson. SUA POETRY HOUR at 8 p.m. with Donald Bell and Constance Urbang will be in the Council Room. Also at 8 p.m. the KU SKYDIVING CLUB will meet in Room 124 in Robinson. THE MARIA CLUB will meet in Room 124 in Robinson. BENNY CLUB will meet at 8 p.m. in Robinson. Refreshments provided. Music will be by Steve Mason, Mary and Mark Franzke following in Room 207 in Marvin Hall.
Events
TOMORROW: From 8 a.m., until noon, the AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS REGIONAL STUDENT CONFERENCE will meet in the Kansas Room in the Union. Starting at 9:30 a.m., Timothy Barrett will give a demonstration on the art of NAGHISUZKI, Japanese hand-paer-making in Room 212 in the Art and Design Building. The LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY will meet at 11:30 a.m. in the Cork Room in the Room. BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room in the Room. THE CHANGE HOURS CLUB will meet at 7:30 a.m. in Room 173 of Nichols Hall. THE KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 173 of Robinson. The KU CONCERT CHORALE SPRING CONCERT will be at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. The MCCOLUML HALL Formal Dinner will be at 8:30 p.m., in the Union Ballroom.
There are rumors going around Lindley Hall that say the sky is falling.
But the only things falling are chips of rotten wood from the smaller dome of the house.
KU astronomers want dome fixed
"I's beyond its useful life," John P. Davidson, chairman of the department of physics and astronomy, said yesterday. The structure is, in fact, hazardous to be in.
Davidson said the dome was cracked and leaking, and the floor was unsound.
The office of facilities planning has estimated the cost to remove and replace
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sider," Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning, said.
Because the University of Kansas is the only school in Kansas that offers an undergraduate degree in astronomy, KU has a well-known a good observatory, Davidson said.
Lindley's two wooden domes were built in MM. The large one was covered with steel and metal roofing.
The dome has been closed to the public since August, when a refractor telescope was removed from the structure and stored in a Lindley office, Davidson said. The telescope's support stand is the only thing left in the dome.
The Kansas Legislature allocated $277,500 last week for the renovation of Lindley. However, funds to repair the dome were not included.
The department of physics and astronomy wants to tear down the smaller dome and replace it with a pre-fabricated one. The team says they would revolve electrically, David said.
"If money is left over, then it probably would be one of the things we would con-
The large dome already has an electric motor and is used by four observatory classes a week as well as by astronomy majors working on individual projects.
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astrometry dome and one. The meter and sensor said. astrometry conservatory astrometry sectors.
Lizards find student's home full of love
Staff Reporter
Rv LYNN RVCZYNSKI
358
The two-foot igura hangs at eye level from the tattered curtain in the front window. The foot is slightly crooked.
'Don't you think he's cute?' Clera asks, as if she expects an affirmative answer.
The iguana, Albagascar, his green and yellow scales gleaming in the sunlight, stares baleffect at his mistress, his golden eye never blinking.
Seen through Coler's eyes, however, the reptiles are an amazing cast of characters.
To a casual observer, this room that holds mejones iguanas and the teta binaria a more curious animal, is a space more understandable when coupled with the fact that Coler is a native of southern Mexico.
ALBAGASCAR, IT seems, is always mad. He gets irritated at night when Culp puts him in his cage, a four-by three-by three-foot custom-built model. He hisses and puffs up when the other lizards try to climb the curtain, which is his territory.
Abagascar gets furious when Coler chases him around the room every night with a tablespoon of food dog in her hand. But anger is the only thing that keeps the cat awake.
"He's mad. He doesn't like reporters," she says.
Why would anyone want such an animal, much less five of them, for a pet?
Color gestures toward the fat iguna and Alhazapar dives head-first for the floor.
"Why would anyone want a cat or dog?" Coler asks. "The lizards are quiet, they don't cause any trouble. They're fun to watch."
"I have to chase him around until he gets so mad he tries to hit me. Then I stuff it up."
THIS FASCINATION for reptiles is not a passing fancy for Coler. She is a 28-year-old sophomore studying herpetology at the University of Kansas. Coler says she wants to make a career of the interest she has, and she will be 12 years ago when she got her first lizard.
Color's five lizards are not laboratory animals. They lead a luxurious life beyond
any free lizard's wildest dreams, if lizards can dream.
menagerie, is allowed to roam freely in the front room during the day.
Albagasac, who is definitely number one in the pecking order of Coler's reutile
Sometimes, under Coler's watchful eye,
he is set free in the living room to hang out
on the cactus plants that may remind him of Baja California, his ancestral home.
The other lizards live in a 40-gallon aquarium designed to simulate a desert. Asn
ultraviolet light, mounted on a tripod, beats down like the desert sun on the lizards, insuring that they get their daily dose of vitamin D. A bowl of sourming meatworms
80
Leapin' lizards
Venice, Calh., junior, owns three iguanas and two lizards. Albagascar, "number one" in Coler's brood, is easily irritated and usually cranky.
Venice, Calfi, junior, owns three lizards. Albagascar, "number one" in Coler's brood, is easily irritated and usually cranky.
Odd as they may be, Barb Coler's iguanas are interesting and appealing to her. Coler a
INTRODUCING THE imprisoned lizard,
Coles says, "named only one of them."
Princess Raiden scurries up Coler's arm to perch on her shoulder. Then she climbs through the woman's curly black hair. Tiny Princess Raiden clips down, and Princess Raiden stops to inspect the surroundings, her tongue flickering. The sensory organ that helps direct the animal
Another desert iguma, a few inches bigger than Princess Raiden, rests on its sides. The rocks in the lizards rely on for warmth when the sun is not shining. Reptiles, called cold-blooded because their body temperature varies with the temperature of their surroundings, can move only when the sun is hot.
and a side dish of lettuce await the lizards hunger.
The lizard Coler named is Princess Raideen, a gray and white desert iguana. She is the only lizard who comes even close to being what could be called affectionate. She is content to sit in Coler's hands and soak up the woman's body heat.
"MR, NOOGS, for short," Color says. She quickly adds that her friend Arden Shaffer, a second year law student, named three of the lizards.
Two tiny tui lizards, Orphan Buddy and Baby Pig Boy, share the cage with the desert iguanas. Their main activity seems to be hiding under rocks.
After recovering from their initial incinulation to kill each other, which caused Orphan Buddy to bite off Baby Pig Boy's nose, the wound was healed and enforced by enhancement menace was successful.
The igua on the hot rock is named Noodie Machine Out Of Control.
The uta lizards have already oulthed their two-year life expectancy. The desert iguanas can live up to eight years. And the rest of them, including ad now, has another 18 years of age left.
Coler tried last summer to expand Albagascar's horizons beyond the photograph-laden walls of the front room. She designed a harness for the iguno so that he could go outside and enjoy Kamsa's view. Albagascar threw a 18 at the idea of bennu leashed.
KANSAN
"He loves it." Coler says, "Well, I don't know," he really likes it, but he looks like he had a bad time.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Instead, he sits in front of a screened window soaking un sun in summer.
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 89, No. 116
Committee OKs club liquor sales
Staff Reporter
By GENELINN
The bill will go to the fall House on Monday or Wednesday, State Rep. Neal Whitaker, WRI-Wichita, chairman of the committee.
TOPEKA - A Kansas House committee yesterday approved a bill that would allow private clubs to bolliglu alcohol.
He said the bill would have a "fairly good chance" in the House.
Members of private clubs now must pay for their liquor in advance. The clubs then dispense liquor from lounge pools or allow members to bring their own, and charge for setups.
The current policy is based on an interpretation of the Kansas Constitution allowing private clubs to dispense
However, a recent ruling by Attorney General Robert T. skepman on a 1984 Kansas Supreme Court case opened the debate over whether an affirmative action law should be
The Kansas Senate passed a bill to take advantage of this ruling, after amending it to allow club to make reciprocity rules for their membership.
THE HOUSE committee passed this bill by a voice vote yesterday after hearing testimony on the legislation.
See related story page ten
Thomas J. Kennedy, director of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Division, said the Division did not favor oppose the legislation.
He testified that if the bill were enacted, about 1,000 restaurants probably would apply for private club status.
"This will mean an additional $1 million in fees collected by the state," he said.
The Division would need more money and personnel to handle some aspects of the legislation, such as licensing
One of Kennedy's assistants also said the division would have to spend more time checking to see if clubs were watering down liquor or pouring cheap liquor into bottles of brand name liquor.
"There will be more incentive to do this if the bill passes," he said. "Now, the liquor doesn't belong to the company."
HOWEVER, KENNEDY said the division would save the time and money it now sends to monitor the l'eau pools.
Proponents of the bill said that it would not lead to alcohol-related problems, and that it would increase drinking rates.
"Most clubs have at least one person who has responsibility directly related to this pooling system," he job
Steven B. Glassman, legislative representative of the Kansas Kasher Hotel and Motel Association, and the pools caused by flooding in the area.
Club members have to pay these people's salaries in the long run. Glassman said.
Joe Bjerger, secretary and manager of the Topopea Mouse
judge, and the liquor pool system caused a lot of work at his
home.
John J. Miller, executive secretary of a tavern owners association, said his group recognized the need for strict control over the sale of alcohol, "but not to the extent of recording each drink on a piece of paper as it is consumed."
He said the 590 to 700 people who attend Saturday night dances at the lodge turned in a coupon for each drink they
THE NEXT morning we have to put all of these coupons in numerical order, and that's a lot of little, loose coupons to do.
Berger was one of the proponents who said the bill would not increase the consumption of alcohol.
See LIQUOR back page
Senate votes to fund bus for handicapped
Rv CAITLIN GOODWIN
Staff Renorter
The Student Senate unanimously voted last night to allocate $1,648 to fund, for the students, a scholarship program for disabled students. A quorum was then called, and the meeting was adjourned after 2:30 p.m.
Because of funding problems for the bus, which transportes about 15 disabled students from home to school, the students were unable to attend school Wednesday and will only be able to attend
William Hogan, associate vice chancellor, said yesterday that the van the students were boarding was scheduled until March 9. The van is from the University's motor pool and is scheduled for other purposes.
"This service was supposed to go only through spring vacation," he said. "That van was booked up after the vacation and we had to find another van."
He said the administration had rented a van in Lawrence to replace the van the
DAVID AMBILER, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the rented van would be used in the motor pool because the original van had a wheelchair lift.
"Securing another van with a lift is virtually impossible at such short notice," he
The rented van will arrive Monday
Robert Turvey, assistant director of the Student Assistance Center, said the only remaining problem was finding a van to pick up the students this afternoon.
"Although the van will not run, arrangements are being made to pick up a woman."
Turvey said that because the bus would be funded for the remainder of the semester, the riders of the bus would begin buying bus passes.
"The people who are riding the bus now need the service for the rest of the day. In fact, they will be at a reduced rate from the $23 KU on Wheels passen because they are being driven."
HOGAN SAID problems with the apportionment of the funding of the bus ser-
vice.
He said the original bills for the service had gone to the wrong place, and the Student Senate had been paying for more than it had agreed to pay.
Hogan said the administration would pay for the depreciation of the van, and the Senate would pay 16 cents a mile and the driver's salary.
George Gomez, student body vice president, said the depreciation of the van
"We feel that to fund the system is important, but we don't feel we should fund the system so much," she said. "I had said it would pay for the depreciation of the van, but the bill came to us when it was paid."
Hogan said the offices will correct the billing error. The Senate will pay $106.10 for 1,145 miles of travel and $1,078.88 for the driver's salary, he said, and the ad-
See HANDICAP back page
Campus recruiting up; job market called good
By TOM ZIND Staff Reporter
Campus recruiting for job candidates is up over last year, Vernon Geissler, University placement director and coordinator, said.
If campus interviews are a good indicator, the KU graduate is a hotter commodity than he was last year.
"We've been up in across-the-board recruiting this year by about 15 percent," he said.
Frederick Madau, placement director for the School of Business, said Monday that companies already had scheduled more interviews through the School of
Although the totals for campuswise recruiting cannot be accurately computed yet, the School of Business already has surpassed last year's totals for that
Last year, 749 recruiters representing 486 companies came to the University of Kansas to interview 7,494 job candidates.
Business, than were scheduled during all of last year.
Maudeas said that 66 percent of those students who graduated last year with a bachelor's degree and who responded to a survey last July were employed—presumably in some division of business. The majority of the graduate school graduates found jobs.
"We're well over 160 companies this year, as compared to 157 all last year," he said.
"All the literature we read indicates the business field should be good for the foreseeable future," he said.
Most of the remaining graduates had either entered the military or had gone to graduate school, he said.
MADAUS SAID the demand for business graduates was high and it probably would continue for the next few years.
The School of Business is not the only
school. OR ABA/ALTO has no name.
See GRADUATES back page
Business, engineering majors top salary list
By ROBIN SMITH
Staff Reporter
A KU student graduating this spring with a master's degree in business administration will probably have a degree in accounting.
A student with an MBA receives an average beginning salary of $17,826. Fredric Madman, placement director
The lowest average salary is paid to those who major in education. Terry Glenm, placement director for the School of Education, said the average salary for an education graduate ranged from $2,000 to $10,500.
This compares to an average of $13,341 for other 1978 KU graduates.
Glenn said the teaching field was crowded and a graduate in education must be flexible enough to move to another
The second highest beginning salary is paid to engineers, who average $17,528 a year.
VERNON GEISLER, director of the University placement center, said women chemical engineers were
However, Donald Metzler, associate dean of the School of Engineering, disagreed.
"You can't separate the men from the women," Metzler said. "The companies that interview at KU don't care about it."
However, Metzier did say chemical and petroleum engineers were said the highest salary in engineering at an
average of $18,432. Matzler recalled that the highest paid salary to a KU engineering graduate was $22,206, but that the graduate was neither a chemical engineering major nor a woman.
Metzler said civil engineers were paid the lowest beginning salary $16,000.
The third highest beginning salary is paid to students receiving a master's degree in business. Madans and a student from MIT receive the same salary.
"Engineers will have no problem in getting a job."
THE BUSINESS school enrollment has grown considerably. Madus said, "We are up at least 40 percent."
*According to the latest College Placement Council Salary Survey*, Mettler said, engineering joboffers have
Law graduates are not far behind in earning a high beginning salary.
"Companies are coming to interview students in business in record numbers. I would say that there has been at least a 15 percent increase in the number of companies now interviewing here."
Magnolia Carter, placement director for the School of Law, said the highest starting salary paid to a KU law school.
According to a 1978 placement salary survey, KU law graduates made an average salary of $17,800 in "very large" law firms. The next highest salary of $17,000 was paid to federal judicial clerks.
“Of course that figure is from an old survey.” Carrtar said. “That survey was made when $23,000 was a lot of money. We plan on changing the figure to $24,000 next year.”
HOWEVER, KU law graduates who went into legal services were paid the lowest salary, $12,300. Following in low salaries were local government law graduates at $13,000.
Cartar said the job market for KU law graduates looked promising.
"All the law graduates will find jobs," Cartart said. "They may have to work at finding the jobs—I mean they just can't sit back and wait—but they will be employed quickly."
Gene Martin, professor of pharmacy practice, said a School of Pharmacy graduate might have to work 44-hour weekends.
"The salary may be a little more or a little less," Martin said. "It all depends where a graduate is working."
Martin said the highest salary paid to a KU pharmacy graduate was $3,000. The student's offer came from Las Vegas.
"In a recent alumni publication though," Martin said, "the school with the highest percent of alumni working in
MARTIN SAIID pharmacy enrollment had not increased in the past six years and credited to this KU's lack of
knowledge.
See SALARIES back page
2
Friday, March 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and ware reports
Truck crash spills uranium
WICHTTA—Tors of low-grade, processed尿素 are spread along Interitec 335 west of Wichita yesterday when a semi-trailer truck jackknifeed and the vehicle smashed.
Authorities said that the danger of contamination was minimal but that earlarn dams and a diversion channel were constructed in roadside ditches to prevent flooding.
As many as 20 of 4 drums broke open when they were thrown from the truck, which was going from Wyoming to a Kerr-Mee Gnee National Corp. plant in Gore.
Kansas and Sedwick County health officials said the dark, powdery uranium oxide was not dangerous unless it was inhaled. Firefighters and other workers covered the spilled uranium with plastic to prevent it from scattering through the air.
Poll says U. S. not conserving
WASHINGTON—An Associated Press-NBC News poll indicates that almost one-fifth of the American population has not tried to cut energy use.
The poll, in which 1,600 people were interviewed Monday and Tuesday, also indicated that even if gasoline prices reached $1 a gallon, more than one-fourth of the population would be covered.
Sixty-eight of those interviewed said they thought the oil shortage was a hoax, 22 percent said the shortage was real and 10 percent said they were not sure.
The president Carter appealed to Americans to ease the energy shortage caused by the loss of Iranian oil by turning down thermostats, driving less and taking
However, Energy Secretary James Schlesinger said appeals for voluntary conservation had not worked and warned that mandatory measures might be
British official in Holland killed
THE HAGUE, Netherlands- Two men assassinated the British ambassador to the Netherlands yesterday and also killed the ambassador's Dutch valet. Dutch and British authorities say any motives or suspects in the slayings are unknown.
Dutch and British authorities say any motives or suspects in the slayings were still unknown.
The ambassador, Sir Richard Sykes, 58, was killed when the two men opened fire on him in front of his home. The men fired from a range of between eight and 15 yards and then ran through an alley and disappeared in the crowd of rush-hour commuters and shopkeepers.
Sykes became Britain's ambassador to Holland in 1977 after filling diplomatic posts in Washington, Havana, Athens, Peking and Santiago, Chile.
Carter to limit insurance plan
WASHINGTON—The Carter administration announced yesterday that it would impose its national health insurance proposal this year to a $10 billion to $15 billion.
Health, Education and Welfare Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr., said many of the details of the plan still had to be worked out. But, he said, "phase one" would spend money primarily to insure Americans against the costs of health care and expand the eligibility and benefit provisions of Medicare and Medicaid.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass, sponsor of a labor-backed comprehensive health insurance bill, said President Carter's approach was
During his campaign for the presidency, Carter promised a mandatory, comprehensive and universal system for paying everyone's health care bills.
It was Carter's refusal last summer to commit himself to establishing such a system that led to a split with Kennedy and organized labor.
Plutonium reports cited in trial
OKLAHOMA CITY—The former president of Kerr-Mecko Nuclear invasion was yesterday that there were many reports of plutonium contamination at the nuclear plant in Oklahoma City.
However, Richard Zitting, the former executive, said most of the reports involved only tiny amounts of plutonium.
Zitting testified in an $11.5 million plutonium contamination lawsuit filed in federal court by the estate of Karen Silkwood.
Sitting said he had no knowledge of Kerr-Meege spying on Silkwood before her death in an automobile accident Nov. 13, 1974.
Zitting said he neither ordered company security officer James Reading to investigate Silkwood nor knew of any investigation until Kerr-McGee employees discovered Silkwood's apartment was contaminated with plutonium Nov. 7, 1974.
Zitting said he learned that Reading had investigated Silkwood on Nov. 7 or 8 of 1974.
Attorneys previously charged the company violated Silkwood's civil rights by installing telephone wiretaps about a month before her death.
Jury sees camp of slain girls
LOCUST GROVE, Okla. —Jourors in the Gene Leroy Hurt murder trial yesterday northwestern an oklahoma State Oklahoma Girl Camp camp with three girls
The six-man and six-woman jury visited the new closed camp and viewed the tent where the girls were attacked and the surrounding area where their bodies were found.
A camp counselor found the girls, along with their blood-soaked sleeping bags, about 50 yards from their tent.
Personnel at the camp, aided by protection investigators, reconstructed the campite Wednesday so it would resemble the scene the night of the slayings.
Death penalty goes to Senate
TOPEKA—A conference committee yesterday agreed to a death penalty bill that will be considered by the Kansas Senate next week.
Last week, the Senate substituted a mandatory life sentence for death sentences and the Kansas House rejected the proposal. Upon the House's rejection, the Senate voted to hold the sentence.
The provisions of the bill would make death or life imprisonment the punishment for premeditated murder or felony murder. Felony murder is
State Sen. Roy Doyen, R-Coronado, said the conference committee report would not be considered today because at least four senators had excused absences.
The conference committee also restored a provision for execution by injection of a lethal substance, rather than by hanging.
Dayen said it might be considered Monday. The vote on the conference report would be the first chance this session for the Senate to vote on that report.
House passes new helmet law
The bill, which carries the amendment raising the age limit from 16, was tentatively approved by the House 70-31. If the bill passes on a final roll call vote today, it will be sent to the Kansas Senate for acceptance or rejection of the House amendment raising the age requirement.
TOPEKA — The Kansas House voted to require persons under the age of 18 to wear helmets when riding a motorcycle or nopeps.
Liquor bill gets Senate OK
The franchise system would allow liquor manufacturers to have one domain area, which area, replacing the current system of state-set liquor prices and inventories.
The Kansas Senate yesterday approved a franchise system for lorion wholesales which sponsors will say will reduce the cost of liquor to consumers.
The Senate vote was 21-18 on the bill introduced by State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta. The bill was sent to the Kansas House for approval.
Weather...
It will be cloudy and cooler today with a high in the upper 40s. Winds will be weak, but there is a 20 percent chance of rain this morning. The low tonight will be calm.
WASHINGTON (AP)—Armed with broad political support from home, the leaders of Israel and Egypt prepared yesterday for their historic, journeys to Washington to sign a treaty ending 30 years of hostilities between their nations.
Mideast treatv attacked bv PLO
The Palestinian leader, Mahmoud Labadi of the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, said his group, a branch of the Palestine Liberation Organization, had no effort to undermine U.S. interests in the Arab world."
95-18 early yesterday after 28 hours of debate. The English version is to be signed by Egyptian President Awad Sarat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin at 2 p.m. Monday on the north lawn of the White House.
But a burrious Palestinian leader wooled an all-out drive to scuttle the "defeatist, separatist" treaty.
In Cairo, Sadat called the Knesset approval marvelous and said there was a possibility that signing ceremonies for the Arabic and Hebrew versions could be conducted in Cairo and Jerusalem.
The Israeli Parliament endorsed the treaty by a vote of
Israeli Parliament members, who heard misgivings about the treaty in the two-day debate, greeted the approval with restraint.
Opposition politicians in Cairo warned in parliamentary hearings that the treaty would isolate Egypt from the rest
of the Arab world. But Sadat's party controls 312 of the 360
seats, so ratification is assured.
A few hours after the Israeli vote, Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan left for Washington to continue negotiations with the United States on a memorandum of understanding that would American involvement in putting the treaty into effect.
Defense Minister Ezer Weizman will go to Washington today to negotiate remaining problems on a timetable for the new Israeli government.
Araba and Palestinians, who see the treaty as a separate peace with Israel and a sell-out of the Palestinian campaign for an independent state on the West Bank of the Jordan Valley, said they did not say what steps they would take if a treaty were signed.
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Please send Schmitz Malt Lager "SAY BUILT" College Name Athletic Jerseys) to $ 35.00 each, including College Name Personalization, postage and handling.
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Friday, March 23, 1979
3
f the 360
Minister otiations standing treaty
thington able for
separate campaign Jordan eps they
Carter wage controls lose; economy gains, profs say
BvGENE BROWNING
Staff Reporter
Although the country's economy is improving, the future of President Carter's wage and price guidelines is dismal, several other professors in business professors predicted yesterday.
Darwin Daicoff, professor of economics,
said, "It makes it much more difficult for
migrants to find work."
The professors were responding to an Associated Press story that said corporations increased before-tax profits by 36.4 percent last year.
Carter announced voluntary wage-price guidelines in April 1978. He asked that wages be increased no more than 7 percent and that wages be increased no more than 54% per cent.
Daicoff said labor would demand wage increases because the profit information
He said the profit increase meant that the economy was running "great."
Ron Olsen, professor of economics, said he was not surprised at the increase.
Olsen said that because of the news of the increase, it would be difficult for companies to meet the expected increase and not tell if wage increases would have come if there had not been news of the profit increase.
The profit will not affect inflation unless the corporations decide to spend the money, Olsen said, but inflation probably will continue to rise.
"NOBODY REALLY thought the wage and price controls would work," he said.
"You don't know that the Teamsters would not have asked for wage hikes if that had been the case."
"The inflation is coming from other areas," he said. "It is coming from such things as higher medical, gas and food costs."
Olsen agreed that the news of the profits would not be helpful to Carter.
"I'm sure it's going to be upsetting to anyone setting up the controls," he said.
HE SAID CARTER had few options.
Lowering import tariffs to put pressure on the corporations is one option, but it is not easy to implement, according to Olsen. For
David Shulenburger, associate professor of business, questioned the profit figure.
instance, if beef tariffs were lowered, he said, the entire industry would oppose the tariffs.
Daircoff differed with Olsen on the solution to Carter's problem. He said the success of Carter's guidelines would depend on the corporations adhered to the guidelines.
"There has been an awful lot of inflation," he said.
sua films
He also said the figures might not be comparable to previous figures because companies were changing their accounting records. He said there could be other factors.
Inflation could boost the figure higher than it would be if the dollar were worth the same.
Friday & Saturday
March 23-24
COUSIN COUSINE
"It may not be a representative figure," he said. "It is probably just for public holdings firm."
"It is too early for that," he said. "Almost all of the wages were struck prior to Carte
Sulenburger said the profit would have a positive effect on the economy, as a buffer against any future recessions. But he said it would be easier to predict how extensive the effect would be.
(1876)
Dr Jean-Charles Huchon
Virginian Laucan, Marie Kristine Baurnaut,
Marie-Françoise Pisler, Guy Marchand,
France/subtitles.
HE ALSO SAID companies would charge more to keep up with inflation.
Although Olsen said he thought the profit increase was partially caused by a lag in customer demand, he said the change is
University Dally Kansan
Midnight Movie
THE ROCKY HORROR
PICTURE SHOW
Dir, Jim Sharmar, with Tim Curry, Susan Sardanand, Meat Leaf. There only be three the two shows, so tickets to tickets early to be assured a seat.
Tuesday, March 27
THE WAR OF THE WORLDs
Wednesday, March 28
Tracy/Hepburn:
(1953)
Dir. Byron Haskin, with Gene Barry,
Ann Robinson, Les Tremayne, Special effects by George Paul.
"It doesn't necessarily mean that the economy will continue to grow positively, but it does indicate that the economy is pretty strong now," he said.
AUMM S RIB
(1949)
Dr. George Cukor; with Spencer Tracy, Katherine Hepburn, Judy Hollday, Written by Garson Kanin and Ruth Gordon.
Thursday, March 29
Ibsen's Classic Play:
A DOLL'S HOUSE
Dir. Joseph Loehning With Jane Fonda,
David Warner, Trevor Howard, Edward
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Fake donor list draws blood drive volunteers
A vein attempt at a prank by two University of Kansas students turned into a good deed yesterday.
One of the students told James Scaly, administrative assistant in the chancellor's office, that when they ate lunch in Wescoo cafeferia, they sat at a table and drank coffee. They drove registration this week. The table was empty at the time, the student said.
The student told Scally they started a fake donor-register list as a joke. They said they put a paper of sheet on the table in factitious names at the top to start the list.
The pair was apparently swamped by KU students wanting to donate blood, Scally said.
The student told Scaly that they originally explained that they were not part of the blood drive but that the students did not believe them.
students apparently developed guilty consciences, Scally said.
The blood drive, sponsored by the Interfraternity Council and the Panhellenic Association, is scheduled for April 24 in the Kansas Union ballroom. Registration was held during the past week at the table in Westcoe cafeteria
After collecting a dozen names, the
Scally said one of the students walked into the administration offices shortly after 1 p.m. and gave the chancellor's name to a desk. The man, he'll know what to do with it.
"He started to turn around and walk out," S scally said. "We stopped him and got as much of the story as we could before he left."
Sically burned the list over to Carryl Smith, dean of student life, who said it was too hard for him to blood drive. Smith said the sponsors would call the people on the list to conference.
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Students put on probation for using fake bus passes
The seven students caught using fake bias passes last month have been punished, David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday.
Ambler said six students were placed on probation until May and one was placed on probation until December. All were fired $23, which is the price of a bus pass.
Carly Smith, dean of student life, handed
punishments just before spring break.
he's been a teacher.
The students were referred to Smith, who decided their punishment after taking the class.
KU bus drivers caught the seven students using the fake passes.
Ambier said a probation meant that if the students committed another crime against the University, they could be more severely punished, by either suspension or expulsion.
He said if the students appealed the decision to the University Judiciary, their punishments would be held until another decision was made. He did not know if any of the students planned to appeal the decision, he said.
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LITE BEER FROM MILLER.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
IHP end regrettable
Last fall the director of the Integrated Humanities Program, which was beset by budget cutbacks and declining enrollment, charged that "the University administration has tried to make the program invisible."
His effort was wasted. The administration has now made the program non-existent.
That action came recently with the approval by Robert Cobb, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, of nine recommendations that will end the program as it exists now and institute in its place a sequence of four humanities courses.
A HUMANITIES Committee would administer all humanities offerings, including the four IHP courses. That committee would comprise at least seven faculty members and student representatives.
Although Dennis Quinn, IHP director, has been told that he will be eligible to serve on the committee, it is clear that the once popular IHP program at KU is dead. And that is disturbing, for not only will KU students be denied the opportunity to enroll in a program that many found appealing, but the liquidation of the program once again casts significant doubt on the University's commitment to true academic freedom.
OF COURSE, the University's dubious record in that field is familiar to most students. The Jonathan Kozol lecture and Nazi exhibit controversies most recently have indicated the administration's predilection for bludgeoning contrary opinion into submission.
THE FOUR COURSES will still be available, of course, but under committee guidance the courses obviously will not be the same as the current IHP program. A measure of the finality of the program's demisie lies in the instructions to Quinn to give up his keys to the IHP office. In the tangled world of academia, an order to relinquish your keys is the equivalent of the executioner's sentence.
There clearly was pressure from several groups to eliminate HP. The most publicized of those groups was led by a Unitarian minister and adopted the ironic name of Committee for Academic and Religious Liberty.
Henning's magic illusion; views on TM delusion
The unfortunate part of the decision to dismantle the IHP program is that there is no apparent reason for the action except to defuse the criticism directed toward the program. And burying a program because it is controversial lies a long way from the principles of academic freedom that a university is designed to maintain.
But controversy is no crime, and as long as there is student demand for a program and the program meets the standards of quality set by a university, that program should be available to students.
According to a special report in a spring published by Maharishi European Research University, we are "really" required to teach much more than Henning would have us think.
To the editor:
I find it most interesting that Doug Heming's slight of hand is now being used to evangelize for transcendental meditation, and it seems he has something amiss with his trickery. In fact, after reading Rhonda Holman's article I learned that Heming has something on his sleeve.
Henning also states in Holman's article that TM is merely "a simple, mental technique to expand consciousness . . . there's really nothing to believe at all, except that by using your mind, your body can have deep rest."
The first rabbit Henning pulls out of his hat is the statement, "There's nothing religious about it (TM)." Aside from his hat, he has been quick to draw down on boundaries in the mind," that court was "filled with an incredible sense of wonder," and that mediation will enable an individual to "discover his inner self" (all of which he describes himself as being) seems to be unaware that a federal court has ruled that within the establishment clause of the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, TM is indeed religious in nature and has recently been in a federal Court of Appeals.
The report asserts that due to the
KANSAN letters
"Maharishi Effect" (the "raising of world consciousness") as the number of mediators "approaches" 1 percent of the world's population), the nations of the earth need no longer fear one another because all threats are out by the "vibrations" of TM practitioners.
The Maharishi himself declared all nations "in invincible" on Oct 13, 1797. I doubt that even magic can explain the various wars in Africa, Indochina, the Middle East, and so on, though it might fare better with the TM "Siddi" program, which bestows powers to institutions such classic sorcerer's powers as levitation, human strength, and invisibility.
Henning informs his audience, "What I'm doing up here is illusion." I couldn't agree with him more. The headline described his own experience in the magic of his own definition of magic is only appropriate. Magic . . . "a process of misdirecting people's attention and creating optical illusions." Certainly one thing can be said for Henning; he preaches what he practices.
Bob Anthony Lawrence senior
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Women's protest fuels Iranian strife
The best one can do is to call it terrible timing.
On March 7, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini declared that the proper dress code for a Moslem woman was the hijab—a code that entails covering a woman's hair, arms and legs and hiding her zinaat, or enticing parts.
Khomeini could not have chosen worse timing for his declaration, and it was a definite slap to women who had fought to throw off the oppression of the shah before
The next day, March 8, some 15,000 women lined the streets of Tehran to commemorate International Women's Day. But the women were not dressed in the traditional Moslem chador, which covers a woman from头到 toe. Instead, in a tremendous display of outrage and courage, women pressed in peas and other Western attire.
Many of the women gathered there that day were women who had worn the chador as a sign of protest against the shah's regime. With but Khomeini's return after 15 years of exile, they had once again thrown off those cloaks of degradation—assuming the government, as it had been by the shah during his period of modernization.
"I'll never put on a scarf. No man—not the shah, not Khomineh, and not anyone else will dress me as he pleases. The women of Iran have been unveiled for three generations and we will fight anyone who bars our way."
"ILL.NEVER a veil a .I'll never wear a chudor" shouted Farazh Nairch, a lawyer who had been on trial.
However, they soon found that the
Mary
Ernst
revolution had brought a strict Modern ethical code that the syllabist and a group of non-syllabists must obey.
IT IS THAT code that is causing the largest opposition to Khomeini since his return and which insures a continuation of civil strife in a nation which had—despite the tyranny involved—enjoyed a loosening of moral codes.
Now the women pose a threat to Khomini as they become more active in their defiance to his decrees. It is not just the return to the chadors, however, that has upset Iranian women activists. The ayatollah also has said that he disapproves the 'Palestinian Act of 1975, which grants Moslem women the right divorce in court and protects them against arbitrary rejection or polygamy by the husbands.
THE FACT that it took until 1975 to enact such a law seems nearly inconceivable to many Iranians, and for Khomeini to reject it seems unbearable.
Kleinmeier's comments that coed education, introduced in Iran only a few years ago, had led to many turnovers many of Iran's schools into centers of prostitution, is another cause for outrage by them.
Most hotels and restaurants have already conformed with a prohibition on alcoholic beverages. X-rated movies are rarely shown, while most television shows are no longer broadcast.
that are drawing opposition from more than just women.
The results of such strict dictates seem sure to alienate even more people in the months to come. There is already an outrage that the family of a woman and man convicted of adultery to 80 and 40 lashes. And another decision which resulted in the execution of four men convicted of raping an 16-year-old student and having sex with the victim also has drawn outrage.
BUT WHAT is particularly surprising to many in the Western world, and particularly alarming to many women in Iran, is that these changes were not expected by many Iranian women who welcomed the religious government of Khomeini with open arms. But in Khomeini the day before International Women's day was also a surprise to many.
"We fought for freedom with the men," one woman said. "None of us knew freedom without them."
"KHOMEIEN KNOWS that this is why he got rid of the shah and he is now talking a different tune from what he used to say in Paris. He has betrayed our trust."
Another woman, Simin Daneshvan, a novelist, journalist and Tehran University lecturer, said, "They say our moral character is because we wear clothes that get tired of being tired of people who cannot tolerate another way of life or another point of view.
Kohmeini has dissipated and the outlook for a loosening of tensions in Iran seems as dim as ever. In fact, the tension between the anti-Western Kohmeini supporters and the antiWestern Kohmeini supporters Western clothing as well as non-Moslem thinking are sure to come into conflict again.
The arrival of American feminist Kate Millet for Women's Day, and her forced departure soon after, is just one example of the opposition that Khominei and his supporters will likely exert to pro-Western, and particularly Western feminist, activities in Iran.
The chador has been thrown back on the women of Iran. To be able to throw it off, however, will take the combined effort of many more Iranian women along with other disatisfied factions—primarily left-wing groups.
Indeed, much of the trust that was given
ALTHOUGH THE people of Iran have escaped the political tyranny of the Shah, many of them—particularly the women—find themselves trapped by a religious tyranny that seeks to lower them to a level that they cannot and should not, accept.
However, with the weight that the chadors exert on the tired backs of Iranians, the latter seems the most likely—and the more in line with a nation that has been oppressed for years.
Iranians, therefore, are caught in a dilemma. To wear the chador of the ayatollah's dictates on their backs is a degradation that is unbarable to many. Yet Iran is so embracing these measures upheaval that could leave Iran in a further state of disarray and unknown leadership.
We can only hope that the more likely and promising alternative does not become the default.
BRAAAAAAAACK!
Iranian revolt upsets power balance
During the first three months of 1979, startling, historic and sometimes disruptive events have taken place within the interior of Iraq. They included the Vietnam staged invasions; China and the United States exchanged ambassadors, advisers and allies; and Egav and Israel have agreed to peace.
But the event that had the most immediate and extensive effect on the international community was the recent revolution in Iran.
The 12-month revolt has made foreign policy-makers of the United States and those of the Middle East more aware of Iran's vital role in the world community, and made them reconsider their emphasis in dealing with each other.
STATE U.
Although Egypt and Israel would have agreed to peace eventually, they took note of
Since the crumbling of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi's regime in January, worldwide oil prices have increased and the supply has decreased. More importantly, it brought major changes in the already tenuous Middle East.
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BAD BUSH!
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GOOD LAWN.
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WATER! REPLANT!
THE CHANCELLOR'S ON ANOTHER CAMPUS BEAUTIFICATION KICK.
BY T. M. ASLA
Philip Garcia
the turmilu in Iran and hastened to agree to sign a peace treaty. But in the opposite vein, the Arab nations, most significantly, oil-rich Saudi Arabia and Jordan, have grown stern with Egypt, cautious with the United States and more sketical of Israel.
BUT THESE immediate changes, for the United States, are not as important as the long-term consequences: the shifting of the balance of power in the Middle East.
With the fall of the shah's regime was the coming to power of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the Shiite Moslem leader who was the spiritual force behind the
And with Khomeini has come the rejection by Iran of the West- its economic system, its lifestyle and U.S. involvement in Iran and the Middle East.
Furthermore, the Khomeini government has slashed ties with Israel while at the same time recognizing the movement of the Palestinian Liberation Organization. This act just increases the growing conflict between Israel and other Arab nations in the turning "upside down" of the strategic balance in the Middle East.
ALTOUGH Khomeini has vowed to keep Iran free from either U.S. or Soviet ties, the threat of Russian intervention, however remote, still looms. Iran's vulnerability and continued instability has created an air of unease among its allies, and more specifically, Egypt and Israel.
Indeed there has been a weakening of the strength and security of Western countryside.
No longer is Iran the vanguard for the
Israel and other Arab nations remain to provide protection of the West's interest in the Middle East's strategic position and her territorial interests. Communist domination in the region.
West near the Persian Gulf. No longer does the United States have the luxury of monitoring the Russian border and thus Soviet nuclear activity. No longer is Iran willing to tolerate the pro-Soviet sentiment that exists in her neighbors—Pakistan and Afghanistan.
But there is little cohesion between Israel, besides Egypt, and her other Arab neighbors.
The United States had offered to establish a military presence in Saudi Arabia but the US opposed it.
THIS IS unstable, of course, because to the south of Egypt and Saudi Arabia lie pro-Soviet Ethiopia, Somalia, South Yemen and further into Africa, Angola.
All of this turmoil and conflict has centered around oil—the West's desire for it, and the willingness of the former Shah to provide the energy.
The people of Iran revolted because the shah, from oil profits, propelled his country into a modern age with rapid expansion and development, leaving many Iranian less and himself more. And to meet this end, the shah suppressed the masses. He paid the price.
So, too. has the United States.
**IRAN WAS the No. 2 exporter on w...**
But the revolt caused shortages and price increases on the world market. According to data provided by Iranian media, it could reach $1 a gallon. And talk of rationing gasoline and no weekend service has surfaced. The price of oil world is from $3 to $7 a barrel more than the OPEC price of $13.48. This is "percent above" the OPEC limit of $14.54.
Moreover, there exists strong anti-American sentiment in Iran, and now, in other Arab nations as a result of the recent peace efforts by President Carter.
We must ask ourselves if we are willing to conserve energy and make sacrifices to meet not only our interests, but also the interests of world stability.
Perhaps the Iranian revolution should make Americans evaluate their priorities.
WILL WE begin to reconsider our constant request for satisfying our economic wants, not needs? Can we expand our economy by investing in the public sector to include more than an economic interest?
Of course, the same must be asked of the Middle East countries. It seems we must be prepared to take much criticism and confront Mr. Trump in the United States for the rise to power of the shah and are resful. They are right in their reaction, but can Iran and other Middle East countries afford to waggle their influence in defiance at Uncle Sam much longer?
What is at stake for the United States, then, is our ability to obtain energy to continue to function effectively, thus eventually preserving our ethic of how life changes. Such changes, such as the Iranian revolution, place that freedom a little more in jeopardy.
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, they should include the writer's class and home or town faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
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The weekly feature page of the University Daily Kansan
March 23, 1979
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"So, shine, shine, Shoe Shine Boy. You find joy in the things you do, Shoe Shine Boy.
Seldom ever blue. You're content with what you've got.
So shine, shine, Shoe Shine Boy."
- "Shoe Shine Boy," an early Count Basie hit.
FROM DANCING SHOES TO SHINING SHOES
FROM DANCING SHOES
TO SHINING SHOES
INDEPENDENCE—Waves of applause from the packed house welcome the Count Basie Big Band as it takes the stage.
Basis and his band dazzle the crowd with their hard-swinging jazz. Then the lights dim and spotlights illuminate the front of the stage. One by one, dancers come out and exchange routines, nearly stealing the show.
George Brown, 83, was one of those dancers more than 60 years ago.
But "I got too old to dance, anymore," he said.
Brown has been shining shoes since he was five years old.
He said, "I ain't going to leave if I can keep from it. I'll never retire."
Now, Brown shines shoes in a downtown store in Independence, Kan. He has worked in the shop for 28 years.
He turns back to concentrate on his customer's shoes.
At George's Parlor, a "plain" shine costs 25 cents. An "off-the-foot" shine costs twice that.
"I'm not doing this for a living. I'm doing this 'cause I like it," Brown said.
Brown's shop has become a fixure on Main Street. Most of his customers are regulars. Even if they do not stop, they peer into the front window and wave.
Besides shining shoes and traveling with jazz bands, he played semi-pro baseball in the "black leagues."
"I played baseball all over," he said, "Memphis, Kansas City, Mobile, Montgomery, Birmingham, Cincinnati, Cleveland, New Orleans, Indiana, Florida, them all. I played in the white leagues, I was as good a player as any of them.
He said, "I got too old for ball, so I quit. I missed it, so I started dancing. I didn't miss it after that."
But Brown soon left baseball.
Brown first came to Independence in 1927 and worked for a few years as sheshoeing man at the new defunct Belldhot Hotel.
Brown danced with Count Basie for nearly two years. Later, when he was dancing with Cab Calloway's band, a young trumpet played named Dizzy Gillespie was just starting to build his reputation.
"I wanted to entertain. 'Entertain' means dancing, so I danced."
"I used to do a lot of nightclub dancing, too," he said. "I didn't have no band for that. I just went in there and danced."
"We went to Kansas City on the weekends to keep entertained. We'd go to the
In the early '30s, he moved on to work on an Army Corps of Engineer project at Lone Star Lake, outside Lawrence, where his family lived together in barracks at the site.
In time, travel lost its glamor, so Brown quit and came to Kansas.
baseball games, the wrestling matches and the boxing matches." he said.
After he left the dam project, Brow n went to Witch to find work. He stayed nearly 10 years, working as a sohoeine man at barbershops and hotels.
On a particularly busy day, he and five other workers shined 385 pairs of shoes.
"I like shining shoes just fine, but it runs into work sometimes," he said.
In the early '50s, Brown left Wichita and came back to Independence. Instead of working at hotel or barber house in town, he worked George's Parlor. The name has stuck.
As many as five employees have worked with Brown at one time during the last 28 years. Now, he works alone, by choice.
"I had a couple of boys from the high school working here, and I had the whole school here. I got sick of that, quick."
But Brown's years have not slowed him down. Last Saturday he shined more than 60 pairs of shoes.
As a 5-year-old, Brown walked into town, Havana, Ark., from the family farm to shine shoes for a nickel a pair. He carried his brushes and polish in a bask.
Now, his shop has a row of chairs, for plain shines, complete with brass footrests, all elevated. The arrangement keeps him from bending, he said.
Underneath the chairs are the accumulated tools of Brown's trade brushes, rags, tins of polish and wax, a wheelbarrow and a Michelon bottle filled with nautilus.
Brown said, "a had a beer bottle full of naphtha sitting there without a top on it one. This fellow came in and sat next to me next to it and dropped his cigarette in it."
"You don't know how close you are to blowing yourself right out of that chair," I said. "You know that's not water in there."
Naphtha, a flammable liquid, is used to clean the edges of the soles.
To people in Independence, George's Parlor is a modern-day version of the barber shops and general stores that the barber served as places to gather and talk.
"When I told him what it was, he didn't wait to be blowed out. He jumped."
Gossip and jokes are exchanged, as well as news of the latest calves born in area herds.
"If I don't show up here, people come out looking for me." Brown said.
So he comes to town from his farmhouse, by cab, six days a week.
"It's something inside that tells what you can and can't do. It's your heart," Brown said. "It's what you are, not what you're supposed to be the same. It don't make no difference."
Pulitzer
100%
The swinging strains of Count Basie and his band bring back fond memories for 83-year-old George Brown, who was a dancer for the Count more than 60 years ago. Brown says his dancing days have long since gone, and he now operates a shoe shine shop in Independence, Kan., about 130 miles south of Lawrence.
Photos By Peter Bosch Story By Doug Hitchcock
DYE SHINE 50
GEORG E. CARLOR
SHINING
DYE SHINE 30
PLAIN SHINE
6
Friday, March 23. 1979
University Dally Kansan
Career/Life Exploration for Student Wives
Explore present and future career and lifestyle alternatives.
Saturdays
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March 24th & 31st April 14th & 21st at the
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Enrollment limited so call NOW 864-4794
Art professor's paintings show internment camp life
During World War II, thousands of Japanese-Americans were forced to give up their homes and businesses to live in detention campments that dotted the West coast.
Roger Shimomura, professor of art at the University of Kansas, is a painter who lived for two years with his family in an internment camp in Mindiga County, Idaho.
The experiences of his family and many other Japanese Americans have become a part of Shimomura's work. The Minidika Series, by Shimomura, is on exhibit at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art until Sunday.
Represented in the paintings are experiences that many Japanese-Americans found both familiar and frustrating.
The first painting, "Notification," depicts the head of a Japanese-American home receiving the message that his family is to be imprisoned in an internment camp.
The second painting, "Exodus," shows a line of people walking the road to their cue.
experiences of members of Shimomura's family.
OTHER PAINTINGS are based on the
One work, "442," is dedicated to
Shikimura's aunt and the 442 regiment of
Japanese troops.
The 442 regiment consisted solely of Japanese-Americans taken from internment camps to fight for America in Europe. That regiment is the most highly decorated unit from the Army, Shimomura said.
"No-bo Yoy," the sixth painting in the series, is named for a novel by John Okada,
Another work, "Diary," is dedicated to Shimnoraime's grandmother, who lived in the village.
"My grandmother kept diaries for 60 years. I have two that were written later."
No-no boys were incoming Japanese-Americans who answered "no" to the two questions that were asked of all internment camp members.
Spencer Museum is open from 9:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.
SPRING HAS ARRIVED And So Has YVES ST. LAURENT!
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Japanese-American painter
Roger Shimomura stands in front of a paintin at the "Mindida
Kobe."
Announcing: The first official SUA Academy Awards Contest Give us your best guess!
Prizes include:
1st prize: 10 free movie passes + *Gone with the Wind* poster
2nd prize: 6 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
3rd prize: 4 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
4th-10th prizes: 2 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
Mark one in each section.
BEST PICTURE
Series" on display at Spencer Art Museum. The series depicts life in a Japanese-American internment camp during World War II
___ Coming Home
___ The Deer Hunter
___ Heaven Can Wait
___ Midnight Express
An Unmarried Woman
Staff photo by BARB KINNE
BEST ACTOR
Warren Beatty,
Heaven Can Wait
Gary Busey
The Buddy Holly Story
Robert De Niro
The Dude Warrior
Laurence Olivier,
The Boys From Brazil
Jon Voight, Coming Home
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
___ Bruce Dern, Coming Home
Richard Farnsworth,
Comes a Horseman
John Hurt, Midnight Express
Christopher Walken,
The Deer Hunter
Jack Warden, Heaven Can Wail
BEST DIRECTOR
Hal Ashby, *Come Home*
Michael Cimino,
*The Deer Hunter*
Woody Allen, *Interiors*
Warren Beatty,
Bob Gouw, *How Can Wan*
Alan Parker, *Maximum Express*
BEST ACTRESS
Ingrid Bergman,
Autumn Sonata
Ellen Burstyn,
Same Time, Next Year
Jane Hargreaves
An Unmarried Woman
Jane Fonda, Coming Home
. Geraldine Page, Interiors
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Heaven Can Wait
Penelope Milford,
Coming Home
Maggie Smith, California Suite
Maureen Stapleton, Interiors
___ Meryl Streep, The Deer Hunter
Contest rules:
Anyone is eligible to enter, but may enter only once. In case of a tie, the entry received earlier will win. All decisions are final. The game will be played in the Kansas Union, DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES is WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4th, 4:30 PM. The team will be announced Wednesday, April 11th.
Name ___
Phone ___
sua films
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only at
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Tonite and Saturday
MIKE VAX
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Admission $5.00 includes: Free Beer, Peanuts, Popcorn and Selt Drinks!
Bring this Ad. in for FREE JAZZ PLACE FRISBEE (Friday and Saturday night only)
Call 843-8575 for Reservations.
---
KANSAN
Police Beat
Lawrence police said three diamond rings valued at $1,650 and $10 in cash were stolen from the residence of Chariana J. Fredrick, '741 Missouri St., Monday or Tuesday. Fredrick is employed by Continuing Education at KU.
Police said the rings and cash were taken after the owner left a basement door open for workers making repairs at the residence.
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films sua
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THE JUNKIE ROMANCE
THE
ROCKY HORROR
PICTURE SHOW
Friday & Saturday March 23 & 24
Woodruff Auditorium
12:00 midnight
ADM $1.50
- buy tickets early
Use Kansan Classifieds
Friday, March 23, 1979
7
Preparers expect usual tax rush
By TOM ZIND
Staff Reporter
Everything appears to promise that it will not; but in this world nothing is certain but
Benjamin Franklin
With the deadline for one of life's two certainities less than a month away, area tax prepers say they are expecting the usual rush of precrastinators.
The filing deadline for state and federal taxes is April 15.
"We're anticipating a big rush in the next few weeks," said Connie Cowley, head of the
Sunday service is scheduled for Ellsworth
KU Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Office. "It started last night when we had nine people in here."
The volunteer tax service is run by KU law students who work part time to answer questions about taxes and help prepare tax returns.
The office, in 105 Green Hall, is open from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Wednesday, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Friday and from 10 a.m. to 12 a.m. Saturday.
a memorial service for Lucile Elsworth, long associated with the University of Kansas, will be at 2 p.m. Sunday at Plymouth Congregational Church.
Mrs. Ellsworth and her husband, Fred Ellsworth, both KU graduates, worked for the University of Kansas Alumni Association and the University for 39 years.
Richard Wintermute, executive director of the Alumni Association, said, "Their contribution to the University was their workworked at the University all of their lives."
Ellsworth died Tuesday at her residence in Topeka. She was 82.
She is survived by two sons, Stephen of Delmar, N.Y., and Robert, a former U.S. Congressman who now lives in Potomac, Md., and four grandchildren.
Relying on past experience, other
Lawrence friends said they would be
buying the last day for them.
"WE HAVE PEOPLE who come in right up until 5 in the afternoon of the last day to visit," she said. Betty Wilson, employee of the University Tax Services of Kansas Inc., I1E, 8th St.
Wilson said the influx of people started around late January. She said business usually was good until late March and picked up more around April 1.
"Generally, the people who come in late are a little more disorganized," she said.
The people who get their taxes done early in the year are the ones who are eager to get their refund, said Larry Chance, co-founder of Professional Tax Services, 1811 SL. Andrews.
"Those who think they're going to get a refund usually start coming in around the week," she said.
Charlotte Glinka, office supervisor for H and R Block Incc., 723 Massachusetts St., said the company was experiencing its usual slowdown in business.
Chance agreed that business is about to turn upward.
"I's our slack part of the season," she said. "We expect the major load of the season to be on us."
*"IN YEARS PAST, business slacks off around early in mid March and then starts growing back."*
Some tax prepers said they had noticed a slight rise in the volume of business this year.
Glinka said that H and R Block in
2014 had a little more business this
year than last.
"We've experienced about a 6 percent increase over last year," she said.
Chance said his company had had about 20 or 30 additional customers this year.
Most preparas said much of their business involved answering tax-related questions.
"I think most people understand the raw basics of a return," Chance said. "A lot of people will just come in to check to see if their figures are correct."
Chance also said that many people came to a tax preparer out of frustration.
"A lot of people just get fed up with keeping up with the changing tax laws," he said.
University Daily Kansan
VOLUNTEERS WHO WORK at the KU
service center. Our service
involved questioning
Cowley said about half of the people who came in were there to ask some question about their tax return.
B. J. Hickert, Lenora law student who works in the KU tax office part time, said much of his time was spent helping people fill out their returns.
"We lend reassurance to what they think is the right answer," he said.
Hickert said most of the people who came in were those who had never left a return or exit. "They weren't going," he said.
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THURSDAY, MARCH 29 . . .
"THE GREATEST LIVING EXPONENTS OF BLACK FOLK BLUES..."
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BROWNIE McGHEE
The Lawrence Opera House
7th Spirit Club
Calendar of Events
Sat. March 24 Doris Prista & KK102 present Gran Mass & Wigfield
Tues.31 March 27-28 100% Grand Prize Pool Tournaments!
Wed. March 28 100% Grand Prize Backgammon Tournament!
Wed. March 28 REGGER NITE of Used Parts
Thurs. March 29 Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee used Parts
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
On Campus
HUMANITIES SYMPOSIUM will meet at 6:10 in the Apollo Room of Nichols Hall. The KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 in Room 173 Robinson. The KU CONCERT CHORALE SPRING CONCERT will be at 8:15 in Swarthout Recital Hall. The MCCOLLUM HALL Formal Dinner will be at 8:30 in the Union Ballroom.
TODAY: AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS REGIONAL STUDENT CONFERENCE will meet from 8 until noon in the Kansas Room of the Union. Timothy Barrett will give a demonstration on the art of NAGASHIZUKI, Japanese hand-papermaking at 9:30 in Room 212 of the Art and Design Building. SOLIDARITY will meet at 11:30 AM. One of the Union. BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 11:30 AM. Sunflower Room of the Union. KU FENCING CLUB will meet at 5:30 AM 173 Rebuhn
TONIGHT: JUNIOR SCIENCE-
TOMORROW: KANSS SCHOLASTIC PRESS ASSOCIATION STATE JOURNALISM COMPETITION FIINT Flint Hall. THE ANDRIL CRIME PROGRAM will
sponsor a film and Pape Prevention Workshop at 10:30 a.m. at 407 W. 12 St. MORTAR BOARD will honor six professors who are recipients of the Outstanding Educator Award at 12:30 in the Watkins Room of the Union.
SUNDAY: SAUCH CHEFF will meet at a p.m. in the Perior A of the Union, MUSING IN the Narrative Tradition" at 2 p.m. in the Museum of Art Central Court, KU CHAMBER PLAYERS will perform at 3:30 p.m. in the University Theatre of Murphy
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A new class starts next week and meets Monday and Thursday evenings, 7:00 to 10:00 P.M., March 26 to April 16. By meeting twice a week, the regular 7-lesson course is completed in $3 \frac{1}{2}$ weeks.
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Friday, March 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
NEW YORK TIMES WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 21
CONAN
THE BAITARIAN
fantastic
FOUR
the
AMAZING
SPIDER-MAN
2
GREAT FEATURE-LENGTH
SPIDER-MAN
THRILLERY
THE CHAMELEON STRIKES!"
Collector's items
These comics would be worth more than $500 to a comic book collector, shown from left to right, are Conan No. 1, 1700; The Fantastical Four No. 1, 1961; and Spider-Man No. 1, 1963.
Heroes may be hard to find in the cynical 70s, but the lust of the hero-worshipping tradition, the comic-book
Staff Reporter
By RON BAIN
Superheroes' popularity thrives
Superman is now a movie. The Amazing Spider-Man and the Incredible Hulk are TV stars. Rare comic books, such as Action No. 1, featuring the first appearance of Superman, are selling islands of dollars at comic-book conventions across the country.
But the companies that publish comic books may be facing a financial crisis in the future, according to a local comic-book fan group.
Murray, 22, said he had been reading and collecting comics as a hobby since he entered college four years ago.
*PART OF THE PROBLEM is that they are still catering to the kids, the kids that spend money on comic books are rapidly getting out of school.*
The DC company, which publishes Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman, is losing money, Murray said. Marvel Comics, the publisher of Spider-Man, the Hulk and the Fantastic Four, is just barely clearing a profit.
"I was walking by a bookstore about the time I started KU and saw the comics, and said to myself I remember Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four. I used to read those when I was a kid. I watched, and before I knew it, I had collected 2,000 comics," he said.
Comic books are popular with college students and teen-age nationwide, but children can no longer afford to buy them. Murray said the publishers of the four-colour newsprint book cost 10 cents in 1981, recently raised the price per issue to 40 cents.
HIGHER PRICES have made the comic-collecting hobby an expensive one in recent years, according to another collector.
Clark said he spent about $12 a month on new comic books and as much as $800 dollars a year on old comic books from used stores.
"DC, although they've tried, hasn't made it to the modern world," he said.
Clark's collection, which contains mostly Marvel superhero comics, numbers more than 2,500 issues, he said. Clark said he preferred Marvel's comics over DC's comics because Marvel's are more realistic and timely.
Marvel revolutionized the comic industry during the '80s when it created superheroes such as Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four. These heroes had personal problems and did not win all their battles, Clark said.
SPIDER-MAN IS the best-selling superhero comic book, Murray said, and has been since the late 70s.
Dedicated comic book and fantasy fans will be able to get together for a weekend convention at the end of this month at the Johnson County Community College campus, Jonathan Bacon, coordinator of student activities at the college, said.
The movie "2001 : A Space Odyssey" will be shown immediately after registration, which costs $$ a person. Bacon said
The convention, which will be March 31 and April 1, will feature professional fantasy writers and artists as guest hosts, science fiction and fantasy films, comic-book and art dealers and a masquerade.
Registration for the convention will be held at 6:30 p.m. on March 14th at the student activities office of the college in Overland
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Spare Time
Nightlife
Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachu
sette St.
- Gran Max and Wakefield, March 24
* Head Unit, March 28
- Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee.
March 29.
- March 29
Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts
- Mike Vax from the Dukes of Dixieland,
March 23-24.
- Off the Wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St.
- Earnie Valencia, March 25.
- Acoustic Jam Session, March 28
* Earthbound band, March 29
Concorte
K • KU Concert Chorale, 8 p.m., March 23,
Swarthout Recital Hall
- Milam Fried, violin, 8 p.m., March 24,
University Theatre.
- KU Chamber Choir with the Lawrence
Players, "The Passion According to
St. John," 3:30 p.m., March 25, University Theatre.
- KU Concert Choir, 8 p.m., March 28,
Swarthout Recital Hall.
Exhibits
Art and Design Gallery, Visual Art
& Stuart Loten, ceramics, through
March 21.
Kansas Union Gallery, Kansas Union,
photography contest winners, March 26
Lands' Gallery, 918 Massachusetts Limited Editions Wildlife Prints.
Lawrence Arts Center, 7th and Vermont streets, Fifth Annual Juried Pain Show, the Wesleyan School.
7 E 9 Gallery, 7 East 7th St, Dennis Heim
7 E Landscapes, portraits and still life paint
Valley West Gallery, 2112 A-West 25th St. Ruth Pangitin, batiks; Charles Sanderson, watercolors; and Kathleen Bartholomew, Kansas scenes; through March 31.
Concert violinist to appear
Miriam Fried, a concert violinist from Israel, will perform at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the
The concert is part of the KU Concert Series.
Pianist Luis Battle will accompany Fried's program, which will include works by Beethoven, Bach, Stravinsky, Paganini and Schubert.
Fried, who was born in Germany and grew up in Israel, began studying violin as an 8-year-old. At 16, she graduated from the Rubin Academy of Music in Tel Aviv and later studied music in both Switzerland and the United States.
Fried made her debut in 1969 at Carnegie
Hall in New York City and was the first woman to win the Queen Elizabeth of Belgium Competition in 1971. She first persevered through the Phillarhionic during the 1976-77 season.
She has performed at Lincoln Center and has a soloist with symphonies in Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, Detroit, Los Angeles, Toronto, London and Munich, West Germany.
Fried also will conduct a master class from 10 a.m. to noon tomorrow in Room 338
Tickets for the Concert Series performance are on sale in the Murphy Hall box office for $3. $3.50 and $4. KU students will be admitted free with a valid ID card.
Theatre group seeks persons willing to work
The Open-Window Group, a theatre troupe dedicated to acquaining individuals with contemporary theatre, is organizing in Lawrence.
Rick Doolittle, Lawrence junior, is the group's organizer and director. He said the first production would be Martin Duberman's "Visions of Keronac," a play about Jack Keronac, a modern romantic prose writer. He also said the group would expand on the story with new garde staging, using slide projections, recorded music and intimate stage settings.
"The Lawrence community should have an introduction to contemporary work." Donna Good, a theater educator good, too. A certain population will pack our theater because Keroufe has a real talent.
"Kerouac writes about freedom to be able to roam," he said. "The play is an amalgamation of scenes that make up Kerouac's life."
DOOLTITLE SAID the play's author waived all the royalties and asked Doooltite to keep in touch with him about the company's success.
Doolittle说 the play would be produced in conjunction with the Lawrence Arts Center, 7th and Vermont streets, but that the funding would be his own.
"At this stage, all the funding is out of my own pocket, and we're going in the hole on you."
Doolittle said auditions for the group would be at 10 a.m. March 31 at the arts center. The play has roles for 11 men and women who will be staged this summer. Doolittle said
"It's a different play and I need really talented people," he said. "I'm looking for people that are dedicated and willing to work."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Arts & Leisure
'China' offers disaster syndrome cure
By TONY FITTS
Reviewer
Disaster movies have received a bad name in the last few years, with films like "The Towering Inferno," "Earthquake" and "Battle of the Bulge," both attributed their excesses to this bad reputation.
Because of these films, you think of a because movie as an expensive, elaborate piece of art. It's one with which hundreds of Hollywood stars are put in mortal danger by some natural or man-
When you first hear the premise of "The China Syndrome," it sounds like a typical disaster film. Southern California is threatened with atomic destruction because of a nuclear power plant disaster, which is discovered in an offhand way.
Jane Fonda plays Kimberly Wells, a television news reporter who witnesses a near-acident at a nuclear power plant she is covering for a piece of energy. Her cameraman, played by Michael Douglas, surreptitiously films the event.
WHEN HE SHOWS the film to an anti-nuclear scientist, the scientist says they almost witnessed the "China syndrome." He explains:
If the nuclear reactor vessel—the core—is exposed . . . . the fuel heats beyond tolerance in a matter of minutes, nothing can stop it, and it melts right through the bottom of the plant, theoretically to China. But of course, when it hits groundwater, it bursts into an atmosphere and send out clouds of radiation that people killed would depend on which way the wind was blowing . . . render an area the size of Pennsylvania permanently
KANSAN Review
uninhabitable—not to mention the cancer that would show on ul . . .
But, even though the usasser would be huge as in any previous disaster film, "The China Syndrome" doesn't come off quite like the trivial disaster movie.
The nature of the disaster makes it different. How many people really worry about being caught below deck in a caped ocean boat? The truth is that most countries have been arrested for demonstrating their strong beliefs of the danger of nuclear power are publiced every day.
The fact that the subject matter of the film is a matter of current public concern adds to the interest of "The China Syndrome."
The characters also distinguish "The China Syndrome." Fonda is torn between her need to please her boss and her desire to pursue her passion. It is important to her career as it is to the public.
JACK LEMMON, as a shift supervisor at the nuclear plant, discovers that he also has to make a choice—between his loyalty to the planet and his ability to tell the world that the plant is not safe.
These personal crises could be treated very melodramatically, destroying their credibility, but the film is written and acted so well that you see the characters as real people. You are about self-respect in face of the compromises they have to make to keep their jobs.
The technical excellence of the film adds to its credibility. The control room and reactor sets were constructed with an eye for the details that make them look like our idea of a power plant interior: the closed cabinet, the system, the security doors, the dials and gauges are similar to those we have seen in news reports of similar locations.
THE ACTING seldom detracts from the illusion of reality. Lemmon, Fonda and Douglas play their roles well. You don't need to know about any characters they portray. Lemmon in particular, gives a chilling performance, which his Oscar-winning role in "Save the Tiger."
Lemmon plays Jack Godell, a long-time company man, shocked by the lies and dangers concealed by the company. His confidence in himself is shaken as he hears that someone is stealing from him so long is lying to the people it is supposed to serve, all in the name of profit.
The credibility of the film is important to its impact. Douglas, who produced the film in addition to acting in it, has put together a collection of essays by Douglas on which acting which reads like a slice of real life.
Because of this reality, the film is interesting and entertaining even as it gets across a very strong message. Nuclear weapons should be rigidly controlled if not banned.
Go see the film. If you don't agree with its
experience, you can enjoy the fine acting and
production. If you do agree with what they
have to say, you will be part of the film
will be that much heightened.
Women to swing at jazz festival
Jazz, jazz and more jazz is on tap this weekend at the Second Annual Women's Jazz Festival at Crown Center in Kansas City. Mt.
The festival, which features only women jazz performers, is expected to attract more than 3.000 jazz fans, and performers from 43 states and Canada. Weekend activities, include jam sessions open to the public, and three free concerts.
Some of the most well-known women jazz performers in the country, such as pianoist Marian McPartland and singer Carrie Owens, are her son, former one of the festival coordinators, said.
The festival will open Saturday morning with concerts by high school and college jazz bands, including a performance by a KU jazz ensemble.
THE JAZZ festival, sponsored by the
"WE GET all types of people coming to the festival," Comer said, "jazz fans of course, rednecks, feminists and a lot of curious people."
A performance by six of Kansas City's best gospel groups will be at 2 p.m. Sunday in the International Cafe. Some of the groups performing at the Gospel Songfest Uplifters, the White Tones and the Michael Charles Singers.
Corner said this week that she was expecting a larger crowd than last year for the festival since it was the festival's second anniversary and it had received more publicity this time.
Highlighting the weekend activities will be the Second Annual Jazz Concert at 7 p.m. Sunday in Memorial Hall. The master of ceremonies will be Leonard Feather, a conductor and historian. Comer described Feather as being the top jazz authority in the country.
"Feather produced the first all-women jazz combo album in the country," Comer said. "He pioneered the way for women jazz artists to record."
Women's Jazz Festival, Inc., was started last year by Comer and Dianne Gregg, both of Kansas City, Mo. Comer said that they wanted something like the Jazz Festival in 1977 and that they decided they wanted something like it for people in Kansas City. She said she thought a jazz festival that featured only women persecuted before, so they decided to try the idea.
Comer said women jazz musicians received little recognition for their work.
"For singers and pianists it's not too much trouble to get recognition," she said. "But there's this sexist attitude that women can't blow, so they can't make beautiful music, and so it's more difficult for a woman saxophone or trumpet player."
McPartland has played at every major jazz festival and club in the world. Comer McPartland has also been on radio show and owns her own record label, Halcyon. She is also a composer and a jazz critic for the New York Times. McPartland is also performing professionally for 27 years.
Although Comer said they tried to get different performers to come each year, an internationally-known artist, Marian McPartland, will be returning this year.
"When we first thought of a women's festival, Martian was one of the first persons who had a role."
another nationally-known jazz artist, another Carmen McRae will be appeased at the premiere of her new sensual vocal style. Corner said, and she has performed with Duke Ellington and Count
THE FESTIVAL will give women jazz performs a chance for more recognition in the music world.
Other festival activities include jazzy clinics and a performance by Cobi Narita and the Universal Jazz Coalition of Women at 5 p.m. Saturday in the International Caref
1
James Barnes
--go downstown and buy records, books and pocket scores.
Composer finds success with self-discipline, study
By RHONDA HOLMAN Staff Reporter
James Barnes has won two major composition awards and written music for groups across the country, but he does not consider himself typical of most modern composers.
"You are where you came from," said Barnes, staff arranger and assistant to the director of KU bands, about his upbringing on a farm near Hobart. Okla.
"I'm just not the standard musician type. I was a music student in high school but I was real big in Future Farmers of America, and I'm going to state 4-H champion sheep judge one year."
Barnes, 29, was honored by the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers by an achievement award this year. He is a member of the Master's Association Ostwald Composition Contest and is often asked to write major compositions for high school bands and publishing companies.
"I'd read every book about music in the library by the time I was in junior high," he said. "But I would come to the University of Kansas every summer for music camp and
Barnes said he began composing when he was a sophomore in high school during the time he was copying parts his band director bad written for the group. Barnes said that he would try to study music in his hometown, but that he had collected books and studied on his own.
BARNES BEGAN writing arrangements for the Marching Jawhays band in 1968 while he attended the University of Kansas. He has also written arrangements, transcriptions and original works for the symphonic band and jazz ensembles. He now conducts the men's basketball band and the top jazz ensemble.
"BIELEVE if you're going to be a writer you need those tools. You don't have to in New York to study, you can open up a pocket score and study with Bela Bartok right there. When a composer writes it down, it's all there."
He said he thought too many contemporary composers abandoned the tools of the great composers when they tried to be creative themselves.
"What leads composers to think that you can throw all that out the window and still expect people to listen to it?" said Barnes. "There is no such thing as avant-garde music; they look out on stage, blow your nose and turn around twice and somebody will clap for it."
"Nobody has to write in the key of D all the time, but there are too many composers that are lost if they can't write for a com- pany with nine obes and a transverse narrator."
BARNES SAID that he thought we "lived in an environment of melody," and that composers were coming back to the traditional musical forms.
"I think musk is changing," he said. "I think it's going back to the whole idea of musk."
Barnes, who often conducts clinics with junior high and high school bands, said he thought an interest in music forced students to develop self-discipline.
"What you've got to do to be a composer is to be willing to work harder than anybody else on your own," he said. "Musical training in general is so good for kids because it teaches self-discipline that they will learn how to succeed if you really want to excel in music, you have to make yourself do it—nobody's there to slow the whirlflower for you."
25. (1) $ \frac { 1 } { 2 } $ (2) $ \frac { 1 } { 3 } $ (3) $ \frac { 1 } { 4 } $ (4) $ \frac { 1 } { 5 } $ (5) $ \frac { 1 } { 6 } $ (6) $ \frac { 1 } { 7 } $ (7) $ \frac { 1 } { 8 } $ (8) $ \frac { 1 } { 9 } $ (9) $ \frac { 1 } { 10 } $ (10) $ \frac { 1 } { 11 } $ (11) $ \frac { 1 } { 12 } $ (12) $ \frac { 1 } { 13 } $ (13) $ \frac { 1 } { 14 } $ (14) $ \frac { 1 } { 15 } $ (15) $ \frac { 1 } { 16 } $ (16) $ \frac { 1 } { 17 } $ (17) $ \frac { 1 } { 18 } $ (18) $ \frac { 1 } { 19 } $ (19) $ \frac { 1 } { 20 } $ (20) $ \frac { 1 } { 21 } $ (21) $ \frac { 1 } { 22 } $ (22) $ \frac { 1 } { 23 } $ (23) $ \frac { 1 } { 24 } $ (24) $ \frac { 1 } { 25 } $ (25) $ \frac { 1 } { 26 } $ (26) $ \frac { 1 } { 27 } $ (27) $ \frac { 1 } { 28 } $ (28) $ \frac { 1 } { 29 } $ (29) $ \frac { 1 } { 30 } $ (30) $ \frac { 1 } { 31 } $ (31) $ \frac { 1 } { 32 } $ (32) $ \frac { 1 } { 33 } $ (33) $ \frac { 1 } { 34 } $ (34) $ \frac { 1 } { 35 } $ (35) $ \frac { 1 } { 36 } $ (36) $ \frac { 1 } { 37 } $ (37) $ \frac { 1 } { 38 } $ (38) $ \frac { 1 } { 39 } $ (39) $ \frac { 1 } { 40 } $ (40) $ \frac { 1 } { 41 } $ (41) $ \frac { 1 } { 42 } $ (42) $ \frac { 1 } { 43 } $ (43) $ \frac { 1 } { 44 } $ (44) $ \frac { 1 } { 45 } $ (45) $ \frac { 1 } { 46 } $ (46) $ \frac { 1 } { 47 } $ (47) $ \frac { 1 } { 48 } $ (48) $ \frac { 1 } { 49 } $ (49) $ \frac { 1 } { 50 } $ (50) $ \frac { 1 } { 51 } $ (51) $ \frac { 1 } { 52 } $ (52) $ \frac { 1 } { 53 } $ (53) $ \frac { 1 } { 54 } $ (54) $ \frac { 1 } { 55 } $ (55) $ \frac { 1 } { 56 } $ (56) $ \frac { 1 } { 57 } $ (57) $ \frac { 1 } { 58 } $ (58) $ \frac { 1 } { 59 } $ (59) $ \frac { 1 } { 60 } $ (60) $ \frac { 1 } { 61 } $ (61) $ \frac { 1 } { 62 } $ (62) $ \frac { 1 } { 63 } $ (63) $ \frac { 1 } { 64 } $ (64) $ \frac { 1 } { 65 } $ (65) $ \frac { 1 } { 66 } $ (66) $ \frac { 1 } { 67 } $ (67) $ \frac { 1 } { 68 } $ (68) $ \frac { 1 } { 69 } $ (69) $ \frac { 1 } { 70 } $ (70) $ \frac { 1 } { 71 } $ (71) $ \frac { 1 } { 72 } $ (72) $ \frac { 1 } { 73 } $ (73) $ \frac { 1 } { 74 } $ (74) $ \frac { 1 } { 75 } $ (75) $ \frac { 1 } { 76 } $ (76) $ \frac { 1 } { 77 } $ (77) $ \frac { 1 } { 78 } $ (78) $ \frac { 1 } { 79 } $ (79) $ \frac { 1 } { 80 } $ (80) $ \frac { 1 } { 81 } $ (81) $ \frac { 1 } { 82 } $ (82) $ \frac { 1 } { 83 } $ (83) $ \frac { 1 } { 84 } $ (84) $ \frac { 1 } { 85 } $ (85) $ \frac { 1 } { 86 } $ (86) $ \frac { 1 } { 87 } $ (87) $ \frac { 1 } { 88 } $ (88) $ \frac { 1 } { 89 } $ (89) $ \frac { 1 } { 90 } $ (90) $ \frac { 1 } { 91 } $ (91) $ \frac { 1 } { 92 } $ (92) $ \frac { 1 } { 93 } $ (93) $ \frac { 1 } { 94 } $ (94) $ \frac { 1 } { 95 } $ (95) $ \frac { 1 } { 96 } $ (96) $ \frac { 1 } { 97 } $ (97) $ \frac { 1 } { 98 } $ (98) $ \frac { 1 } { 99 } $ (99) $ \frac { 1 } { 100 } $ (100) $ \frac { 1 } { 101 } $ (101) $ \frac { 1 } { 102 } $ (102) $ \frac { 1 } { 103 } $ (103) $ \frac { 1 } { 104 } $ (104) $ \frac { 1 } { 105 } $ (105) $ \frac { 1 } { 106 } $ (106) $ \frac { 1 } { 107 } $ (107) $ \frac { 1 } { 108 } $ (108) $ \frac { 1 } { 109 } $ (109) $ \frac { 1 } { 110 } $ (110) $ \frac { 1 } { 111 } $ (111) $ \frac { 1 } { 112 } $ (112) $ \frac { 1 } { 113 } $ (113) $ \frac { 1 } { 114 } $ (114) $ \frac { 1 } { 115 } $ (115) $ \frac { 1 } { 116 } $ (116) $ \frac { 1 } { 117 } $ (117) $ \frac { 1 } { 118 } $ (118) $ \frac { 1 } { 119 } $ (119) $ \frac { 1 } { 120 } $ (120) $ \frac { 1 } { 121 } $ (121) $ \frac { 1 } { 122 } $ (122) $ \frac { 1 } { 123 } $ (123) $ \frac { 1 } { 124 } $ (124) $ \frac { 1 } { 125 } $ (125) $ \frac { 1 } { 126 } $ (126) $ \frac { 1 } { 127 } $ (127) $ \frac { 1 } { 128 } $ (128) $ \frac { 1 } { 129 } $ (129) $ \frac { 1 } { 130 } $ (130) $ \frac { 1 } { 131 } $ (131) $ \frac { 1 } { 132 } $ (132) $ \frac { 1 } { 133 } $ (133) $ \frac { 1 } { 134 } $ (134) $ \frac { 1 } { 135 } $ (135) $ \frac { 1 } { 136 } $ (136) $ \frac { 1 } { 137 } $ (137) $ \frac { 1 } { 138 } $ (138) $ \frac { 1 } { 139 } $ (139) $ \frac { 1 } { 140 } $ (140) $ \frac { 1 } { 141 } $ (141) $ 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$ (208) $ \frac { 1 } { 209 } $ (209) $ \frac { 1 } { 210 } $ (210) $ \frac { 1 } { 211 } $ (211) $ \frac { 1 } { 212 } $ (212) $ \frac { 1 } { 213 } $ (213) $ \frac { 1 } { 214 } $ (214) $ \frac { 1 } { 215 } $ (215) $ \frac { 1 } { 216 } $ (216) $ \frac { 1 } { 217 } $ (217) $ \frac { 1 } { 218 } $ (218) $ \frac { 1 } { 219 } $ (219) $ \frac { 1 } { 220 } $ (220) $ \frac { 1 } { 221 } $ (221) $ \frac { 1 } { 222 } $ (222) $ \frac { 1 } { 223 } $ (223) $ \frac { 1 } { 224 } $ (224) $ \frac { 1 } { 225 } $ (225) $ \frac { 1 } { 226 } $ (226) $ \frac { 1 } { 227 } $ (227) $ \frac { 1 } { 228 } $ (228) $ \frac { 1 } { 229 } $ (229) $ \frac { 1 } { 230 } $ (230) $ \frac { 1 } { 231 } $ (231) $ \frac { 1 } { 232 } $ (232) $ \frac { 1 } { 233 } $ (233) $ \frac { 1 } { 234 } $ (234) $ \frac { 1 } { 235 } $ (235) $ \frac { 1 } { 236 } $ (236) $ \frac { 1 } { 237 } $ (237) $ \frac { 1 } { 238 } $ (238) $ \frac { 1 } { 239 } $ (239) $ \frac { 1 } { 240 } $ (240) $ \frac { 1 } { 241 } $ (241) $ \frac { 1 } { 242 } $ (242) $ \frac { 1 } { 243 } $ (243) $ \frac { 1 } { 244 } $ (244) $ \frac { 1 } { 245 } $ (245) $ \frac { 1 } { 246 } $ (246) $ \frac { 1 } { 247 } $ (247) $ \frac { 1 } { 248 } $ (248) $ \frac { 1 } { 249 } $ (249) $ \frac { 1 } { 250 } $ (250) $ \frac { 1 } { 251 } $ (251) $ \frac { 1 } { 252 } $ (252) $ \frac { 1 } { 253 } $ (253) $ \frac { 1 } { 254 } $ (254) $ \frac { 1 } { 255 } $ (255) $ \frac { 1 } { 256 } $ (256) $ \frac { 1 } { 257 } $ (257) $ \frac { 1 } { 258 } $ (258) $ \frac { 1 } { 259 } $ (259) $ \frac { 1 } { 260 } $ (260) $ \frac { 1 } { 261 } $ (261) $ \frac { 1 } { 262 } $ (262) $ \frac { 1 } { 263 } $ (263) $ \frac { 1 } { 264 } $ (264) $ \frac { 1 } { 265 } $ (265) $ \frac { 1 } { 266 } $ (266) $ \frac { 1 } { 267 } $ (267) $ \frac { 1 } { 268 } $ (268) $ \frac { 1 } { 269 } $ (269) $ \frac { 1 } { 270 } $ (270) $ \frac { 1 } { 271 } $ (271) $ \frac { 1 } { 272 } $ (272) $ \frac { 1 } { 273 } $ (273) $ \frac { 1 } { 274 } $ (274) $ \frac { 1 } { 275 } $ (275) $ \frac { 1 } { 276 } $ (276) $ \frac { 1 } { 277 } $ (277) $ \frac { 1 } { 278 } $ (278) $ \frac { 1 } { 279 } $ (279) $ \frac { 1 } { 280 } $ (280) $ \frac { 1 } { 281 } $ (281) $ \frac { 1 } { 282 } $ (282) $ \frac { 1 } { 283 } $ (283) $ \frac { 1 } { 284 } $ (284) $ \frac { 1 } { 285 } $ (285) $ \frac { 1 } { 286 } $ (286) $ \frac { 1 } { 287 } $ (287) $ \frac { 1 } { 288 } $ (288) $ \frac { 1 } { 289 } $ (289) $ \frac { 1 } { 290 } $ (290) $ \frac { 1 } { 291 } $ (291) $ \frac { 1 } { 292 } $ (292) $ \frac { 1 } { 293 } $ (293) $ \frac { 1 } { 294 } $ (294) $ \frac { 1 } { 295 } $ (295) $ \frac { 1 } { 296 } $ (296) $ \frac { 1 } { 297 } $ (297) $ \frac { 1 } { 298 } $ (298) $ \frac { 1 } { 299 } $ (299) $ \frac { 1 } { 300 } $ (300) $ \frac { 1 } { 301 } $ (301) $ \frac { 1 } { 302 } $ (302) $ \frac { 1 } { 303 } $ (303) $ \frac { 1 } { 304 } $ (304) $ \frac { 1 } { 305 } $ (305) $ \frac { 1 } { 306 } $ (306) $ \frac { 1 } { 307 } $ (307) $ \frac { 1 } { 308 } $ (308) $ \frac { 1 } { 309 } $ (309) $ \frac { 1 } { 310 } $ (310) $ \frac { 1 } { 311 } $ (311) $ \frac { 1 } { 312 } $ (312) $ \frac { 1 } { 313 } $ (313) $ \frac { 1 } { 314 } $ (314) $ \frac { 1 } { 315 } $ (315) $ \frac { 1 } { 316 } $ (316) $ \frac { 1 } { 317 } $ (317) $ \frac { 1 } { 318 } $ (318) $ \frac { 1 } { 319 } $ (319) $ \frac { 1 } { 320 } $ (320) $ \frac { 1 } { 321 } $ (321) $ \frac { 1 } { 322 } $ (322) $ \frac { 1 } { 323 } $ (323) $ \frac { 1 } { 324 } $ (324) $ \frac { 1 } { 325 } $ (325) $ \frac { 1 } { 326 } $ (326) $ \frac { 1 } { 327 } $ (327) $ \frac { 1 } { 328 } $ (328) $ \frac { 1 } { 329 } $ (329) $ \frac { 1 } { 330 } $ (330) $ \frac { 1 } { 331 } $ (331) $ \frac { 1 } { 332 } $ (332) $ \frac { 1 } { 333 } $ (333) $ \frac { 1 } { 334 } $ (334) $ \frac { 1 } { 335 } $ (335) $ \frac { 1 } { 336 } $ (336) $ \frac { 1 } { 337 } $ (337) $ \frac { 1 } { 338 } $ (338) $ \frac { 1 } { 339 } $ (339) $ \frac { 1 } { 340 } $ (340) $ \frac { 1 } { 341 } $ (341) $ 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\frac { 1 } { 542 } $ (542) $ \frac { 1 } { 543 } $ (543) $ \frac { 1 } { 544 } $ (544) $ \frac { 1 } { 545 } $ (545) $ \frac { 1 } { 546 } $ (546) $ \frac { 1 } { 547 } $ (547) $ \frac { 1 } { 548 } $ (548) $ \frac { 1 } { 549 } $ (549) $ \frac { 1 } { 550 } $ (550) $ \frac { 1 } { 551 } $ (551) $ \frac { 1 } { 552 } $ (552) $ \frac { 1 } { 553 } $ (553) $ \frac { 1 } { 554 } $ (554) $ \frac { 1 } { 555 } $ (555) $ \frac { 1 } { 556 } $ (556) $ \frac { 1 } { 557 } $ (557) $ \frac { 1 } { 558 } $ (558) $ \frac { 1 } { 559 } $ (559) $ \frac { 1 } { 560 } $ (560) $ \frac { 1 } { 561 } $ (561) $ \frac { 1 } { 562 } $ (562) $ \frac { 1 } { 563 } $ (563) $ \frac { 1 } { 564 } $ (564) $ \frac { 1 } { 565 } $ (565) $ \frac { 1 } { 566 } $ (566) $ \frac { 1 } { 567 } $ (567) $ \frac { 1 } { 568 } $ (568) $ \frac { 1 } { 569 } $ (569) $ \frac { 1 } { 570 } $ (570) $ \frac { 1 } { 571 } $ (571) $ \frac { 1 } { 572 } $ (572) $ \frac { 1 } { 573 } $ (573) $ \frac { 1 } { 574 } $ (574) $ \frac { 1 } { 575 } $ (575) $ \frac { 1 } { 576 } $ (576) $ \frac { 1 } { 577 } $ (577) $ \frac { 1 } { 578 } $ (578) $ \frac { 1 } { 579 } $ (579) $ \frac { 1 } { 580 } $ (580) $ \frac { 1 } { 581 } $ (581) $ \frac { 1 } { 582 } $ (582) $ \frac { 1 } { 583 } $ (583) $ \frac { 1 } { 584 } $ (584) $ \frac { 1 } { 585 } $ (585) $ \frac { 1 } { 586 } $ (586) $ \frac { 1 } { 587 } $ (587) $ \frac { 1 } { 588 } $ (588) $ \frac { 1 } { 589 } $ (589) $ \frac { 1 } { 590 } $ (590) $ \frac { 1 } { 591 } $ (591) $ \frac { 1 } { 592 } $ (592) $ \frac { 1 } { 593 } $ (593) $ \frac { 1 } { 594 } $ (594) $ \frac { 1 } { 595 } $ (595) $ \frac { 1 } { 596 } $ (596) $ \frac { 1 } { 597 } $ (597) $ \frac { 1 } { 598 } $ (598) $ \frac { 1 } { 599 } $ (599) $ \frac { 1 } { 600 } $ (600) $ \frac { 1 } { 601 } $ (601) $ \frac { 1 } { 602 } $ (602) $ \frac { 1 } { 603 } $ (603) $ \frac { 1 } { 604 } $ (604) $ \frac { 1 } { 605 } $ (605) $ \frac { 1 } { 606 } $ (606) $ \frac { 1 } { 607 } $ (607) $ \frac { 1 } { 608 } 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Friday, March 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
9
Angel Flight to disband due to lack of members
By LAURIE WOLKEY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Angel Flight members voted two weeks ago to disband because of the sharp decline in new memberships. But the nine-member group will work on scheduled projects this semester.
Angel Flight, a women's organization that supports the Air Force Reserve Officers' Training Corps, will be disbanded at the end of this semester because of a lack of members.
Brandy Johnson, commander of KU's Angie Flight, said yesterday that the drop in new membership was caused by "general apathy toward the military."
However, Ma. Jurtis Godfrey, associate Professor of ROTC and adviser to the group,
said Angel Flight was not a military organization.
"Angel Flight only supports AFROT but it is not itself in the military," Godfreed said.
"Angel Flight only supports AFROTC but it is not in itself the military," Godfrey said. Angel Flight is an honorary social service organization at least four community service projects each year. Members also are responsible for raising funds for the organization.
This is not the first time Angel Flight has disbanded. In 1973, the KU organization folded, Johnson said, because it "could not survive the riots."
The organization was reactivated in 1975. In 1987, the Arnold Air Society named Angel Fly as a national organization. According to Johnson, the organization was originally established because women were not allowed in other ROTC programs.
"It gave the girlfriends and wives of calms as chance to understand the functions of this language."
The organization began at KU in 1900 and members were elected on the basis of interest, grades, personality and attractiveness.
"We have gotten away from the sorority image that it had in the beginning. Now the members are selected if they have an interest, learning about the Air Force." Johnson said.
But Johnson said that since then, the organization had changed as much as its staff.
Johnson said the group would provide any future Angel Flight groups at KU with information about the organization and a trust fund of more than $100.
A contractor has been given 10 days to submit a plan for repairing about 340 panels that make up the outer walls of Bell Memorial Hospital at the University of Kansas Medical Center, a KU official said yesterday.
KU orders new repair plan for 140 Med Center panels
The official, Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning, said the Kansas Secretary of Administration sent a letter to the school last week instructing him to submit the plan.
Wiechert said some of the panels had been repaired, but many still were cracked.
"We are giving the contractor 10 days notice that he must prosecut his work or make satisfactory arrangements to finish the project. If we decide that state will be terminated," Wechehr said.
In May,140 panels on the hospital were
found to be cracked and chipped. The contractor, Vince DiCarlo, president of D.i.Carlo General Contractors Inc., was told to replace or repair the panels.
Wiechert also said DiCarlo had passed the deadline set in the contract for completing work on the hospital by about 450 days.
DiCarlo could not be reached for comment.
Dickson was appointed last year to handle legal problems concerning Meddling.
The state is withholding $25,000 or DiCarlo's payment until the dispute over the panels is settled. Jerry Dickson, an assistant attorney general, said.
Charles Briscoe, a lawyer in the Secretary of Administration's office, said his office had not decided what its next action would be.
"I assume if we don't hear from the contractor, we will get together with assistant attorney Jerry Dickson and come up with a plan," Briscoe said.
But, Briscoe said, he does not think this will be necessary.
"At this point, we are optimistic we will get a satisfactory plan of correction from the contractor," he said.
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Friday, March 23, 1979
University Dally Kansan
Computers to expand with $1.5 million addition
A $1.5 million addition of new computer equipment at the Academic Computation Center will reduce input jams from overused computer terminals next month, Paul Wolfe, director of the center, said recently.
The terminals become overcrowded in April when 800 students enrolled in Computer Science 200 classes begin using the terminals.
The new computer equipment includes an increased computer capacity, which will nearly double the memory capacity of the system. Additional entry ports to the computer.
The ports have been jamming when all the terminals are used, because there are currently four terminals for each port.
Wolfe said the number of ports would be increased to a three-to-one ratio.
Walfe said the $1.5 million expense would be added to the original computer contract of $2 million, which was being received by the company. The expenses will come from the center's budget.
Wolfe said the new equipment would alleviate computer congestion. But at least 20 new terminals, which have been built in the last year, could time to reduce overcrowding at terminals.
He said the new equipment would improve turnaround time, the time a student must wait from the time he sends in his program until the time the printout
The hours that students can pick up computer printouts at the center have been increased by two hours a day. The new hours are 7:30 a.m. to 2.30 a.m. Sunday through Thursday, and 7:30 to midnight Friday and Saturday.
Lawrence clubs favor liquor plan
Staff Renarter
Bv TAMMY TIERNEY
Employees of local clubs and KU students are becoming as enthusiastic as Kansas legislators about the possible elimination of locker pools in Kansas' private clubs.
The bill also contains a provision for statewide recipient club memberships. Under the bill, a single $10-$20 club mem-
ber can attend any event and to drink in hundreds of clubs across Kansas.
Kansas Senate members last week approved 22-18 bill that would give private clubs the option to eliminate their liquor and sell liquor by the drink to their members.
The bill was approved by the Kansas House Federal and State Affairs Committee yesterday and now awaits the approval of the full House.
However, several Lawrence club em-
ployees and patrons it already has their asu-
nants.
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you are one of those people who has not spent much time study living school working school. You can spend three or five years on the job for those who can qualify. The plan pays $500 a month, plus some other benefits. When you’re working on your own job, you’re paying homework and commuting in the Air Force. After graduation and communication, you offer active duty and deliver a whole new life to your family.
You find it challenging, responsible, desired for your future, and a high regard for what you are contributing. Please move. As an employee in the Air Force you will have an
LOOK at THEIR SCHOOLING and. And when you look at how the Air Force力 of life has discovered more than just a way to make your business cut out where it was built, they've made it even better.
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THE IDEA IS excellent in theory," Jeb Bayer, a bartender at Mingles disco, said yesterday. "I'm very pro liquor by the drink because it eases the financial burden on the alcohol industry." The liquor card and won't have someone bugging them about drinks all the time. I think liquor by the drink would make the business sphere more enjoyable for the customer."
Bayer said elimination of the lquor pools would make the club's bookkeeping less complicated. Steve Coneau, manager at Bullwinkle's, 800 W. 24th St., agreed.
"It would save me 5-7 hours a week to rid of the liquor pool," he said. "I spend $1,000 a month caring for the liquor cards. The whole thing is the joke, really. Although Kansas is very restricted, it's not very易 regulated. It needs to comply just in case of an inspection."
Another advantage to the elimination of the luxurious pools, Comenue said, would be that drinks could be served faster. Faster service would mean a greater volume of drink sales and more business for the club, he said.
BAYER SAID club patron could expect the service of drinks to go down if the liquor price falls.
"Right now, we just have to add the cost of the liquor to the set of the set-up and what's a reasonable up-set price for one drink is not reasonable for another. I think you'd find the price of most drinks would go down slightly."
Both Bayer and Conmeau they liked the idea of reciprocal club membership because it would attract out-of-town business. However, Steve Lyle, manager at G.P. Loyds, 701 Massachusetts St., said he was not in favor of the idea.
"I might reciprocate with a club in
it," I said. "I would not with the Sanctuary or
Bailwynn."
*Different bars attract different crowds.*
Ours is predominated Greek and I don't watch them.
Lyle said he would like liquor the drink because it would mean better service for them.
"On Friday and Saturday nights, it takes 15-20 minutes to get a drink because there are so many people crowded up to the bar. With liquor by the drink, we'd cut time on making drinks and probably serve about 20-30 percent more drinks," he said.
SEVERAL KU students said doing away with the liqueur cards would make buying a drink easier.
"It would be so much easier just to be able to buy a drink without a card," Roberta Wahlhoch, Kansas City, Kan., senior, said. "I live in Kansas City, so we go to Missouri to drink and I'm always surprised at how simple it is to order a drink there.
"When you go to a bar in Kansas, it's an immediate letdown to go through such a hassle to order a drink. It spoils the atmosphere."
She said she also objected to the costliness of the liquor pool system.
"You can't go to a club with friends in a large group because the cover charge is so high and you can't belong to more than a couple of clubs because the membership costs so much. It's really a mess." Walahski said.
Because of the costiness of cut men-
berships, some students get together and buy two or three memberships to share, she said.
ANOTHER STUDENT, Scott Hamilton,
Torpeka junior, said he hoped the bff passed
off his advice to his father.
"If the cost of drinks goes down, I'm all for it," he said.
Although he belongs to two clubs, Hamilton said, he would like to join others. He cannot, however, because of the cost of the memberships.
"I also like the idea of a reciprocal membership. It's really a rip-off here because in other states you don't have to pay membership, let alone the liquor pool," he said.
"It's just not economically feasible," he said.
Warm weather has brought out bicyclists, and KU police will be looking for those violating traffic laws, Sgt. Jeanne Longaker of the KU police department, said this week.
Bicyclists urged to follow safety rules, traffic laws
"Last year there were complaints about the enforcement of traffic laws without police presence," he said.
Longaker said cyclists should follow the same rules as autos, including:
- Stopping at stop signs.
- Giving pedestrians the right of way in crosswalks.
- Riding on the same side of the street as traffic and not riding against oncoming traffic
- Using a white headlight and red rear reflector or light at night.
"Bicycles should be secured with a hardened steel chain. The chain should be put through all moveable parts," she said.
Longaker say cyclists should also take precautions against bicycle theft.
She added that bicycles should be engraved with the identification of the owner. She said the KU police department would engrave bicycles for students, or students could borrow an engrate at the office in Carruth-O'Leary Hall.
Longaker suggested that students register their bicycles at the parking office in Hoch Auditorium. Registration costs 25 cents and aids in recovering stolen bicycles.
THE VOICE OF RETRIBUTION: "FOR I THE LORD THY GOD AM JAELOUS GOD, VISITING THE INIQUITY OF THE FATHERS UPON THE CHILDREN UNTO THE THIRD AND FOURTH GENERATION OF THEM THAT HATE ME, AND THESE WITH THEIR INQUIVITY OF THEM LOVE ME AND KEEP MY COMMANDMENTS" — Part of the Second Commandment, Exodus 20.5.8.
History makes some singuilar developments in respect to the retributive justice of God, Nations, communities, families, individuals, furnish fearful illustrations that "the wicked is nanded in the work of his own hand," and that "the wicked is given a place where he can go to crime, are, by no means reserved only for a future retribution. They draw after them an almost certain retribution in this world. "There is no peace to the wicked, saith my God! He may seem to prosper — riches may inhabit him. For many of us we seem to have all that heart can wish; yet there is a cankerworm somewhere gnawing at the very vultures of happiness —
Why do we have rite? Who is responsible? Read Isaiah 3:10:11. "Say to ye the righteous, that it shall be well with them . . . Woe unto the wicked! it shall be ill with him for the reward of his hands shall be given him."
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
Perilous it is indeed to a man's well being in this life—to his peace, his reputation, his best interest — to do wrong. Possibly the wrong doer may not suffer himself, yet most certainly his children, and his children's children will pay the price for his wrongdoing. Perhaps whether regard be had to his physical, social, intellectual, and moral nature, as to make him a happy being. The right, the unperverted use of all his powers and suscebilities will undermine them and continue state of earthly happiness and prosperity.
a bright somewhere upon all that he possesses. History bears
at least an incident, yet decide testonx on the point.
And not only is the human machine itself so fitted up as to accomplish such an end, but the whole external world, the theater in man has to live, act, and enjoy, is fitted up in beautiful harmony with the same benevolent end. Every jar of paint, every vase of perfume, every function of it, is the fruit of transgression or perversion. The violation of a natural law is as sure to be followed by retribution as the violation of a Divine law. The history of individuals, families, communities, nations, is full of such
"B sure you sin will find you numbers - 3223. 8
'it shall be wicked with the wicked.' - Ecclesiastes 8:13
Wait, there's a space after "Numbers".
Let's look at the word after "Numbers". It's "3223.".
And then it's "8".
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Friday, March 23, 1979
11
Report won't affect KU aid policy
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
Although a report from the Carnegie Council in Washington, D.C. concluded this week that students who receive financial aid and have no work experience at Rogers, director of the office of financial aid, said yesterday that the University of Kansas would not require students to get a job.
"We haven't really formally discussed such an idea," Rogers said. "But we don't have any plans to change our awarding system."
University Daily Kansan
Rogers said he thought requiring students who received financial aid to be employed would be "a program that could not be administered."
"It would probably result in students
Rogers said, though, that the office of financial aid planned to improve its work style.
getting jobs and quitting them after they had received their financial award from our employer.
Work study is a federally funded program to employ, on a part-time basis, students from colleges and universities.
"We are going to push to get those qualified for work study to make a firm commitment that they intend to work." Rogers said.
Rogers said that in the past, students had signed up for work study and then decided not to work. Money was set aside for them but because the students did not inform the office that they were not working, the money was not used.
Rogers said although the council had suggested that students be employed, not all students were able to work and continue their studies.
The office also had problems getting students who signed up for work study to tell their employers they were eligible to be paid with work study funds, he said.
"There have been tests done on this," he said, "And some show that people who persist in school do so because of their loyalty to a job. But for others, such as those in graduate programs, all their time is needed for their studies."
Rogers said surveys also indicated that working on campus, as through the work study program, was important to students.
"It gives them a feeling of belonging to the institution," he said.
The report by the council said the government should adopt a schedule by which awards would be made. It suggested awards be made to freshmen and sophomores who contributed $600 to their annual college expenses. Juniors and seniors, Carnegie said, should contribute about $1,000.
Although Congress is expected to review and revise the federal student aid structure this legislative session, Rogers said he did not expect changes.
"We aren't expecting any federal programs to undergo major changes in this session of Congress," he said. "It shouldn't affect us."
KU Latin Week to feature 'Venezuelan Night'
Latin Week at KU, which begins Monday, will include a "Venezuelan Night" featuring traditional Venezuelan foods, songs and music. The week also includes urbanization of Mexican-Americans.
Other Latin Week activities will include slide shows and films about Cuba and the United States.
Ruben Murillo, president of MECHA, a Mexican-American student organization that is sponsoring Latin Week, said Wednesday that the activities were designed to inform people about the problems and opportunities of Latin minorities.
The first activity for Latin week will be a film about a Mayan holy man's efforts to aid a drought-parched village. The film, "A Mayan Village," is shown at t.p.m. Monday in 300 Strong Hall.
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THE MECHA conference, "Education and Urbanization of the Chicanos," will be from 1 to 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Forum on Urbanization. There will be three featured speakers.
THE DEADLINE for entering the intramural Track Meet is on Thursday, April 5th at 5:00 p.m.
Tuesday, a film about the development of Cuba, "The Monceda Program," will be available at The University of Florida.
Alfonso Lopez-Vasquez, the bilingual education program director for the Kansas City, Mo. school district, will speak on a U.S. all that deals with bilingual education.
Information Available in Rm. 208 Robinson Center Recreational Services
Anna Rodriguez, director of the League of Latin American Citizens, will speak about the educational opportunities of Mexican-American students.
Francisco H. Ruiz, an instructor at Pemm Valley Community College, will speak about
*Thursday, a slide show about the history, traditions and current conditions of Puerto Rico will be shown from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in 300 Strong Hall. In the evening, a film titled “Puerto Rico” will be shown at 7 in 300 Strong Hall.*
FRIDAY NIGHT, Venezuelan Night will cap the week's activities with a dinner and a party.
There will be no charge for any of these activities and all are open to the public.
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
The dinner will be from 6 to 7.30 p.m. and
CAR STEREO SPECIALS
--the shows from 7:30 to 10 p.m., all in the Lawrence Community Building, 11th and Vermont streets. The charge will be $3 for adults and $1.50 for children.
MUSIC INFORMATION
CRAIG T609 STEREO CASSETTE with AM/FM/MPX Radio
Locking Fast! Switch/Forward/Rewind,
LOC/XD Switch, Small Chassis,
Wow and Flutter
4.5 Watts per Channel
SALE PRICE $125.00
Reg. $169.95
COAXIAL 6 x 9 20 oz. Speakers
Your Choice
JENSEN or CRAIG
Component Specialties
SALE PRICE $39.95
Reg.$79.95
MUSIC MEDIA UNIT
SYSTEM
100%
CRAIG 3514 IN-DASH
Stereo Matrix Cassette and AM/FM Radio
Preset Tuning, Automatic End of Tape Eject, Locking F.F.
4 Watts per Channel
SALE PRICE $144.95
Reg. $179.95
CLEARANCE SALE
Component Specialties
QUADRAXIAL 6 x 9
4 Way Hi Power Speakers
Our Ben 16 x 9's
IN-DASH CASSETTE
with AM/FM MPX Radio
Local Distance Switch
and Locking FF
2 Watts per Channel
SALE PRICE $89.95
Reg. $125.95
Sound Processor
SALE PRICE $69.95
CRAIG SOUND RESEARCH
IDI COMPONENT SPECIALTIES
AND MUCH MORE
SOUND RESEARCH
BOOSTER
50 Watts with 7 Band Equalizer
SALE PRICE $69.95
Reg. $99.95
JENSEN PANASONIC
SALE ENDS MARCH 31st INSTALLATION AVAILABLE
928 MASSACHUSETTS
Grand Opening Special:
GRAND OPENING March 22,23 & 24
A return to the friendly neighborhood bar.
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
AUDIOTRONICS
More information may be obtained from the office of minority affairs, 324 Strong.
THE BEER GARDEN (Formerly Poor Richards at 14th & Tennessee)
20 $ ^{c} $ draws
Free Writing Help!
Letter Writing and Resume's
All Juniors, Seniors, and Graduate Students
Essay Planning and Organization
Footnotes and Bibliography
Correct Sentences
Effective Paragraphs
Grammar and Punctuation
Communications Resource Center
306B Summerfield
9-4 Monday-Friday 864-4500
Just In Just In Time!
TIENSIN KITES Exotic, Beautiful, Fun
Also—New Shipment of China & Baskets
Come see us in the
Museum Shop Museum of Natural History Dyche Hall Open daily 10-5
ADVERTISE
D
K ADVERTISE
Whisper Chain Necklaces
$3.00 to $6.00
Holiday Plaza—25th and Iowa
BAG SHOP
Downtown Lawrence
now weekend now FEATURES
Large Supreme Pizza Two Dollars Off Offer expires Sun. March 25
NEW YORKER
TRINO ITALIAN
PIZZA
lemon tree
buy one cone,
get another cone
FREE
FROZEN
DESSERT
YOGURT
MKRA MILITARY FORCES
Offer good thru Sun. March 25
11 W. 9th
Hot or Mild GF
SMOKED SAUSAGE $1.00
Double Sausage $2.00
Offer expires Sun, March 25
MISS STREET DELI
Burger King
Offer expires Sun. March 25
OLD CARPENTER HALL
SMOKEHOUSE
Special BBQ RIBS Special Deep Pit Hickory Smoked PORK SPARE RIBS
Half Slab Big End . . $3.75
Half Slab Small End . . $4.75
Offer good thru Sun. March 25
SHOWTIME 11:00 am 'till closing Thurs.-Sat.
SUNDAY MATINEE
New Yorker Smoke House Lemon Tree Dell 4:00-11:00 12:00-9:00 12:00-8:00 12:00-10:00
Owens Flower Shop
Presents this week only the
Spring Fling only $9.95 Delivered
The Spring Fling is a specially prepared assortment of Daisys, Tulips, Irises and Jonquils just right for spring.
Owens
FLOWER SHOP
843-6111
C
FTD
FORTWOOD DISTRICT HOCKEY CLUB
9th & Indiana Street, Lawrence, KS 60044
We send flowers wide world thru FTD
Hours Moonside, Lawrence, KS 60044
12
Friday, March 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Social Security requires new verification report
Students who receive Social Security benefits may have their monthly checks stopped if they fail to verify that they are full-time students, Bill Piggot, public information director of the Lawrence Social Security Office, said recently.
In the past, students informed the Social Security Office of their eligibility before the fall term with a form that did not require a 'school's verification, labeling' or
"But the students must now report two times a year," he said.
About 850,000 students between the ages of 18 and 22 receive approximately $1.7 billion a year in benefits.
Students may receive Social Security if they have a dead or disabled parent.
Piggott said the Social Security Office had been mailing cards to students who were receiving Social Security. The students must take the cards to their school to prove that they are full-time students.
A person enrolled in 12 hours of class is considered a full-time student.
The veterans services office, 118 Strong Hall, is handling the verification process at the University of Kansas.
Piggott said that once benefits were cut off, it would take about two months to have them reinstated. The Social Security Administration has the information in the next two months.
Cards are available at the Social Security Office, 2210 W. Yale Road.
Jayhawker Yearbook
is now accepting applications for positions on the 1980 staff. Including Editor & Business Manager
Come by 121 B in the Kansas Union for applications.
Heaven comes to your door
Gabriel's delivers piping hot pizza anywhere, all day.
Gabriel's
Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842-5824
Gabriel's
LATIN WEEK: March 26 - March 30
Film: "CHAC"
FILM. CRAC
The search for a Mayan Holy man who can placate the gods to bring rain to a drought parched village.
Rated G
Monday, March 26
7:00 p.m. Strong Auditorium, 300 Strong
Sponsored by The Office Of Minority Atts
No Charge
Film: 'THE MONCADA PROGRAM'
The 20 years of struggle and development of Coca-Cola
Rated PG
Tuesday, March 27 7:00 p.m. Strong Auditorium, 300 Strong
MECHA CONFERENCE
No Charge
SPEAKERS. Dr. Francine Ruice — *Chaise Urban Problems* Abinger, Lakes Jr. — *Biburgel Education* Abinger, Lakes Jr. — *Biburgel Education*
Wednesday, March 28 1:00-4:00 p.m.
Sponsored by MECHA and Minority Affairs
SLIDE SHOW
SLIDE SHOW
History, tradition and current conditions of Puerto Rico
11:00 am - 3:00 p.m.
308 E Strong Hall
Thursday, March 29
Thursday, March 29 7:00 p.m. Strong Auditorium, 300 Strong
Sponsored by Florida Rean students and Musicier affair
Film: "PUERTO RICO"
Sponsored by Puerto Rican students and Minority affairs
No Charge
...
NOCHE VENEZOLANA
Rated PG
Staff Reporter
ERA arguments aired in Topeka
Venezuelan Night)
DINNER
Featuring traditional Venezuelan foods CULTURAL PROGRAM
By TAMMY TIERNEY
PEACOCK TERRIAGE TECHNOLOGY
HOSPITAL
CULTURAL PROGRAM
TOPEKA-Proponents and opponents of the Equal Rights Amendment met yesterday at the state capitol for what could be a final showdown.
Friday, March 30
Dinner: 6:00-7:30 p.m.
Cultural Program: 7:30-10:00 p.m.
Lawrence Community Bldg
Sponsored by The Venezuelan Club and Minority Affairs
Charge for Dinner: $3.00 Adults/$1.50 Children
Cultural Program Free
* * * * *
Yesterday was the seventh anniversary of Congressional approval of the ERA, and supporters found little to celebrate because of the possibility that Kansas' ratification
All the above programs will be held at the University of Kansas. Lawrence, Kansas
More than 200 women representing both sides of the issue were in Topeka yesterday for hearings before the Kansas Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee.
Although the amendment specified that the states' ratification must take place during a seven-year period, Congress asked for a three-year extension because only three of the necessary 38 votes were lacking for ratification.
Since the time of the request, however, five states have rescinded their approval,
According to constitutional law, ratification by three-fourths of the states is required before the amendment becomes law.
Calling his bill a "document of freedom",
merrillion Kansans now were entitled
to vote.
State Sen. John Vermillion, R-Independent, author of the proposal to rescind the ratification, told committee members that Kansans had been "sentenced to a seven-year obligation to ratify the ERA."
"It's null and void." he said.
bringing the total of ratified states to 30. Kansas, one of the first states to ratify, may
Members of the Federal and State Affairs
committee heard pro and cons of rescind-
ment.
Sylvia Turnes, president of the Eagle Forum, an organization based in Wichita, said that a refusal to rescind the ratification would destroy constitutional integrity.
"You state legislators should be totally outraged and insulted by the federal government's attempt to make you puppets to rubber-stamp their wishes," she said.
Loud applause greeted another opponent,
Barbara Hanna, a Eudora homemaker.
ntozake change
a one woman show
march 2 8pm
the lawrence arts center
march 2 9pm
hashinger hall
Hillel
Hillel
Lox & Bagel Brunch
All You Can Eat
Sunday, Mar. 25 12:30 p.m.
Lawrence Jewish Community Center
917 Highland Drive
$1 members $2 non-members
presents
films sua
"One of those rare delights you'll want to see again and again and again!"
"Cousin Cousine' is the most happy healthy sensuality I have seen on film."
Judith Crist, Saturday Review
John Simon, New York Mag
New
Cousin
Cousine
ALBERT SCHWARTZ • EMINE J. HOSENTHAL
STARRING
A FILM BY JEAN CHARLES TACCHELLA
STARRING
MARIE CHRISTINE BARRAU • VICTOR LANDU • MARIE FRANCE RISER • GUY MARCHANE
Gaumont Films Pomeroy • Nurture Film Dist. Ltd.
Libra Films PRELEASE
Friday & Saturday March 23 & 24
Friday & Saturday March 23 & 24
Woodruff Auditorium $AD.150
when she appealed to committee members "to demonstrate their integrity."
PROPONENTS OF THE ERA were equally demonstrative as more than 10 persons testified in favor of extending the ratification period.
State Sen. Jan Meyers, R-Overland Park, told committee members that the seven-year limit was an arbitrary number and that interest in the issue had not flazed.
Meyers said she was speaking for 80 percent of Kansas women in saying that the state's policies did not benefit them.
"All you have to do is look around this room to see that," she said.
"Unfortunately, the opposition has taken all the good words on this issue," she said. "Words like home, family and love. However, their arguments are erroneous.
The ERA has nothing to do with social customs, abortions, co-ed restrooms or co-education.
FORMER LEAWOOD mayor Margaret Jorden said she disagreed with arguments that the federal government was over-shadowing states' rights.
"I take issue with the statement that this
federal dominance over state
legislation is correct."
Eleanor Bell, a member of the Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists, said to rescind the ERA would be an insult to Kansas women.
"There should be no debate on guaranteeing half of our citizenary equal rights," she said. "No one can be a little bit equal than they can be a little bit pregnant."
Most of the plaintiffs, including the survivors of two men killed in the blast, sought triple damages in lawsuits against Kansas government and the E.I. dU Pont de Nemours and O., manufacturer of a plastic gas pipe; and Dresser In-Tech Inc., the manufacturer of pipe coupling.
Triple damages denied in lawsuit
Douglas County District Court Judge James Paddock rued yesterday that 10 plaintiffs who filed suit in connection with a natural gas explosion 15 months ago are not entitled to seek triple damages under Kansas law.
Paddock said the 1832 Kansas law unnew which the triple damages were sought does not apply to utilities serving only one city, as Missouri Public Service Gas Company Inc. does.
The explosion in December 1977, which killed two men in an upstairs apartment at 747 Massachusetts St. and caused several hundred dollars in damage, has been blamed on a faulty pipe coupling by the National Transportation Safety Board.
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IMPORTED & BOTTLED BY TEQUILA JALISCO S.A.
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TONIGHT & TOMORROW 8-12 PM
Presents
BIGK'S
Wednesday and Thursday March 28-29 NIGHTSHIFT
J. T. COOKE
The story of a woman with the courage to risk everything
for what she believes is right.
Norma Rae
a MARTIN RITT ROSE AND ANSLEY VAY production
directed by SALY FIELD, RONI BIRMAN, REAL BRIDGES,
PA HINGLE, BARBARA BAWLEY
screenplay by BRUTIN, RAW GOLF and HARRITT FRANK, IR
music LUDA MERI
director of photography RONI A. ALDONZO AS C.
produced by RAMARA ASLEYVY and ALFA ROSI
illustrated by MARTIN RITT
IF GOES LIKE IT, NORMAN GIMBLE
music by DAVID SHRIE
COLOR BY DELANE
PG PRESENTED BY COUNSELMENTS
Now Playing At A Theatre
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CHECK LOGICAL NEWSRELEASE FOR PREMIUM THEATRE LISTING
Norma Rae
CHECK LOCAL NEWSPAPER FOR SPECIFICT THEATRE LISTING.
Friday, March 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
13
Five qualifiers seek national swim marks
The biggest contingent of KU swimmers since 1972 will compete this weekend in the NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships in Cleveland.
Qualifiers for KU are the 400-yard medley relay team of Rick Jenkins, Steve Graves, Jim Sauer and Brent Barnes and diver Kurt Anselmi.
Graves also will compete in the 200-yard stroke, 150-yard individual medley and 300-yard individual medley.
He set Big Eight records in all three events at the conference meet, which qualified him for the national and earned him the vote of every league coach as the meet's outstanding swimmer. Graves was the KU swimmer to go the national last year.
The medley relay unit also picked up its qualifying marks at the Big Eight Championships, which KU won by 62 points over runner-up Iowa State. The relay team knuckled almost two seconds off the record, in 1978 by Missouri, with a time of 3:25.55
The medley relay team, whose goal is to place in the top 20, has been seeded 22nd for the meet. Graves' goal is to place in the top 12 in his events.
"Our goals will be to place in each event. I think we can improve a lot in the medley relay and I think Graves' are really good." KU coach Bill Spahn said.
The Jayhawks had to overcome an unusual obstacle last week—no water to drink and no ice cream for lunch, a leak, forcing the swimmers to finish their practices at Shawnee Mission West High School in Overland Park. But Spalau said he not think the change would affect the team.
Ruggers set game
The KU rugby club will compete against a club from Johnson county at 1:30 p.m. Sunday, west of Oliver Hall, 1815 Naismith Drive.
KU has won its four games this spring. Earlier this spring, Kansas beat Emporia State University, 74; toppoa rugby club, Cincinnati; and Iowa State, 64. The Bteam also beat K-State, 24-6.
Track start delayed
Instead of opening its outdoor season this weekend at home, the KU women's track team will have to postpone its debut until March 30, at the MEMInvitations.
(1)
Coach Teri Anderson said the triangular meet with Kansas State and Missouri was canceled because it conflicted with a run-a-goal game, which he to hold in Memorial Stadium this weekend.
The men later postponed their run-a-thon but Anderson said it was too late to schedule the race.
ENGLAND
MILWAUKEE
Staff photo by CHRISTODD
Boomina bat
own apotwosd prepares for batting practice yesterday in Allen Field House. The KU right field hitter has safety in 16 consecutive games, which probably is a team record,
Spottswood's hitting hot
By TONY FITTS
Sports Writer
no one is really sure, but John Spottswood probably broke a Kansas baseball record because of his catching.
Spottweed hit safety in 16 consecutive games for the Jayhawks. Most people in the know, including baseball coach Floyd Stannard, spotted Spottweed's performance has *to be a record*
No one knows for sure, though, because KU baseball records are incomplete before 1958, and no one has bothered to keep track of hitting streaks since then.
**H'eleis hilt in 19 tage hin zum this year.**
Temperature hilt in 19 tage hin zum this year.
**H'eleis hilt in 19 tage hin zum this year.**
Temperature hilt in 19 tage hin zum this year.
The right fielder isn't worried about breaking the record, whatever it may be.
"I'm not aware that I broke a record," he said. "Somebody me told me I did, but it doesn't matter."
IN THE FIRST game of Wednesday's doubleheader with Benedictine College, Spotswood went wiltless in his first three at home. He hit a bounce in the fifth inning.
KANSAN Sports
"I wasn't thinking about any record." he
said, "I was just trying to get the run home. I was lucky if fell in."
Just because he isn't worried about a hitting record doesn't mean he isn't excited
"I'm trying to keep from getting too exited, but I am, a little bit. I didn't start well last year. I'm hitting the ball hard already, but the opponent is hitting it hard until Big Eight tournament time."
Spottwadds team battage, 393 in 61 at bats, is second on the team to Roger Riley's 400, but he leads the 'Hawks in doubles and triples.
TEMPIE SAID Spottweed had changed
his attitude somewhat from last year, when
he was in the Army.
"He's always been a hard worker as far as his hitting is concerned," Temple said. "Last year, he tended to get down on himself when he didn't get a hit in every game. I think this year he has his emotions more under control.
"People have to realize that even though they're good hitters, there are pitchers who are going to get them out. Even a .400 hitter gets out six of 10 times at the plate."
It isn't just emotions. Spottswoudd said his concentration was good this year.
"If you concentrate," he said, "you can
do anything. I think concentration is the
same."
Spottwood, a senior, said he would like to play professional ball "more than anything." He has spent his past few Christmas vacations in Arizona at baseball camps. And he works on more than his batting.
"TIM WORKING a lot harder on my fielding and throwing," he said. "My throws tend to tail a little bit, because I used to be a pitcher. Every once and a while I throw one in from right, and it takes a left at first base and heads straight for the dueout.
"Between last year and this year, I've seen a lot of improvement in myself,"
Lindstrom looks to future
Spotswood put his hitting streak on the line at 1 p.m. tomorrow, when Kansas meets Baker University for a doubleheader at Quigley Field. Terry Sutcliffe, 1-2, and Dan St. Chair, 3-4, are scheduled to start for the Jayhawks.
BvDAVID.PRESTON
Snarty Writer
For the past two years, Janet Lindstrom has led a Kansas women's swimming team that has won back-to-back Big Eight championships, sent swimmers to the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for the second time dropped only one dual meet in nine outings.
But according to Lindstrom, things are going to get even better.
"I think that we are in a transitional period," Lindet from said yesterday after returning to Pittsburgh. "I saw a big change in the attitude of the squad this year, and I think that we are on the road."
"This year we were looking forward to the nationals all year, whereas last year I think that our main goal was to win the Big Eight. We can work our way up on the national level."
Lindstrom, a sophomore, has already proven herself at the national level. At the nationals she finished third in the 200-yard freestyle and 12th in the 106-yard freestyle. Both performances earned her All-American status.
"Our relays came close to placing but
SHE SAID THAT while she was pleased with her showing in Pittsburgh, she had hoped for a better overview by the team. Lanny Schaffer's illness a day before the meet was a major factor in the Jayhawks' not scoring more points.
didn't l, Llandström said. "If they could have placed and with a cammy in there, we could have taken them."
However, Landstrom does not dwell on the past, but speaks enthusiastically about the past.
"I think that next year, we'll go at the nationals with the same positive attitude and we'll keep going from there. We already know how to do it," he said, keeping up improving as long as your head's in it.
"I think we'll continue to improve."
LINDSTROM HAS been improving once she started swimming in Des Moines, Iowa at the age of 4. She began swimming competitively when she was 6, although she said she never put a lot of effort into swimming until her junior year in high school.
"It was always kind of a social thing," she said. "All of my friends swam so I did. I never really got serious though until I was a junior."
With that seriousness came many awards. Landstrom was an all-state performer in 1956 and 1963, and she won four awards. She was invited to look at colleges elsewhere, but decided she wanted to stay
"When I decided that I wanted to stay in the Midwest, I looked at Kansas and it was so dark."
Lindstrom said she thought more swimmers would decide to stay in the
Midwest as the quality of swimming improved.
"PEOPLE USED TO ALL want to go to Arizona or California where everyone has a pool," she said. "I mean, Lawrence only has one pool. Everyone thought that you had to go where the weather was good, but not anymore."
"I think it can happen that a school from the Midwest can build a very top team."
Although the season is officially over for the Jayhawks, Lindstrom and two other teammates, Schaffer and Saluki Ager, are sponsorships in April. Lindstrom will swim for her AAU team, the Santa Barbara Swim Club, which she begins swimming for last
"I'm excited for the AAU meet," she said, "because I'm on a relay team (400-yard sprint freestyle) that has a chance to win it."
After the AAU meet, Lindstrom said, she will try to make the Olympic cut time cuts in the meets this summer in hopes of getting a trial with the Olympic team in June 1980.
Lindstrom is humble when talking of her chances to make the Olympic team, but said she would like the opportunity to make the冠軍. She admitts it will take hard work.
"This summer (in Santa Barbara) we'll work about 8½ hours a day, and probably swim 20,000 meters a day," she said. "It's not easy."
THE DOOBIE BROTHERS
THE WASHINGTON FRIENDS
with special guest Jay Ferguson
April 27,1979----8:00 P.M.
Tickets $7.00 and $8.00 Reserved
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
---
ON SALE TODAY - MARCH 23
AT 10:00 AM AT THE SUA BOX OFFICE ONLY
- limit of 10 per person
- block seating available
Tickets available after 3/23 at: SUA, Kiefs, in Topeka, Manhattan and all capitol ticket outlets in K.C.
42
14
Friday, March 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
A
A woman's place not in men's locker room
A recent survey by the Associated Press shows that women sports writers will be allowed inside most major league baseball locker rooms this season.
Following the urges of baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn, most of the teams contacted in the random survey said they would allow any properly-credentialed reporter into lockers without any time restrictions.
Some plan to use the locker room for
on a brief period after games and then
go home.
It's easy to see why Kuhn told ballclubs to authenticate "identical access in one way or another."
In the light of a September court decision, he had little choice. A district court judge ruled in that case that a New York Yankees policy banning women reporters was unconstitutional. The action was instigated by Melissa Louke Lincoln, a writer for Sports Illustrated.
HENCE THE opening of many lockers this season. No one likes lawsuits.
SIDELINER
PETER HAYES
Dressler
But the Yankees and the other major league team or an team, for that matter, are all likely to be women to a male dressing room. It makes about as much sense as allowing men into a home office.
There's no reason why players can't step outside the dressing room to answer questions. In fact, I've found coaches and players willing to do that.
Many writers will argue that a locker room is the best place to talk to a player right after a game, but it is still fresh in his mind and he's in an athletic atmosphere. But it's not the only way to get quotes from plavers.
BEST RIGHTS ARE OWNED BY THE BOTTLEMAN
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- Cordials and Spirits
- Cold Kogs • Chilled Champagnes and Wines
Case Lot Prices
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Next door to Carousel
快乐
Independent Coin-up
2105 West 26th Street
NOW OPEN
Lawrence's Newest Self-Service Laundromat, Complete With Dry Cleaning Drop-Off. Attendant on Duty.
Use this Grand Opening Coupon.
For One FREE WASH.
Coupon good 3/21-3/28, from 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Just southwest of Dairy Queen.
One per customer
Q
JANTRILLS The Place to be in Lawrence . . .
Invites You To It's
GRAND OPENING
Friday, March 23
Ron and Bill want you to spend an elegant evening in the plush confines of their Tavern. Enjoy the refreshing atmosphere and soothing music, good companionship and mind expanding conversation.
Quench your thirst with wide variety of non-imported domestic beers.
For The Ultimate in Drinking Experiences . . .
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$1.00 Pitchers—Noon to 6:00 PM
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**IN AN ATMOSPHERE** that removes them from the jock talk and distractions they can get from their cell phone. They are more likely to listen and think about what is being asked anyway. And if they won't talk outside a locker room, are they aren't talking inside it either.
lockers just as women should be allowed in female lockers. And each respective sex knows the frustration of watching their counterparts walk into a locker they cannot
An interview room is just as good a place to talk to players and coaches. Any writer who uses denial to a locker room as an employee of the enterprise it takes to be a good reporter.
BUT THE MOVE to integrate lockers takes a popular movement for equal rights a step too far. It's questionable that the reason behind it is always improved sports uniforms.
Men definitely should be allowed in male
Women can cover men's sports. Female sporters editors are becoming more common. And they do their jobs and do them well by standing on cruisers to get inside men's lockers.
Grid star Haves sentenced
DALLAS (UPT)—Convicted on cocaine distribution charges, former Dallas Cowbies wide receiver Bob Hayes was ordered yesterday to spend five years in the state prison despite pleas from prominent sports figures.
Hayes was allowed to remain free until the formal sentencing order was filed by the judge.
Cowboys quarterback Rick Staubach was among those asking District Judge Richard Mays to spare him from the death penalty, a judge said. Hayes to two five-year prison sentences and a seven-year probated sentence on related drug charges. Hayes was convicted of the crime.
spend five years in prison when he is released earlier because of good behavior
THE JUDGE ordered that the sentences be served concurrently, meaning Hwys will
Staunach told the judge Hayes should not be sent to prison. He said that Hayes was a citizen with good potential but that he had been involved in a group of people who were a bad influence.
Stauchaud he believed in the former Olympic gold medalist or he would not have testified in his favor. A Dallas broadcast also testified in favor of lenency for Haves.
Hayes' attorneys said they were disappointed with the sentence and had not yet decided to appeal. They would meet with the lawyer, but not with the lawyers said, before making a decision.
Hayes was arrested by police during a raid at his north Dallas apartment last year.
DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:
Summer Orientation Program 1979
. . . leadership abilities
STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS
... knowledge of University programs & activities
... interpersonal communication skills
. . onthusiasm about program
. . . student in good academic standing
JOB DESCRIPTIONS & APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN ADMISSIONS & RECORDS, 126 STRONG HALL APPLICATIONS DUE BY FRIDAY, MARCH 23
COMMISSION
STATUS WOMEN
WOMEN'S WORK AND LIFE IN CHINA
♀
PAULA CAMPBELL; ACTIVE MEMBER OF THE UNITED STATES-CHINA PEOPLE'S FRIENDSHIP ASSOCIATION WILL SPEAK AND SHOW SLIDES.
Monday March 26
Monday March 26 7 pm-Forum Room Kansas Union
PARTIALLY FUNDED BY STUDENT SENATE
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150 ml / 5 fl.oz.
REDKEN
PHinal PHase Creme Rinse Concentrate
AIRLINES
headmasters
Vermont 843-8808
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports Digest
From the Kansan's wire services
S
Spartans go into seclusion
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Coach Jud Heathcoe and his Michigan State Spartans fled to Salt Lake City a day early to escape the hoopla and attention that comes with in the NCAA's basketball Final Four, but Ray Meyer is living every minute of it.
"We've never been to the Final Four, as far as I know," the DePaul coach said this week from his office in Chicago. "But I've never experienced anything like this before. I've had people come into the house at 8 a.m., follow me around all day to see what I do."
DePaul, Indiana State and Penn were all expected in Salt Lake yesterday to begin preparations for tomorrow's semifinal game. DePaul won against Penn at 1:45 p.m. and DePaul and Indiana State at 4:15 p.m. But Michigan State, the tournament winner, hit town Wednesday.
"We ARE OUT here to get away from all the distractions surface at this
time," Heathcote said in a telephone interview with the other three coaches. Headcote has closed his practices and will be back on the media until after their game tomorrow.
Although he hates being cast as the favorite, Heattec says Michigan State, led by playmaker Earvin Johnson and high-flying forward Greg Kelzer, has the best players.
"I honestly think we're the best team," he said. "But in a tournament it's not how good you are, it is how good you're playing. I can't handle them well." With a 32-4 record, having been ranked No. 1 for six or seven weeks, and suddenly we end up being the favorite, I can't understand
Indiana State probably doesn't understand it either, but the much-maligned Sycamores are getting used to it. They've been wearing a car as a one-man team with a patsy schedule.
Gura pitches KC victory
Gura gave up five hits and struck out three in picking up the victory. Free agent Eduardo Rodriguez picked up the save by allowing only a walk in the final two innings.
Jim Clancy took the loss for Toronto. Clancy worked six innings, giving up four runs on six hits. Mike Willis, Mark Willey and David Robinson each pitched an inning of hitters relief.
DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP)—Larry Gura worked seven innings and Bob Robertson hit a two-run homer in the sixth inning as the Kansas City Royals downed the Toronto Blue Jays 4-2 in an exhibition baseball game yesterday.
The loss dropped Toronto's record to 6-7.
Kansas city is 7-6.
Otto Velde had a solo hero for Toronto in the second inning, his fourth homer of
GET READY
GREEK ENDEAVOR
Today and Tomorrow March 23, and 24
sponsored by
Park Community College Parkville, Missouri.
Pannellennie Association Interfraternity Council
MIRIAM FRIED Violinist
The University of Kansas Concert Series Presents
Sat. March 24 8:00 p.m.
University Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved for $4, $3.50 or 3
KU students admitted FREE with ID
Call 913/864-3982 for reservations
Calendar of Events
Listings subject to change - call us for information.
Calendar of Events
Wed. March 21
Thurs. March 22
New Grass Batch / Normale Krab
KEDGER NITE w/WatP / Ride Bidim Band
Fri. March 23
Sat. March 24
Sat. March 24
Tue. March 27-28 **10* Grand Prize Pool Tournament!**
Chris Fitzsir & K.Y. 102 present Gran Max & Wakefield
TWE, Win 10*
Tues.-W. March 27-2
W-Th. March 28-29
Wed. March 28
Thurs. March 29
5.0 EARLY 20:00
W.-Th. March 28
Wed. March 28
Wed. May 2
Fri. May 4
Sat. May 12
F-S May 18-19
1*100% Grand Prize Backgammon Tournament
1*000% KNIFE NYLON Road
REGULER W/ USED PARTS
Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee
Gary Burton Quartet
Gary Burton Quartet Pat's Blue Riddim Band
Jan Hammer w/Dry Jack
East Break
Pott County Pork & Bean Band
Lamont Cranston Cole Tuckey
Earl Scruggs w/Skunk Valley Boys
Asleep At The Wheel Albert Collins
The Lawrence Opera House (913)842-6930
642 Mass. St
---
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 23, 197!
15
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods services, and employment
All travel accommodations are provided by the AMING
Affordable Accommodation Unit (AAU) at AMING.
AMING is a private hospital affiliated with AMING.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
time times times times times
15 words or
words $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word 01 02 03 04 05
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
ERRORS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
III Flint Hall 864-4358
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These are used in the office or person calling the URGING bounties offers at 865-273-4100.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Zun practice daily 6 p.m. introductory tables
(200) 431-5780, zun@zunmedical.org
record monthly 10 April 1st A.U.F. Awesome Charge
(200) 431-5780, awondercharge@zunmedical.org
You can buy Michael Herl's "Dispatches" in paperback for $3.95 at any bookstore. At the Bookshop, Quintrils Fire Market, you can buy Quantrell for $4.50. Which would you have? **3-23**
**Powertrain, Arm & Taxes** The Nerd for a New York Business **The Neck of a New York Business** the anewer at Hire Hilrich Barney Tracy, Inc. 817-277-3650 bri@hilrichbarney.com **3-8-3-7**
Backgammon Tournament. March 25 4:00 p.m.
Backgammon. By Omega Flat Platinum.
Round Robin
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
2.1 AP 2HR and efficiency, Close to campus, Utility,
9257, Clean, quiet, and comfortable.
9258
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
For rent only. 300 sq ft. unfurnished, from $19. Two laundry rooms, large master bath, enclosed pool. On this road, INDOOR REHABILITATED POOL. Offer valid to 824-443 or at 234 Frontier. Next door.
SUNDANCE
APARTMENTS
Visit our display units today
811. 5972
You can play games online.
You Have a Touch of Java.
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking, meet
rooms. Phone 812-35767 or near town. Phone
812-35767
cares:
Call Mark Schneider for apart-
Still looking for a place to call home? Nahmisha Samson, 762-504-3931, nahmishasamson@yahoo.com. The master of the year. Stun by and look over us. We will be here with you. We will be here with you to give you all the details we will be here with you at Nahmisha HALL, 1800 Nahmisha Hall, 843-525-3931, NahmishaHall.org.
Call Mark Schneider for apartments and rentals, 843-3212 or 842-1111.
Finally a Lawrence landlord who
Sparoon 2 bedroom (AP1) 11h, hotel scarpet-
cart, kitchen, kitchen. $250.00, room -
842-1697
Salvatee Southbridge, juniper-August-1 2 BILL-
furnished. $312 mo. Call 842-4883
Must submit furnished and bedroom apartments
with a valid ID card. Contact us at:
175.200-ultilities. 841-382. 843-368, or
mail us: ultilities@hospice.org
For safety, system must reduce crew, team, and equipment noise. Furnish with fire extinguisher, alarm clock, radio, water cooler, lamp, and fire suppression device. Drill hole for fire sprinkler, fire sprinkler cover, fire sprinkler pipe, fire extinguisher, fire alarm, fire alarm clock, and fire alarm cover.
HOUGHTON PLACE: ITS *FULL*-BUT--We have 16 and 18 lessons to teach us. We will have 12 lessons in the summer term that apart from our class we will do at home and -checked 240 Alhama, 841,577 and 323
For Rest. 2 Bt ARt. Free Laundry, BD Hunique.
2 Bf from Bi. 841-60309 or 841-82377
3-26
Jayhawkwater TOWERS Apartments
1603 West 15th
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our
DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
Substit: 2 bedroom house. Walker-driver, before 5:48. Walker-driver, after 5:48. Call 845-7244 to bring him in.
Roommate - wanted. 2 hr / H 7 Bath & Washer &
Bathroom - needed. 1 hr / H 7 Bath & Washer &
2 utilities. Caitlin Niles 842-167. 3:20
Submit for summer one year old Studio Art Adopt
class to campus. carpeted. 814-268-3777.
clay, wood, canvas.
NICE 1 BEDROOM AGEMENT, furnished, close to
441-849-0599, available immediately, 3-27
SUNDSICE
NOW LEASING
Visit our furnished display unit today 8
All New & Contemporary
8415255·842.4455
Apartments Completely furnished studio on
BR. Convenience located at 71 Florida
west west of the Sanctuary on KU Bus Hue
Mark 1 & 11 Apartments renting for summer residence in New York City. 11 apartments 7 min walk to campus, 11 additional apartment rooms 7 min walk to campus, balconies off parking parade, displacement on parking lot, car park. For additions in 1031 Mine Apt. 23, 842-9025
Sibliece 2 bedroom apartment Great Location
Sibliece 3 bedroom apartment Available April 15th
842-670-792 or 842-670-892
Christian Housling Now and Summer. Close to
Chicago. Mail us: 842-6025 between 2
8:00 p.m. Keep trying.
Two-bedroom basement apartment Unfurnished
two bedrooms, monthly utilities paid $235
deposit 242-666
Summer sublease; one bedroom furnished South-
ridge apartment $1000. Call 841-6396 - 026
Away from home, bring with map of airport,
airport codes, airlines, and departure dates.
Arrival on June 1, 2023. Call #1-800-777-6645.
Wait, the "1-800-777-6645" is actually "1-800-777-6645".
The prompt says "Maintain the original document structure."
So it's just a line of text.
I'll output it as a single line.
Library apartments for rent. 3 bedrooms, 2 full
bedrooms, 1 half bedroom, and a sunroom (immediately).
Please call莱贝瑞·Richardson at
415-687-2500 for rent. Fell built both plus balcony.
Havenly, quiet, comfortable. Havenly,
and Hillfield. 822 Mass. #822-391-6111
Beautiful 2 bedroom bathroom at Minneapolis St. for two rent, middle, old D.A. and new kitchen. $135,000. Call (618) 747-2921.
x20 Mass. 843-8575
******************************************************************************
ENTERTAINMENT
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
TONIGHT!
DAILY
701 Mass.
GUIDE
MINGLES DISCO ONTIGHT!
Membership valid only $10.00
Remain at 2280, 6th
Remain at 7540,
842-7030
CHICKEN LIPS
TONIGHT!
MIKE VAX
SATURDAY NIGHT!
GRAND OPENING
TONIGHT!
QUANTRILLS
SALOON
GRAN MAX
ALWAYS great looking ladies
Laurence
7th & Mass.
--graphic arts experience to help
$1 PITCHERS TILL 6:00
$1.50 PITCHERS TILL 12:00
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization makes sense to you through exam preparation 31. For exam preparation, *New Analysis of Western Civilization* is available, now at Towne Learning.
FOR SALE
BIGK
Alternator, starter and generator. Roebilbach
MOTIVE, ELECTRIC. 843-2160, 2000-W, 90th. 10 h.
MOTIVE, ELECTRIC. 843-2160, 2000-W, 90th. 10 h.
Memberships Avail.
Fender Modelling Bass Guitar with strings, cord,
binding, tuners and covers. Very good condition.
Made in USA. 45-9260.
602 Schoeners at Louise's every Friday from 2
till 5. 4-3
Sunspeed - Run glases are our specialty. Non-reflective
solar panels, seasonally rated, seasonally
2012 Mass. 843-767-9000
WHY RENT? When you could own this beautiful room, you would not want it to be left behind. Like new appliances, disposable air fresheners, washers/dryers, 5 amps alarm, skirted and curtained windows, storage building free, tree tug garden, storage building free, fire escape.
MON-THURS 7-9:00
WEDNESDAY 8-10:00
TUESDAY 7-9:00
.50* Schoolers & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1-7:00
DRINK & DRAWN
EVER FRIDAY
708 Mass.
78 Toyota Celica GT Liftback, AM PM stereo,
power mirror, power window, power door lock,
alarm clock, 411-647-0300 before 11:59 am or after
11:59 a.m.
1972 Honda, Reliable Tran. New battery, pliers
& Chain latch to 1 year old $300.68; 400-540
calls for $150.00.
If you're healthy, you are happy. We have health
assurance. If you're sick or injured,
non of Bond Curve, will More
3-22
BOKONON IMPORTS, LTD Organic aluminum
plastic bottles and heat insulated plastic
target bags in the midwest. The largest
supplier of these products is Bokonon.
IMPORTS, LTD
Make someone at home happy with KU溶液. Make sure you have waders, Round Compression Drug Strips, 80% MILK.
TEACH A408 emuette dock, decked with TEACH
Tape deck, CT-F700, all new dynamic level.
Blank pen level, Dolly 5004-681-2-32
Blank pencil level, Dolly 5004-681-2-32
1973 Pinto AM FM myz player player. Recently
1985 Pinto AM FM myz player player.
1986 $139 Please 842-137-87
2-26
7b yellow makeup Makeup AT, PS, AC Diane
8b blue make up Makeup AT, PS, AC Diane
One more extra clean 3.27
3.27
Watch for trak on Sundays selling produce.
Foods 30, 10 & Illinois. Also wood creates
WATERDEN MATTHESSS $39.98 3 year warrant
WHITE LIGHT 704 Mass 13826 128
WATERDEN MATTHESSS $39.98 3 year warrant
WHITE LIGHT 704 Mass 13826 128
Mastoring 1966 eve 4.3. Compiled correctly.
Mounting 1966 eve 4.3. Conditional restored.
106 stack, main condition (316) 286-4577
106 stack, main condition (316) 286-4577
Sailfish港 470 l 15 f, race boat, Mast sell (316) 385-6177 (all)
3-27
Ultra linear 200x-excellent sounding 3-way
speakers • $80 or best after a call. Pater 412
955-663-5777
Violin (2) for sale Reconditioned—Ready to
play. Phone 843-750-329
1972 750 Norton Commando, combat engine, 12
boots. 842-300. glove, gloves, glove belt, gloves.
$150.00, $42.00, $20.00
Volkswagen tire for sale. New $3.49 4 plk. BFU's to
$2.00 each. Used Stonehill, 3:27-7
75 Tran Am, Custom built 450 HO master机,
650 HP FM store, stores with offer.
Bed-841-7825 82-FT
12. Firetread V8, automatic, power steering, air
excellent mechanical condition; 901-843-6062
Dale Ringer Cleaver | Senate Speaker
David Perdue | House Speaker
Brian Sanders | 2016 with his government budget. Ray Zwart | 2017
Mike Cain | 2018
Toyota & Daimler owners, New 560-13 at 4 p.m.
(222) 789-5268 or info.toyota.com/sales
Toyota & Daimler owners, New 560-13 at 4 p.m.
(222) 789-5268 or info.toyota.com/sales
Used sports car radial tires reduced "Cone" in
heating. Used outdoor equipment - make an air
Rockshoe水库 929 Musk
Brand new canoe, and Pioneer X-track Dalley
recording unit. Call 844-2642
3-26
Raleigh, 10 speed bike in good condition, 26 in
with lock and handle. Call Scott NA84-2916
1974 Mustang II. 4 cylinder, 4 speed, AC, Exceler-
tion, and Low Airback Blackhawk
Warrant Table 9 months old in regular condition
warrant pad Anti Retail. Call Scott 845-231-9900
78 Horns Express Excellent condition, booked.
included: K1-7644 or K1-8320 3.29
VW Squareback, 1971 Excellent condition $80
magnificent or trade with big motorcycles;
$50-$60
Fiat Abarth, 1970 Excellent condition $25-$35
Marriage RH-87 LT, 2t for 25', SLR, with
bundle, little used, $635, RH-82-210,
with bundle.
Bicycle. Eleventh custom frame, 60 cm (12 in).
eclipsed, £35, 84-374, 21-40. 3-28
Dining table, £39, 84-374, 21-40. 3-28
169 Hover 2000 TC $700 1615 AIA 2000 Coarse
part, included part) 845 AIA 235.0 4.0 g pm
bonded
Caseyite Deck Lakvatte HR-DS6 top lanelling
caseyite deck lakvette HR-DS6 top lanelling
material with 95% peak indifference £275 per unit
2 Custom made speaker 18, 10 inch speakers,
4 inch speaker 16, 10 inch speakers.
Excellent for hearing or decor. Techniques 100 watt.
Rechargeable battery.
FOUND
HELP WANTED
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS needed for Upparward Bond募资 Program delivery and July 15th training. Apply with high debt and staff member; salary of $2000 plus formation at 209 Carroll or call us at (843) 768-6350.
A key耳 corner of 9th & Miss. Call Janet at
842-609, after 5.
Ring found 2nd floor women's bathroom. Learned
Hall Claim in 2018 Learned. 3-26
J. D. Bracelet next Potter "Ribb" on bracelet with insertion "HIP" on inside Call 842-605-475
SUMMER GIENTATION STUDENT STAFF POINT
for the Summer Orientation student staff. For
the summer orientation be sure to the advertisement in the university paper to be sure you are not missing it. And records, 10 Strong Hall. An equal opportunity employer.
Part-time business opportunity. You choose the
phone. Call 412-308-61 for 6 p.m.
3:27
Now taking application for Fountain & Grill
dining room, apply at person in at Vistula Restaurant,
1876.
Summerville Johns. National Park Co., 21 Parks, 5,000
Mountain Co., 16 E. Ferrywood, Kailahun, Kipling
Mountain Co., 16 E. Ferrywood, Kailahun, Kipling
NUMBER DONOTMITE COUNSELORS needed
for Bach Program. LIVE on a NU
destination campus. Resume to:
Jones and Salmary $9000 per
month for 2 yrs. Send resume to:
843-617-4335 Applicaton deadline March 9. Call Mr.
Wilson at 843-617-4335.
EXOTIC JOI! LOAK TAHOE, CALIFORNIA
Little expense, inviolate that $770-$400 anur-
mium. Rustic cabinets, vinyl flooring, river rafts & more.
Jacuzzi, sunken pools, river rafts, QX box,
60129. Saratoga County, California 95381.
Attractive, aggressive,
intelligent, vivacious woman for part-
time backcacking and pool tournaments
and have knowledge of both games.
Excellent pay and fringe benefits.
Wanted
Call Jon 842-6930
Phone subject to request. Portable, about 10 hrs.
available. Supported devices: qualified precision
phone C; Windows at 843-425 or
support@xora.com
Wanted.
Creative individual with
graphic arts experience to help
design posters part time. En
cellent pay and fringe benefits.
Call Jon 842-6930
Delivery Deliveries. Needled. Salaries
commission
4-30 b/d
6-222 b/d
Payroll Periods
4-122 b/d
Mechanically inclined student to work in small online shop Demo summer work can arrange classes from 12 weeks to 34 weeks. Classes may include holiday commute with skill classes between 24 weeks and 163 days of summer. Scott Schoen is a graduate of 34 weeks. Scott
One of the Maithews' oldest adding and storage facilities, in now taking summer applications for the position, is the only office available to apply. Apply in person at 12:00 noon. W. 62rd St. E (913) 631-4400; Fax 320-3589.同期兼职 Employer
Wanted ...
Assertive Cocktail Waitress
for exciting, stimulating, adventurous
club experience. $2.00 plus tips. Must
be 21.
Call 842 6930.
ask for Jon.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Enter the exciting world of Health and Nutrition Excellent career make your own home. We want people with a passion for health. Call: 817-265-3272; 6:00am to 9:00pm.
Student Photographic Admission 20.750 $*; June-appointed April 1, 1979 $1,875 $1,875 $900 PTE, graphic artist. Must have extensive background and training in graphic art and/or larger graphical performance to apply. Requires a Bachelor's degree and 60色 developing, strong drawing, origination, presentation, field fundation and formation to be admitted to Aviation A - Cattail West Lakeside For more information, please contact
Delivery Drivers Needed
Flexible Hours
Apply in Person
After 4:00 pm
PYRAMID PIZZA
call 842-3232
or
NEMESIS-LEAD COMPUTER OPERATOR-CNA
The computer service for a business requires a job with an office environment that includes the following: responsibility of computers & assistant services; financial operations; Office 2012 (Asst Admin); Office 442-8322; Financial Operations 2012 (Asst Admin); Office 442-8322.
Sold admiral for quadruplete Tympson, from
the University of Pennsylvania. He served in the theory
welfare afterward, research in the theory
of theology and philosophy.
The Information and Research Department of the City of Atlanta is responsible for personnel in work with a wide range of computer science professionals. We have working knowledge of computer programming in various languages, including Java, C++, and Python. An IBM maintenance and the later in-mobile leaders in geographic data processing and computer systems. We need a trouble-worthy workforce to participate into other new areas. The City offers an array of job opportunities in geography including Spring, 1979 graduates and research, Department, Municipal-Government (610) An Equal Opportunity Employer
Wanted dependable people to work most hours,
willing to work in person at or near
Bartimun, 177 W. 60th St. 2-27
Biochemical Research, Assistant-Pharmacology and Technology at dba required, major in biochemistry with 5 years of experience have at least 6 years of experience in chemical process bioinformatics and neurobiology processes bioinformatics and neurobiology processes and therefore require a research, technical and entrepreneurial background. Required earnings $8,900 to $12,600 per year,drawing upon work from UTSA (1912) 864-6102 The University of Kansas Emerald Opportunity - Affirmative Action Employer
One of the Milwaukee's oldest nursing and discharge hospitals offers a 24-hour DOT requirements. Hospitals need only offer drivers and balances. Will qualify confirmed DOT requirements. Hospitals need only offer drivers or balances (913) 653-1400. Opportunity may be available for qualified nurses or K9s.
Drivers wanted. Must be 18, have own carport,
driving license, and commute at Dominesa Plaza
and Commission Apply at Dominesa Plaza, 230 N. 5th St. in San Diego.
A student assistant for mini quadratification student needed for Mont. afternoons and West. winters. Assisting the student to school (thus own vault). Helping with math lessons. Answering phone calls 4423 or 810-1011 during and after events. 3:30
Quotient the space, time, location, and workload of each job. If there is a large amount of data, use NLP to split it into smaller chunks. Multiply the chunks by batch size. Batch size is the number of data that should be processed in one run of the algorithm.
LOST
10, old female cat black, grey & white stripe
12, wild fox, yellow cap, grey
13, Wichita wolf, yellow cap, grey
14, 854-3416, skin, 91-809-7624
15, gray fur, black eyes, 91-809-7624
MISCELLANEOUS
PRESIDIY BINDING COOPERATIVE The House of
BINDING, HUNTING andCOPYING
of Laws, and eating and enjoying Law.
Let us keep the house of laws fresh.
NOTICE
BISSPT THE DRAFT) Roll national advertiser
sheets for the draft and review of the
instructor's materials for a literature society.
(The draft is not yet complete.)
Extra money may be earned by being at times over the weekend, but not in the evenings. Please contact Kristen Marchis of 800-362-6751 for assistance with remaining tickets.
DEARED WHY LOTTERY? FORKANKAR
Assisted Nurses of Sand Travel 862-842-8123
Korea will for 18 years tender to the Arica Fire Station in Chile an extremely good and durable great Team of Engineers, with extra training and sometimes a great Team of Mechanical Engineers. The tender will be for Korea of the Arica base; Friday, March 24th at 7 p.m.; for the Arica base; Saturday, March 25th at 7 p.m. Advances are invited. Please bring your resume.
J. HOOO HOOKSELLER. The forest school is booked in the Midwest. We handle hard-to-reach schools. Our staff of 20 backpackers are well organized and in excellent condition. We outbuild a full search service for visitors. (Tuesday-Saturday, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. Sun.) (Friday-Saturday, 1:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m. Sun.) (Monday-Saturday, 10:00 p.m.-Lacewine, 8:00 p.m.-8:11 p.m.)
841-604-329
Do you like films, museums, exposers, outdoor activities, or dining with them? The Dundonian volunteers to teach developmentally disabled students the necessary tools independent of involvement in the program will be a very important resource you would like to share. Your email: b423-0288 or b423-0691 (for information). 3-27
Background Teamwork March 25, 2016 (4 p.m.)
Supported by Dana Gay and The Foster Foundation
PERSONAL
the Schoeners and $10 Pitchers every Friday afternoon (2-5) at Lofosie's bar.
BHKN HIRE SHOP in new map! 200 Richland
Lakefront, Burlington. Phone: (847) 569-1644,
quick visit: www.bhhnaresearch.com/Vernier/816442
and quick visit: www.bhhnaresearch.com/Vernier/816442
FOX HELL SURGERY CLINIC. Aberration up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy tests, Birth Control Consultant. Tubal Ligation. For appointment call: 954-280-3600, 498-2100, Overland Park, Ks.
Today 2-6 p.m.
50¹ cans & bottles $1 pitchers the
HARBOUR LITES "A first class dive"
HARVARD SPECIAL 6 & 8 Jr. Mar. Tues. and Wed.
HARVARD SPECIAL 6 & 8 Jr. Mon. Tues. and Wed.
MAGNOLIA DOG TREAT 2 & 3 (150 pts) at
Saturday. 150 pts on Sunday.
FOX HILLE SURGERY CLINIC A local clinic of 106, 109 and 112
857-374-4000 foxhille.com FOXHILLE 857-374-4000
Foxhille 857-374-4000 www.foxhille.com
Gay-Ledian counseling referral now handled
through HTI to M46, 846-256 or Headquarters,
M46, 256
EASY EXTRA INFLOWS $500 $1,990 Stuffing Funds
DEJERTE ENTERPRISES $250 2,590 Stuffing Funds
DEJERTE ENTERPRISES $250 2,590 Stuffing Funds
FREE GOOD AID: Naturally vitamin, mineral
& functional & D protein powder, in a
thick, creamy blend. Use it with
it and your cell feeling GOOD, aged.
Call 800-245-1777
FREE BETWEEN: 8:00 to 8:30 pm.
Take a Mind Contest! Come in the Harbour, we will hit it (4)
Something old, something new, something bizarre.
Friday Evening at 7:00 FM Radio Drama
2-36
Evening at 7:00 FM Radio Drama
2-36
Steve Shive Sig. Ke. Man. Will you go to our
form if you are? Annie's kids. * 3-23
Piratul. The weather is beautiful, and so are
the times these times you'll have to lay in.
-Piratul-
3:26
To whom ever took my camera at Angie's php
guest room, I would like 4 words in the comments:
questions: 820-1209
Get a bit cavity? Come to the Harbour well.
3-23
it will
FY1- Would you like some tips on how to mail
the information Center's FY1- mail, and the
information Center's FY2- mail, see
To the Outcouse Move, Mourk, Diceen, and Mean Jean. We enjoyed all the games, we hope you did too, we'll do it the same at KUS! Lorel, who was White, Lightning, Snow Day, and Condor. 3-23
Come in and match the Indians to Oscar Fleischer.
You can play with radiographs and radio
signals on the HARBOR LITES.
WIN A MOPED Register at your Kansas Union Bookstores
AMA UNITE: mindy; marya's tomorrow? Agate-3-
2villes? call: Caitl
Make a joint or two at 7:14 in Backgammon. Join to ninth night at the Patrons. 3-23
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16
Fridav.March 23,1979
University Daily Kansan
Salaries
From page one
Edith Black, assistant dean to the School of Social Welfare, said she also used national figures as a guide to graduate salaries.
"The national figures may run a little higher than what graduates will really make, but that is the closest estimate I can make," she said.
Charles Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, said the average beginning salary for an architecture graduate gradient range from $8,000 to $12,000.
Kahn also said enrollment in the school had increased enormously in the past three
"Out of all the schools in KU, I'm sure that architecture has the highest percentage for
"The job opportunity is open," Kahn said, "but as far as getting into the school here—we have to turn away two students for every one that is admitted."
THE SCHOOL OF FINE Arts has a stable enrollment, Jean Mattsion, administrative
"We try to take all the students that we can and we encourage the art and music majors to be better on to graduate school—job offers are better." Mattson said.
Mattison said she heard no complaints about a lack of jobs, except in piano careers. "It just seems like everyone plays the piano, and that limits the job offers," she said.
"Salaries do vary, though," she said,
"I'm sure that you won't find a set standard in any school at KU. Just an average of $10,000 all we can guide the students with."
Although Terry Carswell, placement director for the School of Liberals Arts and
--unfair to set an average salary, so we try to follow national figures more."
Sciences, does not keep a record of salaries,
experience, average beginning, salary
projections.
CLASS OF 1978
Carrawell middle fewer students in liberal arts and sciences go on to graduate school.
"There are almost 50 departments within this school." Carswell said. "It may be
ESTIMATED AVERAGE ANNUAL BEGINNING SALARY
SALARY
BUSINESS
MHA...17,832
MS...$16,488
BS Accounting...$14,888
BS Administration...$12,940
*ENGINEERING ... $17,628
*LAW... $15,693
PHARMACY ... $15,000
SOCIAL WELFARE
REPRESENTATIVE NAME:
MA $14,500
BS $10,000
ARCHITECTURE
MS ... $13,000
BS ... $10,500
FINE ARTS
MFA Music and Art $13,000
BS Occupational Therapy $10,000
LIBERAL ARTS SCIENCES $12,744
*JOURNALISM $10,600
*Education $ 9,250
*These schools' salaries are averages of all separate departments.*
DANA LEIBENGOOD, assistant dean of the School of Journalism, said the highest starting salary, $18,300, was paid to a KU graduate and graduate in the new-editorial sequence.
Leibengood had news-editorial majors made the highest salary, at an average of $14,900. He also said photographers and salesmen were paid the lowest average salary, $8,580.
"Of course, the salaries all vary. There is not a set standard to follow." he said.
From nage one
Liquor...
"As a matter of fact, the bill will decrease
linear consumption," he said.
Most Kansas clubs play 1¼ ounces of liquor for each drink, he said, compared to seven-eighths of an ounce in most bars in "wet" states.
He also said club members who had only one or two coupons left at the end of the night might "drink them up" rather than carry them around.
Miller said adoption of the bill would increase tourism in Kansas. He read statements on Kansas liquor laws from the governor, City, Kan., hotel to substantiate his point.
"I don't think alcoholism is a big joke," he said.
ONE VISTOR said the laws were "totally void of intelligence," and another said she was planning to move from Kansas City, Kan., to Kansas City, Mo., because of the war.
The statements drew chuckles from some legislators, but the Rev. Richard Taylor, a longtime opponent of alcohol use, said he was not amused.
Taylor, director of 'Kansas for Life at Its Best," an anti-drug lobby, said Kansas had the lowest per capita consumption of liquor and wine in the country because of its
restrictive laws, and that these laws should not be loosened.
He said the incidence of alcoholism in kansas was less than half the national average.
"I hope the proponents of the bill today are right when they say it won't lead to increased alcohol consumption," he said, "but they will make more money if they sell more of their drug, so I question their opinion."
Handicap . . .
From page one
ministration will pay $137.88 for the lereciation.
The administration also is paying for the rented van, Hogan said.
TURVEY SAID the Student Assistance
workgroup is working on plans for the service
(oversee it).
"We'll be spending a lot of time in the next few weeks to get the plans finished," he said. "We want to avoid the last minute of the bus service that we had to do this."
Graduates . . .
school experiencing an increase in recruiting
From page one
Robert Metzler, placement director in the School of Engineering, said more companies were seeking interviews this year with KU engineering students.
"Although we don't keep exact figures, I suspect that the number of companies is up."
Gomez said he had been meeting with Hogan, Ambler, Turvey, Donald Alderson, dean of student services; Steve McMurry, director of the KU on Wheels program; and Marjorie Hamilton, chairman of the KU information board, about the future of the system.
Metzler said the latest College Placement Council Salary Survey reported that the number of jobs offered to students with a bachelor's degree in engineering went up 40 percent from September 1977, to February 1978.
METZLER SAID these figures were roughly indicative of the demand at the KU
the survey also said engineering job offers accounted for approximately 61 percent of all offers made to students with bachelor's degrees.
While the Schools of Engineering and Business can measure their demands in part by campus interviews, the School of Architecture cannot.
"Anyone who's involved in making a product is going after the engineering process."
The continuing high demand for engineering students, Metzler said, could be correlated with the advance of technology in society.
Charles Kahn, dean of the School of Ar-
architecture and Urban Design, said architecture students usually went to the companies instead of the companies interviewing on campus.
Still, Kahn said, the market looks good for the architecture student.
"I THINK THE opportunity for architecture graduates is very good this
Kahn said most architecture students already had made their contacts and were familiar with the campus.
"I'm pretty confident that the majority are set up with something by now," he said. "Those that haven't yet will probably have something in the next few weeks."
Kahn said many students stayed in Kansas and Missouri, but some have found jobs in cities such as Houston, Chicago and San Francisco.
Dana Leibengood, assistant dean in the School of Journalism, said the school's 270 May graduates were facing a promising job market.
"It looks as if it should be another good year for May graduates," he said. "The market is strong and the placement will be good."
Leibenged said jobs listed through the school were a good measure of the strength of the workforce.
HE SAID THE NUMBER of listings so far this year was close to last year's total's
"The number of listings would indicate that the market should be favorable," he said.
"We are pushing them for assistance," Gomez said. "They agree that we should not have to fund the whole thing, I'd like to see the service become a permanent thing."
Campus recruiters usually interview in the professional schools, he said, and want them to be familiar with the campus.
The service was provided in a test program that ran from Jan. 17 to Mar. 9. On Mar. 8 the Student Senate Executive Committee, in an emergency meeting, allocated $952 to fund the service until Mar. 31.
Although interviews are an accurate measure of the demand in some disciplines, Geissler said he would caution against reading too much into them.
"In the technical areas you find more campus interviews," he said. "The student with the broader background has wider knowledge of the job on his part to seek out the interviews."
DRINK & DROWN
Gay Services of Ks. Present
March 24, 8:30 PM-1:00 AM
ROCKY HORROR SPRING FORMAL
Movie after the dance Costume prizes.
49¢ for any menu item
One day only -- as a special
thanks to our customers
Sat., March 24, 1979
TACO JOHN'S
It's Tacornific!
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Today 1-7 PM
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Free coffee & doughnuts All singles & re-marrieds welcome!
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At the Western Sizzlin Steak House 2620 Iowa St. in Lawrence
SINGLE ADULT FELLOWSHIP OF EVANGELICALS (SAFE)
From Kansas City's Youth For Christ—TV Channel 30—Outstanding Gospel Singing
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$100,000 fund provides aid for Clark County students
The first financial aid fund exclusively for KU students from Clark County was established recently through a $100,000 bequest.
The Kansas University Endowment Association received the bequest from the estate of KU alumni Ivan and Letitia Burket.
The $100,000 gift established the Ivan and Letta Burket Education Fund, named in honor of Burket, a physician who died in 1977, and his wife, who died in 1971.
Mary Margaret Simpson, public relations manager for the Endowment Association, said yesterday that students at the university were also would be eligible for a scholarship.
Larry Heeb, vice president of the Endowment Association, said the fund would provide financial assistance to unaccented employees at Clark County in southwestern Kansas.
"The determination will be made locally and will be based on the student's financial need and academic background," Simpson said.
Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid at KU, said a financial aid committee would accept applications.
Students must apply for financial aid to be eligible for the scholarships, which will be awarded beginning this fall. Rogers said that although February 15 was the application priority date for the fall semester, students could still apply.
Simpson said the amount of the scholarships would be determined on an individual basis. Awards will be granted from high schools in Clark County.
Dr. Burke's generous gift will have a substantial impact on the lives of countless patients.
The bequest was made possible by Burket, who died at the age of 89. He earned a bachelor's degree in 1910 and a master's degree in 1911 from KU. Two years later, he received his M.D. from Harvard University. For 38 years, Burket worked in Clark College as an associate and general practitioner. He and his wife established the first hospital in Ashland.
Students also must get recommendations from three teachers to be eligible for admission.
Rogers said, "The gift is fairly large, perhaps among the top 20 jobs we have
سألني أبني ابن إبراهيم
أيضاً أبني ابن إبراهيم
أيضاً أبني ابن إبراهيم
دلت لي في السؤال ثم قمت بإشرب في الماء وذلك كما قامت بها!
سيفة أبيها أبو بكر بن سفيان
أبو بكر أبو بكر بن سفيان
أبو بكر أبو بكر بن سفيان
بينهم المؤمنون ... دعا إلى جنة أن يكون البحار من ثمرة!
إذا فعلت على الناس قدم الأرض إلى القضاء في المسائل .
إذا كان كافرًا (أكثر ما يكن لهذه المسائل)، ومنه قضاء الشارع، أي أن
الأرض التي أقفلت بها مروراً، وأقفلت بها مروراً، وأقفلت بها مرورة.
وقد أخذت الرجل نصف 12/944 من مسافة إليه !
Hoch Auditorium
DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO TONIGHT?
De De
Check the Lawrence Daily Entertainment Guide in the Classifieds! Save it for weekend reference.
OMICRON DELTA KAPPA Senior Honor Society
ODK
Is now accepting applications for membership. All interested students should pick up applications at the alumni office (main office of the Kansas Union) or at 214 Strong Hall. Applications must be returned by 5:00 pm, Monday, April 9.
Sunshine
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BARCELONA CALADR
A frog reading a book under the clouds.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas
KANSAN
Magic vs. Bird in NCAA action
Vol.89,No.117
Monday, March 26.1979
See stories page six
SUA charges promoters $2,000 for the services it provides, which include ushers, ticket sales and distribution, promotion and a stage crew.
He said he thought KU had been chosen for the concert because the field house was large and the fee charged to the promoters was comparatively low.
Ticket sales for Doobies break record
Shaw said a sellout crowd at the concert would make Lawrence, a recruiting director for promoters. Promoters look for college campuses with large populations and large numbers of students.
"Some promoters look at Lawrence as being a secondary or tertiary market. We don't want it to be enough to a primary market like Kansas City to draw people from there." Shaw
By JULIA GOPLERUL and KATHY KASE Staff Reporters
Student Union Activities has sold 5,000 tickets for the April 27 Doebert Brothers show at the University of Kansas. Students can day ticket sales for a concert at the university of Kansas, according to Alan Shankar.
"We've never had any sell show in Allen Field House, but if any one would, I'd give this one the best chance," he said. "The nature can only lead to good things."
A sellout crowd of 15,999 in Allen Field House could bring better concert to KU and provide funds for a free outdoor concert this spring. Shaw said Friday.
About 20 persons camped outside of the Kansas Union Thursday night to be first in line at the SUA office to buy the tickets, which sell for $7 and $8. By 4 Friday morning more than 200 people walked to Tickets went on sale at 10 a.m. morning.
About 750 people bought $24,000 worth of tickets Friday at the SUA office, according to Shaw. Ticket sales at Kansas City outlets opened Saturday.
Shaw said, "On this show we discovered our fee was really low and that we could make more money for the students by charging the promoters more. For this show, we are charging a rate of $5,000 for receipts after $55,000, which are their estimated expenses if we sell out, we could make $8,400."
Coach pumps iron,weight program
Staff Reporter
By BARBARA JENSEN
If KU's strength and conditioning coach is as successful with the football team as he has been with himself, the players should be ready to win the Orange Ball next year.
The coach, Keith Kephart, has won Mid-West Regional, Central States and Central USA body-building contests and was Mr. Carroll after he began training for the competition.
"The only content I entered and didn't win the Mr. America in Cincinnati last year. Kepler said Saturday. "But that we have done is to quill four contests in two years is quite a few."
Kephart, 34, was hired Feb. 1 to replace Ron Hubbard, who resigned to be an assistant football coach at the University of Colorado. Kephart will put KU's football players on a twice-weekly weight lifting program next week.
He said he had been competitive bodybuilding in 1975 when Manuel Perry, who does stunts for "The Incredible Hulk," suggested they train together. Perry was living in Ames and Kephart was there as the athletic conditioning coach at Iowa State University.
always hungry and started getting a little irritable."
He said the high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet allowed him to eat only meat, eggs, a few vegetables and some fresh fruit.
"I was eating about 100 pieces of chicken a day and the said, 'And we call all the al'-couleeners were. We've Chicken Delight for lunch and eat about 14 pieces of chicken, leaving a big plate
"THEN WE'D GO to another place for supper and do the same thing. Sometimes I'd eat chicken three times a day, but I never got tired of it."
Kephart said he took vitamins and minerals to supplement his diet.
Kephart said he might enter more contexts and that he still trainee six days a week.
"I was taking 80 alfafla pills a day, plus all the other vitamins and minerals because there were so many foods I couldn't eat," he said.
GOLD'S
GYM
VENICE, CALIF.
Staff photo by CHRISTOOD
Pumpin' iron
THE CONDITIONING programs for KU athletes are similar to the one Kephart used, but the athletes do not train to such an extent, he said.
"Here, you're training for a particular sport, not just body-building. You have to be as fit as possible."
He said he had been working mainly with the football team because the sport embodyed his passion.
Most of the football players are enrolled in a conditioning class and will continue conditioning during the summer. Kephart will begin a maintenance program in the fall.
The conditioning class emphasizes cardiovascular conditioning, quickness and agility, he said. The program involves an exercise run, rope-umping and exercises.
"Conditioning involves getting the heart rate up to at least 180 beats per minute." Kephart said. "As the heart conditions, you can lower your heart rate, some amount of stress at a low heart rate."
with Koohart, KU1's crouch and conditioning coach manages to find time to maintain his own weight training program while helping athletes with their stamina.
He said that in a good conditioning program, new muscle fibers replaced old ones.
"If a guy weighs 255, but a lot of that weight is fat, he can't handle his own weight, much less someone else's," he said. "You can tell by his weight, but convert it to lean body weight."
HE SAID the percent of body fat a person had was also important in conditioning.
rie said he was not worried about KU athletes not maintaining a good program.
"The attitude here is so positive that I'm not even concerned about the 2 percent or who aren't working," he said. "I refuse to tell them why we are working, helping those who are really working hard."
KEPHART SAID he had not worked with any of KU's women athletes yet, but that he expected to after the two departments merged.
"I've worked with women before, though, and they can condition just as well as men," she said.
But he said women could not build up as much muscle as men because they had less testosterone, a hormone that allows the growth of muscle fiber.
"I've seen women who are incredibly strong" he said, "but they just don't look like them."
Kephart said he had been working with the basketball team in conditioning and today he would begin working with the swimming team.
"But I'm here to work with all the athletes," he said. "I'm just waiting here for a coach."
Maneuver lengthens pot bill's life
Staff Reporter
Bv PATRICIA MANSON
A parliamentary maneuver by a Kansas House committee may ensure the survival of a bill reducing the penalties for marijuana possession.
"They are supposed to take action on Monday," Glover, the bill's sponsor, said. "If they don't, then we'll run the bill through the House."
The bill will go to the House for debate if a Kansas Senate committee does not act on it today, State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said yesterday.
The bill was submitted to both the Senate Judiciary and Senate Federal and State Affairs committees several weeks ago. The Senate Judiciary committee is scheduled to consider the bill today.
LAST YEAR, A similar marijuana bill was killed when the chairman of the Federal
and State Affairs Committee. State Sen.
Edward Kellan, R-Leavenworth, refused to
vote.
Last week, however, the House Judiciary Committee tacked the marijuana bill onto an unrelated bill that already had been passed by the Senate. If the House passes the amended bill, it will go straight to the floor, skipping the Senate committees.
Under the current law, the first conviction for possession is a class A misdemeanor. The penalty would remain the same no matter how many times a person was
Under th current law, the first conviction for possession is a class a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of $2,500, a year in jail or both.
THE SECOND conviction is a felony, punishable by up to 10 years in jail.
Glover has said that a law reducing penalties for marijuana possession would be less restrictive.
Glover said that 70 percent of all drug arrests in Kansas in 1977 had been for marijuana possession. He said that the new law would free law officials to concentrate on serious crimes against people and property.
Glover also said the state would save the $600,000 a year it spends enforcing the tax.
A bill reducing the penalties for marijuana possession was passed by the House in August.
Glover said last week that 50 of the representatives who had voted for the marijuana bill in 1977 were re-elected in November. He also said that about 10 of the new representatives said they would support the bill.
The House is scheduled to debate another bill concerning marijuana today
That bill, also sponsored by Glover, would allow manjuana use by glaucoma patients and by cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy.
THE BILL needs 63 votes to be passed in the House.
Research has shown that marjani slowns down the process of glaucoma, an eye disease that results in a gradual loss of vision. In an early marjani diagnosis it is also an effective painkiller.
New Mexico, Louisiana, Florida and Illinois have laws allowing the use of marijuana by glaucoma and cancer patients. Glover said.
This is the first time such a bill has been introduced in the Kansas Legislature. Glover said he was confident the House would pass the bill.
JRP to begin investigation of code violations
By LAURA STEVENS
Staff Reporter
Disciplinary action will be begun against some residents or J. R. Pearson Hall for violations of residence hall rules.
"The staff and I have decided to pursue this," Frilki说.
"They will not get off scot-free. We'll talk to each resident involved and tell him we found what the safety checks."
Froki said a safety check was made during the weekend of March 10 as part of the procedure for closing the hall. During the check, a list was made of rooms containing stairs and street signs. Froki said the signs could have been stolen.
Folkl said residents of six or seven rooms were on the list of violators. He said none of those on the list had been
"HOWEVER, NONE of these people will be kicked out," he said. "Actually, I can't say that. A resident might be, but that would not be my decision. That would come from the office of residential programs."
Froik said a student could be removed from the hall if he were found guilty of the charges.
"We will stay in touch with the staff and the staff would bring any further action to us. That is the channel of procedure," she said. "We will be advising. If they think it's necessary, they will bring it further."
Ruth Mikkelson, associate director of the office of residential programs, said the JRP staff would take the
Mikkelsen said any final action would be made on an individual basis.
Mikkelson also said any action taken would be within the University.
However, he said residents were not told that rooms would be checked by staff members.
Frokk said signs were posted in the hall before break instructing residents to unpack electrical appliances and set up their own power stations.
"Before we kick someone out of the hall, we have to be sure they were the ones in violation," she said.
He said the violations that were found were in the open and there had no search of closets or drawers.
"IN THIS CASE, we know we wouldn't have enough of a case to bring criminal action."
"Those were my instructions from Fed McEliberean." McEliberean, director of the office of professional programs.
"As far as I know, some people still don't know that a check was made," he said. "Why didn't they tell us ahead of time? A few people are upset that the list was made without their knowledge and that nobody has been contacted yet."
A JRP resident said yesterday that he did not know the safety check would be made.
McElhene业, the office of the office of residential programs,
was out of town and unavailable for comment yesterday.
THE RESIDENCE hall contract savs:
"The University has the right to assign, reassign or adjust occupancy of rooms and enter rooms when required."
The contract then refers to the Student Rights and Responsibilities Code.
Article 21 of the code says:
"When the institution seeks access to a student room in a residence hall to determine compliance with provisions of applicable multiple dwelling unit laws for improvement or repairs, the occupant shall be notified of such action not only by notification but also by entry without notice in emergencies where imminent danger to life, safety, health, or property is reasonably feared."
ARTICLE 19 savs:
"Students have the right of privacy as any other citizen and surrender none of these rights by becoming members of the academic community. These rights of students are limited to the educational, institutional relationship or residence hall contract shall expressly or implyly give the institution or residence hall officials authority to consent to a search of a student's room."
Frohls said he did not think it was a problem that residents had not been notified in advance of the safety
"It's been done in residence halls in the last six years.
"It's here done in JRP every time we close the bell," he said.
*mrs. harris in HRP every time we close the hall.* he said.
University officials on entering student rooms will be discussed at tonight's Hall Assembly meeting, according to Mark Fouts, AUHF vice president. The meeting will be at 7:15 in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union.
By TOM ZIND Staff Reporter
A nationwide drive to halt legislation that would revive the draft has made its appearance at the University of Kansas.
Petition opposes draft legislation
The local organization of the Students for a Libertarian Society is making plans for a petition drive from mid-April through late May, according to Bail Harb, Great Bend graduate student and spokesman for the campus group.
A national organization formed last year, the group is conducting the drive to win support for stopping a return to the draft. The national drive will start May 1 at high schools and other universities across the country.
Some legislators and military leaders have called for a return to the draft because of concern that the volunteer force might not be effective in a national emergency. The draft was dismantled in 1976.
Bahr said Saturday that the local group was trying to determine how much support the petition drive would get.
SEVEN BILLS calling for a return either to the draft or to draft registration are now before Congress.
The group published a notice in last Friday's Kansan asking people to contact about the petition.
Bahr said one of the bills would allow government access to university files. The government would use the files to get names and addresses of prospective recruits. That was not allowed under previous service acts, he said.
"What we're doing now is asking whether they would sign the petition and whether they would help in the petition drive," he said.
Bahr said the signed petitions would be sent to Kansas' U.S. senators and representatives.
THE PETITIONS state: "We the undersigned absolutely oppose any reinstatement of the draft, compulsory registration, or any program of forced national 'service.'"
Until the drive starts, the group will be distributing and posting anti-draft literature put out by the national organization, he said.
Bahr said the group favored dismantling the selective service system because it was a breach of individual freedom and rights.
Greg Palmer, Pittsburgh graduate student and a member of the local group, said, "We are opposed to any infringement upon individual rights to control one's own life. To extract a certain degree from a person's life is immoral."
Bahr said the organization thought the volunteer force was capable of defending the country.
"IN TIMES of emergency we'll find enough patriots," he said.
He said the national petition drive had the power to stop a return to the draft.
"You have to start somewhere," he said. "Whatever hope there is, it is the only hope. I think if we can get enough people interested, we can stop it."
2
Monday, March 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports
Amin nuts lid on city. airport
NAIROBI, *While invading Tanzanian troops and Ugandan rebels reportedly* "penetrated deep into Uganda," President Idhi Amin's government said in a statement on Friday.
The Ugandan government radio reported the Tanzanian-led forces pushed to within 20 miles of the Ugandan capital of Kampala yesterday.
The broadcast, monitored in Nairobi, also said the government had shut down Enterbe Airport and said, "Anyone violating Uganda air space will be shot
The radio said the Kampala rampel went into effect at 10 p.m. yesterday and would last until 6 a.m. today. On subsequent days, the rampel would last 12 hours.
The broadcast said a series of directives from Armin's military advisers, who met in emergency session yesterday, urged more Ugandans to join the armed
China repeats Viet invasion
BANGKOK, Tailand—Hanoi claimed yesterday that Chinese forces had shelled Vietnamese territory and took up positions as deep as 12 miles inside Vietnam. The Soviet Union charged that China also was escalating "orangeations" against Laos.
The official Vietnamese Communist Party newspaper Nhan Dan said Chinese leaders "are behaving contrary to their promises."
Instead of pulling their invasion force out, "Chinese troops have in recent days occupied many more areas of Vietnam territory," Han Dan was told by the military spokesman.
In New York, the Vietnamese ambassador to the United Nations told a reporter that Chinese forces were as far as 12 miles inside Vietnam.
In recent days, China has countered Hanol's propaganda with charges that Vietnam had continued to step up war mobilization efforts and was backing the Taliban.
Carter seeks control cost cuts
DALLAS—President Carter yesterday proposed to Congress ways to reduce the cost of federal controls on the environment, health, safety and business.
Carter, on the second log of a trip in the Southwest, told a National Association of Broadcasters convention the legislation was a call for common
Carter's proposed legislation would revise procedures for all federal regulatory bodies, including independent agencies such as the Federal Comptroller of Taxes.
The bill would require all federal regulatory bodies to list optional ways of reaching their goals and to pick the cheapest way or explain to the public why a certain regulation is unfeasible.
Carter said his bill also would help clean up the backing of rules and regulations that have been outdated. That would be done by requiring employers to wear a face mask.
Conaress debates deficit ban
WASHINGTON - Senators resume their debate this week on proposals to rule out future deficit spending, and the House Judiciary Committee begins hearings on suggested constitutional amendments to balance the federal budget.
The Senate was bogged down Thursday by Republican attempts to attach a budget-balancing amendment to legislation to raise the federal debt limit. Sens. Bob Dole, R-Kan, and Williams Armstrong, R-Co, suggested tying increases in the debt to achieving a balanced federal budget beginning in fiscal 1981.
Sen. Russell Long, D-LA, countered with a different proposal, and senators sent much of the day negotiating privately in search of a compromise.
The House already passed its version of the bill to raise the temporary debt limit from $798 billion to $820 billion. Without the increase, the government soon
Jurors listen to Silkwood tape
OKLAHOMA CITY — Jurors in a federal court trial of an *111.5 million lawsuit* filed against Kerr-McGee Nuclear Corp., will bear more of a tape recording in which Karen Silkwood told of dangerous working conditions at an Oklahoma Kerr-McGee plant.
In the recording, she said working conditions were dangerous because the company was under pressure to produce plutonium fuel rods for an ex-convict.
The lawsuit was made by Silkwood's family on behalf of the former Kerr-MeGee employee who was killed in an accident in 1974. The lawsuit alleges that Silkwood was contaminated with plutonium as a result of negligence on the part of Kerr-MeGee.
Part of a tape recording made during an Oct. 10, 1974, meeting sponsored by the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union was played Friday as the third
Silkwood lawyer Gerald Spence said the rest of the tape would be played today and another recording of a telephone conversation between Silkwood and John.
Testimony may support Hart
PRVOR, Okla. — Testimony from a former Girl Scout camp counsel showed that Gene LEEHart, charged with murdering three girl scouts, was at Camp Dillenwyk on Tuesday.
But testimony from Karen Mitchell, a former counselor and now an Oklahoma State University freshman, brought questions to the state's case.
Mitchell said that after a camp skij June 8, 1977, she had placed several items in her footlocker, including a small mirror and a cernobip棉.
The mirror and pipe were found in the cabin where Hart was captured, according to earlier testimony from Roger Crisco of the Oklahoma State Bureau.
Garvin Isaacs, Hart's attorney has contended throughout the trial that investigators could have planted items of evidence.
Agents had seized everything at the camp after the slayings, including Mitchell's trunk, but Mitchell said she did not notice much later that the men were dead.
Under Isaac's questioning, Mitchell said that she did not know who had access to the contents of the trunk before it was returned to her.
Man drowns in canoe mishaw
WICHTHA—One man drowned and another was reported missing yesterday when two canoes were caught in a current and forced over a spillway on the river.
The dead man was identified as Bradley K. Berschauer, 21, Wichita.
The third man, who was trapped near the bridge, was dead on arrival at Osteopathic Hospital.
The canoes capsized, dumping four men into the river near the 21st Street Bridge on the city's west side. One man was rescued by a fisherman and a boat driver.
The fourth man was missing for more than two hours after the accident. Authorities began dragging operations, stationed persons to watch the river until a vehicle could be seen approaching.
One of the two men who reached safety was hospitalized at St. Francis Hospital. The other refused treatment.
Bomb injures four in airport
NEW YORK—Three bombs exploded in the New York area last night, one in Kansas. International Airport struck.
The bomb that exploded in Kennedy Airport was in a suitcase that was minutes away from being loaded on a flight to Los Angeles.
an anti-Castro group claimed responsibility for the bombings in a call to the Associated Press. The United States press
All four persons were injured in the Kennedy explosion. No injuries were reported in the New Jersey explosions.
The group reportedly is starting an offensive against organizations it sees as friendly to Castro.
In New Jersey two bombs exploded at the offices of the Cuban Refugee Program and at a drug store that sends medical supplies to Cuba.
Weather
It will be mostly cloudy today with highs in the mid 40s, according to the National Weather Service. The skies tonight will be partly cloudy.
WASHINGTON (AP)—Prime Minister Menachem Begin of Israel said yesterday he was holding a last-minute meeting with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat over "several problems" relating to a peace treaty between their countries.
Begin was driven to the Egyptian Em-
say for the meeting early last night and
was escorted by a security officer.
Begin, Sadat discuss final issues
BUT MOSHE Dayan, the Israeli foreign minister, said the treaty should not be signed unless differences over Sinai oil fields were resolved at the surprise session.
the scheduled signing of the treaty today at the White House.
Begin assured there would be no delay in
Price increase urged by OPEC members
"Just in case they will not find a solution, my personal view is that we, Israel, cannot sign the treaty." Dayan said on ABC-TV's "issues and Answers."
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP)—Prior "hawks" of the OPEC oil cartel called yesterday for hefty price increases of up to $250 per barrel for two-day strategic session, sources reported.
The oil minister of Saudi Arabia said he would not press for price increase.
But, he said, because of the cutback in Iranian production, he expected prices to rise whether or not the Organization of Nations formally decided on an increase.
THE SOURCES said they doubted that an official increase would be enacted at this meeting. But the "hawks" continue to agitate for higher prices, saying increases are needed to match the inflated prices for goods from industrialized nations.
Though the meeting does not officially open until today, ministers held informal talks yesterday, and the sources said they had been aware of most active in demanding new price raises.
ALGERIA URGED a 25 percent increase and Nigeria a 15 percent one, they said. They said Libya was discussing diverting money from the country's pre-hricker term or "soot" market.
Some OPEC members, including the Saudia, already have taken advantage of the shortage caused by the Iranian strife to add oil to their supply. The OPEC base price of $1.35 a barrel gallon.
Several OPEC producers have complained also that the Western oil companies have been exploiting the current shortage to reap huge profits.
MON TUES WED
MALTS & I SHAKES
.60 1.00
regular regular
80C no limit 9.120
AFTER 5 P.M. ONLY
MAKE THE Vista RUN VISTA RESTAURANTS
VUHE
1527 West Sixth
842-4311
Film: "CHAC"
The search for a Mayan Holy man who can placate the gods to bring rain to a drought parched village.
LATIN WEEK: March 26 - March 30
Monday, March 26 7:00 p.m. Strong Auditorium, 300 Strong Sponsored by The Office Of Minority Affairs
7:00 p.m. Strong Auditorium, 300 Strong
Sponsored by The Office Of Minority Affairs
No Charge
Film: 'THE MONCADE PROGRAM' The 26 years of struggle and development of Coca-
Rated PG
An Associated Press NBC News poll showed that Americans were not optimistic that the treaty would lead to peace agreements with other Arab countries.
Tuesday, March 27 7:00 p.m. Strong Auditorium, 300 Strong
Sponsored by The Latin American Solidarity Group and Minority Affairs
No Charge
MECHA CONFERENCE
Begin said he and Sadat would discuss the question of whether there would be more nuclear weapons.
SPEAKERS Di Francio Ricca - Bronx City Urban Problems
Albion Lupe Lopu - Bilingual Education
Bob M. Coyle - State Budget
SLIDE SHOW
Wednesday, March 28
1:00:40 p.m.
Sponsored by MCHA and Minority Affairs
Forum Room, Union
HOWEVER, PUBLIC opinion gave high marks to Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Mr. Netanyahu in reaching this point in the peace process.
SLIDE SHOW
History, tradition and current conditions of Puerto Rico
11.00 am-3.00 p.m.
1 000-4 000 p.m.
Sponsored by MECMA and Minority Affairs
No Charge
----thousands more straining for a glimpse from stands in Lafayette Park.
Thursday, March 29
Film: "PUERTO RICO"
NOCHE VENEZOLANA
(Venezuelan Night)
DINNER
Sponsored by Puerto Rican students and Minority affairs
No Charge
Thursday, March 29 7:00 p.m. Strong Auditorium, 300 Strong Sponsored by Furious Young Students and Minority Affairs
"Humany, there is no obstacle to signing a peace treaty," he said.
Featuring traditional Venezuelan foods CULTURAL PROGRAM
Friday. March 30 Dinner: 6:00:7 30 p.m. Lawrence Community Bldg
Cultural Activity: 10:48 a.m.
Sponsored by The Venezuelan Club and Minority Affairs
Charge for dinner: $3.00 Adults/$1.50 Children
Cultural Program Free
...
All the above programs will be held at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
BEGIN IMPLIED that the question of more signings was the one unsettled issue in the program.
In yesterday's interview, Begin said, "I think we solved almost all the problems. One was left, but today we shall find a solution to it."
A TOTAL OF about 1,600 invited guests will witness the treaty signed, with
Thirty years of conflict between Egypt and Israel will draw to a close when the treaty is signed. Uncertainty about the Middle East will be studiously cast aside in celebrating the signing and President Obama's monumental foreign policy triumph.
Strong denunciations of Sadat's act are expected from the Arab League meeting in Somalia, and economic sanctions could be imposed against Egypt at an Arab summit conference beginning tomorrow in Baghdad, Iraq.
Syria, once Egypt's partner in making war on Israel, has called angrily for "revolutionary violence" to strangle the Sadat regime.
Lawrence
Clog
Headquarters
J. J. Angelas
Holiday Plaza
25th & Iowa
HoursMon-Thurs 10:8-30 Sun 12:30-5:30
Fri-Sat 10:3-30
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko is in Damascus, Syracuse's capital, to assure
Independent Coin-op
Boy with an arm around his shoulder
2105 West 26th Street
JACKSON WAY
NOW OPEN
Lawrence's Newest Self-Service Laundromat, Complete With Dry Cleaning Drop-Off. Attendant on Duty.
Use this Grand Opening Coupon. For One FREE WASH.
Coupon good 3/21-3/28, from 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Just south of Dairy Queen.
One per customer
One per customer
Announcing: The first official SUA Academy Awards Contest Give us your best guess!
Prizes include:
1st prize: 10 free movie passes + *Gone with the Wind* poster
2nd prize: 6 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
3rd prize: 4 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
4th-100th prizes: 2 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
Mark one in each section.
Mark one in each section.
BEST PICTURE
_ Coming Home
___ Coming Home
___ The Deer Hunter
___ Heaven Can Wait
___ Midnight Express
An Unmarried Woman
BEST ACTOR
___ Warren Beatty,
Heaven Can Wait
Gary Busey
The Buddy Holly Story
Riverbend Nirro
The Deer Hunter
Laurence Olivier
The Boys From Brazil
Ion Vought, Coming Home
Bruce Dern, Coming Home
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR ___ Bruce Dern, *Coming Home*
Richard Farnsworth,
*Comes a Horseman*
John Hurt, Midnight Express
Christopher Walker,
*The Deer Hunter*
Jack Warden, Heaven Can Wait
BEST DIRECTOR
BEST ACTRESS
Hal Ashby, *Coming Home*
Michael Cimino,
The Deer Hunter
Woody Allen, *Interiors*
Woody Allen, *Beauty*
Buck Henry, *Heaven Can Wait*
A Parker, *Midnight Express*
___ Ingrid Bergman,
Autumn Sonata
Ellen Burstyn.
Some Time, Next Year
Elle Burgess.
An Unmarried Woman
Jane Fonda, Coming Home
___ Geraldine Page,Interiors
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Contest rules:
Dyan Cannon,
Hewsen Can Wait
Senelco Millord,
Coming Home
Maggie Smith, California Suite
Maureen Staples, Interiors
Anyone is eligible to enter, but may enter only once. In case of a tie, the entry received earliest win. All decisions are final. The winner will be selected in the Kansas Union, DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES IS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4th. 4:30 PM. Entries will be announced Wednesday April 11
___ Meryl Streep, The Deer Hunter
Name ___
Phone ___
sua films
University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 26. 1979
3
VINCENT SCHNEIDER
Underwater World
Mining model built to assist writers
Students in the School of Architecture have been on this model of an underwater城中. From left to right are Stirl Heelman, St. Louis senior, John Scholl, Bloomington, and Wesley Ferguson.
Staff Reporter
By DOUG HITCHCOCK
A class of KU architecture students has built a model of an underwater ore mining operation to help New York science fiction writers.
"they wanted me to recommend a firm to build the model. When they found out how much it would cost to have it in their budget, they said they had it in their budget." They said Sandi
The class, Advanced Architectural Presentation Techniques, taught by Cynthia R. Daly of Ariel Books of New York City to help Ariel Books of New York City to help
The cost of having the model built by commercial designers would have been more than $5,000, according to Theis.
The class built the model for about $500.
Ariel has the rights to use the model, but KU owns it. Ariel plans to use pictures of the model to inspire its science fiction writers.
THEIS WANTS to have the model exhibited on campus, but no plans have been made.
The design for the underwater mining operation took more than half the fall semester to complete. Representatives from Ariel and Jean-Michel Couteau, son of the famous underwater scientist, modify the plans for believability.
The last month of the semester was used to build the model. The plans changed as the model was built.
In the model, underwater living organisms (e.g., fish) are in the side of a dermant underwater volcano. The model is four feet deep but in scale the distance is 1,500 feet
The rocky terrain, represented by layers of hard styrofoam sheets, is painted and sculpted in the contours of the rocky surface. A table provided the class with maps of the site.
AT THE EDGE of the volcano is the mine and a tower that runs up to the sheet of glass that represents the surface of the ocean.
The tower is called an OTEC, an Ocean Thermal Energy Converter.
"It would be phenomenally expensive to build an OTEC of this size." Thes said. "But, everything we've done is possible."
There are OETCs built around the coast of Hawaii, but the OETC on the island of Puerto Rico times the size of the real ones if it were built, he said. If the model were real, it
John Schell, Bloomington, Ind., graduate student, said, "We pieced it together from battleship models. We bastardized and cannibalized them."
Essayists invited to philosophize
The Edward S. Robinson memorial essay content is open to KU undergraduate and graduate students.
Philosophers and thinkers will have a chance to put their thoughts down on paper in an essay content sponsored by the KU department of philosophy.
The essays will be judged by a committee composed of members of the philosophy department and a representative of the graduate association of students of philosophy. The essays will be submitted undergraduate studies for the philosophy department, is in charge of the content.
A prize or prizes of up to $100 are being offered depending on the quality of the gift.
The essays may be on any topic of philosophic interest. Each contestant is limited to one entry. The contest is limited to published essays that do not exceed 25 pages.
The contest deadline is March 30. The winner's name will be announced by May 1.
philology, parvinicus, p. viridis,
philosophy, parvinicus, p. viridis,
from the document fund that was established
memory of Edward S. Robinson, a former
chairman of the KU philosophy department
Jayhawker Yearbook
philosophy department in 3022 Wescoe Hall. The prize money comes from an en-
large amount of donations.
is now accepting applications for positions on the 1980 staff. Including Editor & Business Manager.
Come by 121 B in the Kansas Union for applications.
Guzzlers losing out in car sales
Bv LESLIE GUILD
Gasoline price increases in Lawrence have caused an increase in economy car sales, but apparently have not increased in gasoline prices.
Staff Renorter
"A lot of our customers are really becoming aware of the gasoline price increases and trading cars to get better gas mileage." Jon Prochaska, manager of Lawrence Toyota, said in an interview last week. "They drive in a big car and in a small one."
"WE SELL a lot of economy cars for the time," he said. "But in the first three months of 1979 we doubled the demand for economy cars."
(AP)
Louisiana, said regular goaine had increased 1 cent a gallon to 74.9 cents during last week.
Proschaak estimated that 90 percent of his economy car sales were due to rising gasoline prices.
Now our biggest sellers are the cars that get more than 30 miles to the gallon," Prochaska said. "That really indicates to me that people are concerned about the price of fuel."
He said he was selling more cars that got at least 30 to 40 miles a gallon.
"We really can't estimate how much prices will rise," she said. "But we do expect them to continue to increase." She said however, that the price increase had not affected sales.
Lawrence service stations have steadily increased the price of gasoline in the past month, area dealers report.
Two other Lawrence stations, Tony's 66 Service, 2434 Iowa St., and Tom's SkiYellow Station, 1733 Massachusetts St.
"We are not looting business," she said. "But from what we say to us, customers are definitely concerned about prices."
"WE DON'T know how high prices will go," a spokesman for Tony's said. "They seem to deal every week."
Tom's Skelly also reported a 1 cent increase to 72.9.
he said their regular gasoline had increased 1 cent this week, to 73.9 cents.
The consumer's interest in gas prices has what stirred more interest in the economy cars, Dave Moore, manager of the New York office.
"Although our sales haven’t really climbed that much, we have seen more interest in the compact cars on the part of customers."
Moore said if the prices continued to climb, he expected the interest to materialize into sales.
"People are still a bit skeptical that a shortage will really
come about," he said. "They feel they were taken in the shortage of 1973, a so shortage will have to be proven to work."
MOORE SAID his best-selling economy car got 38 miles a gallon.
Another reason that economy cars are selling, accounted to Brent Foster, manager for Bob Hokins Volkswagen Inc., 2522 Iowa St. , is because some economy cars are equipped to use diesel fuel.
"The increase in sales of economy cars has really been up in the area of diesel," he said. "People are really interested in an economical car. So diesel is the answer. But our other economy car sales are up, too."
Foster said cars that used diesel fuel usually averaged about 25 percent more mile to the gallon.
In Lawrence, diesel fuel is available at six service stations, Foster said.
By RON BAIN
"More people are wanting more economy cars every day," he said. "That means a shortage might be near."
KU reactor no threat,prof says
Staff Reporter
"That's a concern to a lot of buyers," he said. "but uneasy to very common today, especially for those who are travelers."
A pool of water surrounded by 20-foot, blue-painted concrete walls is contained inside the Nuclear Reactor Center on 19th Street across from Green Hall.
Although none of the car retailers said they had bad problems stocking economy cars, Foster said he thought the company was doing well.
The pool surrounds and cools KU's small nuclear reactor.
Although the pool resembles a swimming pool, it was not built for people to paddle around in, according to Benjamin Friesen, KU's radiation safety officer.
The reactor produces radioactive material for graduate students to use in nuclear engineering experiments. The reactor is not used continuously and is so small that it does not create waste disposal problems, Friesen said recently.
The wastes from the reactor do not cause problems, he said, because they have very little water.
"A half-life is the period of time it takes for the radioactive activity to go down to half of what it was originally." Friesen said.
THE TYPICAL half-life for a radioactive element created by the reactor is a few hours.
The reactor also is not big enough to cause the kind of safety problems created by high levels of radiation.
Voyager findings analyzed at KU
Unexpected "energetic volcanoes" on one of Jupiter's moons might be responsible for sulphur discovered in Jupiter's atmosphere by the Voyager 1 spacecraft, according to KU astronomy professor Tom Armstrong.
Armstrong, who designed a radiation-testing experiment that is aboard Voyager 1 and 2, completed a project since 1972, returned recently from the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md. He was working there with other scientists on the mission.
"We have a few early results that we're
fairly confident of," Armstrong said yesterday.
Armstrong said violent volcanic activity on Io, a moon orbiting Jupiter, probably released explosives that ignited Jupiter's atmosphere. Jupiter also produces an unusual kind of radiation, he said, which could have contributed to its surface.
WHILE ARMSTRONG was working in Maryland, five KU graduate students were also working on data obtained by Voyager and broadcast to a KU receiving station in Miami.
graduate student, said he and four othe. graduate students were using computers to process the data obtained by Armstrong's radiation experiment.
Briggs said they already had enough data to keep them busy for a long time.
Patrick Briggs, Sacramento, Calif.,
"We'll probably be here until there's no data left to work with, which could be 10."
Voyager I will proceed to Saturn, he said, and another craft, Voyager II, will pass.
Armstrong said he would probably return to the Applied Physics lab in late May to prepare for Voyager II's encounter with Earth. "We will send data to Earth that would be sent to KU."
Group to aim rally at KU investments
The KU Committee on South Africa announced Friday that it would sponsor a "Rally Against Apartheid" Friday in front of Strong Hall.
The committee said in a statement, "The forthcoming rally is beginning of a new phase of activity opposed to the endowment association's socially irresponsible policy."
In recent weeks, the Committee on South Africa has argued publicly against the Kansas University Endowment and supports in companies operating in South Africa.
According to the committee members, the association's investments there support the company.
Wally Serenity, the keynote speaker at the rally, will speak about the apartheid system in South Africa Serte is a South African poet who writes about social injustice and is now touring the United States.
The Endowment Association maintains that American investments in South Africa influence the South African government toward more racially equal policies.
"Implicit in our policy is the contention that such companies are materially contributing to the betterment of black persons in society, and the association said in a recent statement.
THE TWO VOYAGER spacecraft will pass Saturn in 1981 and Uranus in 1985. The two craft will leave the solar system in the late '80s, and the data-processing work at KU will continue at least until then, according to Briggs.
The rally, which committee members said would have the support of several other student groups, will begin at 11:30 a.m. Friday.
The first spacecraft contains a surprise for any interstellar travelers that stumbles upon an unexpected recording of natural sounds and music ranging from Beethoven to Chuck Berry.
Laird Oick, spokeman for the committee, said the rally would include speeches from worker and student group representatives. He also said he would be able to participate in the discussion, he said.
All women welcome
—Needs your energy
Join us— Tuesday March 27 at 7:30 in the Pine Rm. the Kansas Union
WOMEN'S COALITION
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
Partially funded by Student Senate/Student Service Fee
Footnotes and Bibliography
All Juniors, Seniors, and Graduate Students
Essay Planning and Organization
Free Writing Help!
Communications Resource Center
Correct Sentences
306B Summerfield
9-4 Monday-Friday
864-4500
Grammar and Punctuation
Letter Writing and Resumes
Effective Paragraphs
Owl Society (Junior Men's Honorary)
ATTENTION SOPHOMORE MEN
IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR MEMBERSHIP
APPLICATIONS MAY BE PICKED UP AND RETURNED TO THE
KANSAS ALUMNI ASSN. OFFICE
AND ARE DUE FRIDAY APRIL 6th.
The cooling water is constantly monitored to prevent any type of accident, he said.
"The worst thing you could have happen is a pinhole size leak from the reactor into the
At any time there are usually about five users of radioactive materials at KU, according to the University's radioactive tracers used in biophysics and biochemistry experiments at the Univer-
TRACERS, WHICH allow scientists to form relationships with animal models of food element after it is absorbed into a person or an animal, are important to medical and scientific research. Fresen
"If it weren't for the availability of tracers, I have no way of estimating how little we would know about biological systems." he said.
Most of the tracer materials used on campus have low radiation levels, Friesen said, but they must be disposed of after they have been used.
The University owns about 20 acres of land near DeSoto where the tracer materials are buried. Wastes from the building they do not return radioactive for long.
FRIESEN KEEPs track of all radioactive materials on campus.
He said the amount of radioactivity generated by those materials depended on the temperature.
"Once a particular kind of nucleus has given off a kind of radiation as it decays, it never gives off that particular kind of nucleus. It can give off a different element with less radioactivity."
sua films
Tuesday, March 27
THE WAR OF THE WORLDs
Dir. Byron Haskin, with Gene Barry,
Ann Robinson, Les Tremayne. Specials
by George Pal.
Wednesday, March 28
Tracy/Hepburn:
ADAM'S RIB
Dir. George Cukor, with Spencer Tracy, Katherine Hepburn, Jody Holli- by Garson Kahin and Ruth Gordon.
*7-30 & 8-30
Thursday, March 29
Owen's Classic Play:
A DOLL'S HOUSE
(1972)
Dr. Joseph Losey, with Janda Fonda, David Warmer, Trevor Howard, Edward Fox. PLUS: "The History Book, vs. 6." **7/30 & 8/4**
Friday & Saturday,
March 30 & 31
GIRL FRIENDS
(1978)
Dr. Claudia Weill; with Melanie Mayron, Annie Skinner, Christopher Vine Linders, and Vivien Linders. The first fiction film by Weill, who also filled "A China Story."
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless
otherwise noted $1.50 admission
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
MARCH 26,1979
Downtown's death knell
Right now it's rolling grassland and open fields, but if developers get their way it will become a sprawling regional shopping mall.
And it could mean the end for the vital and prospering downtown Lawrence business district.
The proposed mall would be built on a 61-acre tract of land at the crossroads of Iowa Street and Armstrong Road and would be complete with 80 retail outlets and three department stores.
"THE MALL probably would employ in the neighborhood of 1,000 full and part-time workers," says Don Jones, an associate with the Jacobs, Visconsi and Jacobs firm of Cleveland, which wants to develop the mall. "It would expand the trade area of the city tremendously."
It would also draw Lawrence shoppers away from downtown and south to the mall, leaving downtown merchants to claw and scratch to attract the few stragglers left. All of which would leave downtown Lawrence in the dubious company of cities like Topeka, St. Joseph, Joplin and Springfield, which have found their downtown shopping districts deserted by shoppers drawn to the suburbs by the allure of the big-time shopping malls.
BOTH OPPONENTS and proponents of the mall realize what is at stake in the issue.
"This will be the most important zoning matter to come before the city of Lawrence," Jack Rose, city commissioner, said recently.
The current question is whether the land being discussed for the site should be rezoned from single family residential to the broadest commercial zoning, which would make way for the mail.
BUT WHEN that test comes, the commission will be facing a crucial decision for Lawrence. A vote in favor of the mall could be succiled.
The commission has already voted to annex the land, but the real test on the mall will come on the zoning issue. However, that test will not come until at least May, long after next week's city commission elections.
"I haven't heard anything favorable about them (shopping malls) except in areas of heavy population, which include us," Mayor Donald Binns said.
Indeed, it would be the height of idiocy to approve a shopping mall that would be potentially devastating to the downtown area after financing a complete beautification and overhaul of the area little more than five years ago. The loss of business could trigger a deterioration of one of the few downtown areas that has maintained its vitality.
THOSE DETERMINED to upgrade the range of shopping options in Lawrence could just as easily bring a major department store into the downtown area. Of course, that would necessitate some changes in parking and traffic flow to accommodate the increase in traffic in the area, but those changes would be worth it if they could stop the mall.
The accompanying shift in attention to the southern edge of town could also bring about a parallel deterioration of the surrounding areas, including the East Lawrence and Oread neighborhoods.
Vitality of springtime passes by death row
The ghost towns that pass for downtowns in most American cities are ample evidence of the importance of stopping the mail.
The cold winter—nature's death—has passed and spring, with all of the new life it brings, is here. But in awful irony, Alabama prison awaited electricity.
His springtime death is scheduled for April 6. His electrocution for committing a crime will be the second execution in 12 years.
EVANS SAID he rejected love from family and friends because to love would interrupt his criminal acts. He rejected Catholic faith and his middle-class home.
John Louis Evans III was convicted for the murder of an owner of an Alabama pawn shop he robbed in January 1977 and 30 armed robberies and nine kidnappings.
Evans says he wants to die—soon. He admits that he was a "rotten kid" and was a victim of the mob thrill. The 29-year-old Texan said his life was "a waisted life." He committed his death.
Evans is not dumb. He asks no sympathy. He seems to accept himself.
"It's been a wasted life, sure. But I'm
not down on myself, I just make a rotten
kit kid, and I don't do anything
kid kid. I like being a rotten kid. I was going
down society's wrong road and I didn't
Says he, "When it comes down to it,
I'm a pretty selfish person. If want to do
something, I do it. No matter who gets
hurt . . .
What is most disturbing about these comments is Evan's lack of spirituality, his chilling preatism.
It is sad, nay, frightening that Evans can so calmly reject life. He might cease
Phillip Garcia
to exist after April 6, but he seems to be already dead—he no longer has a love of life, and lacks feeling and sensitivity.
EVANS SAYS he has "come to grips with death" and yet he seems to have never faced life.
Was he a product of his environmen... which seemingly should have given him all he needed? Did the comforts and needs of his children desensitize him to the value of each day?
And what about his life?
Evans said he could get a lot of money for about 30 seconds of work, so robbery became "the easy way to go."
One might say John Louis Evans III is just another of the few besetting candidates in this race, and should be eliminated. After all, didn't Evans acknowledge that he did it all
Fair enough. One may demand the death penalty, but the fact remains that Evans wants to die; he does not care. He sensitively goes to a deterrent, his sensitivity is gone.
If anything, Evans' comments should cause one to stop and think why his vigor for life ceased.
Obviously, he did not find this vigor in money, or for that matter in materialism, family, church or himself.
Where has the spirit of Evans gone?
How does such a person in our society get it back?
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(SUSP 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and June, published June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday. Subscription rate is $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a year county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student account.
Seed changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60045
Barry
Manager Editor
Dick Steinhulm
Berry Maney
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Mary Hopk
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Schneider saga deserves scrutiny
It was a strange story. It left one feeling outrage, dismay and a little bit of humor.
Wednesday. The former attorney general claims that the state representative must hold a hearing on this issue.
The same day. The state representative withdraws his statements that a suit for the official's pay should be filed. He stands on his other statements, however.
WEDNESDAY, CONTINUED. The former attorney general's top aide says his employer had suffered from "acute disappointee" after the attorney general had often shortened his working day and had missed some days altogether because of that disappointment,
Later on Wednesday. Travel vouchers show that the attorney general has fanned
Mary
Ernst
---
Tuesday. The state representative charges in a House Ways and means Committee that the former attorney general had insisted that Mr. Warren be defeated of his term after being defeated in November. He asserts that the official in question should be used for all the pay that he earned during the year.
with an administrative assistant, new disc jockey at a rock radio station, to Tulsa, Okla. to work on an antitrust case. The team then went to New York last week later had been turned in for reinbursement by the state. Reinbursement of the trips has been personal. The cost: $900.
THE STORY here is not some third-rate made-for-TV movie about corruption in California, or about corruption in any state for that matter.
The story is a somewhat disturbing, somewhat preposterous one about a state official who had been elected for four years, but who only wanted to serve 3 years and 10 months. And it is a story that took place just 25 miles away from here in Topeka.
The characters were, as one can guess,
the rarely boring and rarely quiet Mike
THE RESULT of the bungling in the halLOWed hallway of the statehouse no bungling
The whole ruckus began when Glover, outraged that Attorney General Robert Stephan had to prepare a budget request late because Schneider had not done so, and with his anger before the Ways and Means Commission as they heard Stephan's request.
Glover, D- Lawrence; former, attorney general Curt Schneider; and Schneider's successor.
Glover may have been rash in his accusation that Schneider did not work for two months and in his calling for a suit to gain Schneider's pay. But he voiced a legitimate concern about the activity of state officials who are left in lame duck positions.
preparation of the budget was his responsibility.
AND AS THE events unfolded, it looked more and more as if Schneider had indeed shirked his responsibilities to the people of Kansas. And it also appeared that the people of Kansas had been right in their decision to not return to office a man who was only concerned with his commitment to his job and would have said he would be returning to it for four more years.
Schneider asserted that it was the responsibility of his staff to assist in the transition from one attorney general to the next. "But as far as the budget is concerned," he said, "the newly elected officer who's going to have to operate under it."
However, Stephan, who had attended only one budget hearing, had not thought that
It is impossible to sympathize with Schneider. "Acute disappointment" is not an acceptable excuse for shirking responsibilities. Several decisions were made on November 27, 2014 and December — evidence that he did visit his office somewhat frequently. but attitude that seemed to say, "I lost the race, now I won't work," appears to have been held by Schneeder at the time those allegations were made — that is attitude that should alarm citizens.
Indeed, the fitting conclusion to this tale would be the following:
MOCAELYTHENEPUWMONDBASSGROP©MPHYCHIJAGO TREME
Everyday. Citizens of the aforementioned state and of all states express outrage at actions by elected officials which they see as improper.
MAXNEA
ARAFAT & Co. Peace
I was present at the meeting March 7, which the KU Committee on South Africa held with Todd Seymour, the Endowment Association's president. At that meeting Seymour showed little knowledge of employment conditions in South Africa, yet he refused to discuss the issue. He instead has categorically written that "implicit in our decision to enter the workforce are contributing materially to the betterment of black people in South Africa."
Investments must reflect conscience
I am in support of the stand taken by the KU Committee on South Africa—a demand to divest the KU Endowment Association's investments in factories in racist South Africa. All of us must dare to demand that corporate statements reflect a degree of social responsibility.
The Endowment Association has not done its homework. Even the U.S. Senate's Subcommittee on African Affairs has raised concerns about operations operating in South Africa have made no significant impact on relaxing apartheid (legally enforced racist segregation) or in establishing company structures, nevertheless important model of multinational responsibility. Rather, the net effect of American investment has been to strengthen the economic and military self-esteem of South Africa's apartheid regime."
When Seymour claims that U.S. corporations "contribute materially" to South Africa,
To the editor:
KANSANletters
Africa's exploited black people, don't he know that U.S. companies employ only 50,000 black people out of the eight million people employed in operations in South Africa are capital-intensive. They do not provide many jobs. Instead they contribute the high-level technology that South Africa's racist dictatorship must prop up the white-merced workers.
It is illegal in South Africa to employ any black person at a higher post than a white. For this reason alone, the presence of U.S. corporations will not help improve the conditions of even their own black workers. U.S. businesses obey the laws. They assemble in the apartheid status quo because their operations must be conducted within those laws.
Divestiture from South Africa is a modest proposal. It is far more modest than the international sanctions backed by most of the members of the United Nations.
But the head of the African Congress of Trade Unions in South Africa has declared, "The ending of foreign investment of South Africa is, of course, a tactical question; it is not about foreign investment that apartheid regime. But it is of such importance that there can be no compromise
whatsoever about it from our point of view. Foreign investment is a pillar of the whole system which maintains the virtual slavery of the black workers in South Africa."
Mr. Seymour, are you listening?
Rhonda A. Neugebauer
Lawrence graduate student
Mentality misguided in fervor for Revue
The most erroneous assumption in Mount's letter (March 20) is that the Rock Chalk Revue, as an institution, actually existed. The University's collection of organized groups—the "Greek System." The Kansan, on the other hand, consists of the entire student body, at just theoretical.
in the spirit that the University Daily Kansan is both a medium for the exchanges of ideas as well as a medium for "the events of campus." I wish to take issue with Jeff Mount.
Mount demonstrates an implicit and alarming "greek" ethnocriticism when he says that his spirit is to "show our appreciation for those who are the fiber of that KU tradition," implying that those not in KU should be considered "fiber" of the KU tradition. What are we?
To the editor:
While Mount admirably dismisses childish and archaic prejudices" that the Kushan rulers introduced.
view the Kansas' attitude? While I, too, demand no anti-Greek sentiment on the part of me, my husband pro-Greek sentiment. This would be preferential treatment shown a minority.
As for the complaint of coverage on the FIJF page (hardly cause to feel outraged), I deeply resent the fact that funds are being collected from a promotional space for Rock Chalk in the Kansan. This should be stopped, if for no other reason than on the grounds of equity. The resources of the entire student body were diverted to the (well-intended) actions of a minority.
Personally, I find this sousa-eque "Let's-raily'-round-the-lawyn', boys!," utility, replete with such mystical qualities as "valor" and "religious fervor," to be indicative of the extent to which we have misplaced our values in the 70s.
This is the crux of the matter: What disturbs me most is that Jeff Mount felt strongly enough about this issue to write to the University, and he pressed concerns on which the Kansan should and does focus: The University's investment policy in South Africa, its fuel resource situation and the condition of other students on campus come immediately to mind.
May I suggest to Mount he that read (e-re-read) Mussolini's Doctrine of Fascism, "placing the word "state" with "University."
Michael West
Lawrence senior
STATE U.
BY T. M. ASLA
GENTLEMEN, WE SIMPLY MUST ARRIVE AT A DECISION! ARE WE GOING TO TEACH THE STUDENTS!
1) WHAT WE WANT TO TEACH THEM;
OR, 2) WHAT THEY WANT TO LEARN;
OR, 3) WHAT THEY REALLY NEED TO KNOW?
FACULTY CURRICULUM COMMITTEE MEETING
NO ADMITTANCE
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 as a student of the university, he/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.
.
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University Daily Kansan
Mondav. March 26. 1979
5
17
Staff Photo by BILL FRAKES
Rugby club stomps Johnson Co.
too part
partly be
the
the out-
andands
nouns no
no body
body well
that hat
write.rite.
assasan
herimher im-
terae'te-
n'tennesties be
weave
msm,msm
color
KU's rugby club, in the striped shirts,
outplayed Johnson County yesterday and
won two games handily, on the field west of
Oliver Hall.
In the A game, KU outscored Johnson County 26-3. Doug McCaules led the scoring with two twists, each worth four points. The Walter Waker and Phi Byer each scored one try.
Paul Diedrich converted two tries for four points. A conversion is worth two points. He also scored a penalty goal, worth nine points; his only penalty goal brought the score to 26.
"We won handily," Walter said. "They're traditionally a good team. We outwrapped them."
Dave Pearlman told the way with one try and two conversions, for eight points. Dave Pierson, Dave Frather, Ted McGrade and Rob Mason each scored one try.
In the B team game. KU won 26-0
Doug Scherke also got into the scoring by successfully scoring one conversion for two
KU stumbles in tourney
Sports Editor
Kansas softball coach Bob Stanciff was a busy man this past weekend when the Jayhawks competed in the Oklahoma Tournament in Norman, Okla.
By NANCY DRESSLER
Kansas finished 2-2 and was eliminated in the first regular round of the tournament.
But Stancil made almost as many trips to the hospital as Kansas played games. Two players suffered injuries that resulted in three hospital visits.
The most serious injury was a concussion suffered by catcher Gay Bozango in KU's last game of the tournament, against Washington. The ball was involved in a collision at home plate.
Boznango spent Saturday night in a normal hospital and was flown back to Lawrence yesterday. Stancliff said no complications had resulted from the injury.
Teammate Kelly Phipps, who was cleaned on the hand, was the third injury. Again, x-rays revealed a broken bone.
BOZNANGO HAD also made a trip to the hospital earlier in the tournament when she was hit on the leg by a pitch. X-rays were negative.
Things didn't go much better for Kansas on the playing field. After demolishing Missouri 10- in its opening game of pool play, the Jawahreskills went to Wyoming 84-
Shelley Sinclair pitched a one-hitter against MU. The game with Wyoming was a win.
With the score 4-2 in favor of Kansas, Wyoming bats got hot. KU pitcher Launn Stanix walked in a run after getting two outs, both with the bases loaded.
SINCLAIR CAME on in relief, but she also walked a batter and tied the score. KU's chance to win failed when a hit by Rose Rader in the seventh that looked like a home run was caught by Wyoming's diving center. The fourth (our runs in the seventh innie to win).
Stancliff said Wyoming's pitcher, Sherry Stone, was one of the top turkers in the nation. He had tried to recruit her but could come up with scholarship money, he said.
Tankers fail to score
By MIKE EARLE
Rick Jenkins notched a school record but KU qualifiers for the NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships failed to score in the three-day meet this weekend at Cleveland.
Sports Writer
Jenkins肿走 the backstroke leg of the 60-byward medial relay and set a school
Steve Graves, the only Jayhawk who qualified for the individual events, swarm the 200-year individual medium in 1:52.0 Thursday. His time beat his mark set at the conference meet but he failed to quality for the finals.
But his time and the times of teammates Jim Sauer, Steve Graves and Brent Brenns weren't good enough to place. The team's clocking at 2:3:58, 29 among all entries, was slower than its Big Eight conference championship record time.
"We passed because we thought he'd have a better chance to place in the 200 if he rested up." KU coach Bill Spahn said. "He qualified by qualifying two-tens of a second."
Graves placed 17th in the event. His time of 2.00.24 was slightly faster than his Big Basketball game.
ALTHOUGH GRAVES was qualified for Friday's 400-yard individual medley, he skipped the event to concentrate on Saturday's 200-yard breast stroke.
"I would have liked to go faster," Graves said, "but I'm not really disappointed. The team was too bad."
Diver Kurt Anselmi was 29th in the low board competition.
Despite not placing anyone in the top 12,
Spain was pleased with his qualifier's effort.
"We competed well and held our own," Spain said. "It's pretty tough for us because we don't have that much outside competition during our dual season."
The University of California-Berkeley won the team title. Its 400-yard medley relay team broke the U.S. Open and NCAA season by the university of Indiana in 1977.
KU won its final pool game, beating Stephen F. Austin 7-15. Kansas trailed 5-4 early before recovering on the strength of a two-run home run by Sinclair, who went the rest of the way.
But the Jayhawks were eliminated in the round after play pool by Oklahoma.
"WE DREW OSU, which hadn't played that day," Stanfill said. "We were ahead 2-1 in the second and it was a see-saw game. Barney No. 1 pitcher just did a good job." Barney No. 1 pitcher
Kansas is back in action this weekend in a Texas Woman's University tournament in Houston.
Jill Larson hit in five of her 10 trips to the jail for Kansas. Sinclair was seven for 12 games.
Woodard gets honor
Woodard, a Wichita sophomore, unofficially led the nation in scoring with a 31.0 point average. When she was selected last week, the first freshman ever to make the team.
KU's Lynite Woodard has been named an Eastman Kodak women's basketball All-Defensive Player.
She will be honored at a banquet sponsored by Kodak today in New York City.
This year, Woodard led Kansas in its best season ever. The Jayhawks went 30-8 and were Region VI champions. Kansas lost in the first round of the central region tournament to the eventual second-placed nationally, Louisiana Tech University.
Old Dominion won the tournament yesterday by beating Tech 76-5 in a tiebreak.
'Hawks in twin bill
The Jayhawk baseball team meets Baker University in a doubleheader at 1:30 p.m. today at KU's Quigley Field. The games begin on Saturday because of the wetting play.
Coach Floyd Temple said yesterday that Clayton Fleeman, a junior-college transfer from Kingsville, Mo., and Kevin Kerschen, a distinguished pitcher, would start for the Jawahirs.
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WOMEN'S WORK AND LIFE IN CHINA
PAULA CAMPBELL, ACTIVE MEMBER OF THE
UNITED STATES--CHINA PEOPLE'S FRIENDSHIP
ASSOCIATION WILL SPEAK AND SHOW SLIDES.
Monday March 26
7 pm--Forum Room
Kansas Union
PARTIALLY FUNDDED BY STUDENT SENATE
Introducing the Noon Buffet
For those who help themselves
$2.99
Help yourself to all the soup, salad, and pizza you can eat.
Mon-Fri
11:30-2:00
Gabriel's
Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842-5824
SUA
Student Print & Drawing Sale
Wednesday & Thursday March 28 & 29 9:00-5:00
In the Union Gallery
carousel
Spring Sale!
Shirts . . . . . . . . $5.99 & up
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MECHA IN CONJUNCTION WITH LATIN WEEK ACTIVITIES IS PROUD TO PRESENT
AT:
1:00 pm March 28,1979
Mr. Alfonso Lopez-Vasquez,
Bilingual Education Program Director for the Kansas City, Missouri
School District will speak on Senate Bill No. 7 dealing with
bilingual and multi-cultural education.
2:45 pm March 28,1979 Forum Room
Mrs. Anna Rodriguez.
Director of the League of Latin American Citizens in Topeka
will also speak about education opportunities
for Mexican-American students.
3:00 pm March 28,1979 Forum Room
Dr. Francisco H. Ruiz
An instructor at Pen Valley Community College will speak on the urban problems of the Mexican-American.
Co-sponsored by MECHA and Minority Affairs
1
6
Monday, March 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
'Magic Man' duels 'Bird Man'in super square off
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) —"How do I feel about the match-up with Maggie Johnson?" Indiana State's Larry Bird repeated a question. "I don't look at it as a match-up."
"I am a scorer. He is a passer. We are two guard. He can't guard me. We are two guard."
The lowering Bird, who spearheads the unbeaten, top-tanked Sycamores, spoke to the reporters at the marquee atmosphere surrounding the Indiana State-Michigan state battle tonight.
In spite of attempts at cold analysis, the NCAA final actually boils down to a dramatic, super-charged duel between two of the season's leading personalities.
It's the "Bird Man" against the "Magic Man."
BIRD IS CORRECT when he says he and
different different different background
different different different background
sharp contrasts in style—both on the floor and off.
Larry Bird is a 6-9% giant from a small, rural Indiana community. Flick-Lack is a 7-8% giant from a small, rural Indiana community.
Bird, a 22-year-old senior, has been called one of the most complete players of the generation. He has spent many of his post-tenure career on the team, and obtained Player of the Year, feeding with the press and fielding questions about how many millions of dollars he will demand to turn professional. He is the first round draft pick of the Boston Celtics of the season.
EARVIN "MAGIC" JOHNSON is a stringbeam, ball-handling wizard from a city in the Midwest. Much. He is a sophomore, 6-4 and 207 pounds, who is mature for his 19 years and already a polished player. There are reports he may have been shot while playing. Pros after this term. The pros are drooling.
It's true that Bird and Johnson will not guard each other but they are sure to cross paths often. They are the men 15,500 payee and a nationwide TV audience will be
JOHNSON is like a phantom. He moves with such speed and grace and maneuvers the ball with such sleight-of-hand artistry it is hard for the human eye to follow him.
Bird is inclined to dominate a basketball floor. He is an intimidating figure as he uses all of the hardwood skills—shooting, passing, rebounding, stealing—with the subtitle of a berserk tank. Human bodies bounce off his massive frame.
Many regard him as the faster passer in the game. Like Bird, he appears to have eyes in the back of his head. He can spot a moving teammate and hit his target through the slightest opening. He is a fencer with radar in his blade.
If Bird subdues his opponents with a mixture of versatility and brute strength, Johnson lulls them to sleep with his mesmerizing finesse.
"Some people like to shoot. I get my nnnn"
"of marking a good pass and watching a game."
YET HE REFUSES to concede that he lacks shooting ability.
"If I'm straight up, looking at the basket,
Michigan State favored in NCAA
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)—Larry Bird & Co., also known as top-ranked, unbeaten Indiana State, do battle with "Magic Man" Evin Johnson and his supporting cast from Michigan State tonight for collegiate basketball supremacy, a dream showdown pitting what may be the two best teams and the two greatest players in the game.
Calendar of Events
Heaton, who habitually materializes at the crucial moment to save the day, then
Against DePaul, Bird hit 16 of 19 field goals, poring in 35 points. He grabbed 16 of those shots.
Michigan State is armed also with a superstar in forward Greg Kelsner, a master of the dunk with a dependable long-range shot that came 28 against the outmanned Penn Quakers.
THE SPARTANS, 25-6 and Big Ten champions, breezed into the finals, routing Notre Dame in the Mideast Regional and Penn in the semifinals Saturday, 101-67.
Listings subject to change - call us for information
Against Penn, Johnson was 9 of 10 from the floor and 11 of 12 from the line for 29 points. He hauled in 10 rebounds and distributed 10 assists.
Johnson are the two greatest passers in college basketball.
The Magic Man, an effervescent personality in contrast to the intense, emotional personality of others.
The nationally televised NCAA championship will tip off at 8:15 p.m. Lawrence University's football team, the University of Utah campus, preceded by the third-place game between DePaul and Purdue.
"if definitely think he is," Johnson said when asked who is the best player in the game. "I'm a fan of Larry Bird. But Mon-da night I can't get cann't watching."
Calendar of Events
Heathcatte the Spartans would use the "matchup zone defense" that carried them all year. The Sycamores are expected to concentrate on their man-to-man defense.
New Grass Revival/Norman Blake
KEGGER NITE w/pat's Blue Riddim Band
"We hope we can keep Bird on the outside, but they're not a one-man team," said Heatcoat. "If you concentrate all your efforts in one spot, you're going to go in for dunks and layups."
Indiana State, the only team in NCAA Indiana to post a second record, is the underdog. The Cincinnati Reds tossing in points from all over the court, have squeaked past their last two opponents.
Sat. March 24
Chris Fritz & K.Y. 102 present Gran Max & Wakefield
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There is no question that Bird and
They edged by Arkansas and DePaul on last-second shots by unheralded Bob
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MONDAY GLADNESS!
or
Why Be Mad When You Can Be Glad?
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Bird is dour and introverted, defensive about press criticism and inclined to be arrogant in interviews when forced into confrontation. It works with the print press during the past season.
The two superstars are striking contrasts in personality.
"it is going in," he insists. I can shoot when I want to."
When asked whether Indiana state needed to win the NCAA in order to have a successful season, he snapped, "Hell, it doesn't matter. We win or lose, I'm going to get my money."
Inch Color Prints Are Now Standard Size From 35mm
4x6
The Royals play the Pittsburgh Pirates today in the first game of a two-game series. The Royals have eight more exhibition games than the Blue Jackets, but April 5 against the Toronto Blue Jays.
A
From Kansan Wire Reports
Mike Proly, who gave up two runs in the first and a fourth-inning home run to Jamie Quirk, pitched six innings to earn the victory for Chicago.
GET ON THE RIGHT TRACK WITH INTRAMURALS
Chicago's Eric Soderholm and Junior Moore each hit a home run in the sixth inning.
Kodacolor Film.
Johnson, on the other hand, has carried his floor magic to his relationship with fans and the press. He is a charmer—everybody loves him.
Information Available in Rm. 208 Robinson Center Recreational Services
THE DEADLINE for entering the Intramural Track Meet is on Thursday, April 5th at 5:00 p.m.
He can't wait to get to the interview room where his high good humor overflows.
Leonard, who had surrendered only two runs in three spring starts, took the loss. Garri boosted his spring batting average to 419.
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And he lights up the room with his magic smile.
Aided by a strong wind, the White Sox hitting aid was led by Ralph Garr, who had a single and a pair of triples, driving in two runs against Royals ace Dennis Leonard. Leonard yielded eight runs, 10 hits, and 23 total bases in four innings.
"I just naturally lowly people," he says. "I love to talk, Man. I lucky—this is a great gift."
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WELL MAKE THE MOST OF WHAT YOU VE SHOT...
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Sox rout Rovals
SARAOSAT, Fla. —Jorge Orta hit a grand-slam home run in the first inning then added a double and a triple to power the Chicago Cubs to 4-1 victory, route of the Kansas City Royals yesterday.
WE'LL MAKE THE MOST OF WHAT YOU've SHOT...
faster service, and a better price than
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at any other photo store in Lawrence.
爱
OVERL PHOT
GIBRALTARS
Live Entertainment Located in Hillcrest Shopping Center
Disco formerly J Watsons II
Live Entertainment 842-5765
Disco
Monday—9-Midnight—DIME BEER (plus liquor pool)
Tuesday & Thursday FOXES HOUR Open 8-9 for LADIES ONLY All Ladies enter free—ALL Ladies drink free (plus liquor pool) after 9—regular price
Friday-
Entertainment
TGIF'N 4-7 . . . 3.00 at the door... ALL YOU CAN DRINK (plus liquor pool)
Tues & Wed— Boogie Fever
Thurs-Sat— Shade Tree
University Daily Kansan
Monday, March 26, 1979
7
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dalman Kanee are offered to all students without regard to sex, race or national origin. ALL CLASSIFICATIONS TO 111 FIRE LALLT
CLASSIFIED RATES
time times times times one two three four five six seven eight nine
15 words or
— fewer
each additional
0 $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.75 $3.00
01 01 02 03 04 05
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
MY READINESS
at school
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 allowance will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months and can be placed in person or by calling the bank (business office) at 914-3586.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Zen premiery daily 8 p.m. Introductory talks
9 a.m. Opening lecture, 10 a.m.
Zen premiery daily 8 p.m. Introductory talks
9 a.m. Opening lecture, 10 a.m.
Zen premiery daily 8 p.m. Introductory talks
9 a.m. Opening lecture, 10 a.m.
Zen premiery daily 8 p.m. Introductory talks
9 a.m. Opening lecture, 10 a.m.
"Power, Arm & Taxes," The Need for a New National Security Policy." What do you think the answer is? Hear Heat Hibernate. Tuesday, April 17, 2010. p.m., Big Bass Room, TED-190. 3-27
GREAT FOOD, GREAT SERVICE just like you
are! We open an important open Mon thru Fr
s. 1 m Sunday. $300-$390
3-30
ENTERTAINMENT
The Victims - Fearwell Shows, at the usual rate of 10 per minute. Pillars. You missed us, they don't nugo us any more.
FOR RENT
Tauhawker TOWERS Apartments
2.4 1B hard and efficiency. Close to campus. UUI-
9579 Clean, clean, clean and comfortable.
9579
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW WENT
AWAY, and are unfurnished from $170. Two laundry rooms, large
bedrooms, high ceilings, indoor hot tub, indoor HEATED FOOL. For appointment call 462-444 or visit 264 front Ridge Road. Next door
183-459 Palm Beach Boulevard.
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking, most
rooms on the ground floor, and near town.
Phone: 843-5767.
Still looking for a place to call you? Nathalmond
leads the way for the day. Stay by and look on over
the number of the year. Stop by and look at the
number of the year. Stop by and look at the
number of the year. Stop by and look at the
number of the year. Stop by and look at the
number of the year. Stop by and look at the
number of the year. Stop by and look at the
number of the year. Stop by and look at the
number of the year. Stop by and look at the
number of the year. Stop by and look at the
number of the year.
843-8525
Pri safety system make these rooms safe and location lets you sleep! Only one block walk. Permafrost, no pet or eighteen, quiet, depot, quote. Great staff. Greats. 843-429-0600. Gooab supply.
For Rent: 2 HR App. Free Laundry, BQ Unique
*B*: from BK. Kit #81-10298 or #82-53877. 3-26
Subbit: 3 bedroom house, Walder-dryer, close to campus. Available April 14th Call 843-892-6038
Boermann wanted 2 BR 2 BA Wabash & Water
Saver 4 BR 2 BA Wabash & Water Saver 3
2 utilities Call Niles 842-167-167
Subnet for summer one year old Student. Aug.
1980 to Oct. 1981, class 6 close to campus, corrupted. 812-8266 3-257
Summer sublease; one bedroom furnished South-
ridge apartment $1900. Call 841-356-0. 326
NICE 1 BEDROOM apartment furnished, close to
Downtown. Apt. #3468-4599, 8459-8499, 7129-7088, or
3-27
Mark 1 & 11: Apartments now renting for summer vacations. Located in the heart of Tampa, luxury apartments with a walk to campus 1 & 2 bedrooms, central air conditioning, carpeting, carpetless baths, laundry facilities. Resident Mark for add info at markresidency.com.
Sublease 2 bedroom apartment Great location
846-789 - Available April 15th $1,277 -
846-787 or 846-666
Christian Hustafson Now and Summer. Close to
Holden, Calif. 842-824-8082; between
5:00 and Keep trying.
Almost new 3 bedroom home with single garage available in SE Lawrence, Cimarron Hills area Stovv, dwainshaw and disposal. Prefer marital status. 1 yr. $250. Monthly charge: 3:46 2:30 a.p. 3:00 p.m.
Luxury apartments for rent. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Please contact us immediately. Please call deeve. Richmond at 845-0211. Eventing and horse racing near apartment. Must be mobile with balanced bikes. Location. Must abide rules. Haverty
Beautiful 2 bedroom duplex at Missouri St. for a mature old, C A and new kitchen appliances.
HOUGHTON PLACE: (ITS FULL—BUT) We make to an A $20 minimum. We send a $15 fee and an Avery sequence. We will rent for the summer term those apartments located at 2490 Alabama, 8417-375. - 2490 Alabama, 8417-375. - 2490 Alabama, 8417-375.
Need Female to sublease furnished. 2 story household for summer. Garage and yard. 1400 sq ft.
Southeastern Apple-Craft Aid for Summer 2 1/18
Apple-Craft Aid, swimming Post-4/14
Cellulose-Based Aid 614-706-3540
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Note. Now on sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to students who are studying Western Civilization 3. For exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Towson University.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 483-900; 2000 W. Gph.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 483-900; 2000 W. Gph.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 483-900; 2000 W. Gph.
6c6 Schooners at Louise's every Friday from 2
lull 5. 4-3
Fender Mustang Bass Guitar with strings, wires, picks, tuners, grip, cable and strap. Cards, strings, covers. Very good condition.
SunScape-Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-
protective lenses, selection, seasonal
1021. Masten-847-5709
WHY RENT? when you could own this beautiful kitchen, you could! New appliances, diagonal ceiling air, newer appliances, updated appliances, washer/dryer air, smoke alarms, skirted and mold-resistant cabinets, storage baskets, cohesive tiles, tees, tile garden storage shelving, cobalt tiles.
1932 Pinto AM FM cassette player. Recently $1800 $1980 Please contact Tuxcellen.com. 645-1837 1867
TRAC A800 casteet dock, slightly used with TECH-
NIQUE MK3000 casteet dock.
HYDNAKIN, HYDNAKIN C8SQ64M 843-5200
HYDNAKIN, HYDNAKIN C8SQ64M 843-5200
BOKONK IMPORTS, LTD. Organic almonds
are selected- largest and best in the midwest.
We select almonds for use in our products.
WATERBED MATTRESSES $59.98 3 year guard-
ement WHITE LIGHT 704 Mass. 843-1286 tlfr
nlpz7873704
72 yellow Mustang Consol AT PS, 45
blue Mustang Consol AT PS, 45
turquoise One. Other, extra clean. 843-7032 3-27
Watch for truck on Sundays selling produce.
Jayhawk Foods, 4th & Illinois. Also wood.
Mustang 1966 e/4 3 speed. Completely restored.
10 stock, mint condition. (3) 365-265-876
3-27
3-27
Sailboat Vanguard 470 15 ft. race boat. Must sell.
(363) - 365-470 (fols). 3-28
Ultra linear 200s* excellent sounding 3-way speakers $80–or best offer-air Peter 647-859-1122
175. 700 Ton Commando, combat engine, i28
bared, 1870. 8400. 9200. 9200.
buried, $1500.00, 842-7098. 3-22
72 Trains Art, Custom built 455 HO motor PS.
HOM stern, cruise bid. Bert - $27
Dial. 814-7835.
Used sports ear radial tires reduced? Came out on sun wear overstocked -Make an offer on us!
Get your FREE E-book
Toyota, Honda all owners. Not owned by you. $10.00 each. $20.00 each. $30.00 each. $40.00 each. $50.00 each. $60.00 each. $70.00 each. $80.00 each. $90.00 each. $100.00 each.
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Located at 248 N. 10th Street, NYC
Landmark 52, 53rd Avenue, NYC
Registrant No. 17649836, Number 1004962
National ID # NMRSN1004962
Operating Company Ray Stone
525 West 41st Street, NYC
Open 9:00AM - 5:00PM
Integrated Amp. Keworth 7100 600, watts
Integrated Amp. Keworth 7100 600, watts
307 cone transistors base $100. B41-8749-5200
307 cone transistors base $100. B41-8749-5200
Volkswagen wheel kit New $2.84 4 pli BUFK for $2.00 each. Ray Sunback's, Masis. 3-27
1974 Mutual 2, 4 cylinder, A/C Excel-
condition, and Low Air Pressure Alpine Backseat
2-27
Brand new canoe, and Pioneer 8-track Dolly
recording unit. Call 864-2642
5-26
Turn Table 9 month old in excellent condition
= static pad Audible Reflex. Call Scott 864-293-1000
78 Hondo Express. Excellent condition. baskets
included. 841-7644 or 843-3120. 3-28
VW Square back, 1971. Excellent condition $850
negotiation or trade with big motorcycle.
$625 for a new pair.
ENTERTAINMENT
DAILY
LOUSE'S WEST
ALL YOU CAN DRINK
MONDAY NIGHT 3
Guest - $2.00 Guest - $2.00
6-12:00 TN & Michigan
MON-THURS 7:90-10:
$1 PITCHERS
U.S. TUESDAY 7:50-
50' Schooners & $1 Pitcher$
FRIDAY 1:70-
DRINK & DROWN
DRINK & 700'
788 Maxs
POOL TOURNAMENT
$100.00 GRAND PRIZE
Tuesday, March 27th
per Mallard
$2.50 Registration Fee
BACKGAMMON TOURNAMENT
$100.00 GRAND PRIZE
Wed., March 28th
Per Mallard
$2.00 Registration Fee
The Lawrence
Open House
7th Mass
GUIDE
Raleigh 10 speed bike in good condition, 26 in
with lock and call. Call Sean 8644-2916 - 8627
Mamiya RB-75 B7-1, by 2%, SLR, with mated
hood, little used. *perf.* 6875, $65.00
3-28
3-28
1967 Rover 2000 TC, $700. $150. 824 Houc. Coupe
restores, parts included. $150. 824-724. 0-1 p.m.
$300.
2. Custom made speakers, 16 inch woofer,
32 inch woofer, 40-inch woofer.
Excelent for sound discs, TVs, computers.
Technical support available.
Caveat Deck *Lakeyette DR-D50 top bailing*
*Leather mount with peak indicator light.* $79 new
mount with peak indicator light.
Bicycle. Eisenstien custon frame, 60 cm (23 in).
excellent $375, 84-274, 16-70 cm
3-28
Atlanta explorer motion picture structure. For rent
at Atlanta, GA 30307. Prices vary by size and
type. ONLY $1190. Studio number: 852-364-2355.
www.atlantaexplore.org
HERE'S WHAT'S HAPPENING!
INFINITY QA loudspeaker. Brand new with 5
warranty. Look and sound great. 3-30
- 3-30
H4 Honda 750 Price negotiable Call 842-1825
after 6.30 3-30
Pioneer stereo, amplifier 80 watts, like new.
$550.00 negotiable.
3-30
Snakes - Two captive born male Burmese python
10* + 843 - 852
3-27
Tumbler T-1 8-Bank Operations Manual (1975-
1979) New, 10.91 Call: 884-3600, 884-3610
1925 Honda CB500 Good engine and new parts.
Mint sell. 864-6117.
3-27
1978 Honda 400 Bank 11, excellent condition
780 miles. Serious injuries only. B11-8411. Porsche
911. Excellent shape.
Have an Availability night; no refund on $0.00
without a valid prescription for any drugstore.
Store 801, Musk, 815-349-0000. We do delivery.
mountainseeing boots, size 12, cost $10, sell for
$60.00. Set of high quality bicycles, wheels, valves
and tires.
1974 Norton X500 Commands; 450 Miles, Fast.
Battery; Like Exceptional Condition.
Model: 840-232-607
840-232-605
It's enough to make Julia Chula's mouth water.
Bound Cover Cream Cheese & Salmon Shoppe
109th Street, Chicago, IL 60617
FOUND
Ring found 3rd floor women's bathroom. Learned Hair Claim in 2018 Learned 3-26
Wedding band on hill NW of Pomeran's pottery
Call Chris at 844-360-968
3-28
HELP WANTED
LD. Bracketlet near Potter ‘Abbay’ on bracelet
ld with INSERTion `IRP` on Incle `B43-8423`.
Now taking applications for Fountain & Grill night. Apply in person at Vina Restaurant 1278. Apply in person at Vina Restaurant 1278.
RESIDENT ASSISTANTS needed for: Upwardbound student program during summer with Jill and Kathryn deRosa, Dr. Lily Garnett deRosa and staff members; salary of $2600 per month or equivalent; information available at 290 Carry or call 844-357-1111.
Part-time business opportunity. You choose the time. Call 842-3086 after 6 p.m.
3-27
Summer Jobs, National Parks Park Co. 52 Parks, 3,000
Summer Jobs, National Parks Park Co. 52 Parks, 3,000
Mountain Co. 4,180 K. Evergreen, Kalispell, Montana
Wanted..
Creative individual with
graphic arts experience to help
design posters part time. Excellent pay and fringe benefits
Call Jon 842-6930
EXOTIC JOB LOKE TAHOE,CALIFORNIA
5,000 summer over 35,000 miles
overvalued. Over 35,000 placed in CA-
tlanaritas, ranches, cruisers, river rafts, & more.
$179,929. Searay, California, 95860
$429,929. Searay, California, 95860
4:28
SUMMER DORMITHY COUNSELORS needed
for the Bond Program live in a KU
formats with an additional staff
staff during June and July. Baloney $850 per
workday. Must be fluent English and/or
available now. Corvitch or Calgary, call 664-3528
graphic arts experience to help design posters part time. Ex-
JUDGE MEN WOMEN NALBERTO'S
MIDDLE EAST SPORTS CENTER
NEW YORK
MEN'S SHOP $25.99 WOMEN'S
SHOP $30.99
WATERCELL CAVES
$17.99 JUST FOR YOU
Mechanically inclined student to work in small engine dye. Delicate student work, can arrange classroom activities and classes. Salary commensurate with civil engineer between 9-4 weeksdays or 9-3 weeksdays. Scotch College is located at 2710 Broadway North.
Delivery Drivers Needed Salary - commission
or call 842-3229. Piratid Plaza 5-20
or call 842-3229. Piratid Plaza 5-20
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Enter the exciting world of Health and Nutrition. Excelent earning-making=Make your own hours. We want people 6:00 to 9:00 p.m. on call. 3-27 6:00 to 9:00 p.m. on call.
NEEDED-LEAD COMPUTER OPERATOR-CSA
-Directs other computer operators & schedules
technicians for both 1st and 2nd shifts. Must be High
School Graduate & have experience in operation
of computers. Must be competent on qualifications.
Apply at Personal
Computer Center, 842-682-6227.
Opportunity Employer.
5-27
One of the Midwest's oldest moving and storage centers is now making summer applications for households for housing. You can only apply. Apply in person at 12:30pm W. 63rd St. (915) 819-4400. Equal Opportunity Employer.
School attendee for quadriplegic Typhoon, transfusion, and immunology research. In research, in the library, Call 845-726-9100.
Wanted desperate people to work ten hours, nights,
and weekends in the person at a restaurant.
Bartender, 127 W. 6th St. $29.50
The Information and Research Department of the City of Kansas City, Kansas is seeking a full-time position in the Human Resources department applications. This position requires a thorough working knowledge of computer programming in Java and HTML, as well as an IBM mainframe and the latest in multimedia technologies in leadership in data processing and communication. We need a flexible, well-motivated person to work with a team in various areas including data put into other new areas. The city offers an attractive benefit package. **Working at:** Business analytics, including Spring, 1979 graduates, are required. **Applications:** Male, 26-40 years of experience and Research Department, Municipal Office, 64101. AnEqual Opportunity Employer.
Bimethodical Research Assistant-Pharmacology and Technology degree degrees major in pharmacy or medicine. You have at least 2 years of experience in chemical process engineering and international pharmaceutical process engineering and international pharmaceutical process engineering requires a research technician salary of $8,000 to $13,000 per year depending upon the number of courses completed (0111-614-022). The University of Kansas is an优异 Opportunity-Affirmative Employer.
Wanted . .
Assertive Cocktail Waitress
for exciting, stimulating, adventurous,
club experience. $2.00 plus tips. Must be 21.
Call 842-6930.
ask for Jon.
One of the Milwaukee arena staffing and storage facilities is in need of a driver and bellhop. Well train qualified, committed DVCV requirements. Three workers need only 2 yrs of experience. Call or e-mail (913) 621-1449. Keep your phone number. Oversee our Operations.
Delivery wanted. Must be 18 have bake park Park
and continental station in Davenport. Plain 6
342-758-0900
A student qualified for female midnight student needed for Main office and Western office positions. A student required to study with own vip. helped with *Letters of Transmittal* (412) or *BKI 1011* information and resumes. 2-30
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Wanted
Attrative, aggressive,
intelligent, invocable woman for part-
icipation in backgammon and pool four-
ment games and have knowledge of both games.
Excellent pay and
Call Jon 842-6930
Latin American Cancer Society and that joint promotional
program will be held at the Karen Garden Center, both in New York
3-29
Research Associate at Rochester Metropolitan B.S.
School of Medicine. Req. M.S. or Ph.D. in family medicine,
$8,500-$16,000 per year for the first year. May March 29, 2019 through April 9, 2019
Principal investigator position. Reqs. Master's degree in nursing or related profession
and Technology University of Kansas. Reqs. Bachelor's degree in nursing or related profession
and Technology University of Kansas. Reqs. Final Qualification of APRC
Affiliated with Karen Garden Center.
Research Assistant, Graduate student in Biology, Engineering or Computer Science to assist in research projects. Research positions involve devices. Requires experience in service update technology, initiality for 15 months with possible continuance until May 15, 1979 or possibly earth station. To begin May 15, 1979 or possibly earth station, apply to 643-8425 Snow Hill School, 643-8425
Full-time secretary needed for Child Development office. Provide general office duties, manage staff. Must have good talking skills and telephone skills. Children's Learning Center, 106 Lexington Road, Knoxville, TN 37804. Email: jenkennedy@lexingtonroad.org
LOST
12 yr old, add female贴. Hands give & white drapes
below. Width 76 cm. Height 30 cm.
Waist value: 85 cm. Waist height: 45-51 cm. Height: 84-90 cm.
Weight: 88 kg.
MISCELLANEOUS
THEIS BINDING COPYING - The House of
Dukes' Quick Copy Center is headquarters for
their binding and copying in Lawyers. Let us
inquire at 858 MAIN or phone 423-3416. Then
we'll see.
One year old German Shipped to give away had bad hair, gravely, some obstacle training, and was very shy. He was a bit scared.
RESENT TD, DRAFT: Kail national selective
scholarship program. U.S. Citizenship Society
$810,000. Liberation Society $410,
000.
NOTICE
RECKS BREE SHOP is now open 200 Raleigh, NC.
1-800-745-3555. www.recksbree.com
quick report, quick check, Vernon, Vermont, 614-6422
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DEATH WHY BOTTOM? EIKANKAR
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750
***
J. HOOB BOOKSELLER The finest scholarly biennials in the Market of Madison. We handle hardcover, paperback and hardcover backs are well organized and in excellent condition. We maintain a full library service for students. (Tuesday-Saturday) 1:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m., Sun. (Tuesday-Saturday) 1:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m., Sun. (Tuesday-Saturday) 1:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m., Sun. 841-444-7299
60s. Schmitters and 150. Pichner every Friday
after 7-5:3 at Loucines bar.
FEDX HELL, SURGERY CLINIC. Appeal up to $60,000
for surgery (819) 257-3090; (409) 257-3090.
(409) 257-3090.
Do you like films, timeless, exquisite, outdoor adventures, or other types of movies? The County Association has benefited the County auditorate by providing financial support for its involvement in community recreation. If you have an interest in film and would like to see a movie call 822-5256 or visit www.countyassociation.org for more info.
Got a mind Cavity?? Come to the Harbor, we'll be
fit (1)!
5-27
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Music: 04 FM Radio Dramax
Eating at 7:00. Eat at 9:00.
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Gayle Lushman referral referees new handed
brough UUdn. 861-356 or headquarters 841-
357.
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the information Centre's FVY! line, or send me the
information Centre's FVY! line, or
WIN A MOPED Register at your Kansas Union Bookstores
Big Ball. The weather is beautiful, and so are you! One of these tones you'll have on any day.
GREAT FOOD, GREAT SERVICE Just like you
want it. We make dinner special.
1 a.m. 12 noon 11 midnight 3-50
Bring this ad to Gilberts and get 50% off cover
charges Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday.
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Cubblera fares hour: Tuesday and Thursday 8:30 p.m.,午餐 enter and drink for free. 8:30 p.m.
Washington of Hair Barber wants to be allow *you* to
choose your hair. 1919 West 24th, 823-6041,
because he must wear it. 1919 West 24th, 823-6041,
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vouchers at all times. Gibraltar, Hilliard
Stooping Center
FREE PEANUTS with every pitcher tomorrow
night at Iceland's
3-26
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MATH TUTOR M. in math, patience, three years professional tutoring experience 822-341-541
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! available with
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information. Pm to 1 on friday at 1 o'clock at
Saturday 10am at noon at 1 o'clock at
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EXPART TUTORIALS. MATH 002 (113, call 864-5172)
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Tired of feeding yourself? Nalmuth Hall is offering a four-hour time away a boarding plan. You can book a week can be yours if you choose this plan. Stop at HALL 180, Nalmuth Hall 843-8599 ABIMH Hall 180, Nalmuth Hall 843-8599
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ON REMOVAL OF THE MARKING.
Bring bids to registration in T to Y for the T & M,
or in other areas where applicable.
Register as a National Guard Armory. Populate $10 all entries
to register and fill out application. Payment to U.S. Postal
Service available for purchase. For further information,
please contact us.
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TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tf
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980. tf
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Insurance policies. Law papers, term papers.
Widges: $42,072
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tion on Station Rose, 841-350, after 5:28, week-
day anytime network.
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driver. Prompt service Proofreading M-5-
843, 161-727
WANTED
Wanted. Single female to accompany me 10 min-
utes before departure. Will be followed by a
following flight. Contact Larry) after 5
minutes of booking.
WANTED: Tutorial Coordinator for Spring and Fall Programming in C++. Provide professional Science Major training, professional knowledge of university and departmental procedures, have studying and be willing to work closely with students and be willing to work closely with faculty. Due May 27, 1979, Amity in 3rd Carroll Hall at the University of Pittsburgh. Offer of active employee Qualified men and women of college age.
Mallai roommate for fall '19 semester at Mallai
Room; open room; hall, Call Drew or Dave;
6173 6173
WANTED: Half-time counselor. Must be a graduate student in community or health services and have an active and other service agencies in the community, he familiar with the needs of his students and have daily blocks of time. Applications due by January 31. SES is an equal opportunity affirmative action program. Qualified men and women of all races must apply.
Driver for carpool to KU Medical Center, Montreal,
309-825-7645, 812.145.812, 812.145.7645
* 40 cm in depth *
Roommate wanted: 2 bedroom apartment $80 =
Roommate wanted: 145 sq ft April 15 or later Call Carlo
637-673-9447 637-673-9448
Wanted Female, / nɪn-maʊsərɪn/ roommate for
a penthouse Apartment next fall Can
bear 864-1837
TENNIS PROS WANTED- Excelent Senior player and year-end position available, summer camp req. Call (212) 673-3780 or send 2 complete resumes, including resume address, phone number, reserved Avenue, 110th, Clivey Chase, MD
---
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
--additional words
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---
8
Monday, March 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Students search for glacial valley
Staff Reporter
Eleven people spent last Saturday searching for a buried glacial stream valley that could mean an abundant source of water.
Braving sub-freezing temperatures and 30 mph winds, eight students in Exploration Geophysics conducted experiments designed to find the valley, situated several miles north of Perry State Park.
Finding glacial valleys is important because of their potential, as ground sources.
Don Steeple, research associate in the environmental section of the State Geological Survey, said that as much as 100 times more water could be obtained from a glacial well than a regular well.
The students were assisted by Steeples, George Horet,
assistant professor of geology, and Jane Denne, research
researcher.
SIX HUNDRED thousand to a million years ago, glaciers extended into northern Kansas, according to Steeples. They crept down from Canada carrying rubble from the land they passed through.
Glacial valleys are good ground water sources because they are porous and water flows through them easily. Rolhe
Rothe said when the glaciers receded they left behind valleys filled with the rubble, called tilt. Since then the glaciers have melted.
Steepies that pump five gallons of water a minute from a perall well was considered fortunate.
A deep well in the area, however, has been tested at 500 gallons a minute, Denne said. This well, a similar one aligned with it, and two outcroppings of limestone were the source of minerals to suspect the presence of a glacial valley, Denne said.
The students used explosion seismology to try to detect the glacial valley. Explosion seismology is a technique that uses the timing of soundwaves created by explosions to determine the underground structure of an area.
The sound waves generated by the explosion were picked up by a series of geophone probes, a soundwave detection device, about three inches in the ground. They were strong and a specific spacing pattern that covered about 36 meters.
The first two sets of explosions were refraction experiments. Refraction is used at shallow depths, Rothe said, and measures the time it takes for sound waves to hit the first high-velocity layer at a necessary angle, travel across the layer and then bounce back up to the surface. The second set of explosions describes valley and the steepness of its walls can be determined.
After a limited analysis of their data, the students discovered that there appears to be a glacial valley running north and south in that area and that its west wall is some steeper than its east wall.
THE STUDENTS then conducted a reflection experiment to try to determine the valley's depth. A third set of explosions was set off near where they thought the center of the valley was. They then measured the travel time of the waves an
Denne said that the next step was to try to trace the valley's path, size and direction, possibly by using another
"In addition to the extent of the valley, it will give us a better idea of the quantity of water that might be available
Nuclear protesters to appeal verdicts
Five persons who each were found guilty Friday of two charges stemming from a January protest of the Wolf Creek bill, an event new to Burlington will annotate that verdict.
Bill Beeens, Lawrence senior and spokesman for the protesters, said the decision would be appended because "a bad precedent was set."
The defendants they should have been able to use the Kansas compulsion statute in their defense, Beems said.
The compulsation statue would have allowed the defendants to "put nuclear power on trial" by claiming they had been responsible because of the dangers of nuclear power.
"Because the nuclear power plant placed a much greater harm than what we did, we were justified." Beems said.
Judge Floyd Coffman of the Coffey County District Court in Burlington ruled before the trial that compulsion could not be used because the Wolf Creek plant, expected to be completed in 1983, did not contain any malicious material.
The Jan. 12 demonstration resulted in the arrest of 36 persons for blocking a train carrying a reactor vessel to the Wolf Creek site.
The jury, after less than an hour's deliberation Friday, found the defendants guilty of temporary deprivation of bail and having been fired as officer. They each were ordered to pay $100 in fines and court costs and to spend 10 days in jail if the fines were not paid.
According to Beems, the defendants will pay their fines within 10 days.
Nineteen persons who pleaded guilty or no contest to criminal trespass charges after their arrests each paid $83 in fines and court costs.
Eleven others who pleaded not guilty, including three KU students, will face trial on the same charges as the conspiracy. Their trial dates will be set May 17.
Charges were dropped against one man who had requested to be arrested at the demonstration.
Alumni study office faculty club proposal
A six-member committee was appointed recently by the University of Kansas Alumni Association Board of Directors to build an alumni center and faculty club.
According to Dick Wintermorte, executive director of the Alumni Association and a member of the investigating committee, the need for a center for several months.
Winternote said that overcrowding of the Alumni Association's offices in the Kansas Union had been the primary reason for appointing a committee.
"The major need is that the Alumni Association is growing and we need more office space. We think the University would be a good place for alumni and other social groups," he said.
Wintermorte said that since the Alumni Association received no federal funding, the cost of a center would be paid for by the school to eliminate the cost of a center had been made.
THE SIX committee members plan to determine whether a center would be feasible. Wintermatter said, "We will study the situation and build a building would be maintained and the cost."
Members already have visited Ohio State, Bowling Green and Miami of Ohio universities which have free-standing alumni centers, Winnertime said. Investigations of several other university centers are planned for this spring.
"Other schools have found the centers worthwhile, and the centers have provided staff for the programs."
Wintermote said that one possible site for a center was a piece of land owned by the Kansas University Endowment Association at the northeast corner of 13th and Oread, which is being used as a parking lot. Wintermote said, no decision has been reached.
TODD SEYMOUR, president of the Endowment Association and a member of the investigating committee, said the parking lot was a logical place, being so close to campus."
Plans for a center include space for staff offices, meeting rooms, accommodations for visitors.
The committee plans to present a statement report to the alumni board members Mr. Harris and Ms.
Relevant historical trends taught backward
Staff Reporter
Bv MARK GATES
History can be more interesting and relevant when taught backward, a KU professor's experience.
"Generally, teaching history backwards involves making a statement about what is going on today, let's say in feminism, and then working back through time to the period of women's rights," the professor, William Tuttle, chairman of the graduate history program, said recently.
"By moving backward chronologically, you relate the past to the present more effectively than by starting at the beginning of the present," generates interest at the outset," he said.
THE MAN credited with developing this method of teaching says one way to narrow the generation gap is to teach history backward.
The man, Ernest W. Lefewer, director of Georgetown University's Ethics and Public Affairs department, died on January 18.
related to similar events of the past. This develops greater understanding by young people of the influences on the opinions of their elders.
David Katzman, professor of history, said historians had always been aware of the nature and consequences of war.
"Historians are focused on current events and this motivates them to delve into the past to study the historical perspective," he said.
"Just as the past influences the present and the future, the present also influences the past," Katzman said. "However, we must caution ourselves against pandering to the past because sometimes there is a tendency to project the present into the past, and that is missing history."
TUTTLE SAID he taught history backward because the period of history he covers
"I teach history from 1941 on. I'll talk about McCarthyism in the early 50s and then relate that to Stalin's rule in the 40s," he said.
"An important qualification to make is that studying history for its own sake, regardless of its current implications, is valid, too.
"If one wants to understand medieval England just for its own sake, this is equally worth it."
Tuttle said he knew of no local schools that were teaching history backward.
"I think it would be a better way if the purpose of the course were to enhance the person's understanding of man's nature." This helps stimulate student interest.
Tuttle said textbooks were not geared for this kind of teaching.
"THEY USED TO just allow a scholar to write a textbook. Now they do market research to develop books that they think will be used in school boards and teachers, not students.
This is a unique way of presenting history, but it don't know of any textbooks that are well-known.
"The conservative trends in education are stronger today than the innovative trends, 86 percent of the time."
However, Tuttle said the emphasis today in history texts was more topical.
"The neglecting of non-whtes, women and the working class in earlier textbooks was a reflection of their neglect by society," he said.
"There have been big changes in textbooks recently, but most still proceed chronologically. There are new topics but not new approaches."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Police Beat
Lawrence police said the arrested man, Michael R. Brown, 18, Silver Lake, had been released from the Douglas County jail yesterday morning on $3,300.
A Silver Lake man was arrested by Topeka police yesterday morning in connection with the theft of a car in Lawrence early Saturday.
- Compiled by David Edds
Brown is charged with the theft of a 1978 Datsun, valued at $5,500, from the parking lot of G.P. Loyd's, 701 Massachusetts St.
Thomas C Pearson, Concordia
car, had dropped his keys, police said. The
apparently had been stolen after another
man claimed the keys from the club
Lawrence police said two diesel tractors had been stolen Friday night from Russell Ford Tractor Co., 1105 E. 23rdSt.
Investigators said the tractors were probably loaded into an enclosed truck because the vertical exhaust pipe of one
Police said the tractors, a 1979 Ford valued at $1,760 and a 1978 Ford valued at $4,65, probably had been driven onto a loading dock and loaded into a vehicle.
of the tractors had been cut off so that it could be loaded.
MOTOR VEHICLE THEFTS
New 35mm Prints
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Lawrence police said a car had been stolen Friday night or early Saturday morning from the Ramada Inn, 2222 W. Sixth St.
RABID ANIMAL
The car, a 1978 Pontiac valued at $5,500, belonged to Carol Bishop, 634 Greer Terrace. The car was unlocked and the keys were in the carion police said.
KU police investigated on Saturday night a report of a raid skunk near the Endowment Association building on West Camps.
Pice said a KU police officer fired four shotgun rounds at the animal from a distance of 15-20 feet. The shots wounded but did not kill the skunk.
The officer then drew his service revolver and shot the animal. Police said the skunk continued labored breathing, but no signs of injury were on the revolver killed it. The body of the animal is being stored at Haworth Hall until it is sent to a Manhattan laboratory for examination.
John Mulder, University veterinarian, said it was not unusual to have to shoot an animal several times to kill it.
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KANSAN
On Campus
TOMORROW: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE by the American Bar Association/Law Student Division will be available from 6 to 8 p.m. in the legal aid department and 7:30 p.m. in REPUBLICANS meets at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Union. The KU KARATE CLUB will at 7:30 p.m. in Room 17 Robinson. A WESTERN CIVILIZATION CLUB will at 7:30 p.m. shown at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3 old Green Hall. The LAWRENCE COALITION FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE will sponsor a lecture by Richard J. Barner on "Power, for a New National Security Policy" at 8 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union.
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© Copyright 1979
Committee OKs 7% faculty raise
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee voted yesterday to recommend a 7 percent pay raise for faculty at Regents' institutions.
The proposed 7 percent pay hike had been requested by Gov. John Carlin in his budget recommendations, but had been cut to 6 percent in the Kansas House. The decision followed weeks of lobbying for the increase by University of Kansas administrators.
"We all tried to talk to the people we knew in Topeka to let them know we were concious."
Del Slinker, executive vice chancellor,
said yesterday that most KU admin-
istration staff must be able to archi-
c Dykes, much easier than contact
legislators about the faculty pay raise.
But Shankel said the committee decision may have been based on increased estimates of the state's income for next year more than concern for higher education.
But the fight for the 7 percent pay increase is not over yet, according to Senator Norman Gaar, R-Westwood, Senate majority leader.
"THE ESTIMATE THAT state income will be up next year gave them more flexibility," Shankel said. "We made that oint to them."
Gaar said that if the 7 percent increase were approved by the full Senate next week, it would have to go to a conference committee on both houses to iron out the differences.
Gaar said the result probably would be a compromise of a 6.5 percent increase.
KU FACULTY MEMBERS said although they were pleased with the committee decision, they were concerned that the lack of data in inflation, which topped nine percent last year.
Evelyn Swartz, professor of education an chairman of the faculty executive committee, said, "The only regrettable thing is that we didn't provide for it, it still does not cover the risk of plumbing.
Ambrose Saricks, professor of history and president of the Kansas chapter, the University of Kansas Professors, said the faculty had not asked for a higher increase because it wanted to do so.
"WE DIDN'T push for more than 7 percent because that what's the president called for in his wage and price guidelines," he said.
But Gerhard Zuther, professor of English and chairman of the Faculty Council, said the mood of the Legislature was against large increases in anything.
"I don't know that the climate in Topeka is of such a nature that they would give an impression of a warmer infilation," Zuther said. "And they have never had the view that they should catch up with the climate."
Zuther also voiced concern for next year's proposal to increase salaries. Next year's increase would not be enough to compensate for this year's inflation, he said.
"A 7 percent increase next year in view of the predictions of inflation would be worse."
Tuesday, March 27, 1979
[Picture of a man sitting in a chair, holding an umbrella].
Staff Photo by ALAN ZLOTKY
Reptile retailer
Besides raising sankens for a profit, Terry Ground of Lawrence also has a collection of guinea pigs and lizards. Ground hopes to pay for his hobby by selling the offspring. See
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Vol. 89. No.118
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Era of peace begins for Egypt and Israel
WASHINGTON (AP) - Egypt and Israel, enemies for a generation, signed a treaty yesterday to begin a new but fragile era of peace between Arab and Jew.
In a solemn ceremony on the front lawn of the White House, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin put their names to Arabic, Hebrew and English copies of a treaty involving mutual recognition, respect and peace.
"Pace has come," declared a beaming President Carter, whose personal intervention brought the peace talks back to the table in several stalements on the details of a treaty.
CARTER QUOTED the Bible and the Koran and offered a personal prayer that would be a reflection of his faith.
Sadat, replying, declared, "Let there be no more blooded between Arabs and Christians."
Sadat and Begin both praised Carter profusely. Sadat called him a man of compassion; Begin said Carter's work would be remembered for generations.
Even at lunch, only a little more than an hour before they signed, Begin and Sadat were still disputing what the treaty papers should call the West Bank area. Begin insisted on referring to it as Judea and Samaria.
AFTER SIGNING, the three grasped each other in a three-way handshake. Carter said, "We're ready."
But agreement did not come easily.
Outside the White House gates, 1,000 protesters, supporters of Palestinians, shouted their opposition, charging that they believed by cause by making a separate peace with Israel.
In the treaty, Israel agreed to dismantle
Jewish settlements and return to Egypt the
settled land.
Egypt agreed, for the first time, to formally recognize her Jewish neighbor as a member of the state.
A score of Jewish settlements are to be dismissed, "a parish that Hegan says we will abandon," he said.
THE HEART of the treaty is Israel's two-year withdrawal from the Sinai Desert.
Also, Israel airfields will be demobilized and handed over to Fovik for civilian use.
and amounts due to payees on our evaluation list
are subject to change. Please contact us if you have
has offered loans and grants of $ 80 million or
more, or any other details.
Agreement on the final details, the question of Israel's access to oil from wells to be surrendered back to Egypt, came in a Saddam face-to-face session between Sadat and Bet.
Beginner dropped his proposal that the treaty be signed at two further ceremonies, in
Instead, he agreed to settle for a one-day visit next Monday to Cairo.
It will be a return call for the historic visit of Satad to Jerusalem on Nov. 19, 1977, which started the peace process after years of rushing rhetoric between the two countries.
Six weeks from now Egypt and Israel must start talks leading to Palestinian authority in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Within nine months, Israel must withdraw from this half of the Sinai.
Within three years, Israel must withdraw from the rest of the Sinai and the Gaza Strip.
Kansan illustration by SHEILA KNIEGSHAUSER
Pact is protested, praised
Staff Reporter
By LYNN BYCZYNSKI
The treaty that brought peace to Egypt and Israel yesterday has stirred controversy at the University of Kansas.
Two groups, the Moslem Student Association and the Organization of Arab Students, have planned rallies for today and tomorrow to protest the treaty.
The peace treaty calls for Israel's
surrender to the Sinai desert within a
three-year period.
Israel agreed to break up Jewish settlements and return to Egypt Sinai land.
As a concession, Egypt agreed to
launch Israel for a time as a
military ally.
See related story page two
Mohamed Mustafa Ghuj, Misurata,
Libya, graduate student and a member of the Organization of Arab Students, said his
group thought the treaty was unjust to the Palestinian people.
"I'm NOT AGAINST peace, just against this treaty. They are dealing with a simple peace between Egypt and Israel. It doesn't consider Palestine." Gumi said.
A Palestinian student who requested that his name be withheld because he said he had been harassed in the past, said the treaty was made at Palestine's expense.
"The treaty doesn't recognize the national rights of Palestine, it ignores the rights of Israelis. It ignores the Palestinian Liberation Organization, and it legalizes occupation by ignoring the Gaza war."
Both Arab students said that the treaty, by neutralizing Egypt, would disrupt the balance of power in the Middle East and lead to war.
BUT THE DISMAL warnings of some students could not dampen the enthusiasm of others.
Odred Dromed, Tel-Aviv, Israel, graduate student, called the signing of the peace treaty "a great moment in the history of the Middle East."
"I see quite a future for peace," Droum said. "For我 personally it means that now I can go to Egypt to see the pyramids, and there and maybe do business there."
Ahmad Abou-Helaw, Alexandra Egypt, graduate student and president of the Egyptian Student Association, also spoke of the effect peace would have on him.
"To me it means I will lose no more friends or family to war. And when I go back next year, I will find my country in a much better economic situation," he said.
MOHAMED EL-HODIRI, professor of economics and adviser of the Egyptian
Student Association, said he was optimistic about the peace treaty.
"I know the treaty doesn't solve all the problems. But it is a good beginning." El-Hodri said.
Bracha Galander, Jerusalem, Israel, graduate student, offered a more cautious reaction to the peace treaty.
"I have very mixed feelings about it. I myself am very skeptical because I don't know all the details. I will give it some time," she said.
Her husband Yechil, a research associate in the pharmaceutical chemistry department, explained the reason for his mixed feelings about the treaty.
"I don't think we yet have peace in the Mideast, but if it a good step for the future. If the other Arab countries will realize that they are threatened by negotiations, we will have a real peace."
JRP residents ask room check explanation
By LAURA STEVENS
Staff Reporter
About 150 residents of Joseph R. Pearson Hall met for almost two hours last night with Richard Froik, JRP resident director, Bob Nugent, JRP assistant resident and Daniel made during a hall safety check that was made during spring break.
During the check, staff members found violations of the residence hall contract, including marijuana plants and alcohol. Students who were found in violation of the contract were notified Sunday in a letter from Frolik.
Frokins said JRP staff members had not anticipated having to check rooms for safety problems and for that reason, she insisted.
During that check, violations that were left in the open were noted on a list of room numbers. Frokk said No.
Froik said he made the decision to check the entire hall after receiving two phone calls from residents on March 10
"NO ONE AT Strong Hall has seen that list," Frolik said.
One resident asked Frokl why he had not been contacted since spring break informing him that his room had been entered. He also asked Frokl why violators did not receive notes until Sunday.
"We were checking with ORP and the KU council to make 100 percent sure we were in the right," Frolk said.
THE ORP IS the Office of Residential Programs.
THE GREATs The Office of Residential Programs.
SOME OF THEM ask what would happen to them if they were found in violation.
"None of this will be on any of your records," he said. "It stays on a piece of paper in Strong Hall until the end of the semester. At that time, I have the pleasure of ripping it up in my hand. If you must in next year, no one will know any different."
*IF THIS is a first warning, it will be a first warning. If this is in a second or third warning, it will be noted at ORP and *FIRST WARNING*.
Some students were concerned with the staff's right to enter a room without notice or the resident's permission.
"No matter how you try to get around it, you still have no right to violate our rights," one resident said. "I agree you have to go in for the safety checks but these doors are not where you were in my room without my consent and presence."
Friars said the student rights committee of the Student Senate planned to discuss the policy on entering rooms at the university.
CHRIS CLINE, chairman of the AUHR housing services committee, and that her committee was discussing four new housing projects.
"We have not made a formal statement at this time," she said at the JRP meeting.
Fredra said he would talk to Fred McEhlene, director of the office of residential programs, who is out of town until next spring.
KJHK funding request delayed
The Student Senate Communications Committee voted to delay its decision on funding for KKRHI station last night after a Senate's use of Senate funds allocated last year.
All committee recommendations will come before the full Senate April 8. Organizations who wish to appeal the committee recommendations can do so then.
Although the committee recommended a $73,260 line allocation for the Kansan, JKHK will have to wait until tonight's meeting for approval on its $1,517 request for fiscal year 1980.
Last spring, the Senate allocated 75 cents a student to KJRH with the understanding that it would be able to allocate normal line allocation would generate $18,000 to be used for the purchase of a
Margaret Berlin, student body president,
last said night that the additional funding
also carried a stipulation that the transmitter purchase would enable JKH to use the system.
STEVE PEGG, station manager of KJIK, said that the station instead was awaiting administration approval on conversion to 100 watts instead of 1,000 watts. As a result, $6,000 of the $18,000 temporary facility will be used for general station improvements.
Pegg said he had discussed the alternative use of the $6,000 with Mike Harper.
However, Berlin questioned Harper's authority to approve the alternative use of a drug.
The Communications Committee will complete its recommendations at tonight's night.
The Academic Affairs Committee heard budget requests from eight student organizations. Final budget cuts will be made Thursday and Friday.
THE ORGANIZATIONS' tentative allocations and their original requests were: Black American Law Students Association, $55 from $1360; Psychology from $290 from $290; Student Association for the Combined Health Sciences, $290 from $360.
Engineering Student Council, $1,100 from
$2,100; University Association for the Advancement of Women Engineers, $315 from
$1,266.
Astronomy Associates of Lawrence, $710
from $1,240; Kappa Psi Pharmaceutical
Fraternity, $260 from $450 and University
Kansas Geophysical Society, $170 from $380.
THE COMMITTEE delayed voting on
The Cultural Affairs Committee voted last night to recommend a five cent line allocation increase to the University Conference Center and to increase the Chamber Music Series.
budget requests from five other organizations until tomorrow night.
The Student Services Committee heard budget requests from seven student organizations. Volunteer Clearing House did not appear as scheduled.
The groups recommended allocations and original requests were:
Legal Aid Society, $4,350 from $5,300;
Academic Freedom Action Coalition, $695 from $455; Friends of Headquarters,
$7,793.25 from $8,143.25.
Alpha Phi Omega, $1,081 from $1,661;
Commission on the Status of Women, $1,661;
from $2,500. KU Ecology Club, $2,133 from
KU Veterans, $7,029 for $7,029.
The Sports Committee heard budget requests totalling $94,406 from Recreation Services. Committee members delayed action on the requests until Thursday because of printing errors in the budget request.
2
Tuesday, March 27, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wine Servers
OPEC studies price increases
GENEVA, Switzerland—The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries probably will raise oil prices considerably, sources said yesterday.
OPEC is meeting in Geneva to discuss the effects of oil shortages caused by the Iranian revolution and other factors affecting world oil supply.
An Iranian delegate said that Iran had received support from Iraq, Algeria and Libya for a 29 percent increase, which would raise the American retail sector. The Iranian delegation also said it
Algeria denied that it was supporting such a large increase, but said it did want a price hike.
Opposition to the hike is expected to come from Saudi Arabia and Kuwait because officials from both countries said they wanted the market to determine
Gasoline deregulation urged
WASHINGTON - The deregulation of gasoline prices was urged yesterday by a ton official in the Federal Trade Commission.
The official, William S. Comanor, director of the FTCs bureau of economics, told a Senate subcommittee the present regulations were incredibly complex, and it would be easier to make them clearer.
The Carter administration had considered lifting the regulations this year, but the Iranian revolution and tight oil supplies changed the plans.
Although the prices would rise immediately after the deregulation, Corman said, the consumer would end up paying less for gasoline because of the return.
H-bomb story barred by judge
MIL.WAUKEE-A federal judge issued a preliminary injunction yesterday barring The Progressive magazine from publishing a story on hydrogen bombs. The injunction was issued after the magazine declined an offer by the judge to appoint mediators in its dispute with the federal government.
The government had asked U.S. District Judge Robert W. Warren to block publication on grounds that the article would reveal secret information that was published.
The magazine contended that the information in the story was readily available and that the article was about secrecy in the nuclear weapons industry, not about the making of a bomb. It also argued that the injunction was a threat to the freedom of the press provision of the First Amendment.
Evidence against Hart disputed
PREYHO, Okla — a chiristmic testifying for the defense yesterday disputed the state's evidence against Gene Lorey Hart, suspected in the murders of three women.
Herbert Maxey, a former chemist for the state health department, said the tests could show similarities, "but that's about as far as it goes." Maxey also added that the results were likely to be accurate.
After examining hair samples from Hart and one of the three Girl Scouts found bludgeoned to death. June 13, 1977, Maxye said the samples looked similar but could only give a clue as to the race of the person. They did not, he said, give a clue to one particular person.
A technician for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation earlier testified the "microscopic characteristics of both samples were consistent and they either came from Gene Leroy Hart or someone with exactly the same microscopic characterism."
Utility tax removal endorsed
TOPEKA-Legislation to remove a 3 percent sales tax from residential utility bills was endorsed by the Kansas Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee yearly.
The committee endorsed the House bill, 9-2, after eliminating from the exemption any residential bills for telephone and telegraph service. The committee also removed a House provision that would have exempted utility service for agricultural use.
The bill would remove the 3 percent tax from home utility bills beginning July 1 at an estimated cost of $18 million...
The bill received slight opposition when State Sen. Charlie Angell, R-Plans attempted to remove the utility exemption and reduce the 3 percent state sales tax to 2.7 percent. Angell's attempts were foiled when the committee voted against that action.
Committee OKs spending lid bill
TOPEKA—A state spending bill endorsed by a Kansas Senate committee yesterday should be more acceptable to Gov. John Carlin than he vetoed last month.
The bill would establish a 7 % per cent limit on increased appropriations from the general fund and the federal revenue sharing fund. It also would require that a year-end general fund balance be maintained of at least 8 percent of the state budget.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee endorsed the bill after they deleted a House provision that would have provided a $14 million property tax cut.
A provision was added by Senate Minority Leader Staceen Steiger, D-Kansas City, to exempt from the lid state aid for local school districts as tax relief.
The change to the House plan was the only thing that made the spending plan different from the measure Carlin vetoed.
End to dry flights proposed
TOPEKA-A A bill that would allow airlines to serve liquor on flights over Kansas without a license was introduced yesterday in the Kansas Senate.
While the bill, introduced by the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee, does not address the question of serving liquor when on the ground, presumably the airlines serving Kansas would have to keep their bottles corked while loading and unloading passengers.
Earlier in the 1970s, Vern Miller, who then attorney general, maintained that airlines could not legally sell liquor by the drink even while in the air over California.
House votes to drow primaru
TOPEKA-Kansas House members voted yesterday to cancel the state's first presidential primary, scheduled for April, 1980, saving the taxpayers $1.13.
Legislators tentatively approved, 63-54, a bill repealing the state's one-year law that set up a Kansas primary to nominate candidates for president of the state.
Under current law, every voter in the state who declared a party affiliation would be able to vote in that party's primary.
State Rep. James Gillmore, R-Newton, argued legislators to maintain the state's current convention of electing national party convention delegates in the House.
But supporters of the bill said a primary would offer more people a chance to nominate delegates and presidential candidates.
Bill could give pot to patients
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday tentatively approved a bill that would allow cancer and glaucoma patients to use marijuana as part of their treatment.
The bill's sponsor, State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said it would remove criminal penalties for possessing marijuana only for patients certified by their doctors.
Glover said research had indicated marijuana greatly eased nausea and other unpleasant side effects caused by chemotherapy.
The bill would permit the use of marjuanja to help ease nausea caused by chemotherapy. It also could be used to treat glaucoma, an aeve disease.
During committee hearings on the plan, medical authorities testified that a third of the cancer patients in a University of Kansas Medical Center experiment thought marijuana eliminated nausea after chemotherapy treatments.
Skies will be partly cloudy today and highs will be in the mid-50s, according to the Weather Service. Temperatures will be in the 30s tonight. It will be partly cloudy tomorrow.
Weather...
In Cairo, millions of Egyptians watched their televisions, tuned in their radios or simply listened for the pealing of bells announcing the birth of peace for their land.
TEI, AVIV, Israel (AP)-Tens of schools of Israelis gathered in cold, rainy weather yesterday to dance, cheer, cry and pray as they hailed the peace with peace.
Blast mars treaty festivity
SPOKESMEN AT three hospitals said none of those injured was in serious condition and one American tourist was hurt. None of the vietnamized was identified by name.
The festive mood was shattered in Jerusalem, where a terrorist grenade inside the building exploded.
The grenade exploded in Jerusalem a one- city 10 minutes before the treaty was signed in Washington. It injured four American tourists, one French tourist and five other persons who were not identified by nationality.
“THIS IS MY WORLD day since I left my home in Palestine in 1948,” one Palestinian tailor, Mohammed Khaldi, told a reporter and witness its stigma and disgrace.
IN A SPEECH to guerrilla trainees at a Palestinian shanty town on the southern edge of Beirut, Arafat predicted Sadat would soon be assassinated.
No one claimed responsibility for the
Much of the Arab world seethed with hatred and narrow yesterday, the day of the war.
Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat vowed to抓 off the hands of "the stone Sadat, the terrorist Begin and the imperial Carter."
explosion, but Palestinian guerrillas have vowed to disrupt the peace.
The ruling National Democratic Party of President Anwar Sadat planned rallies in Tehran on Tuesday.
IN TEHRAH, Iran, protesters seized the Egyptian Embassy and four employees as hostages but said the hostages would not be harmed. A mob stormed the Egyptian Embassy in the Persian Gulf oil state of Kuwait, smashing doors and windows. Protesters occupied the offices of Egypt Air in Damascus, Syria.
Israeli-occupied West Bank of the Jordan River and Gaza Strip to protest the Israeli-Egyptian treaty. General strikes also paralyzed Lebanon's Moslem areas.
Palestinians staged general strikes in the
In other world capitals, Palestinians, other Arabs and sympathizers护萨atin and rallied to denounce the treaty that ends 30 years of war between Israel and Egypt. But the treaty leaves Israel in control of some occupied Arab lands and does not meet Arab demands for an independent Palestinian homeland.
Last night's organized events were simple—the lighting of mosques and ringing of church bells at the moment of the treaty signing in Washington, 9 p.m. in Cairo; the presentation of a "hung of peace" to the leaders of Iraq; the arrival of Saqafjord as it carried 400 American passengers through the Suez Canal; and the piping of whistles along the canal.
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WANTED
Free University
Besides putting together each semester's curriculum, we are also organizing several one day seminars on a variety of topics. We have a lot of room for new ideas and improvements on old ones.
The Free University is an organization that serves as a clearing house for volunteer instructors in the Lawrence KU community. It offers as well, an opportunity for students to enrollment in academic and non-academic courses.
Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of Orienteer Kanass, Mt. Oread Bicycle Club, and the KU Sailing Club as well as many special outdoor events. We need people to help out in all areas.
sua outdoor recreation
iR
indoor recreation
We're looking for people to help coordinate these events and others.
New ideas are always welcome for other indoor recreational activities.
Ches, Table Tennis, Bridge, Backgammon,
Football, Go Arm Wrestling and Quarterback Club.
Cautionar activities. Come in and apply.
Fine Arts
sua films
The Fine Arts area of SUA acts to supplement the "arts activities" of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for staging workshops, performances and exhibits in any of the arts areas . . . literature, art, drama, music, and dance.
Just like the big shows downtown, only better because we offer so much more and for a lot less.
We are looking to expand the wide variety that we already have in herds: Popular series, Summer series, Midnight series and the Clawed.
Under consideration are the a great director's series, Sunday specials and an International series, visiting illuminiers and
SPECIALEVENTS
We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands. One of our specialties is the outdoor concerts that include several groups and lasts as long as six hours.
Special Events involves a lot of students when it comes to promoting a show. Security, ushers, hospitality and light and stage are areas that must be con-
Check us out and see what you can do to help.
SUR
TRAVEL
SUA Travel offers a unique, less expensive way to travel for the KU student.
Past trips have gone to Padre Island, Vall, Appalachian
Village, the Kentucky Coast and many other places.
Creative minds are needed to promote these programs and develop new ideas.
FORUMS
ideas, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all a part of
SUA Forums
The Forums committee brings nationally recognized people to the University for stimulating and thought provoking programs. We also keep in touch with people on campus and in the local community who have something to savet to a University audience.
We need innovative people like you to help us with our people programs.
pr public relations
SUA Public Relations is responsible for promoting the image and activities of our programming board to the students and the University community. Anyone with creative ideas for promoting SUA is encouraged to apply.
This coming year's activities includes fall and summer orientation and the Madrigal Dinner.
EXPERIENCE IS NOT A NECESSITY HOWEVER INTEREST IS REQUIRED. MARCH 30 IS THE SIGN UP DEADLINE, SO DON'T DELAY. FOR MORE INFORMATION, STOP BY THE SUA OFFICE IN THE KAN-
SAS UNION OR CALL 864-3477
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Tuesday, March 27, 1979
University Daily Kansan
3
Snakes not just a hobby
Bv PATRICIA RICE
Staff Reporter
The snake wraps its body around its owner's neck as its companion crawls on the floor between his feet. Another snake crawls inside, with a window坐 where it glistens in the sun.
"Are you nervous?" his wife asks
"Not yet," the man says.
His face slowly begins to turn red from the pressure as the 10-pound, 4-foot-long snake moves in.
Officers testify in court hearing
These are only three of the four bourses owned by Terry Grund. Grund is one of
Lee Harris, 26, Denver, confessed voluntarily last December to the killing of a Lawrence man, according to testimony in Harrel Crossfield, a Lawrence police detective.
Harris is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the November 1977 slaying of Noram Wood, former manager of W. Woolworth Co. store, 911 Massachusetts.
Crossfield testified in a Douglas County District Court hearing. The hearing was called after a request from Harris, who said that he would not testify on the grounds that it was taken improperly. Harris allegedly confessed while he was taken to Colorado in December after waiving extralimitation.
Harris' defense attorney, Dennis Prater, who was appointed by the court, filed a motion alleging that Harris was coerced into taking the position of two other law enforcement officers during a car trip from Detroit to the Johnson County jail in Glathe. The other officers were David Johnson of the Kansas Bureau of Inspection and the Josephus de la Jones of the Douglas County Sheriff's office.
James Paddock, Douglas County district court judge, heard testimony from the three officers yesterday morning. Paddock instructed Prater and Mike Malone, district attorney, to file written arguments by 1:30 p.m. Friday. Paddock scheduled the hearing of oral arguments for 3 p.m. Monday.
several Lawrence residents who raise animals for pleasure and profit.
For a full-time job, Ground ants anique restoration shop in North Lawrence, Kentucky.
Grand said that after he got his first litter of smokes from the ones mating now that he was a boy, he was still trying to
Grund said he expected from 15 to 20 snakes in his first litter. Although raising bees could be profitable, Grund said, making money was not his main objective.
"BASICALLY WHAT I'm trying to do is pay for my b母, "Grund said.
Grund said he had kept snakes since he was in elementary school. As a boy in Massachusetts, Grund said he kept 40 mouse snakes in the summer and let them go in the fall.
Grand said that in New York City, people carried arms around their necks at night as a sign of respect.
"The method seems to work," Grund said.
"The method seems to work," Grud said. Grud's wife, Deborah Smith, shares his penchant for raising animals. But she raises an animal highly incompatible with her husband's boas: Peruvian guinea pigs. She has raised them for the last vew and a half.
SHE KEEPs the 45 long-haired animals, which resemble multi-colored mop heads, in a back room far away from the boas upstairs.
Smith sells her guinea pigs to area pet stores and private owners for $15 to $18
"But buss would try to eat them, if they go close enough," Smith said.
But Smith said she would soon quit raising guinea pigs. She said she could not continually face the trauma of wondering how they were treated after they left her.
Another local local p raises is Bob Clark, Lawrence graduate student, who shares Grumb's fascination with snakes. He said his father was a python lover andPython the money was by-a-product.
"DREED the snakes if I had to give the babies away," Clark said.
Clark said he had been breeding pythons for four years.
He sells them to Lawrence and Kansas city residents and local pet shops. His price ranges from $75-$200.
Grund, Smith and Clark are licensed and taxed for their animals.
But that and their love for animals are not the only things these pet owners have in common. They also have the common desire to address to remain unknown to the public.
They requested, "Please don't print my address. I wouldn't want my neighbors to know about the animals, especially the snakes."
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Congressmen differ on draft
By TOM ZIND
Staff Reporter
While local members of Students for a Liberarian Society year ago put a petition calling on the U.S. government to reinstate the draft are meandering through Congress. U.S. representatives
The five draft bills in the House of Representatives are still being debated in subcommittees. Katsuno Shia, legislative co-chair for Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan, said yesterday.
Rep. Bob Whittaker, R-Kan., said it might be even longer before the bills get to the house floor.
"All of them are in subcommittee hearings," she said. "I imagine the debate will go on through the summer and possibly the fall."
"MOST LIKELY IT will be later than fall or summer," he said. "I doubt if you'll see anything enacted short of it."
The local SLS group is taking part in a national petition drive against the draft because the group says it is concerned that the draft will be reinstated within months.
The three Kansas Congressmen available for comment yesterday had mixed opinions about whether the draft or registration should be reinstated.
The group is opposed to the draft on the grounds that it violates individual rights.
Sloan said that Winn was now opposed to reinstating the draft.
"He is in favor of the all-volunteer force as it is now," she said. "He still keeping me
SLOAISAID WINN had received a lot of mail from students against the draft bills.
In a recent questionnaire sent to Winn's constituents, 54 percent of the respondents favored a return to the draft, while 46 percent were opposed. Sloan said.
Whittaker said he, too, thought the idea of reinstating the draft was "rather objectionable." However, he said he had reservations about the volunteer army.
"I'm still in the process of gathering information from both organizations, have access across the rather disturbing information on all-volunteer army, such as the quality of the applicants and the staff."
But Dan Glicken, D-Kan., differs with his fellow Representatives. He opposes returning to the draft but favors drafts from Joe Ketcham, his press secretary, said.
Whittaker said there probably would not
be a massive effort to register people for the draft unless there was a national emergency.
ONE HOUSE BILL calling for draft registration, also has a provision that would allow the Selective Service System access to name and address information in books.
The office of Charles Bennett, D-Florida, who sponsored the bill, said that the bill would be exempt from regulations which the federal government access to private records
"I think the draft is a good thing." he said. "I don't see any immediate requirement for a full-scale draft, but a draft registration is not a bad idea."
The bills to reinstate the draft have the support of some of the Reserve Officers Training Corps instructors at KU, assistant professor Army Huff, assist professor of Army Huff.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editor.
MARCH 27.1979
Racism harms society
In a recent photograph taken in the black of night, Mary Carr stood dressed in the familiar and despicable white Ku Klux Klan robe.
Simply said, Carr is basing her candidacy for mayor of this ST. Louis district.
With her arms outstretched as if to acknowledge a cheering throne, she stood outside her home. At her doorway she saw the Mary Carr for Mayor of Black Jack."
Her campaign platform proclaims white supremacy, of course, and also opposition to "communism," textbooks that advocate integration, and "welfare handouts for lazy negroes."
IT IS distressing that in 1979 one still can run for political office with racism as the campaign platform. However, it is encouraging that some residents oppose such a candidacy.
Such a reaction is justified and should be voiced. But one should not let hatred of this blatant attack cloud the occurrence of this distasteful campaign.
Carr makes the point herself: "We want to work within the system politically. We need to be in the place where we can do what we need to do."
Racism is nothing new. After all, the Klan has been around since 1866. But Carr's comments outline the growing sentiment that white America is
getting less government support and services while it is at the same time supporting welfare, i.e., blacks and other minorities.
AS ONE national columnist noted, Klansmen are not announcing their white supremacy as much as they are clamoring about preferential treatment by the government for blacks and whites. "We now fight for their rights and equality."
These people seek a political force to restore their "equality."
But Carr and others who advocate racism and the KKK as the political vehicle to white emancipation are blind to the malady of prejudice.
The very racism they advocate has in large part contributed to the negation of opportunities and advances for minorities. The result can be government dependence and persecution of the status quo.
Carr says the people of Black Jack are ready for racism. "There's nothing wrong with being a racist, nothing at all," she says.
The doles for welfare, forced integration of schools and revision of textbooks are the fruits of racism. Without that racism, those compensations would not be necessary. It is a disgrace that KKK zealots exist, but worse yet, believe the solutions to society's ills can be found in what is actually the very poison that causes those ills.
It must really be tough trying to live on a year. Our U.S. Senate seems to think it is.
Senators welsh on income promise
A couple weeks ago our senators, with unusually blinding speed and daring and without a hint of remorse, gave themselves another nice nav aid of sorts.
With barely a murmur of dissent, the Senate decided to wait until 1983 before enforcing strict new guidelines on outside sales. The guidelines were to go into effect Jan. 1.
Limiting outside income was one of the major reforms approved by lawmakers in 1977 to help spruce up their tarnished images.
"Service in the Senate should not require a sacrifice," Stevens explained the night before.
So sacrifice is for everybody else, not for senators. The public is being asked to take part in the vote. We wage increase larger than 7 percent. But such belt-tightening measures are not for members of the club. They just make the club more about one thing, one said anything about playing by them.
BUT THIS proved to be too much of a financial strain on their deprived existence. They voted, in a voice vote no less, to rid themselves of the limitations placed upon them by heartless reformers. Now they are assuming that extra $25,000 to make ends meet.
It was thought that by holding members to a maximum of $8,625 a year in outside earnings, on top of $7,500 in government income, they would be able to hill the less and more time on the lecture circuit.
THEY CANNOT, in Moynhan's words, be "worrying all the time about financial reserves and whether they can make it." They must be willing to trust them and must have their minds free so they can
Wednesday, March 21, the University Daily Kanan printed a story about the reorganizing of HIP under a new humanities department. Unfortunately the story went no further.
To the editor:
Kansan ignores persecution of IHP
I have been a student at KU since 1975 and every time I hear it written on my computer's personality page, persecution is a strong word, but it was the word used privately by a member of the journal.
For the freedom of education the ax has fallen, the death knell rings, but no one hears. Ask yourself, what would you do if your teacher could no longer use his style of teaching
I have also observed during those four years the Kansan's inability to uncover the truth. Through stonewailing and administrative decisions, the administration has without notice ended a class and, in effect, told the Kansan that they may teach. The Kansan has just sat idly by.
salary increase. I shall continue to defend it in any form because I believe in my heart that it was right. But we cannot have our cake and eat it, too."
There are faculty who will admit only in private that what the administration has done to HIP is wrong, but they won't protest openly—why?
The Kanas staff see themselves as dreamy-eyed crushers in the Woodward campus, so they use mouthpieces of University policy. The paper has stated its support of the program, but it has not actively defended it. It is a mistake, and it hindered to ask the administration questions.
I hate to make the comparison, but it is as though students were dropping dead all over campus and the Kansan were to report it as just a drop in enrollment.
Why is there a list of those faculty who are for or against the program secretly circulating? Why was this list used by a teacher of computer science to telephone students about the program? Why did initially no one want to chair the HP Advisory Committee and why was the committee never publically identified? Why did Chancellor Dykes disavow any mention of the program? What is Bartlesville refuse to respond openly to Professor Quinn's press release? What does he mean, he hopes the matter will be taken care of humanely? The advisory committee found it inappropriate that it make recommendations to reshape HP?
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
But after spending a couple of years thinking about how much money he stood to receive, the institutions were impassed. Byrd changed his heart and the chamber vote he was nowhere to be found.
or forbid Professor Pickett from commenting on Kansas law?
To the editor:
William Weissbeck
Topeka senior
When State Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, first presented his version of the dividing lines for Douglas County's House districts, it was almost camouflaged. The lines split the student vote at the University of North Carolina, itself, thereby diluting the power that we had.
The two points were otherwise the purpose, the map on whom Morrie took Katherine Reporter Party to Topeka to "help" *draw* map lines, anyone could see that gerrymandering had taken place.
As a student at the University of Kansas and a voter in Douglas County, I find the Republican Party's tactics in this matter highly questionable. And as a Democrat, I know that the governor did not veto the bill on the basis of this injustice to Douglas County.
Democrat questions Vogel's voting map
But the comedy turned to tragedy when the Douglas County fight was taken to the House floor and the Republican Party was able to pass Vogel's map. Even more disappointing is Gov. John Carlin's failure to vet the reapportionment bill.
The lines also drew State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, into a Republican-dominated district, thereby weakening his strength in the 1980 campaign.
Susan Otterness
DEATH PENALTY KANSAS LEGISLATURE MARIN THE DAILY KANSAN
Vice president of KU Young Democrats
It looks as if the Senate will be having its cake and eating it too, with a dish of ice cream.
Past dean praised for journalism efforts To the editor.
---
I am sure the Kanaan has carried news of the death Burton W. Mavry, who served in World War II and was killed.
In 1977 they told us that if they were given a cost of living increase, they would become good full-time senators. Well, they got their Senate seats, and now they are saying that they don't want to fill their full tenure.
When it comes time again for the day of
concentrate on the great issues of the day—such as making themselves more com-
Vernon Smith
Then, Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd, D-Wa., reminded his cronies that the present election which allows senators to elect new presidents is intolerably high. We have gotten our
nalism at KU before moving to Syracuse University in 1965.
HUMAN THIS IS YOUR GOD SPEAKING!
AS YOU KNOW, A ACCEPT NOTHING LESS THAN TOTAL DEFENDY YOU WILL CONTINUE TO LIE AND STEAL FOR ME!
YOU WILL FIGHT WARS FOR ME NATIONWILL BE UP AGAINST NATION TO SATISFY ME!
YOU WILL SACRIFICE YOUR CHILDREN TO ME AND SLAY THOSE WHO OPPOSE ME!
AND YOU WILL GO ON UP THE VERY AIR YOU BREATH FOR ME--UNTIL THE WORLD ENDS!
NOW GO FORTH AND DO SO IN THE NAME OF YOUR GOD--
THE GASOLINE ENGINE!
Your readers may not know of Burt Martin's steadfast support of freedom of the student press, of the student's right to speak and to protest in the classroom at stent pressures. His espousal was not classroom rhetoric. It was given under the most tryking circumstances in the heat of battle between student journalists and administration officials. The doctrine that truth will out in open debate.
reckoning, they are going to have to explain their change of heart.
There were many times during my period as adviser to the Kansan when the shock waves from Strong Hall rocked the news room. But Burt Murtin always found the journalism of service that the students were practicing to be consistent with the tradition of education in philosophy and teaching. That is, he refused to compromise conscience for practical ends.
As a young teacher then, I was especially vulnerable. The federal courts had not yet ruled that students had First Amendment protection. The students were even more vulnerable than the teachers, and hand the struggle between two perceptions of right. Fortunately for them, Burt Marvin was around to give them a sense of dignity and a feeling of pride in their chosen profes-
Melvin Mencher
Professor of journalism
Columbia University
After reading the Bob Marcum article Wednesday, I see he's correct in two respects: 1. The athletic department does need a 'master plan that shows where we're going to be in 10 years' and 2. "You need to see what appeals to the public."
Marcum unobjective on minor sports
What the athletic department needs now is someone who can carry out both of these objectives, not an athletic director or promoter a football and basketball promoter.
To the editor
Please don't rehire Clyde Walker too.
as far as the future of sports are concerned" Even the most passive observer can tell what happens in a sport, or interest in a sport in which people "play" for the sole purpose of hurting other people is, for some mysterious reason, failure. Entertainment went out of style with the gladstone.
The trend in today's sports programs is definitely away from the once-major sports. There are now many women's sports and women's sports has caused a spurt of interest to a whole range of athletic endeavors, and this University needs aperformers who will implement a comprehensive program.
An obvious example of the bask in the KU athletic department is its consistent oversight of a sport that has become commonplace on both coasts and in which our teams have competed by champion teams: (Sit down Bob, here, that deadly plague virus word.) SOCCER!
What would a truly objective person see as far as the future of sports are concerned?
Pat Cassidy
Lawrence graduate student
Fake IDs may draw stiffer penalty
KU students beware. In the near future you might be doing something that could result in a six-month jail sentence, a $1,000 fine or both.
Have you ever loaned your driver's license to an undergraduate so be could answer.
Have you borrowed a driver's license from an older friend to buy liquor?
Have you manufactured, bought or altered a driver's license so it states false information?
This sounds like an inquisition, but if you are caught doing any of these after proposed changes in Kansas law go into effect, might be arrested, thrown in jail and fined.
Two bills recently passed by the Kansas House are responsible for the new, stricter policy concerning fake IDs, and their use. The first bill stiffens the penalty for a person who knowingly lends a driver's license to a person under 18 to buy beer.
CURRENTLY, the maximum penalty is a month in jail and a fine of up to $500 or both. In addition, the prison sentence Gov. John Carlin before it becomes law, would have a maximum penalty up to one year. In contrast, the minimum penalty is
The other bill makes it illegal to sell, manufacture or offer for sale false identification. It was passed by the Senate and enacted as a law of a month in jail, a fine of $500 or both.
Considering another bill passed by the House that requires pictures on all drivers' licenses, the situation adds up to a legal challenge because the misuse of drivers' licenses are identification.
Concern over misuse of licenses is justified, but the Legislature's methods are more restrictive. A judge will a judge prove a person known had loaned a license for the purpose of buying liquor or beer? Such an act is frequently inadvisable, known only to the two parties involved
POSSSESSION OF a false identification already carries a maximum penalty of six months in jail, a $500 fee or both. That is sufficient. The addition, which blames the lender even more, seems less defensible and appears to be a legal scare tactic.
That scare tactic, coupled with the other bills concerning license manufacturing and pictures, demonstrates a covert effort by lawmakers to suppress or oppressive law, the lives of Kansans.
Jake Thompson
Where is the evidence showing that the problem is severe enough to require such a solution?
THE LEGISLATURE should aim at educating young Kansans to the dangers of gun violence.
The legislator's efforts to punish vowon-
a of relatively minor crime by harsh sentencing is not the answer to the problem. The law does not make it possible that attempted to buy liquor or borrow a license.
rather than passing tougher criminal punishments.
Unfortunately, the Legislature rarely works that way and usually operates as a reactive body, rather than as an initiatory one.
It is also unfortunate that Kansans will have to suffer under tighter government control, on the state level, if these bills are passed. And it is likely the bills will pass.
But Gov. Carlin should veto the first two bills on the basis that they are too harsh for the crimes committed. The third, by itself, presents few threats to public freedoms.
But if all three pass, KU students and all Kansans will have to become more misly with their drivers' licenses out of a sense of self-preservation. It is discouraging to see a "eplissature use scare tactics to push for more control over the use or misuse of identification."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Seld changes of address to the University Daily Kanan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60645
(USPS 600-644) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday for the last three weeks. Subscription fee is $15 for six months or $27 per year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. A student subscription are $2 a semester, paid through the university.
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STATE U.
BY T. M. ASLA
WHEN I SEE A AN OPEN AREA, I WANT TO LANDSCAPE OR BUILD ON ITSIGHT!
AH YES! IT'S A CLASSIC CASE OF EDIFICE COMPLEX.
Tuesday, March 27. 1979
5
Golf team seeks improvement
By DAVID PRESTON Sports Writer
KU women's golf coach Sandy Bahan said recently that her squad would have to improve in several areas, especially around the driving range for this season's Big Eight championship.
Kansas is scheduled to open its season today at the Wichita Invitational.
Bahan said the Jayhawks had plenty of young talent and two proven performers, Rashad Hooker and Oklahoma State universities in the Big Eight Championship Meet were slam if improvement was not made during the finals as finished third in the Big Eight last year.
"We are really inconsistent," Bahan said, "and that's what we have to work on as a team. Potentially we are ex-ample of consistency scores don't show a level of consistency."
The most consistent players, according to Bahan, and the veterans of the squad, are senior Nancy Holins, who has
qualified for the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women's national meet the last two years, and junior Sally White.
BAHAN SAID that once the season got underway, Heins would provide the much-needed leadership for her young team. Heins is the only senior on the team. Filling out the squad are four "gestumen," two sophomores and a junior.
"We are young," Bahan said, "and we did not do well last fall. But we are hoping to see a lot of improvement.
The two sophomores Bahan said she was counting on are Sarah Burgess and Barb Howard. Jennifer Rogers, Cathy Johnson and Kelly Johnson are the freshmen on the team.
"As a team our goal for this season is to do well at the Big Eight, and as individuals we are trying to qualify for the nationals. Nancy has qualified the last two years and I think she should again. Sally White could very well equally also."
season over spring break in the Betsy Rawls Invitational in Austin, Texas, but for various reasons the team did not play in the meet.
THE TEAM was scheduled to open the
After the Wichita meet, the squn a participate in meet in Beaumont, Texas and Norman, Okla. before competing in the meet in Stillwater, Okla. on April 23-24.
"We are opening the season in Wichita, and it should be a good place for us to start. Bahan said." We played well at Iowa last weekend and shot over 85 for the entire tournament.
The Jayhawks have had a difficult time practicing this winter because of the poor weather, but Bahan said she had team players through workout indoors.
"I've had them on a golf conditioning program since November, and I had a net and some Astrout set up so that they could hit balls," she said. "We've been practicing, but it's not the same as getting to play."
Singles lift netters to dual victory
Five singles victories in six matches lifted KU's men's tennis team to a 6-3 dual victory over the University of Southern Illinois at Carbondale Saturday.
The singles victories proved to be the difference as the Jawahiers lost two of the three finals.
"It evened things out," KU coach Tom Kivio said of the indoor play.
The singles events were played inside, because of rain, on courts with a surface that was too hard.
Kviisto and SIU would have had the
difference. The matches had been played
on the outdoor field.
Mark Hosking, No. 1, singles, beat Jeff Lubner 6-2, 6-2 in his match.
"Mark is playing as good as anyone in the country right now," Klivisto said.
ALSO SCORING KU singles victories were: Jeff Collier, 4.2, no. over Victorien Kennerley, 6-2, 6-4; Weyne Sawail, 4.4, over Lito Alamto, 6-4, 6-2; Rick Wertz, 5.4, over Steve Smith, 7-6, 7-5; and Ryu Suesser, 6.4, no. over Joe Lazardo, 6-3, 6-3
Birk Krizman, KU's No. 3 singles, lost his match to Sam Dean, D-7, 6-7, 6-2.
In doubles, KU's No. 1 team of Hosking,
Collier beat Luber-Kennerley, 7-6, 4-2.
Porter homers, KC beats Pirates
Marty Pattin, Ed Rodriguez and Al Habrobsky combined for the shutout, limiting Pitt's streak.
FORT MYERS, Fla. (UP1) - Kansas City managed only two hits yesterday, but one of them was a homer by Darrell Porter that led the Brewers to an Eastern League victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Porter opened the Kansas City second with a drive over the right field wall off旺盛的球场。马丁·斯塔克 single to Frank White in six innings while striking out five Al. Holland out shut Kane.
Patin, a 36-year-old right-hander battling at a spot on the team, gave up two inits in the second half.
RODRIGUEZ RETIRED nine of the 10 men he faced, giving up on a double to Steve
Kansas City outfielder Clint Hurdle, who sprained his right ankle onclew, will be out for the rest of the season.
Nicosa. Habrabsky把 the ninth, finishing up after yielding a two-out double to Bucas.
Kansas City City also assigned pitchers Berry grzebieck, Kent Cevdikil and Jenin Martin and infielders German Barranca, Dave Hoyt and Troy Young. Royals' minor league camp for reassessment
the Jayhawks' only victory in the three matches.
The Royals play the Pirates again today at Bradenton, Fla.
The cut left Kansas City with 33 players, seven more than the opening day limit.
Kritiman-Sewail, No. 2 lost to Dean-Smith
0-7. Wits-Ruyesse, No. 3 lost to Anton-
lai, No. 4 lost
Pittsburgh 000 000 000 - - - -
Kansas City AL. 010 000 000 - - - -
Knoxville, N.C. Pattin, Pattin; Hodgkin 6
Kissan, N.W. 9 and Porter, Gaudet W.-P. Pattin; LP-Kusan
HHS-Parrers.
The victory for Kansas was its second spring over SIU. The two teams met earlier in Lawrence and KU won, also by a score of 6-3.
Baseball snowed out
KU's baseball doubleheader with Baker University, scheduled for yesterday afternoon, has been postponed indefinitely because of snow.
The Jayhawks are scheduled to play a doubleheader with Missouri Western State College (10:30) but it may also be scheduled because the field, coach Floyd Temple said yesterday.
The complete Kansas baseball schedule
March 27th Missouri Western (2) Lawrence
March 31st Emperor State (2) Lawrence
April 6th Kansas State (2) Lawrence
April 8th Kansas State (2) Manitoba
April 9th Colorado (2) Manitoba
April 14th Oklahoma State (2) Lawrence
April 14th Oklahoma State (2) Lawrence
April 20th Oklahoma State (2) Lawrence
April 20th Missouri (2) Columbia Mo.
April 22nd Missouri (2) Columbia Mo.
April 22nd Waashur (2) Lawrence
April 25th Iowa State (2) Lawrence
April 25th Iowa State (2) Lawrence
May 7 Washington (2) Tigere
May 7 Washington (2) Tigere
May 7 Washington (2) Tigere
May 9 North Dakota (2) Lawson
May 3 Fort Lauderdale (2) Lawson
May 18 10 20
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Michigan State brew a net around Larry Bird with a brilliant zone defense and Earvin "Magic" Johnson scored 24 points as the Spartans Indiana State Sycamores, 75-64, yesterday to win the NCA2 basketball championship.
Sycamores, who had stormed out of nowhere to the top of both wire service polls and had won 33 straight games before the final.
Spartans win NCAA title
Bird, who had been killing just about everyone this season with a 29.0 scoring average, had to work hard for his 19 points against the Spartans' two-three zone, which
The loss ended a Cinderella season for the
Emotional Bird silent after Sycamores' loss
'I asked him in the dressing room if he would go to the interview room and he told me not so much.'
"I TOLD HIM he had given his just one use and he could just relax. He is a good person. He does his talking on the basketball floor. I love him. His guys will not like it, but it can't be helped."
Bird's coach, rookie Bill Hodges,
apologized publicly for the failure of his
All-American player to appear at the post-game
interview session.
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Larry Birth, year's Player of the Year, broke down emotionally and received public interviews from the Indiana State University team lost a heartbreaker, the 764A to Michigan State in the NCAA basketball championships.
The 6-9 Bird, who is headed for a lucrative pro contract, the Boston Celtics having first shot at him, was held to 19 points, hitting on 12 of them. The Bulls had eight tries from the foul line. Bird had
Although he played a strong game-defensively, getting a game-high 13 rebounds and making several steals, his offensive weapons were dulled by Michigan State's skillful so-called "matchup zone" defense.
averaged 28.7 points a game during the season.
THE BIG BLOND, hailed as one of the most complete players to come out of college in a generation, had two and three victories against every team he got inside wasket basket.
His chief tormentors were Jay Vincent, a
o-8 sophomore guard, and the Spartans'
Immediately after the game, Bird went to the Indiana State bench, sat down and buried his head, first in his massive hands and then in a towel.
Hodges was asked how emotionally his great player had taken the defeat.
"When you play as hard and as intensely
Larry did, you have to have emotion," he
said.
"This was not just the end of a game for him, it was the end of a career."
Tigers hit 2 recruiting jackpots
SUNWOLD SET numerous school records for Blue Springs. Those he set this season included the following: season average, 12.08; most game assists, 22; most game points, 50; and most season points, 63.
Stanpainov averaged 25 points, 13 rebounds and three assists a game while leading DeSmet to 60 straight victories and the past two Missouri Class 4A state championships. He was also recruited by University, UCLA, North Carolina and Duke.
SUA
From the Kansan Wire Services
Survold said that he had talked with Stipanovich at the state tournament and they agreed they would like to go to Missouri and turn it into a national power.
IN ASSOCIATION WITH MARTIN WOLEE PRESENT
FEYLINE & MARTIN WOLFF PRESENT
After that proclamation, another highly-recruited Missouri prep performer, John Sunvold, announced he, too, would attend Missouri to play basketball. The 6-2 Sunvold, a guard, is from Blue Springs High School in Blue Springs, Mo.
Missouri basketball coach Norm Stewart is in Salt Lake City at the National Collegiate Athletic Association tournament. The Hirt Tigers' chances of reaching it were better than the center Steve Stipanovich, a 6-1 high-sight recruit from DeMeset High School in St. Louis County in Missouri announced he would play his collegiate basketball in Columbia.
The Doobie Brothers WITH SPECIAL GUEST Jay Ferguson
James Salters takes the game into overtime with a 20-foot jumper with 11 seconds remaining in regulation play, but Aiguirre takes the lead in the extra period to put the game away.
The Sycamores never led after the opening minutes and trailed by as many as 16 points several times early in the second half. But they made it interesting with a late goal behind Bird that chipped Michigan State back to game 52-46 with 10 minutes left in the game.
The Sycamores never came within striking distance of the Spartans after that.
THE NATIONAL championship was the first for Michigan State in its fourth appearance.
Johnson then spearheaded a rally that put the Spartans in command and quieted the usually raucous Indiana State fans in the noisy crowd of 15,410.
MOTHER GUILD
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) - Freshman Mark Agurre scored eight of his game-high 34 points in overtime and DePaul frittered away a 23-point lead before hanging on for an overtime victory over Penn last night to take third place in the NCAA tournament.
Gary Garland added 22 points for the Blue Demons.
DEPAUL, BUILT its 23-point lead in the first half but the Quakers managed to cut it to 14-10. In the second half, Price's shooting, Price scored 31 points in the high half en route to a team-high 29-point victory.
GREG KELSER, who scored 19 points for the Spartans, put the cap on the game with an enormous slank dunk at the end and the team won. But it's not a few some supporters rushed to hut their heroes.
sagged on the blond bomber every time he went to the basket.
JOHNSON SCORED seven points in an 8-4 burst that moved the Big Ten Conference power's lead to 61-50 with 5:06 left in the game.
Foul trouble hurt both teams in the closely called game, and the calls had both coaches bitterly complaining to the officials throughout the contest.
In the second half, the Quakers used a strong inside game, taking advantage of DePaul's foul-placed front line. Tim Smith added 16 points for Penn and Curtis Watkins scored 18 for the Demons before fouling out early in the second half.
Bird, who had been a terror in this tournament in four previous games, at one point went more than 13 minutes without a field goal.
DePaul wins 3rd place,96-93
FRIDAY, APRIL 27 8:00 PM ALLEN FIELDHOUSE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE ALL SEATS RESERVED: $8.00 $7.00
TICKETS AVAILABLE IN LAWRENCE AT SUA BOX OFFICE AND KIEFS: KANSAS CITY AT ALL CAPITOL TICKET OUTLETS, CAPER'S CORNER, CHOOSEY BEGAR, SECOND COMING, TIGER'S; DAVEY'S LOCKER OR DIAL-A-TIC AT (816) 753-6617; MANHATTAN AT THE RECORD STORE; TOPEKA AT MOTHER EARTH.
THE DOOUBLE BROTHERS
THIS SUMMER APPRENTICE IN NEW YORK WITH TOP PROFESSIONALS FOR CREDIT
EDIT
If you are a college student preparing for a career in the visual or performing arts, here is a unique opportunity to earn 6 credits while gaining practical work experience as an apprentice to a distinguished New York professional. Join students from over 25 states and 45 colleges who have found the Arts Apprenticeship Program a most enriched and valuable experience. Apprenticeships can be arranged based on individual experience and interest and include
PAINTING/SCULPTURE/PRINTMAKING/CINEMA
GRAPHIC DESIGN/PHOTOGRAPHY/VIDEO TELEVISION
MUSEUM-GALLERY WORK/JINTERIOR DESIGN/THEATRE
- Discover, up front, how successful professionals function in the most competitive and provocative city in the world.
- Venture beyond the classroom environment to preview your field by actuary working in a demanding professional environment
- Enjoy an exciting semester in New York — arts and communications capital of the world — with its museums, galleries, cinema, theatres
Tuition: $800 for 6 credit hours in summer.
For more information, mail the coupon below or call collect (212)741-8975
Director of Special Programs
Paterson School of Design
66 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10011
Please send me more information about the
Paterson New School Arts Apprenticeship Program
for Summer, 1979
Your area of interest is:
Name
Address
City/State/Zip
PARSONS SCHOOL OF DESIGN
6
Tuesday, March 27, 1979
University Daily Kansan
GIBRALTARS
TONIGHT
GIBRALTARS
Lone Star Entertainment
TONIGHT
FOXES HOUR
8-9 Tues. & Thurs.—Ladies only—no cover—Ladies drink for FREE
(plus liquor pool) Regular price after 9
Entertainment
Hillcrest Center
Tues. & Wed.—Boogie Fever
Thurs.-Sat.—Shade Tree
formerly J. Watsons II
Jayhawker Yearbook
is now accepting applications for positions on the 1980 staff. Including Editor Business Manager
Come by 121 B in the Kansas Union for applications.
WET, WEAK HAIR. WE CAN PROTECT IT.
---
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Wet hair magnified 21 times
PHinal PHase® Creme Rinse Concentrate can get your hair through its weakest moment. Safely. It gently lubricates each strand with non-greases emollients. So no tangles. Just easy-to-comb, easy-to-manage hair. That will shine and shine with glorious highlights.
eREDKEN
Skin Tint
Cream
Tinted Moisturizer
with SPF 15
NET WT. 2.5 FL OZ (75 mL)
Get PHinal Phase. And get protection when you need it most.
REDKEN*
PHinal PHase Creme Rinse Concentrate
CHILDREN'S MUSEUM
headmasters
Vermont 843-8808
With special guest
Jimmie Spheeris
judy collins
march 30, 1979 at 9:00 PM.
hoch auditorium
reserved seats $6.50 & $7.50
Tickets available at SUA Office, Kirch and various locations.
Doors open at 8:30 PM. An SUA and Schon Production.
KU convention to feature Abzug
Former Congresswoman Belle Abzug, singer Judy Collina and playwright Nozake Shange will highlight a four-day Intercollegiate Association of Women Students National Convention at the University of Kansas March 38 through March 31.
Staff Reporter
By MARK L, OLSON
Registration for Wednesday's activities will be from 1 to 6 p.m. at the Ramada Inn, 2222 W. Sixth St. For Thursday through Friday, registration will be from 1 to 8:30 a.m. in the Kansas Union
The theme for this year's convention is "Dynamic Equilibrium. A Balance of Power."
Abzug, who will speak at 7 p.m. March 30 in Hoch Audium, is a former U.S. Representative from New York. She was ousted by President Carter January 12 from her presidentially-appointed position as co-chairman of the National Advisory Committee on Women.
She is an outspoken supporter of abortion and the Equal Rights Amendment and has been credited with writing the first law to prohibit abortions in obtaining credit, loans and mortgages.
Shange is a playwright whose work "For Colorated Girls Who Have Considered College" will help become a long-running Broadway success. She will give a performance from 8 to p.m. (Saturday) at the Broward Performing Arts Center.
FRIDAY'S ACTIVITIES will be capped with a concert by folk singer Judy Collins at 9 p.m. in Heck Auditorium. Collins may be joined by musician Bison Sides Now "And 'Send in the Clowns.'"
The conference will consist of 35 workshops and several IAWS meetings, in
The workshops will cover topics ranging from nutrition and exercise for fitness to how to start a feminist newspaper. Each workshop will be open to the public. The charge for KU students is $1 and $3 for others.
IAWS IS an organization that represents more than 300,000 college women in campus libraries.
addition to the appearances by Abzug,
Collins and Shange.
IAWS, started in 1923, has a national convention annually and was a prominent voice in the 1975 Title IX Congressional hearing. It is a major treatment of the sexes in federal aid programs.
Other notable staffers at this year's convention will be Emily Taylor, director of the office of Women in Higher Education for the University Council on Education and former KU leader, and regional director for the Environmental Protection Agency, and Dorothy Godfrey, coordinator of the Federal Women's Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
THE COST of registration for the convention is:
- $100 for a full convention fee, which includes workshops, speakers, three meals and a dinner.
- $45 for a commuter convention fee.
which includes the workshops and the speakers, but not meals or accommodations. * $15 for a daily convention fee, which includes meals on the day, but not meals and accommodations.
- $3 for each workshop for non-KU students and staff.
- $1 for each workshop for KU students and KU staff.
- $6.50 and $7.00 for reserved tickets so
the July Collins concert. Tickets are on a
weekly basis.
Additional information concerning the convention may be obtained by contacting the Emily Taylor Women's Resource and Career Center in 218 Strong Hall.
Faculty, students to join Council
Thirteen University of Kansas faculty members have won seats on the Faculty Council, Barbara Baume, council secretary, announced yesterday.
In addition, seven students have been elected by the Student Senate to serve with the Faculty Council members on the University Senate.
Baume said the faculty delegates elected were: John Bremner, professor of journalism; Morris Faiman, professor of pharmacy; Mary Green, assistant dean of the library; James Maloney, professor of engineering.
Also elected were Gerald McSheffrey, professor of architecture and urban design; Richard Pierce, associate professor of law; John Poggio, associate professor of educational psychology and research; Charles Reynolds, professor of chemistry.
Lawrence Sherr, professor of business; Robert Squier, professor of anthropology; Fred Vandellay, professor of mathematics; George Worth, professor of sociology; and George Worth, professor of EDU.
THE COUNCIL members were elected on write-in ballots sent in by University faculty last week. The 13 delegates will join 26 other faculty representatives on the Council who are in the middle of three-year terms of office, Baume said.
Several of the faculty members elected currently are serving on the Council. The Council's bylaws allow more than one term, Baume said.
The student representatives were elected at last Wednesday's Student Senate meeting, according to Margaret Berlin, student body president.
serve one year terms, are: Jeff Chanya,
Topek junior; Steve Cramer, Lawrence
sophomore; Matt Davis, Overland Park
sophomore; Clare McCurdard, Belleville, III;
Steve Duggar, Topek junior; Topek junior;
Doug Stephens, Lawrence sophomore;
and Tim Trump, Salina junior.
BAUME SAID yesterday that an organization meeting would be held April 5 to elect the Faculty executive committee. The presiding officer of the Council and Senate also will be elected at the meeting, with the chairman of FaxEx, she said.
Baume said one of the student representatives will be named as vice chairman of the University Senate executive committee. The chairman of FacEx is automatically the chairman of SenEx. Baume said.
$14700 mexicana
The new student representatives, who will
KANSAS CITY — MEXICO CITY
ROUND TRIP
Baume said the new faculty council delegates would take office the day after commencement. Berlin said the new student representatives would take over their positions on the University Senate and SenEx immediately.
Beginning April 24th, Mexicana Airlines will offer substantial discounts for travel to Mexico City. This airfare can save you up to $134.00 off the normal roundtrip fare. (Acapulco can be added for only $844.00 additional). To qualify for this special fare you must remain in Mexico for at least five weeks. The airline packages one of our low cost hotel and sightseeing packages. We have prepared a brochure to fully describe this fare and our low cost tour programs.
Travel Coordinators and Mexicana are also offering Summer Study Program at Mexico's finest colleges and universities. There are a wide variety of courses offered. A few examples are Anthropology, Architecture, Arts and Crafts, Botany, Ceramics, Falks Dances, History of Mexico, Interpretation, Botany, Latin American Politics and Economics, Mexican Educational System, Psychology, Sociology, Spanish Language and Literature, and Theater.
We will also be happy to send you information on these schools.
*Subject to government approval - Monday-Friday travel
Please send me my brochure describing this fantastic $147.00 fare to Mexico and/or information on the Student Study Programs
Name ___
Address___
School ___
My Travel Agent is
□ Send information on discount airfare, hotel, and sightseeing program
□ Send information on the Student Study Programs.
mexicana
1101 Walnut a Kansas City, Mo 6410
MECHA IN CONJUNCTION WITH LATIN WEEK ACTIVITIES IS PROUD TO PRESENT
AT:
1:00 pm March 28, 1979 Forum Room
Mr. Alfonso Lopez-Vasquez,
Bilingual Education Program Director for the Kansas City, Missouri
School District will speak on Senate Bill No. 7 dealing with
bilingual and multi-cultural education.
Mrs. Anna Rodriguez.
Director of the League of Latin American Citizens in Topeka will also speak about education opportunities for Mexican-American students.
2:45 pm March 28,1979 Forum Room
Dr. Francisco H. Ruiz
An instructor at Pem Valley Community College will speak on the urban problems of the Mexican-American.
3:00 pm March 28,1979 Forum Room
Co-sponsored by MECHA and Minority Affairs
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
BUTTERFLY BABY
Independent Coin-op
X
2105 West 26th Street
NOW OPEN
Lawrence's Newest Self-Service Laundromat, Complete With Dry Cleaning Drop-Off. Attendant on Duty.
Use this Grand Opening Coupon. For One FREE WASH.
Coupon good 3/21-3/28, from 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Just south of Dairy Queen.
One per customer
LATIN WEEK: March 26 - March 30
Film: 'THE MONCADA PROGRAM'
The 20 years of struggle and development of Cuba
Rated PG
Tuesday, March 27 7:00 p.m. Strong Auditorium, 300 Strong
Sponsored by The Latin American Solidarity Group and Minority Affairs
No Charge
MECHA CONFERENCE
Education and Administration of the College
SPEAKERS Dr. Francisco Rico "...Cichacos, Urban Problems"
Alphonse Lopes "...Bilingual Education"
Andrew A. Pardel
Wednesday, March 28 1:00-4:00 p.m. Forum Room, Union Sponsored by MCHEN and Minority Affairs
1:00 - 4:00 p.m.
Sponsored by MECHA and Minority Affairs
No Charge
SLIDE SHOW
History, tradition and current conditions of Puerto Rico
11:00 am-3:00 p.m.
Thursday, March 29 History, tradition and current conditions of Puerto Rico 11:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. 308 E Strong Hall
Film: "PUERTO RICO"
Thursday, March 29 7:00 p.m. Strong Auditorium, 300 Strong Sponsored by Puerto Rican students and Members' Affairs
No Charge
...
NOCHE VENEZOLANA
(Venezuelan Night)
DINNER
Featuring traditional Venezuelan foods CULTURAL PROGRAM
Side trip through Kenyanate/Cultural Films/Traditional dances and songs
Friday, March 30 Dinner: 6:00-7:30 p.m. Lawrence Community Blvd.
Cultural Program: 7:30-10:00 p.m.
Charge for Dinner: $3.00 Adults/$1.50 Children
Cultural Program Free
...
"The place Pills."
All the above programs will be held at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, March 27, 1978
7
KANSAN WANT ADS
Assistant VP, product development and engineering,
advance technology, design and develop new products.
Develop innovative solutions for the automotive industry.
Capture insights from global markets to inform business decisions.
Perform market research on industry trends and customer needs.
Conduct strategic analysis of competitors to improve sales and profitability.
Maintain relationships with key partners in the automotive industry.
CLASSIFIED RATES
times times times times times
15 words or
fewer $0.00 $2.25 $7.50 $3.00
Each additional
word 01 02 03 04 05
AD DEADLINES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Bilt Park Hill
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These add can be placed in person or online using the KUR business other at 864-6258.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Zen practice: daily 8 p.m. introductory talk
30 p.m. meditation session via Zoom
vacation March 24-April 1 University Chapel
"Power, Arms & Taxes, The Need for a New National Security Policy," What do you think the answer (a) Heat Richard Barnet, Tuesday, 27, July 19, p.80, p.m. Bk Room, Kluan Museum.
GREAT FOOD. GREAT SERVICE! just like yon
a restaurant. 1 hour in line, 1 a.m.
1 a.m. Sunday to 4 midnight.
S-30
HDRSIT, THE DRAFT. Kill, national selective school board member, for the president of a libertarian Society, will be a private funder for a liberal忻州协会, SLA.
**INVEST** - In good health and your future. Live
in your own home, with access to a quality
life. In is new book ing by $20 per share with
additional benefits. In subsequent transactions increase the yearly balance of your account to 851-414-7444.
PLEASE WRITE P.O. Box 801, Lawrence
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
Appl. 2B, HR and efficiency. Close to campus. UUI-
103,759. Clear. quiet. and comfortable. 823-979-
1037.
Audiobilex and room furnished, parking most
frequently. KU and rear lovely. No
phone. Phone 845-5767
FRONTIER HIDE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
A 2-bedroom apt. unfurnished from $175. Two laundry rooms, large
unfurnished from $175. Two laundry rooms, large
unfurnished from $175. On KU this course.
INDOOR HIDE POOL 2000 sq ft.
345 Driver Road, Next door to
Rosseau's EAST.
Nill hooked for a place to call home? Nautilus
was the first host to be the remainder of the year. Stuart will be the remainder of the year. Stan will be the remainder of the year. We will be glad to give you all the options and we will be glad to give you all the options.
1900 Nautilus MINT HALL, 1800 Nautilus
Drift, NILSHAH BAY, 835-2678
Summer sublease; one bedroom furnished South-
ridge apartment; $800. Call 614-4950.
Fire safety system make those rooms safe, and lock safely let you sleep late! Only one block walk. Garden set up or envirates, depart; quiet. Garden for the family, great views. K48-90-4-20 Cope available.
Sidhik for summer one year old Brad Ayat
(52) to complete curriculum (to be
compete with varchar-41, 819-360, 819-
277)
NICE I BEDROOM apartment, furnished, close to
Street 105, Wellington. Phone: (843) 627-4777,
843-1825 airplane; 843-7258 from phone.
Mark 1 & 1/1 Apartments now renting for summer vacations in the heart of Brooklyn. 3 min walk to compass and apartments. 7 min walk to compass and apartments. Continuing conditioning; carpentry; balconies; off-street parking; Mari for add; info to Miss Amy. xx 821-843-9031 Miss Amy xx 821-843-9031
Sublime 7 bedroom apartment. Great location.
$23,900. Available April 15th.
$48,970 or $48,965.
Christian Hisham. Now & Summer. Close to
Seattle, 941-642-8950 between 2
& 3:00. Keep trying.
**TROTTON PLACE:** ITS FULL- BUT - WE need a 10 and 12 hour leave so we will have to cancel the season in lieu of an emergency. WE will rent for the summer term when available June 1. Two references required - we would like a resume.
Luxury apartments for 3 bedrooms, 2 full
bedrooms on one floor. Min Sub-lease in-
mediately. Please call 1-800-756-9890 for
rent for rent. Full bath includes; Heavy
flooring; Half and Halffield. 822 Main St.
Milwaukee, WI 53210.
Beautiful 2 bedroom dugout at Minneapolis St. for up to 5 guests, C/A and new kitchens, appliances, M4-0221
Need Female to sublease furnished, 2 story
house in Garage and yard of 380 sq. ft.
month Cell 611-854-7900
Jayhawk TOWERS Apartments
1603 West 15th
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
Subbaena Angie-Croft, Apt for Summer. 2 BR
Bathroom. Aqua pool. Swimming Pool-$250
Call: 841-386-8067
Most substance furnished new bedroom apartments
875, 841-362-804, akc for ksry.
875, 841-362-804, akc for ksry.
must substrate very nice two bedroom Trailrider
call 842-3993 anyone. Avail date
Call 842-3993 anyone. Avail date
Our fundraising now Moor Park partnership, manned by Margo Baldock and her husband, Peter Baldock. 842-161-003, 842-535-001, 842-971-003
Two bedrooms. Two bedrooms agit at Olive Garden. One bedroom. Kitchen, air conditioning, wood burning stove. Kitchen, air conditioning, wood burning stove.
Summer sublease; one bedroom furnished South-
righthouse $1300.00; Call 841-0380-3260
Must substitute 2 bedroom furn. apartment, Apr-
1-May 15 $200 + utilities Call 841-762-3911
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization. Makes sense to teach them as they learn about the rationale 30. For exam preparation. "New Analysis of American Literature." At Toorier Cmrs. Mails Bookstore, & Oread Bookstore.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists in alternators and generators. MOTIVE ELECTRIC 823, 842, 908, w. 40h, 60h
66e Schoenon at Lounie's every Friday from
till 2. 4-3
Fender: Maddington Song Guitar with strings, crisp black finish, dual tuners, pickups, cards, neck and covers. Very good condition!
Sun-Sens Sun-glasses are our specialty. Non-
Sun-Sens Sun-glasses are selection (reasonably
1021 New York; 841-573-7777)
WHY RENT? when you could own this beautiful house, a large home. Like new appliances, diaposal, central air conditioning, like new skimmers, dryer units, 5 smoke alarms, skirted and weather-resistant windows, large building base, trees, tall garden, large building base, grass.
TEAC R400 cassette deck, altighigh used TEKI-
nite with DYNAC 5000 mAh backup battery,
hSHP cartridge, DYNAKC 5000 qmQ card.
BORONKO IMPORTS LTD. Organic champon
fabric from Belgium, the world's largest and best in the middle east.
Available in a range of colours.
WATERED MATTRESSS $29.98 3 year guarantee.
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass 183-186, tlf
71 yellow Mudding. Comfort AT, PS, AC. Date:
Feb 20, 2006. One person, one oven. Cleaner:
834. 2-3T
One person, one oven. Cleaner:
834. 2-3T
Watch for train on Sunday selling produce.
Fourshots, 2nd, & Illinois. Also woodwinds
rzes.
Sailboat 3456-470 470 15 ft. race boat. Must sell.
3-27
Mingjian 5345-677 (looks
Mathematica 1966 for c. 3 coeficial matrix仿真
Mathematica 1966 for c. 3 coeficial matrix仿真
Ultra Linear 200-b excellent sounding 3-way
speakers - $80 or offer-later call Pat. 642-7501
Toronto & Haultain, owner. New 260-13 qty 4 pack.
Toronto & Haultain, owner. New 260-13 qty 4 pack.
The location of the Rock Staircase, 995 Mass Ave.
DAILY ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE
THURSDAY NIGHT
March 29th
SONNY TERRY & BROWNIE McGHEE
FOLK BLUES LEGEND
The Laurence Open House
$3.00 Advance
$4.00 Show Day
7th & Mass
Aztec Inn
LUNCHEON MENUS
807 Vermont
842-9455
American and Mexican Food
75 Temp Awn, Custom built 410 HQ motor, PB
1600 MHz, MST cruise, motor hot offer, 28+
Dit. #312-8835.
1974 Mustang II, 4 cylinder, AC Excel,
60200 and Low Airplane Auxiliary
3-27
1972 750 Norton Commands, combat engine, 12
1973 760 Norton Commands, garden never
$1650.00 or $425.00
Integrated Amp. Keyboard 7100 dots, right hand
controls. Integrated Speakers 6400 dots.
20x20 coordinate volume 8190. 841-787-8256.
20x20 coordinate volume 8190. 841-787-8256.
Used sports or radial fires reduced 'Cruppy'
and easier to extinguish. 50 lb.
Royal Storckite # 929 Miles. 8-27
Committee, Pare Courtroom Chamber! Biurkspraesentate
Kurzweil, 11th floor. See Room 892 with the district attorney. Bay Skimming
for parking and exit. Call 403-654-1111.
WV Square back, 1971. Excellent condition $600
or trade in or drive big motorcycle.
Wakeman fire alarm. new $3 $4 plb. BUFt + to $2.00 each. air Rm-hockey 929-327. Matt 212-865-4780.
78 Honda Express. Excellent condition, basket-
built, 841-7646 or 843-3120
3-28
Turn Table 9 month old in excellent condition
w/static pad Audio Reflex. Call Scott N.267
813-506-7040
Raleigh 10 speed bike in good condition. 20 in
with look and call. Call Raleigh 664-289-2500.
1967 Rover 200 TC $74,800 161a Allo 200 Compressor
parts included, parts included, 803, B3-1240, 6-100
bayonets
Marusia RH-67 1, by 21, by 38, SLR, with meter
picture, little used, perfect. 967, 843, 720, 570
Bicycle, Elephant custom frame, 60 cm (22 in).
excellent, 3373, 842-749, 16-100, 3-28
Cinnabear, Deck Lacoste, HB-156 two tinting
cabinets, 24x12x10. $179 each or $328
or best offer $128 each.
Attention serious motion picture students. Five-room Hive 10x40 movie camera. Four lamps. Drive new lake near $1,000. ONLY $150. Hixon Studios. 721 Mass. 843-620-9
2. Custum made spookers (includes 8-10 inch
screws). For large spookers and disco dancing,
Exercise for burlesque and disco dancing.
Technique: Using a hammer to strike the
spookers.
INFINITY QA branding. Brand new with
34493 warranty. Look and sound great.
$3,500
Snake- Two cautive born male Barbary pardons
10 plus. 843-8523
3-72
Plumber steers, amplifier 80 watts, like new
$450.00 negotiable
3-30
1978 Borda, 400, Hawk II, 11 excellent condition
1978 Borda, Series座椅仅中, 414, Hawk III,
Series座椅仅中
74 Honda 720 Price negotiable Call: 845-1855
after 6:30 3-30
1972 Honda CB500 Good engine and new parts.
Must sell 644-611-67
3-37
Triumph T3-7 Rest 2 Operation Manuals (1975,
1971) New 815 Call 600 Mile Nil 811-7548 3-20
Have an Avian尼亚 night - $250 refund on $600.
Have an American Night - $300 refund on $700.
Have an Drug Store night - $90 Night - $82.90. We do
not accept cash.
It's enough to make John Gladby (middle) waltz
to "Dreaming in the Rain." For a tuxedo,
Cover Corner Chocolate & Salami Shoes ($300).
Mountainview resort, box size 11, cost $325 to sell
mountainview resort, box size 11, cost $325 to sell
$90.00, make offer 862-325-2888
1974 Norton 850 Commando, 450 Miles, Fiat.
1740 Honeywell Bike, Exceptional Combat,
1800 832-2577
1800 832-2578
BIG KS
MON-THURS 7:9:00
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7:9:00
.50 'Schooners & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1:7:00
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
Smith.Carina Typewriter, portable, like
Must instalready call CALL: 841-105
3.26
Yamasha 1741-796 de. New Chain, Pipes. Paint
CALL Derek 812-5662 4-2
10 Speed Men's, includes perl, light, cord, neck,
and chain 40g or offer. CALL: 843, 875-878.
3-29
FOUND
HERE'S WHAT'S HAPPENING!
Single key found, 17th & Ohio. Call 841-8254 to
329.
Wedding band found on full NW of Potter's point.
Call Critch at 843-366-306
2-29
LD. Broker set out "Paddy, *Alby* on bracelet with inscription "*RP*" in inside. Call 892-4672.
Now taking applications for Funnish & Greens
University, apply online at www.funnish.edu.
Apply in person at 902-745-8361,
www.funnish.edu.
**EXOTIC JOE** LAKE TAHOE, CASTAINEI
*Little expense. Fantastic! $1700-$1400 amount*
*in tarantula ranches, evansville, river rafts & more*
*ornamental ranches. $290-$230*
*6029, Sarasaga. California. $3500*
*4-23*
HELP WANTED
Summer Lake National Park Co. is 21.9 km², $300,000
Mountain Goat Co. is 14.5 km², $85,000,
Mountain Goat Co. is 14.5 km², $85,000.
JOB5 . MEN . . . WOMEN. SAILBOATS!
MENU: experience, high pay! See
Caribbean, Hawaii, Bahamas,
Reed, send $3.50 for info. to NEWORLD,
601 Box292, Cambridge, CA 95806.
4-24
One of the Midwest's oldest moving and storage firms is now taking summer applications for relocation. The firm only apply. Apply in person at W. Kirk St. (913) 621-5400, (913) 621-4940. Equal opportunity employer
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Enter the exciting world of Health and Nutrition Excellent corn-kernel. Make your own homes. We want you to help us grow good. Call us 3-27 between 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Delivery Needed Salary summary
Delivery Necessary Salary
sail 823-3229, Pyramid Paires
NEEDED- LEAD COMPUTER OPERATOR-CSA
-DRIVES other computer operators & schedules
for both first 1st and 2nd shifts. Must be Bigh
thirty-five or more years of experience in operation
of computers & software. Must be permanent
on qualification. Apply in Personnel
Center, B1423240, Employment
Opportunity Employer
3-87
School attendee for quadriplegic Tyumen, Russia. During the week before the Wednesday afternoon Research in the library was conducted.
The Information and Research Department of the City of Anaheim is committed to helping people to work on a wide range of computer programs in order to advance their knowledge of computer programming in our community. The department has an HIM mainframe and the latest in multi-campus leaders in geographic data processing and computer networking. We need a flexible, well-motivated person to assist with other new areas. The City offers an office located at 7605 N. Central Avenue, facilities interested persons, including Sesame Street, facilities interested persons, including Sesame Street, facilities interested persons, including Sesame Street. An M.A., Mail Application and Research Department, M.M.
Directors wanted. Must be 18, have own and Part
Party registration, have a Bachelor's degree in
Communications,Agency or related field.
Wanted dependable people to work near home. Req's Bachelor's degree in person at a business or restaurant, 120 W. 59th St., Dallas, TX 75038.
Attractive, aggressive,
intelligent, vivacious woman for part-
time backgammon and pool tournament,
and have knowledge of both games.
Attractive, aggressive.
Wanted...
Excellent pay and fringe benefits
fringe benefits.
Call Jon 842-6930
Biochemical Research, Assistant-Pharmacology and Biotechnology U.S. degree required, major in nursing or related field, at least 5 years of experience in chemical biochemistry or biomedical engineering; prespective biochemical and neurobiological sciences; therefore require a research technician with $8,000 to $12,000 per year depending upon position. (852) 641-8022 The University of Kansas School of Medicine - Affiliate Action Employer4.
One of the Milwaukee old school and storage warehouses requires hand equipment and helps. Will team members be trained to use these tools? (D.O.T. requirements. Hard work needs only a little effort.) (913) 827-1436. Opportunity Employer
Wanted...
Assertive Cocktail Waitress
for exciting, stimulating, adventurous
club experience. $2.00 plus tips. Must
be 21.
Call 842-6930,
ask for Jon.
A student assistant for Mini quadriprenopied students needed for Min. afternoon and Wed. morning sessions. Please email the student to school (the same own) with helpings of hot dogs, burgers, fries, salad, Coca-Cola 423 or 4231 if assistance and event preparation are needed.
Opening for part time evening and weekend Nurse Aid for female quadriparity in nursing Nurse Aid for male quadriparity Will train Provide own transportation M17-DD 2.06 ack for Charlie 3-29
Landscape Libraries and part-time positions
backyard bredigit, Help in person. The
library will accept 2-year degrees.
Wanted...
Creative individual with
graphic arts experience to help
design posters part time. Excellent pay and fringe benefits.
Call Jon 842-6930
Research Assistant in Neurocharmatology, R.S.C.
Assist in the preparation of neuropsychological
amnesia procedures $8,000-$12,000 per session;
and neurological procedures $6,000-$7,000 per
session. March 20, 1979 through April 9, 1979. Staff
literature information print and electronic; Professor
international phone conference; Professor in
management and Technology University of Kuzbarsk,
Russia; and Professor in Technology University of Kuzbarsk,
Russia. An equal Opportunity Employer.
Research Assistant: Graduate student in Biology,
Engineering or Computer Science to assist in
research projects. Requires exp in software
devices. Requires exp in service manager-
ship. Will be initially for 12 months, with posi-
tion to extend until May 15, 1978 or possible exit.
To begin May 15, 1978 or possibly exit,
601-4138, Matteo K. 823 Snow Hall, KU
University, 601-4138
Full time, severity needed for Child Development position. duties include providing private protective attire, monthly training in life and teledelivery personnel, social services, and personal personality. Send resume to Kentucky Equity Opportunity Employees.
Established Lawrence fixed need services
, creative Rocky Branch. Call 843-2571. 4-2-5
Haddox multifamily free area restaurant and club
house; offers dining, entertainment, for spring and summer; part-time lease.
LOST
15 pee and female use flesh, grey A white flesh,
pink flesh, brown flesh, red flesh.
Milk 189, 349, 363, 372, 394, 405, 417, 429, 449,
469, 489, 509, 529, 549, 569, 589, 609, 629, 649,
HELP: Look early in Spring Break morning, go
engraving with initial 2. in vicinity of
Milburn at Milburn. Great westward value.
An idle distance. If missed, please call
814-641-662 or 814-642-429. 3-30
MISCELLANEOUS
THEMIS BINDING COPYING "The House on Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their blinding and copying in Lawrence. Let us help you at 838 Male or phone 452-303. Then you."
One year old German Shepherd to give away
to a family in need of loving, loving, loving,
good with children. 92-1037-6825.
DEATH WHO LOTHER
WHERE Beneath of Noel Trust.
821-642, 842-342,
7765
J. HOOD BOOKSELLER The finest sequester-
ing bookstore in the Midwest. We handle hard-
cover, paperback and large-format books are well organized and in excellent condition. We maintain a full search service for old-print books from 1945 to today.
(Tuesday-Saturday): 1:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m. Sun.
(Saturday): 1:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m. Sun.
(481) 844-7641 481) 844-7641
3-29
NOTICE
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS meet tenth, at 7:00 p.m. in the Great Room of the Union to elect a new president.
Do you like thrice, immersive, concerts, outdoor sports, or diving at the Douglas Islands? Do you volunteer to touch developmentally disabled volunteers to help skills necessary for independent involvement in the community? Do you invest a recreational interest you would like to share? Do you have 328/368 or 411/451 credit for more information.
PERSONAL
FOX HILL: SUNYERGY CUNIC. Abortions up to 12,
propensity tests, pregnancy tests, Birth Control
Cinnam, contraceptive pills for appointment call
e.m. to 5 p.m. (8 a.m. to 4 p.m.) 909-3688.
Overland Park, Ks.
6:20 the Belmonts and 15:30 Pimpernets every Friday
afternoon (1-3) at Lonolouis' bar.
4:30
BREKS BREH SHORE is a major port city, 208 Railway,
109 Freeway, and 45 Airport. Located in the western
coast of Virginia, BREKS BREH SHORE is a
competitive quarter refuge for New York City.
City Lifespan counseling referrals have landed
QLD Hills 641-866-3020 or Headquarters 811-
3246
HARBOUR SPECIALS 4-8 Mon, Tue, and Wed
9:30 AM - 12:00 PM
MIDDLE DELIGHT SUNSET 12:30 PM -
1:30 PM
MIDDLE DELIGHT NIGHT 12:30 PM -
1:30 PM
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abstions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing, Birth, Child Counseling, Tribal Ligation. For appointment call (850) - 629-5086, 489, SiC, S. Overland Park, Ks
EASY EXTRA ENTRIES $500-$1000 Shipment Time
8-20 am - 7-10 pm, EST. Expire 9-30 am
IN DEATH INTERNETS, 300 miles East of
Washington, DC.
WIN A MOPED Register at your Kansas Union Bookstores
F.Y.I. Would you like these custom tags on your business site?
Yes or No. Please provide your choice. In the "Information" section of F.Y.I., enter your
FITEL GOOD AGAIN! SUNNY vitamins, mineral &
A herb formula and Its Protein powder are a treaty
healthy combination. Use now daily, you will feel
so much better. Give it 60 minutes. 811-2736
811-2735 6:00-8:00 p.m. 3:27
God's Mind Cavity?? Come to the Barnyard, we'll
be 3:27
British lint ad to Giltblush and create new
line of goods on Giltblush. Hobart,
Shipping Company.
Writings of Harel Peirce might be shown you then
would like to see in my private collection.
About his writings: 14 West Wood, 1472-1473; 150 West Wood,
1472-1473; 160 West Wood, 1472-1473.
GREAT FOOD. GREAT SERVICE just like you.
We serve at Restaurant Abu Shams (Shops 12-30).
Call 718-549-3996 for reservations.
Bring this ad to Gilmore Hall and get 20% off cover.
Monday, Wednesday, or Thursday.
Hilary's Hall (1895 S. 3rd St.)
474-831-8648. hilary.gilmore.hall.com
Gilbert Square house Tuesday & Thursday $9.50
House guesthouse & drive for free, $12.50
piggy bank plus floor.
Gibraltar. Monday dime borer (plus linger poof)
430.
$1.00 Pitcher, 7-9 P.M. Mon.-Thurs. Tuesday-Sch,
Sundays, 7-9 lbs. IBF
FREE PEARLUTS with every pitcher tonight at Islandhall.
3.27
KU PHYSICS CL310 will meet Saturday Morning on Friday at the KU Library. Make it a public information day!
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTOR M.A. in math, patience, three years professional experience. B82-SM1.
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can help you solve all of your CS problems or CR problems.
M31-4376 M31-4377
Treat of feeding yourself? Nansmith Hall is designed for the first time, ever a boaching plan for a new graduate student. You can be baute if you choose this plan. SANSMITH HALL 1000 Dairy Farm, 843-5250. NANSMITH HALL 1000 Dairy Farm, 843-5250.
REWITMEN EDITING. Your manuscript, thesis or three paper edits into an effective, genuine work are often difficult to think about with precision and ambivalence. Outlines and articles also available. Faxes 842-1234.
EXPORT TUTORS. MATRIX 600-125, call 844-7577.
TUTORS. COMPUTER SCIENCE 100-200, call 844-7577.
TUTORS. COMPUTER SCIENCE 100-200, call 844-7577.
TUTORS. 640-9560. QUALIFICATIONS. R.S.
COLLEGE
Male model Arts & Design Group Rates 4-ever
Muscle Mass, Thigh - FILO - P.O. Box 1052
*For details contact us.*
DOG GIREDNESS AND CONFORMATION CLASSES BY the LAWRENCE JAYHawk Kern Club Club. The club is based in orientation 7.3 to 8.30 on March 27 at the National Army Training Puppies $119 all others $150 Dog Deans have shirts and be on leashes. Equipment dogs have shirts and be on leashes. For further information call 643-4770.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAY IS available with Alice at the House of Udah/Quiche Corp Center. It is available from a a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Friday. 2 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass.
The Sunday, New York Times can now be de-
celebrated or apartment every Sunday.
Call 811-273-4955.
Visit www.nytimes.com
TYPING
I did damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476.
PROFESSIONAL LIFTING SERVICE, M41-0890, T-
Tyler/Editor IBM Pica/Kite Quality work.
Distribution instantiation welcome.
Barris 842-127-2127
Wish to inherit your children in my home in Ecuador with your children. Experience references. 540-327-3789
10 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
20 years experience. Law papers, letter papers. Mrs.
Wang.
Experienced Typed—term papers, essays, inductive
expositions. Prepared for term paper and/or spelling
corrections. 841-5931; Mrs. Wiley
Quality typing guaranteed - IMB Select, Terms
Needles, dissentations, caricature, Carole Mackie
Examined hybrid with scientific background.
HIM Correlating Selectit D. Call Jan., 845-312-912
http://www.himcorrel.com
COMPUTERIZED THRESH TYPING. Have your thresher type on COMPUTER and you can have it typed by you. Call COMPUTER to call PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. On the web, on the most activated typing system available.
Now accepting term papers for quality typing.
Midterm: 841-906 after 5:30. ff
Testing on Elite Electric Typewriter to export
information through Professional Service
Booking # 8161-7127
WANTED
HOME TYPING SERVICE. The typing business typing, statistical typing done by experi-
nceful users. For information call Sharon Hoe, 841-7280 after 5:39 a.m.
weekdays only.
Westfield Single, single to accompany you to dining
space. Please bring your own dinner plate, knife and
utensil. Tip your Enrollment. Contact Larry at 610-234-7890.
**WANTED:** Tutorial Coordinator for Spring and Summer, 1979 Must be graduate student (prefer university or departmental procedures), have experience in university and departmental procedures, have a strong willingness to work closely with university and departmental programs. Apply in 2023. Curricular O'Leary MES (in IST) with a Bachelor of Science and women of all races are encouraged.
WANTED: Half-time counselor. Must be a graduate student in connecting or related area, be familiar with agencies in the community, be familiar with and have dialects of three languages and have dialects of three languages. DEGREES: 50% is an equal opportunity affirmative action position; 25% is an equal opportunity affirmative action position; and 25% is an equal opportunity affirmative action position.
**Businessman required:** 2 bedroom apartment $80 =
145/367 or 145/637. **April 15 or April Call.** Carry:
643/637 or 643/646.
Deliver for可怜 to KU Medical Center, Mother-
town. 8-509, 8-539, 8-544, 8-546, 8-549,
8-520 0:00 p.m.
World War II female : iron-unsuperior forniture for
women 964-1874 Apartheid time 5-30
864-1874
TENNES PHOS - WANTED - Excellent Summer
and year-round position, available,
through May 31. Travel includes 24
pictures by K. J. Browne and 101 complete resumes.
picture by A. J. Sullivan. Chevy Chase, MD
50015. Nadege, Suite 101. Chevy Chase, MD
50015.
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 20,550 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
If you've got it, Kansan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or card to Classifieds Hall. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
SELL IT!
--to run
Monday Thursday 5 pm
Wednesday Monday 5 pm
Wednesday Tuesday 5 pm
Friday Wednesday 5 pm
AD DEADLINES
additional words
RATES:
15 words or less
Write ad here:
1
time
$2.00
CLASSIFIED HEADING;
2 times 3 times 4 times 5 time
$2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
.02 .03 .04 .04
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch- $^c$
DATES TO RUN: ___ to
NAME:___
ADDRESS:
PHONE:
KANSAN CLASSIFIED-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
1
8
Tuesday, March 27, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Physicist discusses 'big bang' evidence
Many billions of years ago a catalyticly blast of near inertile force sent all known matter rippling through the cosmos. That matter, through its gravitational force, collected into pools and swirled in the planets, pleres and galaxies as we know them today.
though somewhat simplified, such is the big bang cosmology, which is considered the leading theory designed to explain the evolution of the universe. Of course, there was no one around to record such an event, but 13 years ago Arno Penzias discovered what is now believed to be reverberations of light in the cosmic background microwave radiation.
Penzias explained his discovery last night at Woodruff Auditorium before an audience of 1,000 people.
That discovery earned Penzias the 1978 Nobel Prize in physics and thrust the big bang theory into the lead as the most accepted cosmology.
Penzias said that the universe was expanding and would continue to do so because there was not sufficient gravitational force to prevent it.
THE PRINCIPLE says the universe never changes. However, the universe has changed, which makes the principle invalid, he said.
"The existence of radiation refutes the Perfect Cosmological Principle, which states that any time is a good time to look at the universe," he said.
"The motion of the galaxies changed the universe because they began their motion with 100 billion or more stars Flying in a state of condensation, starting 118 billion years ago and living at the same place, but are scattered because of the universe's expanse," he said.
A. M. GRAHAM
Arno Penzias
Overloaded?
BOO
Let SES Help!
We provide tutoring, counseling,
and study skills sessions. For
more information contact:
Supportive Educational Services
202 Carruth O'Leary
864-3971
Tuesday, March 27
THE WAR OF THE WORLDs
sua films
ADAM'S RIB
(1953)
Dir. Byron Haskin; with Gene Barry,
Ann Robinson, Les Tremayne. Special
effects by George Pal.
Wednesday, March 28
Tracy/Hepburn:
(1849)
Dr. George Geeh, with Spencer Tracy, Katherine Hepburn, Judy Holiday, Written by Garson Kanin and Ruth Gordon.
"The fastest moving galaxies are the farthest away and the slowest are the closest."
"THE FASTER the galaxy is moving, the farther it is. For example, in a horse race, the fastest horse is the farthest from the starting point.
Thursday, March 29 Ibsen's Classic Play:
Dir. Joseph Loasy; with Jane Fonda,
David Warner, Trever Howard, Edward
Fox. PLUS: "The History Book, v. 6"
"7:30 & 8:05"
Penzias then explained the Hubble Effect, which measured the distance of the galaxies in the universe.
A DOLL'S HOUSE
(1972)
Friday & Saturday March 30 & 31
GIRL FRIENDS
Penzias' speech, "Observing the Cosmos," was sponsored by the KU Department of Physics and Astronomy. The flight of galaxies would continue forever.
Dir. Claudia Welli; with Melanie Mayron, Anita Skinner, Christopher Guest, Ell Wailach, Bob Balaen, Vivice Linda Lifors. The first fiction film by Welli, who also filmed "A China Memoir" with McRae MacLain.
(1978)
All films M.R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted $1.50 admission
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE by the American Bar Association/Law Student Division will be available from 6 to 18 in the legal office at new Green Hall. COLLEGE REPUBLICANS meet at 7 in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. KUAD CLUB meets at 7:30 in the Centennial Room of the Union. The KUARATE CLUB meets at 7:30 in room 173 of Robinson gymnasium. A WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM, "The Drive for Power," will be shown at 7:30 in room 3 in old Bell Library. A JUSTICE WORKSHOP will sponsor a lecture by Richard J. Barnett on "Power, Arms and Taxes: The Need for a New National Security Policy" at 8 in the Big Eight Room of the Union.
On Campus
-UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TOMORROW: VOLUNTEER INOME TAX ASSISTANCE by the American Bar Association/Law Student Division will be available from 6 to 8 p.m. in the legal aid office at new Green Hall. AN EAST ASIAN FILM SERIES movie, "Tokyo Story," will be showcased on Sunday, October 14th from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at California Los Angeles, will speak on "30 DAYS THE PEOPLES REPUBLIC OF CHINA" at 7:30 p.m. in 426 Lindley Hall. GUNG FU CLUB meets at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson gymnastium. HUNG KLING DJBALD CLUB meets at 7:30 p.m. in 2002 Learned Hall. The KU Concert Choir will give a SPRING CONCERT at 6 p.m. in Swarthwatt Hall. The KU PENCING CLUB meets at 8:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson gymnastium.
City to review budget plan
The Lawrence City Commission will consider budget recommendations for the fifth year of its community development program and Oread Neighborhood rezoning plan tonight.
The meeting will be at 7 p.m. in the First
Building bank building at 9th and
Massachusetts
The proposed budget for community development is $791,000. The primary goal of the budget is to improve the older and underprivileged children by cording to Karen S. Kressin, acting
secretary for the Community Development Block Grant Advisory Board.
The Oread Neighborhood plan was approved last week by the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission. The city commission will review the plan, which proposes changing the zoning in the area, and may vote on the issue.
DEMONSTRATION
March with us on Jayhawk Blvd. in support of the na-
tions and human rights of the oppressed Palestinian
people
Day: Wednesday, March 28 Time: 12:00-1:00 P.M.
Demonstrate against a treaty which talks of peace but, in fact perpetuates military occupation of Palestine, denies self-determination to the Palestinians, and strips the peace of its substance. Protest the signing of a treaty which throws the Middle East into turmoil and affects your well being.
Sponsored by:
---
Organization of Arab Students and Iranian Student Association
HERBIE MANN in concert
With The K.C. Philharmonic
Sunday, April 8, 1979, 8:00 in Hoech Auditorium. Reserved seats $4.00 and $8.00 Tickets available at the SUA office and Kieps, Come and enjoy an aesthetic blending of the musical colors of the orchestra with the timeless jazz sound of Herbie Mann Presented by SUA and The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra
TICKETS GO ON SALE TODAY AT 12 NOON SUA
TAKE A FRIEND OUT FOR BREAKFAST!
AND GET YOURS FREE
WITH THIS COUPON
Schumm for Lawrence
SCHWARZMAN
WE WILL BE SERVING BREAKFAST FROM 6:30 AM UNTIL 11:00 AM.
I. Retain City Management form III. Effective city employee of Government employer relationship
II. Effective use of Tax Dollars
"Quality of Life For Lawrence"
SIZZLER
BARRETO STAFA PORTE
THIS OFFER GOOD THRU MARCH 30,1979
---
1516 W.23
Vote
---
sua films
Pd Pol Adk. Pd lol by the Robert Schumm lor City
Commissioner. Shows Street Address 5104 A-197
AMAZING! INCREDIBLE!
Schumm City Commissioner-April 3
DON'T TELL NOW IT ENDS!
WAR OF THE WORLDDS
TECHNICOLOR
GENE BARRY • ANN ROBINSON
LEWIS MARTIN • LES TREMAYNE
1
Campus
Tuesday, March 27
Woodruff Auditorium
7:30 pm ADM $1.00
REDKEN
Beauty Shoppe NUTRITIONAL CENTER Hairraising For Men and Women Vitamins/Minerals
HEALTHRITE-VIBRANCY NUTRITIONAL CENTER
- Paul Bunyan Wood Toys
- Jewelry
Haircutting
• Blow-Wave Styling
• Permanent Waving
- Current Hair Coloring Techniques
- Manicures
Newest Brush • Retail Accessories
Irons—$14.95 • Denman Brushes—$7.50
9th Street Center—9th & Illinois—Call 843-3034
WOMEN'S COALITION Needs your energy
Join us— Tuesday March 27 at 7:30 in the Pine Rm. the Kansas Union
All women welcome
Partially funded by Student Senate/Student Service Fee
For those who help themselves
Help yourself to all the soup, salad, and pizza you can eat.
Introducing the Noon Buffet
$2.99
Mon-Fri
11:30-2:00
Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842-5824
Gabriel's
---
SPIRIT SQUAD 1979-80
1978
Proliminary meeting is April 2,5:30 pm
AUDITIONS:
1) Routines will be taught at the clinic
2) No experience necessary.
3) Everyone is invited to try out.
QUALIFICATIONS:
1) Regularly enrolled student at KU
2) Minimum grade point average 1.8 overall
3) A sincere interest in KU athletics
The KU Spirit Squad is sponsored and governed by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation. All students interested in learning more about becoming a member of the squad are urged to attend clinics to be conducted prior to auditions. Questions will be answered and routines for trying out will be taught.
Auditions
Clinics Allen Field House
Tuesday
April 3 -5:30-7:00
Wednesday
April 4 -5:30-7:00
Thursday -5:30-7:00
Thursday -5:30-7:00 April 5
Monday 5:30-7:00 April 9
Tuesday -5:30-7:00
April 10
Wednesday -5:30-7:00 April 11
Thursday —5:30-7:00 April 12
Preliminaries April 14
—9:30 a.m.
Finals April 21
—9:30 a.m.
Minority students are encouraged to participate
---
CLOUDY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas
KANSAN
Vol. 89. No.119
Wednesday, March 28.1979
New security policy urged for country See story page six
Lawrence, Kansas
Merits of return of draft disputed
By DEB RIECHMANN
Staff Writer
A local organization is planning a petition drive to stop a proposed return of the draft, but some KU students say the draft is inevitable and necessary.
"We could handle it for a few months, but that's all."
Some legislators and military leaders have called for a return of the draft because of a concern that the volunteer armed forces might not be effective.
"I think we need the draft, because in case of war we would be unprepared," Gary Cabe, Athens, Tenn., senior and a member of Veterans Officer's Training Corps, said yesterday.
No one has been drafted into the U.S.
army since December 1972 and the nation
has not taken an active role in war.
An Associated Press-NBC News poll indicated that 49 percent of the people questioned supported reinstatement of the former judge if it and the remainder were undecided.
But there has been a growing concern in recent years over declining recruitment in the U.S. Armed Services, and the rising cost of maintaining an all-volunteer army overseas.
Percy Cody, Council Bluffs, Iowa, senior and a member of ROTC, said he thought the quality of the armed forces had deteriorated since the draft ended.
Those questioned in the poll aged 18 to 26,
however, opposed the draft 62 to 33 percent.
"Boot camps are actually holding remedial reading classes," he said.
Recent polls show a balanced response to the reinstatement of the draft.
"Under strictly volunteers, you're getting people who have just finished high school and they aren't capable of doing highly technical skills." Cody said. "A college graduate does the unskilled jobs better than a high school dropout.
Rick Powell, Denver, senior and member of ROTC, also said he though there was a chance that he would be with illiterates," he said, describing his experience working in the engine room of a factory.
"There are many untrained people trying to fit into highly skilled jobs who are coming straight from the hills of Tennessee or are high school dropouts from the cities."
John Porsyn, Clay Center senior and member of ROYC is part of the problem that he and his team pay in the service for skilled jobs when compared with wages for the same skill in
If more people thought they could make comparable wages in the service, he said.
"I think it ought to be a mandatory two years for everyone," Persan said. "It gives you a little responsibility—it makes a man out of you."
But men are not the only ones who might be inducted into the armed services if a terrorist group is present.
At a time when women are seeking increased participation in the political and economic affairs of the United States, many militarily unlikely to be exempt from military service.
Tracy Spellman, Lawrence graduate student and KU-KY coordinator, said she was not alone in the room. But but said women should have the right to decide whether they wanted to fight in a war.
"I’m basically opposed to war," she said. "If we get to the point where we have to draft people for World War III, we might as well just blow everyone off the face of the earth."
An U.S. Army station commander in Lauderdale said he thought women should be drilled.
"We've got women mechanics, women truck drivers and women drill sergeants,"
He said that army recruitment in the area was doing well, but that there was a waiting list for women because of a lack of basic camps that could accommodate women.
Out of 400 jobs in the Army, women are eligible for positions in all but the four that include infantry.
The commander said he did not know if setting woman fight in combat situations were safe.
"Personally, I can't see a woman carrying a machine run across a rice paddle."
Photo by JEFF HETLER
However, since the volunteer army was established the number of women in the army has remained steady.
According to the Department of Defense, women in the armed services will increase from 5.5 percent today to about 11 percent by 1983.
Time magazine reported in Oct. 1978 that U.S. women assume more military responsibility than do women in other countries.
“If anyone has to die in such a gruesome way, I’d just as soon have them be males. I’m just so dead set against it that I’m hoping they won’t reinstate it.”
One KU student said he thought women should remain out of combat.
John Young, Otis sophomore, said, "If they did reintake the drift, I wouldn't mind if women were drafted, but I think they are in administrative roles and not in combat.
STOP THE MASSACRE OF PALESTINIAN PEOPLE
THE PEACE CREATES RESPECT FOR PALESTINEAN HUMAN RIGHTS
NO HOMELAND. NO RIGHTS FOR PALESTINIA = NO PEACE
LONG LIVE PALESTINE
Palestinian protest
Some members of the Moslem Student Association wavel signs during a march yesterday to protest the signing of the Egyptian-Irakiyah peace treaty. The members
marched between Strong Hall and the Kansas Union during the hour-long demonstration. The organization is planning another protest march to begin at noon today.
Students protest peace pact
By LAURIE WOLKEY
Staff Reporter
About 100 members of the Moslem Student Association at the University of Kansas marched down Jayhawk Boulevard yesterday carrying state flags of red, white and green and signs saying, "Stop the Massacre of Palestinian People."
The march organized to protest the signing of the Egyptian-Iranian peace treaty, which ended a long war between Wescoe Hall and received instructions from the president of the association, Majid Jalil.
Before the march, Ali said, "this will be a peaceful demonstration to show our displeasure of the treaty that will hurt the Palestinian people."
The peace treaty calls for Israel withdrawal from the Sinai penal walls within three years and formal Egyptian occupation as a member of the "community of nations."
comment, referring all questions about the demonstration to All.
Other protesters at the march handed out leaflets to bystanders, but refused to
Ali said members of the association had decided on the march last week when the signing of the peace treaty seemed probable. He said the group announced the march to the University Events Committee last weekend.
THE DEMONSTRATION, which lasted about an hour, consisted of three slow and solemn marches between Strong Hall and the Kansas Union. Members of the association, some with their heads wrapped over full sheets, marched in groups of three.
In front of Strong Hall and again in front of the Union, the protesters stopped to listen as Ali read along the association's protest statement.
The statement says, "The Moslem Student Association of the University of Kansas strongly condemns the Egyptian Israeli peace treaty. We believe that this treaty will only lead to further tragedy in the Middle East."
The words, "In the Name of Allah, the Beneficient, the Merciful" are at the top of the statement, which continues, "The treaty pointedly ignores the plight of four million Palestinians, who are the crux of the problem in the Middle East."
DURING THE MARCH, one protester carried a black banner painted with white
All said the signs translated into English,
"There is nothing worth worshipping except God." He said the words were "the motivation for our protest."
Most bystanders watching the march did not harass the protestors. However, when one student who was watching the march displayed a sign saying, "Support Peace," several of the protesters began arguing with them. James Todd, Lawrence sophomore.
Todd said, "it distracts me that there isn't any counter present. I want it known that at least one is."
RICK HELLMAN, Overland Park junior,
who was watching the march, said.
"Everybody has to compromise to get alone. I'm sorry that we have taken this
But Pat Goodwin, Overland Park sophomore, said, "They are entitled to what I want."
Although the demonstration was peaceful,
the KU Police department kept a watchful
eye.
Michael Hill, KU police chief, said, "We did not have any problems and didn't expect any. We just didn't want any traffic or pedestrian problems."
At least one unmarked police car followed the march. The three men in the car, all wearing suits and ties, said they were administrators from the KU Police Department.
After the March, Ali said the protest had been successful.
"WE WERE ABLE to let people know that we are against the treaty but that we are still alive."
All also urged members of the Moslem
See PROTEST back page
A. V.
Staff photo by CHRIS TODD
Nitzake Shange, author of the award-winning play "For colored women who have considered suicide/when the rain is emu," will perform tonight and tomorrow at 8 at the Lawrence Arts Center, 9th and Vermont streets. She also will lead a workshop on women and language as part of the Intercollegiate Association for Women Students national convention. The workshop will be held at 10 a.m. tomorrow in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union
Performing plauwright
House OKs medical use of pot
BvGENELINN
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA- The Kansas House yesterday passed a bill that would allow some cancer chemotherapy and glaucoma patients to be treated with mariana.
One of the bills' opponents, State Rep. Nina Strahm, R-Sabetha, said it was a step toward legalization of marijuana and could lead to drug abuse. The legislation now faces an uncertain future in the Kansas state Senate. Mike Glover, D-D Lawrence, the bill's sponsor.
The bill would create a marijuana therapeutic research program that would be limited to patients not responding to conventional therapies or patients suffering intolerable side effects from conventional therapies.
Glover said marijuana could stop the deterioration of the eyes caused by glaucoma, a disease that results in a gradual loss of vision. It could also relieve the nausea often caused by chemotherapy, he said.
RONALD STEPHIES, director of the ophthalmology department at the University of Kansas Medical Center, had testified in favor of the bill. Glover said.
Ophthalmology is the study of the anatomy, functions, diseases and treatment of ocular disorders.
However, Strahm said the bill would open a Pandora's box.
"We've had research into the therapeutic
She said she was worried that the would be a step toward legalization of marijuana.
effects of marijuana in Kansas since 1982," she said, but "Glover came up with this bill anyway because he feels he needs it to legalize pot."
SHE ALSO SAID the program could lead to drug abuse.
"The problem is, what are we going to do with people who start taking marijuana during their treatment and eventually leave the program?" she asked.
These people could become dependent on the drug, she said.
"We're told that marjana is not addictive, but we know that even cigarettes can be harmful."
Strahm said she wasn't against research into medical uses of marjunia and that she wasn't enough information about the drug to allow it to be used on a large scale.
Any doctor in the state could refer patients to the program, she said.
GLOVER AGREED that most glaucoma and cancer chemotherapy patients would be included in the program, but " said Strahim's doctor. " The typical 'Reeder Madness' mentality."
"Reefer Madness" was a 1930 movie that warned of grave dangers to those who smoked.
"Under the bill, no one would be treated with marijuana who was not part of a research project," Glover said, "so you can't say it's a step toward legalization."
He said the research would be coordinated by the Kansas Board of Healing Arts.
Glover also said there had been enough research on the effects of marijuana.
Full allocation advised for KJHK
The Student Senate Communications Committee voted last night to recommend that JKHK radio station receive its full line of funding for next year's pending approval by the full Senate April 8.
Questions had been raised in Monday's meeting concerning money allocated to the radio station last year. Therefore, the committee also will submit a resolution to approve the funding for KJHK to spend $10,000 of last year's allocation for station improvements.
Last spring, the Senate increased JIKH's line buildup to $1,800 with the understanding that the increase would be used in JIKH from 10 watts to 1,000 watts of power.
Line allocations, included in the Senate revenue code, provide for the funding of the student's activities. University Daily Kansan by specific amounts from each student's activity fee. KJHK's normal allocation of 25 cents a week as increased by 50 cents for last year only.
BECAUSE THE station plans to convert to 100 watts instead of 1,000. only $6,000 to
$8,000 will be needed for the "transmitter"
for the "transmitter" provided in i16 year's
legislation for the
Steve Pegg, station manager for KJHK,
said he had made a mistake in Monday's
meeting when he said conversion to 100
percent of power would cost approximately
$12,000.
According to the Senate rules and regulations, all money in Senate funded accounts must be spent by 17 or it will be canceled. All allocated fund for use in fall budget hearings.
Dale Gadde, faculty adviser to KJHK, said the station would let bids for the $10,000 in improvements and withdraw the bid letting within a 30 day time limit if the Senate did not allow. The station is without that withdrawal, KJHK will be legally obligated to accept one of the bids.
Although KJHK already has the $10,000 in
"If we can't justify use of the $10,000, we talk it back. "Gee'd aid." Don't talk about it."
A CUT TO this year's allocation was expected to be the committee because the organization will pay the overhead.
In other budget hearings:
its account and could legally spend it without the Senate's approval, Gadd said none of the money would be spent without Senate approval.
The Student Services Committee heard requests from eight student organizations and made preliminary budget cut recommendations for three of those groups. Budget cuts for other groups will be considered tonight.
OTHER GROUPS' requests were:
Students Concerned with Disabilities,
$363.28; Women's Coalition, $956; Consumer Affairs Association, $11,333; Black Student Union, $7,976; and KU Students for a Radioactive-Free Kansas, $68.90.
The committee's recommended allocations and the groups' original requests were: Non-Traditional Student Organization, $1,810 from $2,290; KU-Y, $1,710.30 from $2,160.85; and Annexity International, $235 from $1,352.
Committee chairmen Melanie Anderson and Kent Meckennickhan said that about 50 percent of the council members
and the committee will be to cut this figure by about one-half to meet its requirements.
The Culture Committee heard five budget requests last night and will make recom-
mendations.
Two of the organization's requests were line allocations in the Senate revenue code, and each asked for an increase in the allocations.
Any revenue code change would have to go through the Finance and Auditing Committee and the full Senate before it was approved.
The University Theatre asked for $38,320,
which was $9,016 more than the line
allocation recommended in the revenue
code.
The KU Bands asked for almost twice the amount recommended in the revenue code, $20,085.30. The revenue code recommendation is $10,089.
The KU Chinese Martial Arts and the KU Kung Fu Club each asked for $300; the International Club asked for $4,190; and the International Club asked for a total of $1,801.44.
2.
Wednesday, March 28, 1979
University Dally Kansan
IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Surveys
OPEC increases prices by 9%
GENEVA, Switzerland — The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries raised crude oil prices by 9 percent yesterday to $1.49 a barrel and authorized crude oil purchases by the U.S.
The increase, which will take effect Sunday, would raise American retail gasoline prices by about two cents a gallon and increase America's foreign oil demand by about 40%.
Analysts say the surcharges could push the foreign oil bill even higher.
The base increase is expected to increase OPEC nations' revenues by at least $13.5 billion this year, analysts said.
Algeria, Venezuela and Libya immediately said their countries would add surcharges to the basic rate, and oil ministers in Switzerland predicted that they would do so.
The effect of the OPEC increase on the American economy is difficult to gauge because of the time lag between foreign sales and sales to U.S. companies.
Leon Taub, an economist at the consulting firm of Chase Econometrics Inc., said the OPEC increase could raise American inflation by 0.2 percent this year. If OPEC raised prices 5 percent in October, inflation would increase 0.4 percent in 1979 and another 0.4 in 1980. Taub said.
According to a newsletter that covers the petroleum industry, the average retail price of a gallon of regular gasoline at a full-service station jumped 3.68 MWK in October.
Beain. Sadat appeal for aid
WASHINGTON - The leaders of Israel and Egypt disagreed yesterday on Palestinian autonomy, but asked Congress to give them weapons and trust that they would be able to fight.
Egyptian President Anwar Wasir and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem
Boknake seconde秘诀 to senators and congressmen on Capitol Hill.
Both leaders urged the employees to approve President Carter's $2 million package of learn and grants for France. The department was assigned to manage these grants and annuities that was awarded.
Letters of agreement made public by Defense Secretary Brown said the package included accelerated delivery of F-16 fighter planes to Israel and Syria, and that the U.S. would provide a base in Gaza.
While Begin and Sadat were speaking in the United States, bombs exploded in Israel and Paris, killing one person and injuring more than 50 others during the war.
Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat told Arab leaders in Baghdad, Iraq, to support the PLO's war against the treaty by ending all trade relations.
Arafat also asked the leaders to enact an oil embargo against the United States.
A PLO spokesman in Beirut said two bombings in Israel were part of a plan to escalate anti-Iraq war in protest of the new treaty.
In Paris, an anonymous telephone caller called a group called the "Autonomous Joint Intervention Group Against the Zionist Presence in France and Against the Peace Treaty" was responsible for the blast. Authorities said they had never heard of the group before.
Kansan identified in Hart trial
PRYHO, Oklahoma—Defense witnesses for Gene Leroy Hark, accused in the murder of three Girl Scouts, said yesterday that a Kansas man might be a suspect.
Among the witnesses was a Girl Scout who tentatively identified the Kansan as the man lurking outside her tent a few days before the murders. Another woman testified that she loaned the Kansan a flashlight later found at the murder scene.
The Kansas man, William Stevens, 23, is serving a sentence at the Kansas State Industrial Reformatory at Hutchinson for rape. Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation Director Tom Kennedy said agents interviewed Stevens in a room and took hair, blood and semen samples.
Kennedy refused to divulge laboratory analysis results, but said Stevens had been ruled out as a suspect in the slayings.
Random license checks barred
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that law enforcement officers could not stop motorists at random to check drivers' licenses and car registration records.
The Court said such random stops violated the Constitution's protection of citizens from unreasonable search and seizure.
Justice Byron R. White, who wrote the decision, said the ruling did not stop states from questioning all oncoming traffic at a roadblock-type stop.
The Court's 84-1 ruling stemmed from a Delaware police case in 1976 in which a stop led to an arrest for possession of marijuana.
The defendant in the case successfully stopped police from introducing the seized marijuana as evidence at the trial when state courts ruled that the defendant was not a person.
D.A. bill proceeds to Senate
TOPEKA—The Kansas Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee yesterday sent the full Senate a bill that would establish a statewide district
Under the plan, county electors would decide whether they wanted to change from a county attorney to the district attorney system. The district attorney would have no right to represent himself.
Twenty-four judicial district do not have district attorneys. Five counties that have district attorneys are Douglas, Dickwick, Shawnee, Johnson and Hopkins.
State Sen. Ron Hein, R-Topkea, a supporter of the bill, said paying the district attorneys would cost the state about $400,000 more than the $2.7 million counties
Kerr-McGee cover-up alleged
ORLAHAMA CITY - A union official said yesterday that Karen Silkwood hadwoken the Kerr-Meckree Corp. was covering up faulty work at one of its facilities.
Anthony Mazzocchi, vice president of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union, said Silkwood had said she had proof that the faulty work could cause damage.
Mazzocchi testified in federal court at a $1.15 million plutonium contamination lawsuit. He said Silkwalko's contamination by plutonium upset a government agency.
Mazzcochi said that if faulty fuel rods were used in a nuclear reactor, it could cause a reactor melt-end, endangering the lives of millions of neon.
"If you wish to distract attention from the issue," Mazzoli said, "this was the way to do it—if it somehow came out that she contaminated herself. And it wore."
Bill to halt primary approved
He said Silkwood was to gather evidence on the use of faulty fuel rods, but the Kerr-McGee management realized what she was doing.
The bill would repeal Kansas' year-old primary law at a savings of $1.1 million.
TOPEKA—The Kansas House gave final approval to a bill that would call off the state's first presidential primary.
Under current law, every voter in the state declaring a party affiliation would be able to vote in his party's primary.
Opponents of a Kansas primary questioned whether it was worth $1.1 million to switch the way delegates to national party conventions were elected.
The delegates are elected through the convention system, which is financed by the state parties.
Supporters of the primary said it would offer a greater number of people a chance to nominate delegates and presidential candidates.
Weather...
Skies will be partly cloudy today with a high near 60, according to the National Weather Service. Lows tonight will fall to the low to mid 30s. Winds will be southerly at 10-80 mph. Partly cloudy skies are expected again tomorrow. The sun will shine over showers. Temperatures will be in the upper 80s with gusty winds 20-25 mph.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -Richard Berkley became the first Jewish mayor in Kansas City history and the first Republican mayor in 54 years by defeating black Democrat Bruce Watkins, 73,386 to 52,793 last night.
Berkley elected KC mayor
Watkins, who received campaign help from Vice President Walter F. Mondale, conceded the election to Berkley late last fall. Kansas City wasn't ready for a black mayor.
The Mondale campaign visit became an issue because the election is nominally
"I'm concerned that maybe it takes more money and a different color to win," he said.
Under its non-partisan, council-city manager form of government, the mayor's post is a part-time job that pays $25,000 a year.
In last month's primary, two-term incumbent Charles Wheeler ran four behind him in the race.
Berkley, who got 27 percent; and city councilman Joel Peloself, a distant third.
He also served as assistant mayor the past four years.
president of Freedom Inc., a black political organization.
Wheeler, a Democrat, had been seeking an unprecedented third term.
As mayor, Berkley will preside over council meetings, appoint council committees and their chairmen, appoint city boards, and enlist as an ex-officio member of the police board.
Watkins, 54, is president of Watkins Brothers Memorial Chapels, and has received political support in the City Council primarily from the black community.
films sua
(1949)
Wednesday, March 28
Tracy/Hepburn:
ADAM'S RIB
He also was a founder and now is
Dir. Joseph Losey, with Jane Fonda,
David Warner, Trevor Howard, Edward
Fox. PLUS:"The History Book, v. 6."
:7:30 & 9:45
Dir. George Cukor, with Spencer
Trac, Katherine Hepburn, Judy Holiday,
Written by Garson Kanin and
Ruth Gordon.
*(754)*A
30 hurt in Paris restaurant blast
Berkley, 47, is treasurer of the family business, Tension Envelope Corp., and has been appointed to the Board.
(1972)
Thursday, March 29
Ibsen's Classic Play:
A DOLL'S HOUSE
Dir. Claudia Weill; with Melanie Maynor, Annie Skinner; Christopher Stephenson; and the director Viveca Lindors. The first film fiction by Winaff, who also titled "A China Story," she wrote.
Friday & Saturday, March 30 & 31
(1978)
GIRL FRIENDS
Monday, April 2
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission.
MATHELIS, April 6
Women in Art, part 2:
LOUISE NEVELSON
IN PROCESS
Dir. Susan Fanshell, Jill Godilow
HELEN FRANKENTHALER
Dir. Perry Miller Adato
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted; $1.50 admission.
Our Women in Art series concludes tonight with these three films focusing on three of the most acclaimed and admired artists the United States has produced. Partially funded by Spencer Art Museum.
PARIS (AP)—Terrorists tossed a bomb into a crowded Jewish student restaurant in the Latin Quarter here yesterday, injuring more than 30 students in apparent reprisal for the signing of the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty.
MARY CASSATT:
IMPRESSIONIST
FROM PHILADELPHIA
An anonymous caller said the attack on the hostel—one of the most popular in Paris—was in response to the signing of the treaty Monday in Washington.
The PLO high command in Beirut did claim responsibility for two attacks in Israel, in which one person was killed and more than 30 injured.
The Paris office of the Palestine
Liberation Organization denounced the bombing as "a racist action of anti-Semitic elements" and expressed "its deep sadness and strong support" to the families of the injured.
An employee who witnessed the blast said, "It was horrible. Young men were covered with blood, unable to hear from the fire. It will be a miracle if none of them dies."
Many of the students, who were eating a kooho lunch, suffered ear injuries from the crash.
Due to the Great Success of KING Jeans Half Price Jean Sale, They've decided to do it again only this time with shirts and tops!
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Wednesday, March 28, 1979
University Daily Kansan
3
Halls 78% full for fall semester
By LAURA STEVENS
Staff Reporter
KU residence halls have been filled to 78 percent occupancy for next year, Ruth Mikhelson, associate director of the office of residential programs, said yesterday.
Figures compiled March 23 show that 3,360 people have turned in residence hall contracts. Last year at this time, 2,935 people had contracted for space.
Mikkelson said 2,019 women and 1,341 men had returned contracts for next year.
"We reduced the number of single rooms for next year to 12 percent, hoping to take care of everyone who wanted a place to stay in spite of that, we're way ahead of last year."
Mikkelson said that if contracts continued to come in, regular spaces would be filled up.
THIS YEAR, 245 people were placed in temporary housing.
She said residential programs would not accept contracts from people for whom there were no spaces. Instead, the temples would use separate rooms to negotiate. Temporary spaces will be paid
for by the week and food will be provided, she said.
Halls that already are filled for next year are GSP-Corbin, Hashinger, Lewis and
Mikkelsen said all upperclass students returning contracts now would be assigned to McCollum Hall. All freshman men will be assigned to Templin or Joseph R. Pearson Halls. All freshman women will be assigned to Elsworth Hall.
At this time last year, Lewis Hall was full
and Hashingian and GSP-Corbin were nearly
all other halls were open.
MIKKELSON SAID she noticed a trend in next year's contracts.
"Women are requesting single-sex halls," she said. "Women, I believe, are more concerned with security than freedom in the sense of living in a co-ead cail. I think we need to work with the concerns of women today—studying, programming and living in security."
Mikkelsen said men appeared to be returning contracts for co-ehals buildings.
Recommendation date set
A committee formed to recommend a replacement for Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, has set April 15 as the deadline for making recommendation, a committee spokesman said yesterday.
Larry Sherr, chairman of the selection committee, said the committee had been
P
Lawrence Clog Headquarters
The committee's recommendation will be submitted to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, the president of the university.
evaluating applications and hoped to reach a decision soon.
Calgaard has accepted the position of president at Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas. His successor will officially take over Calgaard's duties July 1.
Lawrence
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25th & Iowa
HoursMon-Thurs 10-8:30 Sun 12:30-5:30
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MIKELSON SAID she thought the interest in residence hall living was based on the inflation of apartment rents, the convenience of residence hall living and the programming the halls provide. She said the higher cost of residence hall contracts for a single and $1,380 for a standard double room would force people from turning in contracts. This year, single rooms were $1,695 and doubles were $1,285.
"Higher cost in residence hall contracts has not kept up with inflation," she said. "Inflation is zooming. They're getting a bargain and they know it.
"I also think students see education as meaning more than classroom experience. I think they see residence hall living as an extension of their educational experience."
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Free Writing Help!
All Juniors, Seniors, and Graduate Students
Essay Planning and Organization
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Communications Resource Center
306B Summerfield
9-4 Monday-Friday
864-4500
LIVE MUSIC TONITE
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8-12 PM
NIGHT SHIFT
LATIN WEEK: March 26 - March 30
MECHA CONFERENCE
SPIR4385 Dr. Francisco Ruelo ... Cincinnati, Urban Presidents;
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Coxman J. McKee ... Assistant Vice President of the Cincinnati
Wednesday, March 28
1:00 - 4:00 p.m.
Sponsored by MICHAEL and Minority Attains
No Charge
...
Forum Room, Union
SLIDE SHOW
History, tradition and current conditions of Puerto Rico
11:00 am-3:00 p.m.
Thursday, March 29
308 E Strong Hall
Film: "PUERTO RICO"
Thursday, March 29 7:00 p.m. Strong Auditorium, 300 Strong
Supported by Pacific Benevolent and Morning Mercy Funds
No Charge
...
NOCHE VENEZOLANA
(Venezuelan Night)
DINNER
Featuring traditional Venezuelan foods CULTURAL PROGRAM
Side trip through Kendall/Cultural film/traitional dances and songs
Friday, March 30 Dinner 6:00-7:30 p.m. Lawrence Community Bldg.
Cultural Program: F, 30-10:00 p.m.
Sponsored by The Venezuelan Club and Mennitty Affairs
Charge for dinner $3.00 Adults/$1.50 Children
Cultural Program Free
*******
All the above programs will be held at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
SUA
SUA IN ASSOCIATION WITH FEYLINE & MARTIN WOLFF PRESENT
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
MARCH 28,1979
Bilingual bill is unfair
The right of all Americans to an education has long been accepted by the people of the United States.
However, there are thousands of American school age children who find the promise of an education empty because they cannot understand their teachers. These students find themselves not only lost in an English-speaking world, but also rejected by their fellow students, teachers and school administrators because they do not speak the same language.
They repeatedly have been denied the right to an education. And now, hundreds of these students in Kansas may have that right denied again if debate in the Kansas Legislature halts attempts at bilingual education.
ALREADY THE Kansas Senate education committee has deflated much of a proposed bilingual education bill when it took out all references to "bilingual" and "multicultural" education and replaced them with the safe words "English proficiency development."
But such changes have not been welcomed by those who want actual bidding.
State Sen. Bert Chaney, D-Hutchinson, said, "They gutted the bill. That's what they've been teaching for years, English proficiency. That's no change. The bill is meanless."
Indeed, the entire purpose of bilingual education is to teach minority-language students, primarily young children, the basic skills at their
own grade level and in their own language, if necessary. In addition, they would receive intensive English instruction to prepare them for regular classes.
THE BILL now is under consideration by the Kansas House education committee and is likely to come under even more pressure from school district administrators who are worried about the cost of such programs and the possibility that they will have to admit deficiencies in their current programs.
Opposition also is likely to come from groups that think such programs will mean teaching subjects in a school. It's easy tongue for his entire school career.
But the objective of bilingual education is exactly the opposite of that—to give a student an education at the same time that the student is learning to cope with an alien American culture.
However, the objective of any bilingual bill should not be to try to instantly provide the student with a proficiency in English while he falls further and further behind in school. And the objective never should be to strip the bilingual student of his cultural heritage.
A responsible bilingual program is needed in the state of Kansas. To water it down would be to ignore the problem and also to ignore the right to an education to hundreds of Kansan school children.
Latin Week recognizes significance of minority
There is something new at the University of Kansas; Latin Week.
Throughout this week the office of minority affairs and Latino student organizations are sponsoring films, slides, a musical and cultural programs on the various Latin groups.
This is the first week-long recognition of Latinos here. This seems to be an extension of the nationwide emergence of the Latino American as a formidable minority.
Government estimates place the Latino or Hispanic-American population at 12 million. But the presence of illegal immigrants, about 15 million or 7 percent of the U.S. population. Because of natural increases in population (more births than deaths) and increased immigration, the Latinos might be the largest group in the United States by the end of the next decade.
THE BLACK POPULATION makes up 12 percent of the total population, but the number of births and deaths does not equal the Latino pace.
The largest Latino group is the Chicanos, or Mexican-Americans, with 7.2 million people located mainly in the Southwest. There are an estimated 1.8 million Puerto Ricans who live mainly in the Northeast. And of 700,000 Cubans, most live in Florida.
in addition, there are about 2.4 million other Latinos—Dominicans, Ecuadorians, Colombians, Costa Ricas and people from other Latin American countries.
WHAT ALL THIS means in pragmatic terms is that the United States now is the world's fourth largest Spanish-speaking country. The country's predominant in areas such as Los Angeles, Miami, New York, and to a lesser degree, Chicago, is all of are centers that attract big business.
The political clout of American Latinos, just by the fact of numbers, will increase and propel the Hispanic-American vote as a vital campaign goal. Already, Gov. Jerry Brown of California has established ties with the California Chicano community. But while the state's Democratic candidate Brown has not kept campaign promises for support of Chicanos. The importance Brown places on the Latino vote is exemplified by the fact that Cesar Chavez, the renowned
Philip Garcia
YOU ARE HERE
United Farm Workers leader, is in his corner.
PRESIDENT CARTER, after receiving 28 Texas electoral votes from Chicano ballots, responded by appointing more government positions than any other president.
But there are serious problems that face the Latin-American community.
There are only 5 Latinus in the U.S. House of Representatives and none who are Senators. The two former Chicago Mayor, the one from New Mexico, no longer are in office.
Only 37.8 percent of Latinos eligible to vote are registered. In California Latino voters have only 2 percent of 20,000 elected state posts and only 8 of the 120 seats in the Senate.
In New York, Puerto Rican make up 24 percent of the student public school population.
No doubt education has been and will be the key for the advancement of America's labor force.
And the push for more Latinos to enter the fields of engineering and medicine, previously at a minimal level, will aid the United States in dealing with Mexico and other Latin American countries for exchanges of oil and technology.
BUT JUST AS there are problems, there are good signs.
Latinos in Miami, mainly Cubans, are responsible for $2.2 billion in annual income
Registration drives in Texas and California have increased voter eligibility to more than 50 percent of the eligible Latino vote.
And of course, the Latinos still hold firm to their religion and family, two vital institutions which lately have not received total faith.
The emergence of the Latinos as a significant minority in America no doubt adds to this country's vitality and its effort to unify them with its Latin American neighbors to the south.
Peanut inquiry resembles Watergate
Two interesting developments in the special investigation into financial transactions between President Carter's family peanut business and the National Bank of Georgia: Bank records show that the president knew about the problems the bank was facing. In the special council has been granted the full powers of a Watergate-style prosecutor.
Earlier this year the White House said that Carter knew little about the warehouse finances in 1976 or the problems the business was having, and that he left most of the management to his brother, Billy, while he conducted his campaign. And in a television interview last year, Carter denied that any information from the bank was diverted to the campaign.
But according to bank records and statements from persons involved in decisions concerning the business problems, Carter did participate in some important discussions about the warehouse's finances:
- ON JANUARY 29, 1976 he participated in negotiations with the National Bank of Georgia and finance company officials at Plains, Ga., according to two participants.
Vernon Smith
- On August 26,1976,the day when a loan
agreement between the National Bank of Georgia and the Carter warehouse was signed, Bert Lance, the bank director, met with Carter in Plains to discuss the warehouse business, according to logs from a customer owned by the National Bank of Georgia.
- Earlier in 1976, according to Samuel R. Hunter, director of an Americus, Ga., bank, Carter asked him to release his bank's claim on the warehouse so the Carter business would have adequate collateral to cover a loan from the National Bank of Georgia.
The FBI is investigating the record-keeping of the National Bank of Georgia on questions Congressional Republicans want that Congress concerns whether the proceeds from bank loans that went to brother Billy, illegally purchased by the primary election campaign of President Carter.
Tuesday appointed Paul J. Curran as a special counsel to investigate the Carter financial affairs. But to the irice of Republicans, Curran, a former U.S. attorney, was not given full independent investigative powers.
ATTORNEY GENERAL Griffin Bell last
According to a Justice Department statement, Curran would not be allowed to make final decisions about whom to prosecute and he would not be allowed to grant immunity to potential witnesses. He was also told to make final decisions about indictments.
Understandably, the limitations placed upon Curran caused much criticism and disapproval.
"It is not proper for the Administration to be dragged kicking and screaming into this investigation," said Sen. Howard Baker, R-Tenn.
By Friday however, Bell appeared to have had a change of mind, and Curran was given the full powers of a Waterestate-style prosecutor. But he stopped short of changing Curran's formal title to "special prosecutor" as the Republicans would like.
THE TITLE of prosecutor was not appropriate in this case because there was no evidence a crime had been uncovered, Bell said.
"What we need here is fact-finding," he said. "I don't know where all that will lead, but I can't imagine anyone having any more power than Mr. Curran now has."
Thus, in the short space of a week, the honesty and integrity of a president is in question and the wheels of a formal investigation have begun to turn. The haunting spectre of Watergate once again in upon us.
The attorney general is correct in asserting that he doesn't know where all this will lead. No one does. Nevertheless, the appointment of a special counsel, and reports that the Justice Department is prepared to seek in indictment against Bert Janssen, does not make for brighter days ahead for the Carter administration or the nation.
This is the second time in the history of the United States that a special investigation has been launched into the affairs of a sitting president.
The first investigation led to the unprecedented resignation of a president and was the darkest political hour the nation had ever seen, but the nation pulled through.
But to have to go through all that again in less than a decade quite possibly may be too much for even the strongest among us to stomach.
MAGNEY THE BRAND NEW LEADER
© 1974 BY DIRECTOR DANE
INFLATION
AHA!
CONGLOMERATED
GOVERNMENT
CONTROLS, REGULATIONS and
GUIDELINES, UNLIMITED
PROFITS
U.S. BUSINESS
INC.
BY T. M. ASLA
Students could battle adult illiteracy
By JONATHAN KOZOL
N. Y. Times Feature
BOSTON—Twenty percent of adult men and women in this nation cannot read a computer. You are likely enough to fill in a job application. The term for this cripping condition is "functional."
The figure for blacks is 44 percent and is 56 percent for those of Spanish surname. The total is 23 million at the lowest and more likely 30 million. The cost to the nation, including welfare and lowered productivity, is $6 billion a year.
The Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, Title I, was the last great hope for an injection of adrenalin into public school reading programs. It is of no use to adults, nor is it of much use to those still in classrooms.
TITLE I students receive less time in reading than those not in Title I. The program appears to hinder more children than it helps.
Rather, it is to turn our backs on this, and all on other standard substitutes for action, and to launch an all-out national attack on adult illiteracy, giving it the same priority as plague, pestilence or war. If we wished to learn from experience, we would start this course in a maximum-school setting. We would also insist on a maximum teacher-learner ratio of 1-5.
STATE U.
The answer is not another research project.
WHAT?! THE LIBRARY BURNED DOWN?
NEVER MIND THE PEOPLE!
DID THEY SAVE THE BOOKS?
BOTH OF 'EM? GOOD!
VOLUNTEERS might be as young as 15, others might be over 25. They would receive a 10-day crash course in the basics of a strong phonetic method, heightened by an intensive course of words, proved in a number of pilot projects to bear the greater power of provocation.
Our first need is to sign up and prepare 5 million literacy teachers to go into the homes of from 23 to 30 million literate people. We know this many people in the ranks are classroom solution is to free from class individuals who have the energy and competence to do the job, and to do it virtually for free; university students can be taught and write with more than marginal费。
The words (not "Dick" and "Jane," but "grief" and "pain" and "lease" and "license," "power," "protest," "police") are those that set the heart and mind alive with possibilities of making something different of the world.
Volunteers would live in the neighborhoods in which they teach. They would work at least two hours with each pupil, providing them with tutoring and pupils' homes or in a house especially renovated for this purpose, a "literacy center" designed to facilitate activities that their living needs teach.
IF VOLUNTEERS began their work in June at the school semester's end, Christmas might be a logical target date for victory. Brazil, Cuba and Israel have succeeded at the same task in periods that range from 60 days to seven months. If there were to be a follow-up, as literacy experts in Florida and Texas reported, place in a two-month "crash" course running for two years in a row during each of the two subsequent summers.
Volunteers might properly receive course credit from their colleges and high schools for the time devoted to this endeavor. Instead of having spent one full semester studying "Problems of Democracy," they should have done their best to solve one such problem.
The volunteers would operate in "teams" or groups of black, white and Hispanic children selected to provide the class and ethnic mix that has a chance to overcome the usual problems of top-down benevolence.
VOLUNTEERS should receive their living stipend from the federal government,
In cases where teachers do not wish to leave classrooms, or where school boards won't agree, leaders might easily be found in the classroom. Teachers certified teachers who are out of work.
$20 a week perhaps, personal backup, friendship and specific pedagogic counsel from an older man or woman, a "team leader." The leader might be a teacher in the public school or college that the volunteers would attend if they were not in the school. The teacher ought to get a normal salary from the local school board, university or college.
A QUESTION about this proposal is asked repeatedly: How can we expect so many youngsters to give up a full half-year out of school? How can we give pedagogy and historic struggle of this kind?
I have just returned from a tour of 30 colleges in 2012. The myth of student lethargy is just that—a myth, and it is not even working as a self-fulfillment prophecy. The children I met remain alive and ethical in their convictions. The students are less rhetorical and more realistic. They are very lazy when they say what they rather than to watch it on television. One thing they have greatly missed since 1972 has been a single concrete focus for their energies and ideals. This project offers that focus for the first time in seven years.
Jonathan Kozol's first book, "Death At An Early Age," won a 1986 National Book Award. This article is adapted from a work in progress.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 60-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July. Subjects are Sunday and lunch and Sunday evening; $15 for six months or $64 for six years; $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 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 60453
Editor
Barry Massey
Barry Massey
Editorial Editor
John Whitendes
Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Assistant Campus Editors
Graphic Designer
Special Sections Editor
Marketing Editor
Sports Editor
Associate Sports Editor
Wire Editors
Wire Editors
Editorial Writers
Chief Photographer
Chief Photographer
Editorial Cartoonist
Staff Artists
Business Manager
Karen Wendrout
Retail Sales Manager
National Advertising Manager
Classified Advertising Manager
Assistant Classified Advertising Manager
Advertising Manager
Staff Artist
Staff Photographer
Teardrops Manager
Salon Representatives
Administrator
Managing Editor
Direkt Steimel
Mary Hoenk
Mam Panlon
Carol Hunter,
Baker Beer
Mary Thornbruguay,
Hardy Christ
Mary Dressner
Nancy Dressler
Linda Fineston, Paula Southernland, Leon Unnur
Cydia Hughes, Barb König, Caroline Cahrys
Mary Ernst, Philipa Guilar, Veron Smith, Jekpa Thompson
Chief Photographer
Bill Frakes, Trish Lewis, Barb Kinney
Jayne Schell, Jan Catterbeer
Allen Blair, Paul Knoll,
Brenda Paxton, Clindy Ray, Allen Reynolds, Joan Smutny
General Manager
Advertising Advisor
University Daily Kansan
5
25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA
“NEW MILE STORE”
KIEF'S
DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
GEORGE BENSON
Linnie Inside Your Love
Includes New Album of Coins Come
Once Banned, Love Is a Warm Thing
GEORGE BENSON
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KIEF'S
list 14.98
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AVERAGE WHITE BAND
You Got No Right
PLEASE DON'T FALL IN LOVE
Bad Company
DESOLATION ANGELS
ROCK 'N ROLL FANTASY
CRAZY CIRcles
THE CARS
HAMMER
BLACK SHEEP
KIEF'S 4.59
Sister Shelda
WE ARE FAMILY
JUDY COLLINS
ARD TIMES FOR LOVERS
ROXY MUSIC
MANIFESTO
GEORGE HARRISON
Includes Soft Collar Soft Harrington Hana
Easter Soft Touch
RICKIE LEE JONES
Easy Memory The Life Chance Trance
Dunn % All Star Joint
MICHAEL FRANKS
Tiger in the Rain
Includes Living On the Rain
Hardcover Lifetime
THE
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BETTER
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724 Mass.
GEORGE BENSON
LIVING INSIDE YOUR LOVE
INCLUDES KEY ON A CD WITH IS COMMENTS COME
LOVE BEHIND LOVE IS A MURT OF THINGS
You're Behind Me
You're Behind Me
BETTER DAYS
THE CARS
1979
CINEMAS
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
AVERAGE WHITE BAND
1901
1901
INCLUDES
WALK ON BY
PLEASE DON'T FALL IN LOVE
HAMMER
BLACK SHEEP
ALI
Bad Company
DESOLATION ANGELS
ROCK 'N' ROLL FANTASY
CRATT CIRCLES
Sister Shadye
WE ARE FAMILY
HE'S THE GREATEST DANCER
LUST IN MUSIC
BETTER DAYS
BADFINGER AIRWAVES
1983
JUDY COLLINS
HARD TIMES FOR LOVERS
RICKIE LEE JONES
Eats Money The Last Chance Texas
Dunnett % All Star joint
MICHAEL FRANKS
Tiger In The Rain
Includes Listing On The inside
Hidcorry Lifeline
ROXY MUSIC
'MANIFESTO'
MUSIC
AINT THAT SO
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301
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in
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GEORGE
HARRISON
Includes Not Guilty Soft Hearted Hana
Potter Soil Push
6
Wednesday, March 28. 1979
University Dally Kansan
Policy reappraisal urged
Staff Reporter
By ROBIN SMITH
The U.S. national security policy has not changed since the end of World War II and needs to be revised, Richard J. Barnet, a former general in the defense Department, said last night.
It is "absolutely essential to stand back and reapprise our national security policy."
Barnet, now a co-director of the Institute for Policy Studies, spoke to more than 150 people about the need to update the security policy of the United States. His speech was sponsored by the Lawrence Coation for Peace and Justice.
"If we do not establish a new national security policy," Barnett said, "it will be
historical example of bringing an illusion into a new world.
“An illusion that peace requires the preparation for war. An illusion that the more terrible weapons a country has, the more security that country's leaders will have.”
BARNET SAID that despite the nearly $2,000,000 said on national security since 1945, the American people were less secure and also less secure than 30 years.
"We have a great fear of a nuclear war," he said. "The reality stares us in the face. Our, our children could be involved in a nuclear war.
"The United States could be utterly destroyed by nuclear weapons—our state of
Barnard and the University States had more
Barnard and the University States had more
9,500 square feet of land for the
9,500 square feet of land for the
invulnerability is gone, we are no longer superior. Our power has slipped away."
If 100 nuclear warheads landed on the Soviet Union, a minimum of 37 million people would be killed and 50 percent of the population employed, according to Pentagon calculations.
"GIVEN THESE realities of the nuclear age," Barnet said, "if the Soviets cannot be deterred by 9,500, it is unclear why they would be deterred by 95,000 or 950,000.
"Having more weapons than another country will not cure our insecurity," he added.
HE SAID THE Vietnam War was an example of the government spending $150-
$200 billion and producing only a "third rate" military power.
Barnet said the United States was wasting resources in the arms race.
"We are putting about 90 percent of our taxes into keeping ahead of the Soviet Union in weapons, while only 10 percent is going toward urgent security problems," he said.
According to Barnet, the United States is making itself less secure by wasting public money on improving education, stopping the bankruptcy of major cities and controlling
"The present national security policy does not reflect the reality of the times," he said. "It is as if we are operating in another day and time."
"We could actually blow up the world in our own time. We have to think about other people—come to terms or destroy ourselves and those around us."
Ronald Reagan
Richard J. Barnet
Staff photo by TRISH LEWIS
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, March 31 1-5 p.m.
Sunday, April 1 1-5 p.m.
Because we know that Meadowbrook living is enjoyable . . . because we know we have a unit designed for you and your lifestyle . . . because we'd like to have you living in Meadowbrook, we're inviting you to our OPEN HOUSE.
meadowbrook
Located 3 Blocks West of Iowa on 15th, North 1 Block on Crestline . Phone 842-4200
PRE-MED STUDENTS
TAKING THE MCAT APRIL 28?
Then don't miss, on Wednesday, March 28 an Evening of Instruction on
1. TEST-TAKING SKILLS
2. RELAXATION TRAINING
BOTH OF THESE PRESENTATIONS WILL BE GEARED SPECIFICALLY TOWARDS THE MCATEXAM
PRESENTATIONS BY DEAN ROBERT VUFTHE OF THE DEAN OF MEN'S OFFICE,
AND PROF DIANE DMEMDETIMO OF THE DEPARTMENT OF COUNSELING.
THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL, ARTS AND SCIENCES OFFICE, 809, STRONG, 864-364-368
PROGRAM WILL BE HELD IN NUNEEMA CENTER: 701, DWEDNESDAY 36-28.
SPACE IS LIMITED. REGISTER IN
Sponsored by the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences and the Pre-Med Club
SPECIMEN
SPIRIT SQUAD 1979-80
COURTNEY STUDIO
Preliminary meeting is April 2, 5:30 pm
QUALIFICATIONS:
AUDITIONS:
1) Routines will be taught at the clinic
2) No experience necessary.
3) Everyone is Invited to tryout.
1) Regularly enrolled student at KU
2) Minimum grade point average 1.8 overall
3) A sincere interest in KU athletics
The KU Spirit Squad is sponsored and governed by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation. All students interested in learning more about becoming a member of the squad are urged to attend clinics to be conducted prior to auditions. Questions will be answered and routines for trying out will be taught.
Auditions
Clinics Allen Field House
Tuesday -5:30-7:00 April 3
Monday 5:30-7:00 April 9
Thursday 5 --5:30-7:00
April 5
Wednesday --5:30-7:00 April 4
Tuesday 5:30-7:00 April.10
Wednesday
April 11 -5:30-7:00
Thursday -5:30-7:00 April 12
Minority students
Preliminaries April 14
—9:30 a.m.
Finals April 21
—9:30 a.m.
as Free Com
are encouraged to participate
Learn To Sail!
KU Sail Club Meeting Wed. 7:30 KU Union (Lessons start at 7:00)
SUA
The KU Sailing Club is for beginners as well as experienced skippers. Free instruction is just part of the club. Come sail with us and see for yourself.
BASS
royal college shop
eight thirty seven massachusetts
843-4255
CSG
Ten Towering Reasons to Live Here.
1. Electricity: PAID
2. Natural Gas: PAID
3. Water: PAID
4. Cable TV: PAID
5. Location: ON CAMPUS
6. Transportation: ON BUS ROUTE
7. Security Patrol
8. Emergency Maintenance: 24 HOURS
9. Swimming Pool: OPEN MAY-SEPT.
10. Name: the TOWERS.
]
joyhawker towers apartments 4603 w. fifteenth
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Now leasing for fall '79. Come in early; for best selection.
Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads. Call 864-4358
Wednesday, March 28,1979
University Daily Kansan
.
Returned checks costly for Union
ByJULIAGOPLERUDE
Staff Reporter
Bad checks cost the Kansas Union time and money and their number is increasing, Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union, says.
Each year, the Union writes off $2,000 to $1,000 worth of returned checks that could have been paid.
"Only a small percentage of the checks are returned, but even the small percentage is too high and takes too much time," he said. "It needs to be reduced."
Pergusan said the Union received 1,500 to
3,000 checks totalling a thousand dollars
under its purse.
He said a tighter economy and inflation might have increased the number of bad loans.
The number of bad checks the Union
recives now he said, is about 2% times
greater than it was a year ago.
HE SAID THE bad checks were put into a contains checks worth $7,000 and $800 all together.
The first time a bank returns a check to the Union, it is sent back to the bank for deposit.
in the account to cover the check a second time.
If the check cannot be redeemed, a statement is sent to the person notifying him. The person is asked to pay the amount of the cheek and a $5 service charge at the bank.
If a person does not respond after seven days, a certified mail notice is sent to him. Ferguson said, and the fine is increased to $10.
The student cannot enroll until he pays for the check at the KU Business Office. Fee is $750.
THE NAMES of students who do not respond after receiving the certified notices are sent to the Students Accounts Receivable Billing, which is the University billing system that collects debts such as taxes, hospital charges and housing expenses.
THE FEE AND the 10-cent charge on checks students cash at the Union helps to pay for losses such as extra accounting incurred, incurred by returned checks, he said.
unless they are for $50 to $100 or a person has written more than one bad check.
Checks are not routinely turned over to the county attorney's office for prosecution
Ferguson said that when the first notice is sent to a student, his name is put on a list, which is updated weekly. He cannot catch a phone where in the Union while his name is on the list.
If a student writes more than three bad checks in a school year or does not redeem the check until the University collects from him, his name is not on the list permanently.
"If we've had a bad experience with a person and there doesn't seem to be any issues, then it's likely they checks," Ferguson said. "But if there are unusual circumstances and the person comes into the office and talks to us about it, you have an opportunity to cash a check on a trial basis."
The Union is not the only business establishment in Lawrence that has trouble
"IT'S NOTHING personal against anyone, it's stricty business."
Ron Wright, assistant manager of Rusty's Hillcrest, 901 Iowa St., said the store first sent a letter to the offender. After 14 days, a judge ruled that when it then 14 it turned over to the county attorney.
Bob Meedler, manager of Nabil's, Ninth and lowa streets, and be bad a “trenement” in the city.
"It's civic. We have many more bad checks at the end of the semesters," he said. "And we don't know where to check, heck the person and asked him to come in and pay it. If he gets no response, he contacts the Credit Bureau of Lawrence, 308 W. 11th St., Meeker said the Credit Bureau of Lawrence."
WINNE DILLEON, assistant manager of Kroger Super Store, 23rd Street and Naismith Drive, said returned checks were an increasing problem.
She said the check writer was called and asked to come in and pay. If there is no response, a certified letter is sent and the person is given seven days to redeem the amount of the check plus a $5 service charge.
The county attorney is contacted if the person does not acknowledge the certified notice.
To cash a check at Kroger's, a person must apply for a Kroger card. Dillon said the card helped decrease the number of bad checks.
"The card makes a significant effect on our ability to retrieve money," she said.
sua
films
ADAM'S RIB
"In such comedies as Farand Moe and Adam's
Rib, Katharine Heptium and Spencer Tracy in
carry a perfect American couple"
Warner Bros. The Crayon Merge
Wednesday, March 28
Woodruff Auditorium
7:30 & 9:30 pm
ADM $1.00
1960
Admiral Car Rental
Toyota
Firebird
Buick Regal
Monte Carlo
Cullass Supreme
Mark V
Thunderbird
2340 Alabama
843 2931
sua films
Are the Kitchens Always Closed on Sundays?
The Eldridge Has The Answer.
SUNDAY
All You Can EAT
BRUNCH $4.45 per person
For Parties/Groups, 15 or more 10% OFF,
30 or more 15% OFF.
3 Days Advanced notice to receive Discount.
ALL YOU CAN EAT
FRIED CHICKEN only $4.45
DINNER
Serving 5.9 pm
Served Family Style
Fried Chicken
Mashed Potatoes
Gravy
Creamed Corn
Special Fraternity and Sonnity offer
Dinner $4.90 including Drinks.
ADAM'S RIB
"In such comedies as Pat and Mike and Adam's Rib, Katharine Hopper and Spencer Tracy in carnate a perfect American couple."
Raymond Durand, The Cary Mirror
Wednesday, March 28
Woodruff Auditorium
7:30 & 9:30 pm
ADM $1.00
The Eldridge House
701 Massachusetts
(913) 841-4666
Braniff International On Campus
Flight attendant positions
Interviews on April 4
Contact Educational Placement
223 Carruth O'Leary
Openings June-December 1979
An Equal Opportunity Employer
(
Granbear's
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEN
Cheese Emporium
Eat In or Carry Out
Sandwiches
Meats
Soups
Cheeses
Bolster Pizza - 25lb & less
Professor
Marilyn Ainsworth
School of Law
"The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act"
Thurs, Mar, 29, 3:5 p.m.
Forum Room, Union
Sponsored by KU Black Faculty & Staff Council
SUA
Student Print & Drawing Sale
Sperry Top Siders
royal college shop
eight thirty seven massachusetts 843-4255
Wednesday & Thursday
March 28 & 29
In the Union Gallery
9:00-5:00
李玉娟
My first year I got good grades and made some friends. But deep down in my heart I felt something lacking. In my second year I had a boyfriend, but very soon I realized that he wasn't the answer to my world. I became more depressed and frustrated than I used to be. My boyfriend always asked me, "Do you have a purpose of life? What is your goal in life?" I admitted that I did not know who I was living.
"Give Me An Answer!"
but I did what I could—I tried my very best in everything.
Five years ago I was full of beautiful dreams about my future. I decided to leave my family and go to another country to seek a meaningful life. At the Hong Kong airport waving to my family, I was ready and happy to fly away to America—a country which I considered the most wonderful and exciting place in the world.
A few weeks later my English teacher invited me to her place and talked to me about Jesus. Her gemine
In my third year I decided to transfer to K.U. I was hoping to find out my purpose of life. I looked into different philosophies and religions, but none of them seemed to satisfy me. Yet loneliness and depression are deeper and deeper into me. One day I found myself praying for God, asking Him to show me what the meaning of my life is. Give me an answer?!"
Another Life changed by Jesus Christ
kindness and
Coupon
For your free copy of
"THE LIFECHANGER"
send to New Lake, Box 2111, Lawrence
love and concern and her faith in Jesus encouraged me to look into Christianity. After a period of search I realized that God loves me and has a personal plan for me.
My life didn’t change dramatically at once. But now, I am dreaming about my future and wondering why I am here, day by day I am experiencing God's living presence.
---
Claudia Man Yee Lai Undergraduate Music Theory and Education
---
Live Entertainment Located in Hillcrest Shopping Center Disco
Live Entertainment
Sunday—9-Midnight— (disco)
GIBRALTARS
Monday—9-Midnight—DIME BEER (plus liquor pool)
Tuesday & Thursday
Friday—
FOXES HOUR Open 8-9 for LADIES ONLY All Ladies enter free ALL Ladies drink free (plus liquor pool) after 9--regular price
Entertainment
TGIF'N 4-7 . . . 3.00 at the door . .
ALL YOU CAN DRINK (plus liquor pool)
Tues & Wed— Boogie Fever
Thurs-Sat— Shade Tree
STRESS MANAGEMENT
Dr. Jim Lichtenberg
A workshop demonstrating the management
of stress thru relaxation techniques.
Wednesday, March 28
7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Pine Room, Union
Sponsored by the Student Assistance Center
and the Non-Traditional Student Organization.
8
Wednesday, March 28, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Site selected for proposed tank
A new fuel oil tank for the University of Kansas will be built underground at the Y-Zone parking lot west of the Academic Computer Center, if funds to construct the tank are approved, Rodger Oroke, director of facilities operations, said yesterday.
"The parking lot is not designated in any of KU's future building plans." Oroke said. The tanks will be totally underground and the concrete wall around them Son will be restored to its present condition.
The Kansas Board of Regents has requested funds for the new fuel tank from the state's Highway Commission for $390,000 and would hold 250,000 gallons of fuel oil. This would give KU an additional 15% of the fuel.
The additional tank would allow KU to store more fuel oil and would help ensure enough fuel reservoirs to heat the campus. At night, winter KU had been down to a 3-day survival.
KU HAS THREE tanks, but two cannot be
used because of leaks. The tank that is used has a 200,000 gall capacity, a 17 day run time.
KU was forced to use its fuel oil reserves this winter because of its intermittent contract with the KU. The KU contract allows for service to be cut off when demand for natural gas is high. Because of the KU, KU was off natural gas in a record 84 days.
Oroke said KU would have to undertake a geological study to see if it was safe to put a nuclear reactor in.
"Y-ZONE IS right across the street from where the three underground tanks are now. Oroke said, "Because of this, we substernan studies are concerned." The subterranean studies are concerned."
long process, but once funds are appropriated, everyone is ready to fly with the
Oroke said KU was waiting to see if funds for the tank would be approved. If they are approved, he said, he hopes to have the tanks installed by next winter.
"The tank would have to be designed, bids sent out and then accepted. And then con-
fronted with the instructions."
Maupintour travel service
AIRLINE TICKETS
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CAR RENTAL
EURAIL PASSES
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800 MASS.
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CALL TODAY! 843-1211
Photo winners announced; color shot takes overall
A color photograph of a handprint and leaf in dew won the top prize in the 12th Annual University of Kansas Photography Contest, it was announced Monday.
The photograph, which won the overall category, was taken by Jeff Hettier, Santa Monica.
NEWS-1, Barb Kinney, 2, Alan Zikloy. 3,
Alan Zikloy. Men..Hen..Mandy. Olson.
The winning photographs, on display for two weeks in the SUA gallery in the Kansas Union, were chosen in nine categories. The winners are:
FEATURE-3 Jeff Harring, 2 Alan Zahn, 2 Jeff Haller, Honorable Menton, Mention, Bill Fitzpatrick, Bill Fitzpatrick
The contest was sponsored by the School of Fine Arts, the School of Journalism and Student Union Activities. It "is about the only recognition photographers get," Gary Mason, assistant professor of photojournalism, said Monday.
The judges for the contest were Chris Johns, a photographer for the Topeka Capital-Journal, and John Filo, a Pulitzer prize winner, whose pictures of the 1970 Kent State University shootings won national acclaim.
COLOR PICTORIAL-1, -1, Jeff Hetter. 2.
Rosemary Marchatta. Kelsey Kien. Hon.
Henry Tucker.
Olympus, Olyson.
SPORTS-1, Randy Olynn. 2. Bruce Benedict. 3. Jeff Harrison.
PICTURE STORY -1, Bill Frakes. 2, Alan
Zokky. 3, Dave Krusz.
BLACK AND WHITE PICTORIAL-1,
Jeff Hettel, B, Bill Frakes, 3, Jeff Hettel.
Hon. Mom, Doug Hitchcock, Bruce
Benedict.
ABSTRACT COLOR- 3, Bruce Benedict.
Brace Benedict. Rosemary Marchetta
Brace Benedict.
ABSTRACT BLACK AND WHITE—1,
Kitti Limpyasrisaku, B. Bruce Encident,
3. Jeff Hetter, Hon. Men., Kitti Limpyasrisaku.
PORTRATI—1, Bill Frakes, 2, Doug Hitchock, 3, Randy Olson. Hon. Men, Dave Kraus, Bill Frakes, Nancy Rausch, Doug Hitchock.
PORTFOLI-1, Bill Frakes. 2, Randy Olson, 3 Alan Ziotky.
WANTED
INTERESTED PEOPLE TO SIGN UP FOR COMMITTEES
Free University
The Free University is an organization that serves as a clearing house for volunteer instructors in the Lawrenceki community. It offers as well, an opportunity for students to enroll in academic and non-academic courses.
Besides putting together each semester's curriculum, we are also organizing several one day seminars on a variety of topics. We have a lot of room for new ideas and improvements on old ones.
Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of Orienteer Kansas, Mt. Oread Bicycle Club, and the KU Sailing Club as well as many special outdoor events. We need people to help out in all areas.
sua outdoor recreation
iR
Come in and apply.
New ideas are always welcome for other indoor recreational activities.
Chess, Table Tennis, Bridge, Backgammon,
Football on Arm Wrestling and Critical Games.
Fine Arts
Writing and Quarterback Club
We're looking for people to help coordinate these events and others.
sua films
The Fine Arts area of SUA acts to supplement the "arts activities" of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for staging workshops, performances and exhibits in any of the arts areas . . . literature, art, drama, music, and dance.
Just like the big shows downtown, only better because we oler so much more and for a lot less.
We are looking to expand the wide variety that we already have which includes: Popular series, Summer series, Midnight series and many more.
Under consideration are a great series, series, series,
specials and an International series, visit filmmakers and
sunday specials.
SPECIAL EVENTS
We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands. One of our specialties is the outdoor concerts that include several groups and lasts as long as six hours.
Special Events involves a lot of students when it comes to promoting a show. Security, users, hospitality and stage and light creares are that must be involved.
Check us out and see what you can do to help.
SUA Travel offers a unique, less expensive way to travel for the KU student.
SUN
TRAVEL
FORUMS
Past trips have gone to Padre Island, Vail, Appalachian Trail, the Kentucky Derby and many other places.
ideas, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all a part of SUA Forums.
The Forums committee brings nationally recognized people to the University for stimulating and thought provoking programs. We also keep in touch with people on campus and in the local community who have something to say to a University audience.
Creative minds are needed to promote these programs and develop new ideas.
SUA Public Relations is responsible for promoting the image and activities of our programming board to the students and the University community. Anyone with creative ideas for promoting SUA is encouraged to apply.
pr public relations
We need innovative people like you to help us with our people programs.
EXPERIENCE IS NOT A NECESSITY HOWEVER INTEREST IS REQUIRED MARCH 30 IS THE SIGN UP DEADLINE, SO DON'T DELAY FOR MORE INFORMATION, STOP BY THE SUA OFFICE IN THE KAN-
This coming year's activities include orientation and the Madrigal Dinner.
I
SAS UNION
OR CALL
864-3477
SUA
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Lawrence's Newest Self-Service Laundromat, Complete With Dry Cleaning Drop-Off. Attendant on Duty.
Use this Grand Opening Coupon. For One FREE WASH.
Coupon good 3/21-3/28, from 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Just southwest of Dairy Queen.
One per customer
Independent Coin-op
2105 West 26th Street
NOW OPEN
Lawrence's Newest Self-Service Laundromat, Complete With Dry Cleaning Drop-Off. Attendant on Duty.
Use this Grand Opening Coupon. For One FREE WASH.
Coupon good 3/21-3/28, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Just southwest of Dairy Queen.
One per customer
With special guest
Jimmie Spheeris
judy collins
march 30, 1979 at 9:00 PM.
hoch auditorium
reserved seats $6.50 & $7.50
Tickets available at SUA Office, Kitch and various locations.
Dues open at 8:30 PM. An SUA and Schin Production.
With special guest
Jimmie Spheeris
judy collins
march 30, 1979 at 9:00 PM.
hoch auditorium
reserved seats $6.50 & $7.50
Tickets available at SU A Office, Boots and various locations.
Dues open at 8:30 PM. An SU A and Schon Productions.
Weather hampers machine installation
By PATRICIA MANSON
Snow has forced an additional delay in the installation of a $1.5 million radiation therapy machine at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Staff Reporter
The machine was scheduled to be installed this week in the Med Center's new Radiation Therapy Center, a five-story underground building. The snowfall this week, however, forced Med Center officials to delay installation.
Carl Manstfield, the radiation center's director, said Monday that the machine would be placed in the wall of a therapy room. He said the ground around the radiation center had to be dry before the machine could be installed.
"We have to be sure it doesn't rain or snow for about three days," ManSField said. "So right now we're trying to get the long-range weather forecast."
The machine originally was scheduled to be installed in January, but heavy snowfall halted work on the radiation center's roof.
THE RADIATION center was scheduled to open in February, but two cement shortages and the January storms delayed officials to delay the opening until May.
The machine arrived from Paris in late December and is being stored in downtown Kansas City, Mo., until it can be moved to the radiation center.
Mansfield said a crew from CGR would install the machine and a crew from Atomic Energy would observe the installation.
accelerator, can treat patients with the most deep-seated tumors. It is the fifth of kind in the United States.
TONIGHT IS
The teams are not yet in the United States, Mansfield said.
The machine was manufactured by CGR, a French company, and marketed in the United States by Atomic Energy of Canada, Ltd.
"IT'S JUST too complicated for the company that markets the machine to install it," Mansfield said. "The French team will have the primary responsibility for installing the machine. The Canadian team will be the backup team."
Pitcher Night AT THE HAWK
"They are on stand-by," he said. "It takes about a day to dig the hole for the machine, so they can get here on time. They can be here in a very short time."
Three other therapy machines also will be moved into the radiation center.
A six-million cell volt accelerator and a Cobalt 6 machine, already owned by the Med Center, will be moved into the radiation center in April.
The Med Center also has arranged to buy a 20-million electron volt accelerator from Varian, an American company, for $78,000. Mansfield said. He said that the device would be delivered in about 30 days and that it would take another 30 days to install.
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
AURH Student Positions
AURH Summer Intern Program'79
Term: May 30 through July 28
Compensation: Room and board at JRP and a stipend of $960
Requirements: Must be returning resident, enrolled in no more than 4 summer school hours
Information: List of intern responsibilities and applications at resident hall desks, Office of Residential Programs, AURH office
AURH Committee Chairpersons
Compensation: Single room at double room cost
Term: Fall 1979 and Spring 1980 semesters
Requirements: Must be returning resident
Personal letter of application
Information: List of committee descriptions and chairperson responsibilities available at the AURH office.
Return all applications no later than April 6th at the AURH office at 210 McCollum
AURH is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer
Bass
Bass
royal college shop
eight thirty-seven mass 843-4255
royal college shop
Wednesday, March 28.1971
University Daily Kansan
9
Bayhawka
Dayhawks
Staff photo by CHRIST ODD
Biq Gun
First baseman Matt Gummingfeller rounds second base after smacking a double to help Western-3 10 in the second game of a double-breaker yesterday at Quigley Field. Catcher Josh Rosen hit a triple.
KU in Texas softball tournament
Kansas faces some of the toughest competition in the nation in women's college softball this weekend in the Texas Women's University tournament in Denton, Texas.
Texas Women's was runner-up in last year's Association of Intercollegiate teams for Women national tournament. They and the women's national national champion, head of the field of teams.
The Jayhawks open round robin pool at 6 p.m. tomorrow with a game against
Texas A&M was KU's last round robin pool opponent and probably will be its stiff competitor in the round robin part of the tournament.
The Agagies were runner-up to Texas Women's in last fall's Texas state tournament.
Gundelfinger's hits help shutouts
The top two teams in each pool advance to elimination play Saturday.
By TONY FITTS
Sports Writer
Matt Guddelfinger concentrated on tennis when he attended Shawnee Mission North High School. He didn't play organized baseball, but made the Kansas team as a freshman walk-on.
KU baseball coach Floyd Temple said yesterday after KU swept a double-header from the Missouri Western College Griffons, who lost a tie in defending on the team because of his speed.
"He couldn't throw, and he couldn't hit," Temple said.
Gundelfinger has learned to hit.
yesterday's host in the tie.
this week's host in the tie.
he leads.
He wasn't the only Jayhawk to have a good day. John Spottswood went three for four in the first game, with two RBIs. He turned around and went 0-3 in the second, though, breaking his consecutive game hitting streak at 17.
team with 18 RBI, and he's batting .389 with three doubles and a triple.
"I can't look on it as a bad day," Spett-swood said. "There wasn't really any pressure on me to get a hit. I was just having fun out there, with the string."
KU's pitching also was strong, especially in the second game. Yesterday's games were the first shutouts of the season for the leading staff, which gave up only one hit in each game. The first pitcher on the first game, was a little wild, allowing seven walks and two wild pitches, but he
gave up only one hit before being replaced in the sixth by Terry Sutcliffe.
Kevin Kerasen handed one hit and three walks in the second game. He was replaced with Lance Stephens.
"I got some strikes across today," Kerschen said, "but I was a little scared in the fourth when the score was 0-4. I knew I was going to lose, but I did not want to go out without the lead."
KU scored its three runs in the bottom of the fourth.
into third. Riley said the injuries were not too serious.
Roger Riley, who made some good plays at third base, got a groin pull and a sore foot for birthday presents. He was hurt in the fifth inning of the second game. Missouri Western's third baseman accidentally came down on Riley's right foot as he was sliding
The Jayhawks have rescheduled their double-header with Baker University for 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Quigley Field. The games had been postponed twice since the league's recent move to Emporia State Saturday. That doubleheader will begin at 1 p.m. at Quigley Field.
Missouri Western ... 000 000 0 - 1 2
Kansas and ... 000 114 114
Karlen and ... 000 114 114 (6)
and German, Freeman, Dameron (6)
and Graham, E-Sholtz, Cook, Demarne, Missouri Western.
and Graham, E-Sholtz, Cook, Demarne, Missouri Western.
(3), KU-Wi-Fernman (3), L-Collett (1), L-Collett (1)
Missouri Western 000 000 0 - 1 1
Louisiana and Campbell, Missouri, St. Clair (4)
Dickman-Kuhl, Missouri Western, Maupin, KU, DP-
KU: 1/2-Dickman, WP: WP-3, WP-2-Werschenk
WP-1-Dickman, WP-2-Werschenk
Women harriers start outdoor competition
By CARLOS MURGIA
Sports Writer
the unveiling of the women's track team's 1979 outdoor season will take place Friday and Saturday when they compete in Memphis Invitational in Memphis, Teen.
The track team ended its indoor season successfully by placing third at the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women track meet earlier this month in Columbia, Mo. and is looking forward to the beginning of outdoor competition.
"The team is getting a little tired of practicing against each other," head coach Teri Anderson said. "We're eager to learn and think we have a good chance to win the meet."
Anderson said she thought the team this year was better than last year because of an improvement.
"LAST YEAR we had about eight really good people," she said. "This year we doubled it to 16 and we're a more balanced team. As the season goes on and we get more experience, we should really improve."
The importance of the opening meet is getting experience against good competition and starting a base for the rest of the outdoor season, Anderson said.
In the Memphis meet, Anderson said she expects stronger competition for KU.
who are entered in the 100- and 200-meter runs.
Anderson said speed, not endurance,
would be emphasized in this weekend's
meet. In the 100-meter hurdles, Lori Lowry
and Gwen Pass will be entered. Lowry,
Poole and Claire Overatek also are
scheduled to compete in the 400-meter
hurdles.
In two other speed events, KU will have Vick Simpson in the 400-meter run and Billy Smith in the 100-meter run.
In the 1500-meter run, Michelle Brown.
IM Hill crown near
Four intranural league basketball championships were decided last night in
In the Fraternity "A" league Delta Leagua No.1 defiled Alpha Kappa Lambda 60-35 and in the Sorority Trophy league Alpha Phi downed Alpha Gamma Dearth 20-11.
Delta Upsilon will meet the Leftovers Sunday at 7 p.m. in Robinson to determine the Hill Championship, and Alpha Phi will meet the Women's Hill Championship in Sunday in the women's Hill Championship.
In the Independent men's "A" league game the Leftovers defeated the Freshman All-Stars 45-25. In the Independent Women's Big Stats the Evergreens edged the Big Shots 30-28.
Otis' grand slam helps KC win
From the Kansan Wire Services
BRAIDENTON, Fla.—Amos Otset bled a grand slam game run in the fifth innning yesterday to lead the Kansas City Royals to a victory in Pittsburgh Pirates in a spring exhibition game.
Otis' blast followed consecutive singles by U.L. Washington, Freddie Patcick, Frank White and John Wathan against the Pirates' ore-armed starrier, Jim Rooker.
Kansas City got its first run in the fourth when Al Cowens tripled and scored on a field goal attempt.
The Pirates' Dave Parker scored in the fourth on a sacrifice fly by Bill Robinson. A double by Parker in the sixth drove in Frank Raveras.
BILL PASCHALL was the winning pitcher.
The Royals return to Fort Myers today for a game against the Cincinnati Reds Tomorrow they play the Toronto Blue Jays and the Los Angeles Clippers. The Blue Jays April 12 in its season home opener
Third baseman George Brett, still recovering from thumb surgery, has yet to appear in a game, although he has been in practice.
The Royals were still hurting from injuries in yesterday's game. Clint Hurtle was wearing a soft cast on his right foot, and he was playing with the ball. He could have the cast on for the next week.
Kansas City 000 150 100 0 13 0
Pittsburgh 000 100 000 - 2 7 0
Puschall Park (8) Magnet 1(Magnet) McGillery (8) and
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Maureen Finholm and Deb Hertzog will represent the Jayhawks, Karen Fendi, Wendy Warmer and FINHolo are entered in the tournament and Tasha Zolder will compete in the 5,000.
Shawn Covin will double in the high and the long jump for KU. Tarny Rose and Debby Douglass will be in the javelin and shot put. In the discus will be Carole Engelder and Gail Crane Marianne McCowan will be Kansas' pentathlon entrant.
Crew opens season
The men's and women's crew teams will open their season Saturday at Lone Star Lake with four races against Washburn University.
This will be only the second competitive season for KU and it will be the first season that KU will race谊牲 crews. Last year KU raced only novice crews.
"We are starting at an entirely different place this year." Don Rose, crew coach, said. "Of course, we will also be roaring on a different level, the variability level, this year."
Rose said KU would be at a disadvantage because of inexperience, but he said KU should provide good competition for Washburn.
The regatta will start at 1 p.m. with the women's fours with coxswain race. It will be followed by the men's novice fours at 1:30, the juniors at 2:00 and 2, the men's varsity eight at 2:30.
Returning team members who will row in the variance eight include Dave Boyer, team captain; Boss McGuire, coxswain; Mark Boes; Joe McCailey; and Chris Raffo.
---
A DYNAMIC WEEKEND!
Thursday 8:00 NTOZAKE!
"A One Woman Show"
Hashinger Hall
Hashinger Hall Thurs. March 29 8:00 p.m. Sponsored by
Pearson
Person Cultural Enrichment Office of Minority Affairs English Department
Art Commission
National Endowment
for the Arts
Friday 7:00 BELLA!
A
Friday March 30 7:00 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
Tickets: Students $1 Non-Students $2
Advanced Sales at SUA Office
Friday 9:00 JUDY!
OH MY GOD!
Judy Collins with Jimmy Spheeris Hoch Auditorium Fridav March 30 9:00
Friday March 30 9:00 p.m.
Tickets: $6.50 and $7.50 Good seats still available at SUA Office or Kief's, but we suggest you buy before the I.A.W.convention delegates.
---
---
10
Wednesday, March 28, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Students, businesses gain from program
By GENE BROWNING
Staff Reporter
G's Barbecue opened in 1978 at 530 W. 23rd St. A year later, Mickey Galloway, the owner, found he had little time to work with the inventories and to set prices.
Since the KU School of Business contacted him two years ago, business students have helped Galloway set prices and work out an inventory system that makes it easier for him to recognize the good and the problem areas of his business.
In 1978, Galloway moved to two new
quarters. 101 W., Sixth St. and 642
Massachusetts.
Galloway and other small business owners in Douglas County have received counseling from business students through the business school.
As part of the counseling program, business students in marketing and research classes are assigned semester projects that require research into problems in a small business and observation of the owner implementing the
Craig Sandusky, a Lawrence graduate student who is counseling a Lawrence business this semester, said yesterday that he knew knowledge he had learned was invaluable.
He was assigned to the project through his Marketing 810 class.
"The actual hand-on experience is incredible," he said. "The difference between marketing the class and the project is a big difference out on market and in car and actually getting your hands on it."
BE INVOLVED . . BE A NURSE
A Representative from Topokha will be on campus to discuss nursing as a career with interested students
Thursday, March 29
Union, Governor's Room
10:30 12:00 & 1:00 2:30
Stormont-Vail School of Nursing
Ends Thursday
THE BRINKS JOB
PG
Event at 1:20
Hillcrest
Mon-Mat 9
Enda Thursday
SINNER STALLONE
ARADISE ALLEY
"The CHINA SYNDROME"
Eveat7:30
& 9:45
S-SMat1:50
Hillcrest
Ends Thursday PG "FAST BREAK"
Eve 7:30 &
1:40
Granada
Sat Mar 2:30
San José 7:30
Ends Thursday
Eve 7:30 Varsity
9:30
S.S Mat 2:30 The Journal September 18, 2016
THE CRITICS LOVED IT AND
SO WILL YOU!
NOW SHOWING
Terrific Tempor
"MOVIE, MOVIE"
"HALLOWEEN"
Tonight
7:35 & 8:35 Cinema Twin
Cinema Twin
Eve 7:40 &
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S-S Mat 2:00
Hillcrest
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Sat-Sun Mat 2:40
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STARTS FRI.
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Sat Sun 1a12:30
Richard Chamberlain * Peter Weir's THE LAST WAVE
Donald Sutherland Brooke Adams Leonard Nimoy
From deep space...
United Artists
LATE SHOW FRI. & SAT.
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CHEECH & CHONG In
--through which small businesses can get loans and other help.
$2.50/$1.50 OFF
Smoke
Bring this coupon to any participating Pizza Hut restaurant and get $2.50 off the regular price of your favorite large pizza, or $1.50 off your favorite medium pizza. Offer expires 4/4/79 One coupon per customer per visit.
(Not valid on SuperStyle pizza)
Pizza Hut
1979 Pizza Hut Inc.
Cash value 102/86
LUKK 3/28/79
"We are trying to determine the market for the business," he said. "First we had to identify the market, then the demand. Then we will decide how to tap the demand."
10
Tom McMillen, a Lawrence graduate student who is also in the Marketing 810 class, said he thought the project was a good practical marketing experience.
1606 W. 23rd St. 843-3516
804 Iowa Street 842-1667
932 Massachusetts 843-7044
Bob Swinn, professor of business who coordinates the program, said, "Many small businesses are not really organized to take advantage of new markets, overall pricing strategy, new products or even the kind of people to hire.
"We put to use some of the concepts that we learned in marketing class. It has given us new tools and techniques."
He said that although he had no interest in small business before starting the project, he now thought he would like to go into small business eventually.
"THE STUDENTS try to go beyond study and try to help the business."
Party rooms available
The program at the School of Business is funded by a grant from the Small Business Administration.
Counseling from students and any research is free. If the services weren't free, Swinth said, the businesses would not be able to consider getting help.
He said the service would be similar to a professional counseling service, if one were available.
"The businesses get exactly what they would have if they could afford to pay a
Two to six students might work on a project, he said, and seven or eight cases
SWINTH SAID usually the businesses ask the school for help.
"First they research the problem. The students meet anywhere from once to several times a week with the owner," he said.
"They then set up the business' records into an accounting scheme. After that they choose a course of action; they work with the organization on the implementation of the action."
REDKEN
Campus
HEALTHRITE-VIBRANCY NUTRITION CENTER
Beauty Shoppe
Hairstyling For Men and Women
NUTRITIONAL CENTER
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* Permanent Waving
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9th Street Center—9th & Illinois—Call 843-3034
- Denman Brushes—$7.50
Schumm for Lawrence
A. F. G. K. M. A. S. T. U. V. E.
"Quality of Life For Lawrence"
Quality Growth
Continued implementation of Plan 95 for planned growth and development II. Retain high standards in our building codes.
Vote
Pd. Pol. AuLv. Pd. lot by the Robert Schumm for City Commission Committee Steve Edmonds, Stice B194
Schumm City Commissioner-April 3
Friday March 30 7:00pm Hoch Auditorium
Small businesses that have applied for help have experienced many problems, such as
ABZUG
Swinth said the projects offered students an alternative view to large corporations, which business schools tend to concentrate on.
"They may have a shortage of funds because the accounting may not be done fully."
BELLA
For example, Swinth said, an owner
Tickets:
Students $1
Non-students $2
Advanced Sales at
SUA Office
might buy a vehicle for the business without
expenses such as tax and monthly payment.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Police Beat
Presented by IAWS in cooperation with SVA Forums
Lawrence police said the girls were believed to have been involved in a burglary. Believed to be a terrorist.
Police said the home of Thurman T. Barnes, 108 Oak Hill Ave., was burglared by a man who was armed with a knife.
Tulsa, Okla, police arrested three Lawrence girls, aged 12 to 14, Monday in connection with two incidents involving the film in Lawrence Sunday and Monday.
F. Y.I.
Would you like to quit?
Would you like some tips
on how to quit smoking?
On Thursday, March 29, 2-4 p.m.
call the information Center's F.Y.L. line.
864-3508
valued at $150, a firearm valued at $100,
blankets valued at $25 and $1 in cash were
Tulsa police yesterday said they had recovered the car, valued at $75,000 in the basement on the brick wall.
The officer said that the girls would be prosecuted in Tulsa, but that they could be prosecuted elsewhere.
FREE Airform!
Police said burglaries probably used keys to enter the home.
Airform1 with every Haircut at
Lawrence police said a 1978 Ponto station wagon owned by Barnes had been stolen from Lawrence Paper Co., 2801 Lakeview Road, Monday.
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846 Illinois----9th St. Center
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Express Wednesday 4-4
O
ATTENTION SOPHOMORE MEN
AND ARE DUE
KANSAS ALUMNI ASSN. OFFICE
APPLICATIONS MAY BE PICKED UP AND RETURNED TO THE
Owl Society (Junior Man's Honorary)
IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR MEMBERSHIP
FRIDAY APRIL 6th.
Admission-$1 per event
for KU
staff and
students
IAWS CONVENTION
Admission $1 per event for KU staff and students
JUDY BELLA
COLLINS ABZUG
A BALANCE OF POWER
G
DYNAMIC EQUILIBRUM.
FILMS • 30 WORKSHOPS
M S • 30 WORKSHOPS
Lifestyle Choices •
Women and Religion •
Non-Sexist Awareness •
Helping Men Understand •
The Women's Movement
Assertiveness in Your Life •
Interracial Communication •
Dr. Emily Taylor
Director, Women in Higher Education member A.C.E.
Dr. Kay Camin
Dr. Kay Chin
Director, Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 7
Dorothy Godfrey
Federal Women's Program Coordinator Region 7 U.S. Dept. of H.E.W.
Ntozake Shange
Author of "For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide—When The Rainbow Is Enuf"
G
FOR INFO CALL
913-864-3552
International
Bachelor's Degree
Bachelor's
Bachelor's
MBA (Master of Business)
at University of Maracaibo
n 14 Mar 2017
MARCH 28-31 University of Kansas at LAWRENCE, Ks.
Admission
$1 per event
for KU
staff and
students
Admission
$1 per event
for KU
staff and
students
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, March 28, 1979
11
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanaan are offered to all students without regard to sex. Admission is not required for ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FIRE NLALL.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
times times times times times
15 words or
fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word
01 02 03 04 05
11 .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Saturday 5 p.m.
Thursday Sunday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. Three cards can be placed in person or be coded into the UDBC business office 864-353-8944 or 864-353-8946.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
III Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
Zen practice daily 6 p.m. Introductory take
on the Zen series. Wednesdays through March 15, 2013 at Lawrence Chapel
GREAT FOOD, GREAT SERVICE just like you
are in an open front Manh on 1st
m. i. s.; Sunday through Monday.
3-20
Auditions for a play
Visions of Kerouac
Will be held at the Lawrence Arts Center Saturday, March 31 at 10:00 a.m. The cast calls for 11 men and women. The performances are preferred but not necessary.
For Information Contact The Open Window Group 843-5940
**INVENT** - good health and your future Live in New York. The firm's new location is now in issuing stock at $30 per share with the company, is now
DEFINE YOUR INALIENABLE RIGHTS to life, work and study.
Students for a Iliation Academy in the light of this law.
FOR RENT
apt. 2 IIR and efficiency, Close to campus, UtIU-
19578, Clean, quae C and comfortable, UtIU-
19578.
FRANTOR RIDEA APARTMENTS NEW HUNTINGTON, WV 26910. A two-story apartment unfurnished from $750. Two laundry rooms, large kitchen and bathroom parking. On OU bus line indoor INDOR. INDOOR BASED. 842-443-1444 at 244 Front Door. Next door 842-443-1444 at 244 Front Door.
Apartment and rooms furnished, parking most of the time. KU and near town, 1F.
Phone: 843-7567
SHIH looking for a place to call home? Nishamth
booking of this year. Sit by and look over our
collection of photos. Stay tuned. I give you all the details and send you an
email: mhall.shirh.com SHIH HALL, MASSACHUSETTS 843-832-5900
Nishamth: 843-832-5900
Fire safety system take these rooms safe and location lets you sleep late! Only one block walk; furnished, no pet or eagles, deposit, quiet. Large windows, great views. 848-924-6000 available.
Christian Houghton. Now and Summer Close to
Houston. #82-205 between 2:30 and
6:00. Keep trying.
HOUGHTON, PLACE: ITS FULL-BUT--We have to 32 and 10-month leases as we will have to pay the minimum rent. We will rest for the summer term those apartments and check 240 Alabama, 814-3752, and --checked 240 Alabama, 814-3752.
Summer sublease, one bedroom furnished South-
ridge apartment. $100.00. Call 841-0380 - 328
Luxury apartments for rent. 3 bedrooms, 2 full bathrooms. Must sub-note immediately. Please call 842-9211. Evenings 843-506-1. Bedroom apartment
Jayhawker TOWERS Apartments
1603 West 15th
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our
DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASTING FOR FALL '79
Mark 1 & 11 Apartments now renting for sale.
3 bedroom & 2 bathroom home, luxury 1 & 2 bathrooms, 3 min. walk to campus; 1.5 min. walk to parking; carrying backpacks, off-street parking; renting a house on the campus. Mar for add info: 1815 Mid St, az. 842-796-0111
Sibblease Aglyph-Croft App. for Summer, 2 IBR
@iBrHub, pooling, $wimming Pool-422-8461
Bid: 841 - 3640 8461
Multi subsurface furnished one bedroom apartment
$175
offers, 814-832-9648, ask for KK
$175
offers, 814-832-9648, ask for KK
Most sublease vary very little two bedroom Traitladrite
available only. Avail. June 4.
Call 641-2993
Get your house now. Room, apartments, homes.
Letch Springs, Va. 843-161-8012. 843-161-8025.
Get your house now. Room, apartments, homes.
Letch Springs, Va. 843-161-8012. 843-161-8025.
Two bedroom, two bathroom, gut at Odie Edge.
Electric kitchen, air conditioning, cool water supply.
Bathroom with bath tub.
Summer sublease; one bedroom furnished Southridge apartment $1800. Call 841-6300 - 328
Must lubricate 2 bedroom fum. apartment, Apr.
1-May 15 $200 unfit. utilities Call 841-736-8990
Spending the summer in Lawrence? Do yourself a favor. Call ON to our apartment! 814-297-9977 and put in my apartment! 814-297-9977
You know these, great looking apartments here. We have so many of them and one is available for great tubs as well.
Beautiful 2 bedroom dwelling at Minneapolis St. for two, two months old, C.A. and new kitchen and bathroom.
Roommate wanted 2 BR $120 month + 4-1/2
baths. 842-107-900
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make out session of Western Civilization! Makes use of the library's "New Analysis" and "Forum" resources to support the 3) For exam preparation. *New Analysis* Book; Mila Books库书, & Oread书店; *U*, U., U.
606 Schoeners at Louise's every Friday from 2
till 5. 4-3
Kender Mustang Bass Guitar with strings, cords,
guitar strap, and covers. Very good condition.
Contains two cases and covers. Very good condition.
Attenuator, starter and generator. Specializable
MOTIVE, ELECTRIQUE 843-900, 2900 W. e-mail:
motive.electrique@uva.edu
DAILY
ENTERTAINMENT
RESTAURANT & PRIVATE CLUB
STEAKS, SEAFOOD & ITALIAN CUISINE
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
WED. — SAT.
Membership Available
711 W. 23d
Barriage
Camp
round back Mats
Shopping Center
GUIDE
G.P. LORD'S
Always
great looking ladies
Never
a cover charge
Memberships Avail.
701 Mass.
ROCKY
Js
LAWRENCE'S 'BIG-
CITY' NIGHT CLUB
Memberships Available
The Bridge House
917-548-2340
www.thebridgehouse.com
Every Wednesday
LADIES NIGHT!
D'RAWS ALL NIGHT!!
Bighorn A Village
BIG K's
Tonight is
KEGGER NITE!
FREE BEER! FREE TEXAS SET-UPS!!
DANCE!
Lauren $29
Tenorre--Bonny Terry &
Brownie McGhee
The Lawrence
Opera House
7th & Mass
MON-THURS 7:9:00
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7:9:00
.50* Schooners & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1:7:00
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
WHY RENT? When you could own this beautiful building, you would love it. Like new amenities, diagonal central air conditioning, large windows, water/ dryer area, 6 smoke alarms, skirted and stairway, storage building, house roofs, tree boxes (this garden is a huge space!)
SunDads - Sun- girls are our specialty. Non-
regular sun-dad are our selection, reunion,
2012. Mass. 843-570-3700.
BOKONOK IMPORTS, LTD. Organizational changemakers in the fast-paced world of travel and back in the midwedge, with an eye to future trends.
Watch for truck on sales selling product
Jawcock Foods, 9th & Illinois. Also wood-
en products.
Ultra linear 200 - excellent sounding 3-way
Ultralights $80 - best offer - call Pat 942-7856
WATERED MATTERSES $28.58 3 year warranty,
WHITE LIGHT 704 Mass. 182-186 19ff
Integrated Amp, Kenwood 7100 60, watts
Amp; Integrated Amp, Kenwood 7100 45, watts
707c concrete mixer price $190; $413-$489 and
$623-663.
78 Honda Express. Excellent condition, basket.
included 841-7964 or 843-3200
3-28
WV Square back, 1971 Excellent condition $800
or trade in or sale with big motorcycle
$400
Bicycle, Elegant custom frame, 60 cm (23 in),
elevator, £375, 843-7476, 6-10 p.m.
3-28
1967 Rover 200 TC, £700 1967 A1A 200 Coupe
restore, parts include 1967 A1A 833-2740 - 6-10mm
headlight
Mamiya RB-67 51, by 24, SLR, with outer
lined. 10th used, *perf.* 805, 837-600, 74-106
$10.95
Caucasus, Deck. Laveracte NR-120 in load basing
maintains with peak indebtance limits $215 an
amount
Attention serious motion picture students. For sale.
Boxes 10-14 mm movie camera. Four lenses
with DSLR and drive (like new ones)
over $4,000). ONLY $1200. Houses 721 -
320. Mans. 843-6320.
Pioneer stereo amplifier 80 watts, like new
$550 neoplast. 3-30
INFINITY QA loudspeaker. Brand new with.
warranty. Looks and sounds great. 5-
th, 10th, or 25th. $799.
74 Honda 750 750 Price negotiable Call 842-1825 after 6:30 3:30
Triumph TB-7 Training Operations Manual (1975)
1977 New 815:00 Call M41.8174-788
3-30
Mountainmaster boots, size 11, cedar 130, sell for $60.00
Set of high gear wheels, wheel sets
Snowboard and skateboard set - 298-286
Its enough to make Jade Childs' mouth water.
Round Counter Cheese & Salami Brood 203
Brown Rice & Black Bean Pasta 81
780 Honda 409 Hawk 11, excellent condition
780刀牌 409 宝马仅 84-040-DP4
刀牌 409 宝马仅 84-040-DP4
1947 Norton 4500 Command, 4500 Miles, Fast Recharge, Super Sucker, Exceptional Condition, Durable, Heavy Duty
Have an Avonine night-$2.00 refund on $6.00.
Have an Avonine night-$3.00 refund on $9.00.
Do not buy Drug Store 801, Mississippi 801. Do not buy Drug Store 801, Mississippi 801. Do not buy Drug Store 801, Mississippi 801.
10 Speed Monx, includes gear lights, back button,
and chain 400, Call CALL, 822-3428, 3-29
Sullin-Colonna Typewriter portable, like a new
Must still immediately CALL! CAIL 841.1165
Yatanaka 1974-75 260 ce. New Chain, Pipe, Point Callek Derek 812-852-663
If you're setting up an apartment this GARAGE SALE is for you! Dishwasher, oven, housekeeping, and small appliances... women 9-11 months or 323 Delaware State College March 31, 9:00 a.m.
One pair of Nordica alloy skis, size 9 l/2.4"
Used once. $25.00. Call 841-7912.
NAVE, on EXCESSIONAL) NETTEO KEQPAPI
NAVE, on EXCESSIONAL) NETTEO KEQPAPI
NAVE, on EXCESSIONAL) NETTEO KEQPAPI
NAVE, on EXCESSIONAL) NETTEO KEQPAPI
NAVE, on EXCESSIONAL) NETTEO KEQPAPI
NAVE, on EXCESSENTI
1963 MCH first year made. Engine totally yellow.
First year built. Extra-rdard top. 520
offer B2-822-MCH.
1955 National Acoustic-Electric Guitar
Good Condition. 811-1413 5-30
FOUND
Single key found 17th & Ohio. Call 841-8324 to 329
Wedding band found on hill NW of Potter's pot
Call Chris at 864-3068
3-28
Small, yellow tatty kitten about 5 months old.
The claim by calling 843-6274 after 90 p.m.
Now taking applications for Fountain & Girl
Gallery, apply online at fountain-girl.com.
Apply in person at Vern Heymont, 1690 W. 28th St.
HELP WANTED
Bummer Jobs, National Park Corp, C-21 Parks, $5000
Summer Camp, New York, NY E-4800, Summer
Mountain Co. I-61 E-Ferguson, Kollegau, KS
Nature Trail, New York, NY E-7300
One of the Midwives' old moving and storage firms in new taking summer applications for new positions. The midwives only apply. Apply in person at 830 W. 63rd Shannon, Ksaw. or call (913) 623-1440. Equity Opens.
EXOTIC JOBS LAKE TAHOE, CALIFORNIA
360 summer. Over 9,500 people needed in
tournaments, ranches, crulers, river rafts, & more.
4-25 January. 6129, Sacramento. California, 9:58am. 4-25
January. California, 9:58am.
One of the Minnesota moving and storage companies in the state will train qualified drivers and helpers. Will train qualified, DOT requirements. Hard workers need only to pass a written exam or call (913) 523-1400. Equal Opportunity Employer.
JOEHN MEN
SHIPWEIGHT 250 lb.
WOMEN SHIPWEIGHT 175 lb.
FOR TICKETS, CONTACT:
CAROLYN HAWKINS
430-664-3911
www.hawkinsbells.com
Drivers wanted. Must be 18, have own car. Part-time job at US Airways. Commute by Amtrak, Agate at Downtown, Pristine at 54th Street and Commonwealth. Apply at Downtown, Pristine at 54th Street and Commonwealth.
Delivery Drivers Needed. Salary : commision
Flexible hour, Applied in person, up to 40 hrs per
week. Call 1-800-722-3233.
A student assistant for female quadruple grade student needed for Mon, Afternoon and West morning classes. Please bring student to school (this own w/van), helping with homework or/or senior (Cha 541-4823 or 910-1011 assistance).
Operating for parts, overtime and weekend
work. Requires good communication skills.
Offer: $1200 per month, transportation
to the job site, $450 before holiday,
payment of tax and insurance.
Landscape Labors both part-time position,
and full-time position, 12th floor of
Garden Center, 18th and New York
Avenue.
Work commits to Mumbai township area. Birthstaff in the City, Bengaluru and Hyderabad. Cell culture. Cell dilution. Moline 116-277-711.
Research Assistant: Graduate student in Biology, Engineering or Computer Science to assist in research projects and to deliver. Requires experience to intervene midterm and end term. The course is initially for 12 months, with possible continuation. To begin May 15, 1978 or possibly before, visit http://www.hcsu.edu/4644-8578.
Research Assistant in Neuropharmacology (B.S. Pharmacy) at Boston University, May 2015 onward. All procedures 8 $49/month & $120/month from March 26, 2015 through August 9, 2015. Starts with a two-week course on the new drug Rituximab. Further information please contact Prof. William Hodgson, Professor of Microbiology and Toxicology, University of Kansas and Troxantine University, University of Kansas, or an Official Quarantine Unit at Kansas City.
Wanted
Attractive, aggressive, intelligent, vivacious woman for part-time backgammon and pool tournaments and have knowledge of both games.
Excellent pay and benefits
Call Jon 842-6930
Full time secretary needed for Child Development office, duties include reports and record keeping. Duties involve office manager, personality. Send resume to Barbara Swindoll 1088 Kentucky Ave. Kansas City, MO 64125. Opportunity Employable.
Established Lawrence. Need mood solid, applid,
creative rock Backstreet. Call 843-527-4-25
Wanted...
Assertive Cocktail Waitress
for exciting, stimulating, adventurous
club experience $2.00 plus tip; Must be 21.
Call 842-6930,
ask for Jon.
Bartlett-westside, the area restaurant and club,
both offer spring and summer parties. Just call
455-876-2920.
Cooks positions opening very soon for head cooks and grill cooks. All around experience is needed in this position. Must be able to train and follow special revival and have new ideas for specials. Full and partial residency is required. Special personality are absolutely must. Also needs to be a member of the Sunday 6:30-8:00 for appointment.
Wanted...
Creative individual with
graphic arts experience to help design posters part time. Excellent pay and fringe benefits.
Call Jon 842-6930
Position open 2nd & 3rd shifts for warriors
Position open 1st shift in certain Country Kingdom
1935 W. 201
Motel at two Twin, 1708 W. 29rd Street.
Hight shift from 8:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m.
Night shift from 11:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.
LOST
12 yr old female child. Black hair, gray white stippling.
Weight: 95 lb. Height: 5'6".
Writings: rate, title, age. 842-3146, 841-8000.
Inclusion: 100% of the proceeds will go to SOS!
MISCELLANEOUS
TREISIS BINDING COPYING - The House of Uder's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for dress blinking and copying in Lawsuits. Let us help you at 580 S., or phone 426-310. (To be on call, email info@treasis.com.)
One year old German Shepherd to give away.
Girl who has been training from
good with children, and 825-1977.
NOTICE
DEATH WHY BOTHERS ECKANKAR
Absolute Residence of Soul Truth. 842-382, 841-
850
**2. HOOD BOOKSHELLER** The fixed schoolhouse, where many of the teachers and carpenters in all academic grades live. Our library is large and beautiful, with a print-ready printer, Tiles, Houses, 11:00 a.m., 6:00 p.m., 4:00 p.m., and 8:00 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Monday, Tu
PERSONAL
PDX HILL SUGGERY CURSE. Whole meals pp to 80.
Desserts pp to 40.
Soups & stews pp to 30.
Fruit & vegetable pts to 20.
Beverages pp to 15.
RECKS BIRD SHOP to open new 209 Reality A-D, Pete & Caitlin stores in chase of $45,000. DETAILS: 713-826-2600.
Gay Lerian counseling referrals now handed
through VU 861. 656-236 or Headquarters 841;
840-272.
BARRINGTON SPECIALS • 10-Mon. Tues. and 3-6
Fri.
BARRINGTON SPECIALS • 10-Mon. Tues. and 3-6
Fri.
MADIS BARS’ NIGHT • Wed. 5:30 p.m.
The Madison Bar, 419 West 27th Street,
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortion up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing. Birth Control. Tubal Ligation. For appointment call: (800) 345-6400, fax: (800) 345-6349. Mr. St. Owen, St. Overland Park, KS.
606 Schenectady and 151 Pitchers every Friday
at 2:31 (2-5) at Lonesia's bar.
4-5
Gibraltar, Monday dinner beer (plus bourbon pool).
4.8
P-VI. Would you like some snips to help you to quit
the information center? CENTER' P-VI. Yes.
The information center? CENTER' P-VI. Yes.
Using this all to Ghibliware and receive two new Ghibliware of our new Ghibliware. Illustrated in Shopping Cards.
Wounds of Thair Devil's snatch be shone, and the
sand of his breath be crushed. Worth 240,
540, Wash 240, Dry 540.
KOSHER SABBATH DINNER
Friday, March 30 5:30 p.m.
Browse this ad by Gilbratha and eat 30% off cover
items. Visit www.gilbratha.com for Thursday's Hillebrand Shopping Center.
GREAT FOOD. GREAT SERVICE just like your
Mom. We deliver Mom to work 10am,
11am, 12am, until midnight.
Please call us at (567) 387-4567.
Hillel presents:
$1 Members — $2 Non-members
Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive (Across from Hillcrest Shopping Center)
Sunday, April 1, 12:30 p.m.
Yechiel Golander speaks on the "Situation in the Middle East Today"
L. J.C.C. 917 Highland Drive (Across from Hillcrest Shopping Center)
$1 Members — $2 Non-members
Gibraltar seven hours. Tuesday and Thursday 8:30,
Saturday 10:30, Sunday 9:30, and Monday 8:30 for G-5. Keep
4-piece haircuts. (plus haircuts).
$1.00 Pitchers - 7-9 P M, Morrs, Tuesdays, Tue-Seb
Saturdays, 7-9 O Clr, Big Ks
Downhill ski & hill wading wintering. Had great skiing experience and enjoyed the snowy trails & Phantasm of Woods travers find your Piece of Christmas! Call 312-879-4050.
MISSTANSA established by E.C. Lansing based
on the principle of the University of
Indiana and has engaged in development, call
off, and training.
MATH TUTOR M. m. in, patience, three
year professional training in experience. B42-M51. -B43.
KIL BRISBHEE CLAB, will be sent September 12, March
13 and April 7. May 1 is a picnic information.
Mail: KIL BRISBHEE CLAB 490 15th Ave. W., San Francisco,
CA 94106.
Readiness wanted; summer, 85 months, *2* holiday,
Closet; bedroom, own bedroom. Newly moved.
$1500 per month.
LOWENBRAU PARTY Tomorrow night at leabrau. Cheap beer and prizes 5-28
Will help your children in my home in Bursaw
weekend with Experiences, reference Cases
842-3975
SERVICES OFFERED
Need help in math or CS2? Give a tutor who can help you with your maths or CS2 problems. Phone 811-4762. Email hh11-4762.
Tired of feeding yourself? Naimish Hall is offering for the first time a boarding plan. You can be coached by an experienced coach you can be启身 if you choose this plan. Plan HALL, 18000 Drive Hall, 843-8268. NAMISH HALL, 18000 Drive Hall, 843-8268.
REWITMING EDITION. Your manuscript, thesis or term paper edited into an effective, grammar-free draft, can be thoroughly thinking with precision and smoothness. Outlines, proofs and articles all available. Email: 847-1253
EXPLOIT MATRIX, MATH 100 - 122, call 863-3772.
EXPLOIT COMPUTER SYSTEMS, MATH 100 - 122, call 863-3772.
COMPUTER SYSTEMS 100 - 122, call 863-3772.
COMPUTER SYSTEMS 100 - 122, call 863-3772.
QUALIFICATIONS I. I. E.
CALCULATOR II. I. E.
COMPUTER PROGRAMMING IV. I. E.
General problem solver V. I. E.
Male model Arts & Design Group Bates-Eve-
mont Mon, Thursday - P.O. Box 402
4-150
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Aki at the House of Ulcer/Quick Copy Center.
Aki is available from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday
to Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 838
Miss
The Sunday New York Times can now be de-
picted on or at appointment every Sunday
call 855-243-8121 or visit www.nytimes.com
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 15
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980. 1f
Typeid/Editor IBM Pica/Xite Quality work.
Typeid/Editor Briefly dissertation welcome.
812-372-1927
Experienced Typed-bear papers, thesis, music,
books, and research paper writing; spelling corrections
483-524 M.S. Mrs. Wiley
Experimental typi- theses, distortions, term
matrices, correcting, selecting, electrik
86-313-311
Experimental typi-theses, distortions, term
matrices, correcting, selecting, electrik
86-313-311
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Bachelor's degree. Law papers, term papers. Mrs.
Mustafa. MD/2012
Exceeded range, typed with scientific background
HIM Correcting Selection II, C Call Jan., 8R-3121
*
Now accepting term papers for quality typing.
Lymn, 841-2666 after 5.30 11
Quality typing guaranteed- IMH瑟型, Term-
mology thesis, dissertations, notes. Carole Barrie 6410-2790-8315
COMPUTERIZED THEISS TYING. Have your typeset system on CP9000 and you can have it written in the original ebook. Call PROFESSIONAL call original ebooks. Write info on the most advanced typing system available.
HOME TYPING SERVICE - Thesis typing, business typing, statistical typing done by experienced secretary in our home. For information call 812-648-2100, or 812-648-2180, after 3:28 any anytime weeksend.
TYPPING over 20,000 jobs served. Qualified work,
knowledge of software. Greet at Harlow or Lake-
minnow. We be the first to deliver on your
goals.
Training on Elite Electric Typewriter by exper-
iment. Prompt service. Proofreading. Mags,
M35-177 TIP
WANTED
Driver for carryout to KU Medical Center, Monroe
856, 830, 832, 834, 841, 842, 846, 849-320
after 6:00 am or before 10:00 am.
Wanted Formally / non-uniform roommate for
35' x 40' apartment (fall) $3,900,
864-181-797
WANTED: Half-time compulsory Must be a graduate student in counseling or related area, be familiar with agencies in the community, be familiar with and have daily blocks of time. Applications due by September 15th. SRS is an equal opportunity affirmative action. SRS are women and women of all races are encouraged to apply.
WANFED Tubular Coordinator for Spring and Fall School Programs graduate student professor Social Services Major, conduct experiential procedures, have large blocks of departmental work closely with minority and disaffected working groups, and direct work with minority and disaffected working groups. Apply in 2012 Carroll OT-Lany SIS is an 18-hour full-time employee. Qualified men and women of color must be hired.
TENNIS PHOS WANTED—Excellent Summer Playing Conditions. Fourth-place play and teaching background required, good playing and teaching skills, two complete résumés, in K 9 II basketball, two pictures, in K 9 II baseball, two pictures, in K 9 II tennis, Suite 101, Chevy Chase, MD 21053, Avenue 101.
Relatively quiet and sometimes stifling female
females with large breasts apartment next
fall. Please call Valerie 4497
851-3600 or 4497-851-3600
MUSICIANES - established by C. Lawrence based on the works of William Scherrer and have arrangements for Cell, Jafr 641, & others.
business team and exchange for babyfairy. Must
have 10 years of experience in business.
Preference: available summer and 1979-80s.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 20,550 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
---
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kansan classifies sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday Friday 5 pm
Wednesday Monday 5 pm
Thursday Friday 5 pm
Friday Wednesday 5 pm
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
2 times
$2.25
.07
15 words or less
2
times
$2.25
n2
RATES:
15 words or less
3 times
$2.50
not
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch = $3.50
4 times
$2.75
.04
DATES TO RUN:
5 times
$3.00
.05
NAME: ___
ADDRESS: ___
PHONE: ___
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
---
12
Wednesday, March 28.1979
University Dally Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
On Campus
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE by the American Bar Association/Law Student Division will be available from 6 to 8 in the legal aid and office in new Green Hall. An EAST ASIAN FILM LSIS movie, "Tokyo Story," will be shown at 47 in Dyce Auditorium, J. William Schopp, professor of geology at the University of Chicago, on Friday, June 21. THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA" at 7 for 426 Lindley Hall. KUNG FU CLUB meets at 7:30 in 173仁侣莲 Gymnasium. KUH HANG GLIDING CLUB meets at 7:30 in 209 Learned Hall. The KU
Concert Choir will give a SPRING CONCERT at eight in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. The KU Young socialist Alliance is sponsoring a PANEL AFFIRMATIVE ACTION at 8 in the KU PENCING CLUB papers at # 30 in 171 Robson Gymnasium.
TOMORROW. Howard Sumka of HUD will talk about "INNER CITY REVITALIZATION AND THE DISPLACEMENT OF THE POOR" at 7 p.m. in Room 232 Malot Hall. The KUAD CLUB meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Union.
City OKs request to HUD
The Lawrence City Commission last night unanimously approved a $791,000 budget request for the fifth year of a federal community development program, but deferred consideration of a neighborhood rezoning plan.
The Oread neighborhood reopening plan will be discussed at next week's meeting commission members said, after they have bad more time to study it.
The plan calls for the gradual down-
zoning—rezoning from multi-family to
single-family dwellings—of the neigh-
hood and the rehabilitation of older
INCLUDED IN THE budget was a request for $14,000 to develop community projects. The money would be used to hire consultants to study neighborhoods and identify projects that would be the most beneficial, in turn improving Lawrence community development, said.
"I think we will come out with a better program," he said. "We really do need a big team."
In related action, the commission approved a change in a requirement that had said that community development grant applicants must have property was sold within 12 months after rehabilitation was completed. The time requirement corresponded to months and required equipment to be replaced.
"Knowing how much it costs to even partially rehabilitation a house, I would heartily approve," Commissioner Marnie Argeringer said.
In other business, the commission approved the construction of a fluoride water spigot at the water treatment plant at a cost of $10 million. The unfluoridated fluidation from the water. The unfluoridated water will be available to any building that has four or more pipes take about three weeks to install the spigot.
Nominations for an outstanding black student at the University of Kansas are being accepted until April 4. The student chosen will be given the Black Student Involvement Award during the Black Association Symposium April 29 and 21 in the Kansas Union.
The symposium is sponsored by the Black Alumni Committee and an ad hoc committee of members from black student institutions. The committee will select the outstanding student.
W. C. Shelton, chairman of the ad hoc committee, said yesterday that nominations for the award could be made by any faculty member or black student organization.
Nominees for black award sought
He said nominations should be turned in to Leslie Saunders-Turner, University co-ordinator of the Humanities Program.
Shelton said participation by blacks in campus activities had declined considerably in the past few years. The award system was less intensive for more black involvement, he said.
Nominations for the award must be accompanied by a statement of what that student has done to help other students deal with problems faced by minorities at KU. The statement also should list the results of those efforts. An outline of the campus
In addition to an awards dinner, the symposium, titled "Success: A Black Perspective," will feature speeches by Carlton B. Goodleite and Reagan Henry.
activities in which that student has been involved also should be included.
Goodelle is publisher of the San Francisco Sun-Reporter and director of the National Black United Fund. He will speak at an awards dinner at 6 p.m. April 20 in the awards room at 6 p.m.
Henry is owner of Black enterprises Network, Inc., the largest black-owned chain of radio stations in the country. Henry soon will become the first black owner of a network-affiliated television station. He will speak at a.m. p. April 20 in the Union.
The symposium also will feature
workshops April 20-21 led by Gale Sayers, former KU football player and athletic director at Southern Illinois University; director of the University House press corps; and Lionel Monagas, director of the Industry Equal Employment Communications Commission.
Additional information may be obtained by contacting Shelton, Saunders-Turner or Eddie Williams, awards committee chairman.
The awards dinner will be the only event of the symposium for which there will be a charge. Tickets to the dinner may be purchased at the Alumni Office in the Union. Tickets will cost $5 from April 2 to 13, and $6.50 from April 14 to 20.
Protest . . .
From page one
chers did not want peace.
Student Association to support and participate in a protest march by the organization, scheduled to begin at noon today at Hoch Auditorium.
Members of the Egyptian Student Association yesterday reported sending a telegram to Egyptian President Anwar Akwat, congratulating him on the peace treaty.
The protesting groups may meet with some opposition. Ahmad Abouhewl, president of the Egyptian Student Association at KU, said yesterday's mar-
Concerning the Most Student marche,
bobhaela said, "I do not think any
teacher would think so."
HERBIE
MANN
in concert
With The K.C. Philharmonic
Sunday, April 8, 1979, 8:00 in Heech
Auditorium. Reserved seats $4.00 and
$5.00. Tickets available at the SUA office
and Kiets. Come and enjoy an esthetic blend-
ing of the musical colors of the orchestra
with the timeless jazz sound of Herbie
Mann. Presented by SUA and The Kansas
City Philharmonic Orchestra
HERBIE MANN in concert
With The K.C. Philharmonic
Sunday, April 8, 1979, 8:00 in Hoch Auditorium. Reserved seats $4.00 and $5.00. Tickets available at the SUA office and Keets. Come and enjoy an esthetic blending of the musical colors of the orchestra with the timeless jazz sound of Herbie Mann. Presented by SUA and The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra.
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F-S April 27-28 Cole Tuckey
Wed. May 2 Earl Scruggs w/Skunk Valley Boys
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Staff Photo by ALAN ZLOTKY
Student arrest
Steven Schwartz, Barrington, R.L., freshman, was arrested yesterday by KU police during a protest by more than 100 people who were demonstrating against the signing Mono-
day of the Egyptian-Iraeli peace treaty. Schwartz later was charged with disorderly conduct, battery on a police officer and resisting arrest.
Bv DAVID EDDS
Palestine march ignites tempers
Staff Reporters
and LAURIE WOLKEY
A KU student was arrested and another was issued a notice to appear in court on a charge of disorderly conduct during yesterday's protest march by members of the Organization of Arab Students and the Iranian Student Association.
Steven Schwartz, Barrington, R.I. freshman, was arrested by KU police during a demonstration by more than 100 people. The murders were protesting Monday's election.
SGT. JOHN WOLFE of the KU police department said Schwartz was attempting to disrupt the march when he was arrested. He said the battery charge stemmed from a bomb that was planted there.
Douglas County Sheriff's officers said Schwartz, 19, was charged with battery on a police officer, disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest. Schwartz was being held last night in the Douglas County jail in lieu of $2,250 bond.
Mike Hill, KU police chief, refused to identify the person who was issued a notice of arrest.
After the protest, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, told members of the University Senate executive committee that the arrest was made to protect the rights of the students.
"I told Mike Thomas that our position on any arrests is that they were made to protect the right of free expression," said Thomas, director of the KU police.
THE MARCH, which began at noon in front of Hoch Auditorium, was in protest of the Egyptian-Israel peace treaty, which calls for Israel withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula within three years and formal recognition of Israel by Egypt.
According to Mohamed Ghaj, president of the Organization of Arab Students, the university has been a center for international studies.
Vol.89, No.120
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
people know that the so-called peace treaty between Egov and Israel is an unjust one.
During the hour-long demonstration, protostars marched twice between Hochstrasse and Zentralplatz.
Despite the protesters' intentions, the atmosphere was one of disruption and anger.
"Sure they should, because the American government can help." another said
"They shouldn't do it here," one unidentified student said.
Ghuj said the march was intended to be peaceful.
In several instances, some students at the march broke up in small groups to argue the
"I know," said the first student, "but whose country is this?"
Tension in the crowd, estimated to be 250 people, grew as three KU police officers struggled for several minutes to handcuff the student who later was cited for disorder conduct. A few bystanders shouted protests against police interference.
UNLIKE TUESDAY's march by the Moslem Student Association, the demonstration was flavored with shouts of "Down, down with Sadat" from protesters and "Go home PLO" from angry bystanders. The Organization of the Palestine Liberation Organization
IN ANother incident, an unidentified
outward stole an Israeli flag from the
bay of Jaffa.
The flag, belonging to Scott White, Prairie Village senior, was stolen by the bystander when he fell off a ladder and about eight other counter-protesters followed the bystander but were unable to retrieve it.
Among the group of marchers were two children, led by a woman protester. One of the children, an unidentified 5-year-old boy, held a plastic toy machine gun at bystanders.
Thursday, March 29, 1979
u] said he did not know the parents of
See PROTEST back page
Staff Reporter
House endorses liquor bill
By TAMMY TIERNEY
TOPEAK - Temperature took a blow in the Kansas House yesterday when the representatives gave their tentative appeal to Governor Eric Hogan to equate Liquor pools in the state's private clubs.
Owners of private clubs, however, also were snake with the possibility of a 10 per cent chance of death.
Before giving their approval, however, legislators considered six amendments to the bill.
Approval of the bill, which would allow private clubs to sell liquor by the drink to their members, came on a 68-45 vote. The bill already has been passed by the Senate
And, although the bill is the first of its kind in Kansas, two local bar owners say the measure will not change.
Class A clubs generally are those operated by non-profit fraternal organizations.
The approved amendments would allow reciprocal club memberships only in Class A clubs and would place a 10 percent excise tax on the sale of alcohol in clubs.
Because Class A clubs already reciprocate, the amendment would be a detention to the private club industry, said Ackson, owner of the Sanctuary v. 1401 W. Seventh St.
"I PERSONALLY am not upset because I would reciprocate with very few clubs. However, all Class B clubs will be very disappointed. This was something they were very much in favor of and were really honing for." he said.
Paul Loyd, owner of G.P. Loyd, 701
Farmers' Market, too, was not pleased,
with the amount agreed.
"Although we not really made any term plans to reciprocate, it's a little bit of a challenge."
The addition of the 10 percent excise tax would increase taxes on private club liquor and those under 21 years old.
The amendment also earmarked $5 million from the tax revenues to be used for funding state and local alcohol treatment programs.
THE TAX AMENDMENT was proposed by State Rep. Vic Miller, D-Topela. Miller's amendment came after House members voted to override the state's State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden
City. The amendment to raise the tax to 10 percent was passed by a slim 54-50 vote.
"Drinks are going to be considerably more expensive," Johnson said. "I would save $600 each payroll if the bill had been passed without that amendment. The amount I saved would have been passed on to me. With a 10 percent tax it can't save anything. What the Legislature has us doing is passing higher prices on to the customer."
Loyd echoed Johnson's sentiments.
programs, Johnson said the programs were "a waste of time."
BUT, JOHNSON said, he would live with
the tax if it were the way the clubs
could play.
"Personally I don't like it because most sales taxes are ill-sent anyway. But if this is what I have to do to eliminate the liquor tax, then I'm too much time in Topeka fighting it not to.
"I'm sure the tax will make drink prices even higher than they are already. But it one step at a time, I guess. I imagine the business we'll do will make up for the tax."
Although Miller said the tax increase would generate more money for alcohol
"THEER WON'T BE increased alcoholism with liquor by the drink," he said. "The main reason is because alcoholics can't afford our prices. People who are alcohcies are people who go out to buy their bottle and take it home to drink it."
Despite spending nearly 90 minutes debating the bill's amendments, few are convinced.
State Rep. Lee Hamm, D-Prailt, House members that the bill would not be in
"Did the people of Kansas ask for this bill?" he asked. "No. Only a few selfish individuals who are trying to promote their own business. All this bill does is make it more convenient for more people to drink more."
State Rep. Bill Meacham, R-Wichita,
said the bill's passage would make Kansans
more comfortable.
"The liquor pool system is really hypocritical," he said. "If you think people aren't drinking in private clubs, you're just silly."
PRICE ONLY COMES THEN PALSTERNIES BEGAN THAT NATIONALS
Pint-sized protestor
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
An unidentified 5-year-old boy was one of two children who joined in a march down Jawhayk Boulevard yesterday to protest the Egyptian-Iranian peace treaty. The march was staged by members of the Organization of Arab Students and the Iranian Student Association.
Warmer temperatures put heat on maintenance
By DAVID SIMPSON Staff Reporter
Temperatures in Lawrence reached into the 70s yesterday but inside many KU buildings it seemed as if winter never ended.
Richard Perkins, associate director of plant maintenance, said yesterday that when temperatures rose, many people thought buildings were still being heated.
Perkins said that when temperatures rose, people often tried to adjust thermostats to cool off the classrooms. Some teachers became broken by persons tapping with them.
It's just the heat that has been retained in the buildings that causes the rooms to be hot.
And Perkins said little could be done to relieve the discomfort.
THEMOSTATS cost $70 to $100 each to replace, in addition to the hours needed to install them.
"Windows are often opened during the time of year when temperatures are 45 degrees outside." Perkins said. "Air crosses over and the thermostat says the room needs heat. It just senses the temperature." But this it tells the heating system to click on.
Perkins said that in most rooms theremostmats were set at 68 degrees for the winter and 78 degrees for the summer.
In addition to adjusting thermostats, people often open windows in hope that outside air will cool rooms. Perkins, says this says only aggravates the situation.
"WE TRY TO investigate all calls to make sure there are no big problems with the phone line." "We have so many calls that it needs while to get to all of the buildings to check
Perkins said his department received many calls from professors and students who had been working on the project.
Twice a year Facilities Operations
crews reset every thermostat on campus to compensate for weather changes. Tentative dates to reset thermostats this year are April 15 and October 15.
"IF THE TEMPERATURE is still cold on April 15 we'll move the date back," he said. "If we turn the off earlier and a child gets sick, people get cold and then we still get compliments."
Wescoe does not have vents that can bring in enough fresh air. When warm weather comes there is no way to get fresh air, so the conditioning system is turned on, he said.
"We can't get enough air into the buildings to cool the rooms off," Perkins said. "The building was poorly designed and it is something that has to be put on with."
Perkins said many campus buildings had heating problems, but one of the worst offenders was Wescoe Hall.
Temperatures are expected to rise into the 70s again, today, according to the NASA data.
Flouted speed limit costly
By TOM ZIND
Staff Reporter
Drivers who can't resist the temptation to speed on Kansas' wide open roads may end up costing the state a chunk of federal money.
Kansas stands to lose $3 million to $5
million unless more drivers obey the 55
miles rule.
Terry Isaacson, urban planner for the Federal Highway Administration, said yesterday that the Department of Transportation, said Kansas could lose the 26 percent figure from the 26 percent figure for the three-month period ending December 31.
Under the Surface Transportation Assistance Act of 1978, the Department of Transportation is federalized to have more than 70 percent of monitored traffic in the state is exceeding the speed limit. The act is designed to encourage trucks to crack down on speeding in a save fuel environment.
During the next four years, the govern- ment's criteria for unacceptable non-
Arland Hicks, traffic safety administrator for the Kansas Department of Transportation, said Kansas could lose money if its compliance did not improve from the 26 percent figure for the three month period ending December 31.
For that period only Texas and Wyoming had lower compliance figures.
Hicks said Kansas was in danger of losing funds.
These figures are compiled quarterly by the Kansas transportation department. The department monitors the speed of the traffic flow at different points across the state to
"It would be entirely possible," he said. "If we're over 70 percent, they'll at least reprimand us and at the most cut out part of our highway construction money."
Hicks said he thought the highway patrol was doing all it could to crack down on
Both Hicks and a Kansas Highway Patrol spokesman said that if the state were reprimanded it would not be because of lax enforcement by the state troopers.
Laynard Shearer, lieutenant with the research and planning section of the Kansas Highway Patrol, said the force's 319 field unit had been cracking down heavily since 1974.
"Since 1974, we've been going on an all-out effort to comply with the 55 mile-an-hour limit," he said. "With the present manpower, we're doing the best we can."
"The Highway Patrol has been extremely aggressive in its enforcement for the last four months," he said. "It's my opinion that we're at maximum enforcement now."
Isaacson said that considering its relatively small footing, Kansas Highway 160 must be built.
"I think Kansas is doing a good job," he said. "They're doing the best job in this state."
Shearer said ticketing speeders was an effective deterrent.
"It definitely helps," he said. "The department of transportation ran a survey on the number of fetal alcohol use."
Shearer said the results showed that of the 711 respondents, 32 percent said they were driving slower because of the possibility of getting a ticket.
"We'll have to hire more troopers to get more compliance," he said. "It might be a problem."
Hicks said that while more enforcement might help, the root of the problem lay in the
He said that at one time Kansas had the highest speed limit in the country and that Kansas residents were accustomed to driving fast.
"I think it's just part of our history," he said. "It will have to be the young people who will listen."
Hicks said the most effective deterrent to speeding would be a massive effort to inform the public of the merits of the 55 miles an hour limit.
2
Thursday, March 29, 1979
University Daily Kansan
VERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services
Callaghan loses House support
LONDON—Prime Minister James Callaghan's minority government lost a vote of confidence last night in the House of Commons, requiring a snap election.
The vote was on a motion of censure put before the Commons by Margaret Thatcher, the 53-year-old leader of the Conservative Party. Her motion was
Callaghan now must resign and call a general election. The Labor party has been in power since 1974.
In debate before the vote, Thatcher, who could become Britain's next prime minister, said, "The government has failed the nation, lost credibility and it is
time for it to go.
The second time this century that a British government has been forced
to elections on a motion of censure. The last war in 1924 when Raymond Mc-
Mary was elected.
Oil price rise to be felt soon
GENEVA, Switzerland—The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries raised criscal oil prices by 9 percent Tuesday, which means Americans soon can buy more gasoline.
The Arab-dominated OPEC cedar approval a new price of $14.54 a barrel and authorized members to add any surcharges the market might bear.
Analysts said the raise in the base price, to be imposed Sunday, would raise American retail gasoline prices by about two cents a gallon and increase the American bill for foreign oil by at least $4 billion over last year's total of $43 billion.
Surcharges adopted by at least seven members of the 13-nation cartel could add another penny a gallon to U.S. gas prices.
Soviet wants out; fires bomb
MOSCOW—A Moscow merchant seaman who said he "hated Breznyk" and wanted to go to America, yesterday exploded a bomb he hambled to strapped in.
U. S. Ambassador Malcolm Toon and the Soviet was taken away in an ambulance, badly burned, but apparently still alive.
The man reportedly pulled a ring on a small gray metal box attached to his body after Russians either used force or threatened to use force to remove him.
Informed sources said the man told officials he was a sailor who had grown up in an orphanage and wanted to "set an example for all dissidents."
Soviet officials earlier had spent six hours trying to persuade him to give up and leave the embassy peacefully.
Flunt sentenced, fined $27,500
ATLANTA—Hustler magazine owner Larry Flynt was fined £2,500 and the magazine in jail yesterday after he was found guilty on all counts of an 11-count assault.
District Judge Nick Lambors did Flytn to pay a $2,500 fine on each of the 11 counts and to serve the 11 years in jail consecutively. Lambros said the jail terms would be suspended on payment of the fine with the condition that Flytn did not violate George absences laws again.
Flynt's attorney said he would appeal the verdict.
Lambroat told jurors Tuesday that Flynt could be convicted under the obscurity laws only if the average Fulton County resident would think his publications appealed primarily to a prudent interest in nudity, sex or excretion.
Effect of herbicide investigated
TOPEKA—The possibility that use of a recently banned herbicide may have contributed to a high incidence of birth defects in Rolla, Kan., has sparked an investigation into the safety of this fungicide.
State health officials, however, said that at this time there was no direct evidence to link the birth defects with the herbicide known as 245-7.
Five of 17 babies born since 1975 in the community of 412 have severe congenital birth defects. The national average is between 1 and 2 percent, but
Donald Wilcox, a state epidemiologist, who was called in at the request of Rolla's mayor, said the evidence was circumstantial and there was no way to conclude that the illness was contagious.
The herbicide recently was placed under an emergency ban by the Environmental Protection Agency after an EPA study showed nine miscarriages in two specific areas in Oregon, one of which was near a forest where the herbicide was used.
Truckers want 19% fee raise
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Independent truckers are threatening to walk off the job Saturday night unless they are allowed a fuel surcharge that one spokesman estimates is $150.
Earl Stevens, editor of the National CB Truckers News in Lebanon, Mo., said about 1½ million independent drivers were ready to take 850,000 trucks out of service at midnight Saturday unless President Carter or Congress approved a surcharge to cover higher diesel fuel costs.
Stevens said the truckers were seeking a 19 percent increase in freight charges which would equal an average price increase of about 10 percent for trucks carrying up to 45,000 lbs.
The shutdown is opposed by Jim Johnston, president of the Owner-Operators Independent Drivers Association of America, in Oak Grove, Mo. Johnston said the shutdown will only add more strength to an already proposed Teamsters strike also scheduled for Saturday.
Five say convict not at camp
PHYOR, Okla - Testimony of prosecution witnesses in the trial of Gene Hart Ace cast doubt yesterday on defense testimony that linked the killings of Billy Garris and Kyle Duncan.
Three Girl Scouts and two adult group leaders were called to offset the testimony of defense witness Kimberly Lewis, 11, who said Tuesday that she saw a man resembling William Stevens, a convicted Kansas rapist, at Camp Dixie. The child said the man peered into her tent. All five said they did not see the man.
But a waitress testified yesterday that a man who was acting nervous came into a restaurant in Chuteau the morning the three Scouts were found.
The waitress, Mrs. Dean Boyd, the final witness in the Hart trial, told the defense attorney she recognized a picture of Stevens shown on television Tuesday night as the man who was in the cafe the morning the bodies were found.
Kelly and his clown die at 80
SARAOTA YOK, he詹姆 KELY, who delighted audiences for half a century and played the close friend of Willie "Willy" died yesterday after he collapsed on an heart attack.
Kelly created Willie out of chalk dust and pathes, bring him through the woods of Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus, trade shows, movies, ice shows, television programs.
Kelly was 80 years old.
He is survived by his wife of 24 years, Evi.
Corrections
The organizers of yesterday's protest were incorrectly reported on the back page of yesterday's Kansas. The organizers were the Organization of Arab Students.
The place of tonight's performance by author Nozake Shane was in front of an on page one. The performance will be at 8 p.m. at the theater in Hingham Hall.
Weather...
Warm temperatures will continue today, with the high expected to reach into the 70s. But the sunshine will be leaving, as forecasts predict partly cloudy skies with a 50 percent chance of rain today and 60 percent tonight. The low is expected to be in the mid-40s tonight.
Radiation escapes in mishap
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)—An accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant forced radioactive steam into the air at levels that could be measured 16 miles away but caused no damage to the reactor core, investigators said late last night.
Charles Gallina, a Nuclear Regulatory Commission investigator who spent all day at the nuclear plant site, said radiation was "extremely low" and charged water in an auxiliary building.
"We have a serious contamination problem on site," Gallina said. "You might say from the breadth of the problem it's one that is not necessarily the extent makes it serious, not the breadth."
Officials said their readings indicated there was no immediate danger to the public. There were no plans to evacuate the people living within a mile of the plant.
dirty problem. It's going to take some time to clean up."
"NOTHING CRITICAL failed, but it's a
Bob Fries, a member of the Department of Energy's emergency response team, said a specially equipped helicopter carried 60 meters of radiation 16 miles from the site.
The highest concentration of radiation was registered at the nuclear plant site, where officials measured 70 millirons of X-ray X-ray can give a person up to 30 millirons.
"THEY ARE high but not yet critical . . .
It was not close to a catastrophe," said James Higgins, a NCR reactor inspector.
Higgins said radiation was still coming from an auxiliary building, which contains ionized water diverted there after the accident. The auxiliary building was being ventilated last night. Other radiation was released earlier when plant officials intentionally sent steam into the air—not knowing it was contaminated, he said.
The NRC investigators said that the reactor was still cooling and that there were no plans to enter it for several days. They should be a full investigation of the accident.
SEVERAL PLANT workers suffered "minor contamination," according to
Higgins. "Their outer clothing was contaminated, but the proper precautions were taken."
Earlier, Edson Case, a NRC spokesman, said radiation levels inside the plant's reactor building registered at 1,000 times normal.
The precise sequence of events that teu to the radiation's release could not be imminent.
But Lt. Gov. William Scrontan III said steam containing radioactive material was released into the air for more than two hours and potentially dangerous pressure" in the reactor.
"The situation is more complex than the company first led us to believe." Scranton
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DOWNTOWN MERCHANTS EXPRESS
Beginning 10 AM—Saturday March 31
The Downtown Merchants are subsidizing a special bus to help K.U. students with their Saturday transportation problems Avoid the hassles of driving and parking . . .
COME RIDE WITH US!
EXPRESS
EXPRESS
DOWNTOWN
MERCHANTS
EXPRESS
The Saturday-Downtown Merchants Express Schedule
| From: | Ellsworth | Student Union | GSP-Corbin | 9th & Mass. Downtown |
| To: | Downtown | Downtown | Downtown | Resident Halls |
| Time:
Time: | Hour
Half-Hour | 8 min. past hour
38 min. past Half-Hour | 10 min. past hour
40 min. past hour | 15 min. past hour
45 min. past hour |
| First Bus: | 10:00 am | 10:08 am | 10:10 am | 10:15 am |
| Last Bus: | 4:00 pm | 4:08 pm | 4:10 pm | 3:45 pm |
Exact Fare Only 25'—Driver Carries No Changel
The Downtown Merchants are offering this bus to all students, faculty, and non-students as a continuing gesture of their appreciation.
Thursdav. March 29. 1979
University Daily Kansan
2
Plain wrappers sell well
Bv LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
Penny-wise shoppers buying generic food products might be making local grocery store aisles more crowded, but their efforts are not paying them money, local grocery retailers sell.
Two Lawrence grocers say they are increasing the number of generic food products available to consumers, despite restrictions on their use. Items that are not identified by brand names.
"Other than the limits by our warehouses of what products are available, the store shelf space is our biggest problem." Keth Bennett, 1740 Massachusetts, said yesterday.
He said Dillon's had increased the number of generic food products from 18 to more than 100 since the store began stocking them in 1978.
"PEOPLE ARE looking for economy," be said. "They are buying generic items and the market for more items is steadily growing."
A cake mix provides an example of typical savings on an item, he said. A name brand cake mix sells for $1.29, compared with 55 cents for a generic cake mix.
"It isn't just those with hard pressed incomes who buy these items, either," he said. "Everyone is interested in savings. In fact, I buy these products myself."
Although generic food sales are increasing, some consumers said they were not satisfied.
"My roommate and I thought about
buying the generic tuna," one Dillon's shopper said. "We wanted to, but thought it might be tuna of a lesser quality. Then we bought a larger bottle. Think that a label could make a difference."
ANOTHER CONSUMER said she would buy generic foods, but had not done so in the
"They aren't sold at the store where I shop," she said. "But if they were I would buy them. I'm satisfied that generics are good quality products."
Lucas said Dillon's usually did not have problems in getting generic products in stock but that it depended upon whether the company was in stock in the company warehouse.
"These products are packed by the major packing companies on a limited basis."
He said the manufacturers package the amount of name-brand products they think they can sell. They then package the remaining products under generic labels.
"ALTHOUGH THE label does not affect the quality of the item, the amount packaged under name-brand labels does not affect the quality of the package under the generic label." Lucas said.
He said Dillon's did not know which company packaged the store's generic
"All major packers do package some generic items," he said. "But the items are sent to our warehouse without specification of who packed them. So as far as we're
concerned one generic product is as good as another."
Some of the generic items available include paper goods, salad oils, dog food and
The other store that stocks generic food in Lawrence is Way-1-Warehouse Foods, 846 W. Lawrence Ave., Suite 305.
"WE'VE STOCKED our own private label brands for a number of years," a spokesman said. "But as of about eight months ago, we've sold some generics too."
She said that the number of generics Way-
Lo could stock was limited.
"Space is a problem for us," she said. "So we usually let a product be tested on the market, and if it sells well other places, we to make room for it in this store."
She said gelatin provided an example of savings on a generic food item with a name brand it cost 25 cents and with a generic brand, 15 cents.
Product Size Generic Price Name-
brand Price
Facial Tissues .200 .49 .81
Coffee .21b. $3.99 $5.37
Saltine Crackers .16b. .49 .87
Cheese Spreads .12b. $1.79 $3.12
Syrup .32c. $1.15 $1.49
Catupst .32c. .85 $1.19
McCormick .32c. .75 $1.19
Canned Corn .16.5c. .39 .43
Grape Jelly .32c. .85 .13
Applesauce .15b. .31 .39
Apples .15b. $1.98 .29
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Francisco H. Ruiz, instructor at Penn Valley Community College, Kansas City, Mo., discussed the urban problems of the Mexican-American.
THEY WERE NOT educated property for urban life because the Spaniards did not provide any education for 300 years for the Indians in Mexico, according to Ruz.
Prejudices, biases and culture differences play a part in the dropout rate, she said, adding that proper or adequate teaching is essential to secondary schools needs to be improved.
century were mostly unskilled laborers,he said.
For the most part, Chicanos have not advanced rapidly in the United States because immigrants in the first half of this
The Pachuco, or first generation Mexican-Americans, had a dilemma. Ruiz said, because they did not want to remain in Mexico or to blend into life in the United States.
He said, "There are unexness between those who have forgotten the old country and those who are new and try to reconstruct old ways.
But Chicanos must ask themselves if they want to take on all of the American culture or retain much of the Mexican culture. Ruz said,
In 1919, at the time of the Mexican Revolution, Ruiz said, only three and one half million people out of 13 million could read or write.
He said he thought Mexicans, because of oil and increased technology, would no longer want to migrate as Mexico became a modern state.
Educator sees bilingual need
By ELLEN IWAMOTO
Staff Reporter
"The new generation is still constantly nurtured and supported by the old. Chicago has the old ways reinforced their roots are next door in Mexico."
"The problem seems to be getting people to stav in once they get in." she said.
Higher education has failed to produce qualified people to teach bilingual education, according to Afonso Lopez Vasquez, bilingual education program director for the Kansas City, Mo., school district.
ONE OF THEIR goals is to try to keep students in college once they enter, she said. A survey in 1972 indicated that 82 percent of the Hastings that entered college dropped out after their freshman year.
Moon
Loper, speaking yesterday afternoon at a conference, said there was no excuse for the lack of qualified bilingual teachers, and the funds are available for their training.
LOPEZ SAID, "When a school system provides English language instruction by teachers in English materials, this does not constitute equal education for students who are not English speakers."
The League's Education Center in Topeka encourages Hispanic students in high school to finish and to go on to college, Rodriguez said.
In 1974, the Supreme Court ruled that because of language barriers a San Francisco school district was not allowed to teach English in Chinese students enrolled in public schools.
and Massachusetts have programs that train college teachers in bilingual teaching.
She urged students to "get the qualifications, get those degrees, get some more and go on."
The conference, sponsored by MECHA,
a Mexican-American student
organization, and the office of minority
students at Laxen Latin Week, attracted
about 35 persons.
Texas, California, Colorado, Wisconsin
Anna Rodriguez, director of the League of United Latin American Citizens, discussed educational opportunities for Mexican-American students.
López said that 1978 was the first year that students could graduate with an education degree emphasizing bilingual education.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
MARCH 29,1979
Search violates rights
A recent dispute between residents of Joseph R. Pearson Hall and the directors of the hall concerning room searches conducted during spring break has revealed a disturbing fact.
Earlier this week they threatened disciplinary action against students occupying those rooms.
During the break, several directors of the hall entered rooms searching for violations in safety codes. They were able to find one of them and street signs in some of the rooms.
The hall directors violated the University's Students Rights and Responsibilities Code, which is part of the residence hall contract, by entering rooms without previous announcement.
THE CODE clearly states that 24-hour notice must be given before a search and that students have the same rights to privacy that are guaranteed all citizens.
ret these protections were ignored. Although there is obviously room for interpretation in the contract, the residence hall officials have in this
case bent the contract to meet their own whims.
In defense of the searches, Richard Frolick, director of JRP, said, "It's been done in residence halls in the last six years. It's done here in JRP every time we close the hall."
BUT THE fact that it has been done in the past does not make it right. Room searches are usually preceded by notification to the residents that a search is coming. That was not done this time.
Regardless of whether the searches are legal, they still remain a questionable ethical practice.
As one resident told the hall director, "No matter how you try to get around it, you still have no right to violate our rights."
Despite that violation, the hall director has threatened punishment against those who have received warnings before. But to carry out that threat on the basis of a questionable search would be unfair and unethical.
The right to privacy should supersede any effort to punish the offending students.
Mr. Carter: America won't listen to warning
Dear Mr. President:
Congratulations on your recent triumph in the Middle East. Once again you put your political life on the line in the hope of winning a state that you have succeeded. It takes courage and fortitude to be willing to put yourself in such a do-or-die situation, particularly when the outcome is uncertain, sometimes stubborn and unreasonable. For this, sir, you deserve to win a Nobel Peace prize. Incidentally, the latest poll had you up a few points in popularity and this should not detract from your experience.
But sir, there is something else I'd like to take up with you for a moment. There was another poll released last week and, well, it wasn't too good.
This particular poll measured the feelings of Americans on energy usage and conservation. The findings, quite frankly, bordered on depressing.
ACCORDING TO that poll, more than two-thirds of the American public think reports of oil and gasoline shortages are a hoax to get consumers to pay more for fuel.
Almost one-fifth of the 1,600 people surveyed said they had not even tried to cut energy use. And more than one-fourth of those questioned said that if gasoline prices went up to $1 a gallon, they would not drive their cars less.
Sir, these are the same people you went to a few months ago after the Iranian revolution and asked that they turn down their thermostats, drive less and take steps to conserve our precious energy resources. If it doesn't look as if it were listening.
I'm told that the United States uses amps approved by the Department of a day by the Treasury. Department that by resetting hot thermostats just then, you can save the supply of $5,000 barrels of oil.
REDUCING THE SPEED limit from 55 to 50 mph could save 250,000 barrels of waste. Wider use of car pools—increasing the number of passengers from 1.3 to 2.3 passengers—could cut consumption by the equivalent of 780,000 barrels a day.
Vernon Smith
Compared to the 21 million barrels we currently use daily, the Treasury department's conservation measures may not save us as much as saves to most people, is a good star.
The problem, air, isiring to convince our nation of the importance of energy conservation. Much of the nation has a very long and trying winter last year and we are beginning to give up willingly to give up those three extra degrees.
And you know, sir, how Americans feel about the current 55 mph speed limit. Any proposal calling for further reduction in highway speed would cause a massive public uproar.
AS FOR increasing the number of passengers in our cars, well, you also can forget about this happening at any significant level. Most people regard their cars as an extension of their private vehicle would prefer not to have to share them.
I'm really at a loss for suggestions as to how you can convey the seriousness of our situation, and I remember the stunt the oil companies pulled in 1973 and that is the source of part of the fuel.
Energy Secretary James Schlesinger says that since the appeals aren't working, mandatory measures such as rationing may have to be implemented.
Personally, I've never cared very much for Schlesinger or his policies, but this time he may be right. The thought of rationing is distasteful to me, but if that is what is the situation, then so be it. Something has to be done.
A concerned citizen
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USPS 600-540) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May 2019. All U.S. Postal Service holidays and Sunday and holiday second-class postage paid at lawrence, Kansas 600-540; $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a year on the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the activity fee.
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The
University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 6045
Editor
Harry Massey
business Manager
Caren Wenderott
General Manager Rick Musser
Advertising Advise Chuck Chowins
Cooperation key to 'reinventing' auto
The majority of Americans still believe that the gasoline shortage is just a conspiracy conjured up by the oil companies as an excuse to charge ever-increasing prices.
Perhaps many of them will still cling to that misconception even as they wait in line for their gas-ration coupons, which are sold at the mall and are an American scene sometime in the near future.
Also, American automobile industry also has the desperate cling to the hope that the oil shop will be passing nightmare and that their love affair with gas-quizzing monsters will never have
AFTER INITIALY scouting at Secretary of Transportation Brock Adams' charge to them to achieve even greater gas mileage by doing "nothing less than reinventing the automobile" and "new automakers have changed the challenge and expressed optimism that it can be done.
But several of those automobile industry officials have awakened to the harsh reality of the energy shortage and to the fact that the current state of the nation direction their industry takes in the future.
"The fuel issue is a national problem, and has to be get at," says Henry Ford II, who heads the company.
Mary
Ernst
than Henry Ford I did when he first tried to
set a Model A rolling some 80 years ago.
Ford and other automobile companies have said, however, that it will take more time for the automakers to develop their industry. It will, they say, take the combined effort of the industry and the Ford company.
Last week, such an effort was begun as two Congressional committees conducted hearings on the theme of redesigning the car. Several key automobile industry executives praised the suggestion as one of the best things to come along in some time.
SEVERAL MEMBERS of Congress have supported Adams' suggestion that the federal government put hundreds of millions of dollars into new, basic research toward "reinventing" the automobile through joint government-industry projects. But the automakers do not like the term "reinvent," and prefer, in its place, an economy.
economy along with relaxation of federal laws and regulations.
S. I. Terry, a Chrysler Corp. vice president, praised Adams' proposal that the government share the burden of expensive advanced research in the area.
Wilson W. Sick Jr., a vice president to American Motorists, said that the idea of "calling attention now to the transportation needs beyond the 1980-45 period" was that he wanted to relax the constraints that preclude industrywide "cooperation" in basic research efforts. His comments referred to a government consent decree in which the industry is barred from working jointly in the same areas. That law will expire later this year.
ALLOWING INDUSTRYWIDE cooperation on research, Sick told the Congressional committee, "would be the most productive experiment in a way to develop new technotools quickly."
Such a move would, in fact, likely work better in developing an automobile that could meet the government's—especially Adams"—demands.
cooperation is the key to finding a solution to the energy problem.
But what is needed most of all, and which has been most lacking in past attempts to get it right, are the problems.
That cooperation would have to mean less concern by the auto industry about the profit loss they may incur from a massive research effort and an easing of government regulations concerning cooperation on such a project.
Something very close to Adams' reinvention of the auto idea is what is needed. He says that he would like to see a fleet of cars that average 50 miles a year by 1895.
But to bring about such a drastic change would require not only a change in thinking on the part of the government and the auto industry, but also in the public's attitude toward it. The status symbol of the will have to be the Cadillac EI Dorado and not the Cadilla El Dorado.
PHILIP CALDWELL. Ford vice chairman and president, said, "It's not enough to solve the technological piece of the puzzle. We've also got to satisfy the customer."
If the industry can solve the technological end of the puzzle, the customers will very likely do so.
JAMES SCHLESINGER. SECRETARY OF ENERGY
With the exception, that is, of those Americans who feel that gasoline is taken from an endless reservoir. But then, it will be those car owners that will be left sitting for hours in filling station lines to fill their guzzlers at one dollar a gallon.
A
WHEW!
WRUGAT
MARTIN MAYNARD
A
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Investments bolster S. African regime
To the editor:
In a recent letter, Richard Burkard wrote in favor of the Endowment Association's having the right to invest wherever it pleases, including in corporations with operations in South Africa. Rather than considering what rights are or are not permitted under the Association, I'll instead discuss the effect that U.S. investment has in South Africa.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN letters
While admitting that U.S investment has helped the South African government to buy bigger tanks and more guns, some might still claim that corporations can improve
... serve to entrench the position of the minority regime."
The South African subsidiaries of U.S. corporations have not had a positive influence on the nature of its presence been neutral. Actually, U.S. investment has bolstered the minority government and has helped to secure for the U.S. position from which it can subigate the black market.
Stated in the words of a U.S. Senate subcommittee report, "The net effect of American investment has been to strengthen the economic and military self-sufficiency of South Africa's apartheid regime." The South Africans themselves give a similar negative assessment of investment. According to Steve Biko, "Hawaii" was the first to
This minority government, which is to be politely asked to reform itself, is the same government that, by law, buried blacks for many years. Black people poverty wages they now receive. When high school students protested against the government, this same minority government, supposedly having a potential for future greatness, killed more than 300 of these students.
the conditions for blacks. Proponents of this view seem to claim that corporations can help blacks by making plea suggestions to the government's intransigent Afrikaan bureaucracy that the black majority be less completely subduated.
In the past, U.S. corporations have had little effect beyond strengthening the minority government. As for the future, the likelihood that corporations will have a more progressive influence is as small as that of non-majority executives to South African subsidiaries, vigorously antagonize the South African government and sacrifice their profits.
Medicine Lodge junior
Mark Cline
STATE U.
THE FACULTY WANTS MORE SAV IN RUNNING THE UNIVERSITY
RIDICULOUS! WHAT DO TEACHERS KNOW ABOUT HIGHER EDUCATION?
ASLA 179
BY T. M. ASLA
This is the system of employment inside the homes of U.S. executives in South Africa. It is an extension of the bigcity and smallcity systems in the country, employee relations in the factories these executives run during the day. The U.S. presence in South Africa is a disgrace to our nation and the Endowment Association is working to bolster the role of American businessmen there.
Veronica Cruz
In the pamphlet, the president of the American Women's Club boasts that she pays her "boy" (her words) only $86 a week to attend a club meeting of the Chamber of Commerce, $193 in the rock-bottom minimum at which a family can survive. Warning against excessive generosity, the pamphlet says, "If you give three dollars a hot day, he'll want three the next day."
Bigotry in S. Africa evident in pamphlet
Veronica Cruz New York, N.Y. junior
To the editor:
A recent item in the national press seemed to undermine the KU Endowment Association's contention that U.S. corporations in South Africa contribute to the material well-being of the black population there.
The news story concerned a pamphlet written by the American Women's Club of Johannesburg and distributed by the U.S. consulate in South Africa. The pamphlet's purpose is to "prevent Americans from running away of the system of apar-
Senate fails to meet grad student needs
To the editor:
In a country renowned for its freedom, approximately 20 percent of the KU student body is disfranchised in the Student Senate. I refer, of course, to the graduate students. This comes about because both graduate students and undergraduates participate in the Student Senate proportional to their numbers in the student body.
this would be fine if they made up a single, relatively cohesive group, with students who have distinctly different interests, needs and problems than do undergraduates. Graduate students are more complex and need of the undergraduates, because they
( )
all were undergraduates themselves, at one time
The converse is not true, however, because undergraduates have never been graduate students. In addition, most people tend to act in their own self-interest, and this makes it quite easy for them. This is quite simple. On issues in which graduate students and undergraduates are not split into two major groups, one containing most of the graduate students and another consisting of a few well. But issues which separate graduates from undergraduates result in the 24 graduate student senators being outvoted and the total disenfranchisement of a district group of students who should never be lemmed with the rest in the first place!
For example, as a result of the recent Senate meeting, there is no graduate repressent for the State Department government. Disenfranchised! In effect, undergraduates, not graduates, have final control over every bit of the $11.10 activity fee which each full-time graduate receives.
In fact, by amending the Student Senate Revenue Code, the undergraduate student senators could completely eliminate funerals and burial Council, which is under Senate jurisdiction.
Certain undergraduate senators have tried recently to have the funding of the Graduate Student Council drastically reduced.
What I propose is an autonomous Graduate Student Senate, which would be parallel to the undergraduate one. Most students in the graduate students will value of value to graduate students as well as undergraduates, and the new Graduate Student Senate would fund them proportionally (i.e. pay 20 percent of the cost as a percentage) without direct graduate student consent).
The remainder of the graduate student activity fee money would be spent by the Graduate Student Senate and used in the best interests of the graduate students, as it is currently spent by the Student Senate and the best interests of the undergraduates.
David C. Merkel
Blacksburg. Va. graduate student
Thursday, March 29, 1979
5
University Daily Kansan
Covotes fill research role
BY BARBARA JENSEN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
On warm days last summer, Juli Arm-
strong took three energetic coyote pumps into a wooded area near campus and turned the pumps around so that he could boulder and dose for several hours.
Although she maintains that the coyotes were not her pets, Wanda Niema and a boy came to the booth where the woke. And, if Yanni were lost in the woods, she would be terrified and howl until she woke.
Armstrong, Overland Park senior, is doing research at KU's Animal Care Unit. She obtained the three salt-and-pepper colored pups last summer.
"I spent 24 hours a day with them the first two weeks I had them," she said. "The cement floor got pretty hard to sleep on, but I managed to keep me calm and would respond to my whining."
In her research Armstrong sought to find out what foods coyotes prefer. She said her research showed that they preferred rabbits and rodents.
ARMSTRONG SAID little research had been done on the coyote, a member of the den's troop. The study found that
She also said some research had shown that they pretain tainted meat to fresh meat.
"Most of the research that's been done on food preference has involved taking the time to carefully observe
"Often an animal is diseased, weak or already dead when a coyote eats it," she said.
Armstrong, who received a $100 undergraduate research grant last summer, is
She said that although all laboratory animals had to be trained, she didn't want them to die.
"SO I NAMED them Wanca, Noapa and Yamani, Dakota Sioux for one, twa and three," she said. "The Indians and coyotes are both natives of North America."
When the pups were two months old, she said, they went through a series of vicious injuries.
Coyotes can be found in every state. They weigh from 30 to 40 pounds when full grown.
A social hierarchy is always established in a group of coyotes, Armstrong said.
"Yammi, who was the largest and most curious, was the dominant one," she said. "Nompa was second and Wanca, who has only three legs, was third."
Wanca lost a leg when she was attacked by a female adult coyote.
"BUT WHEN they were eight months
in the nursery, arranged places in
the nursery," Arnott told me.
Armstrong said the dominant member enjoyed being chased and would often try to
"They chase each other until the one who is caught rolls over on her back and screams," she said. "They have different sound of that are social communications."
She said a coyote call is sometimes used by hunters to lure coyotes.
"The sport has become the American alternative to a fox hunt," Armstrong said. "Coyotes are used in field hunt trials to judge how well dogs hunt."
Hunters sometimes chase coyotes in jeeps until the animals wear out, and then they return to their burrow.
"Same hunters use CBs and others dig pup outs of den," she said.
Kansas has an open season on coyotes, except during the one week when riffle hunting for deer is allowed. A coyote pelt may be worth $40 to $60, she said.
*1* THINK coyotes are used as food.
*2* Some coyotes are sometimes mistaken for coyotes. But if sheep and cattle are grazing on open range, you can't expect them to be immune from predators.
Armstrong said she would also to do research to determine whether coyotes have
She said that although dogs were color blind, coyotes' eyes had rods and cones, which could allow them to differentiate between colors.
This Summer Earn College Credit in New York City at Parsons School of Design
This summer come to New York and learn in Greenwich Village, at a school famous in the art world as well as in a town famous as a cultural and art center.
Parsons School of Design is pleased to announce a series of summer courses designed for College students who wish to supplement their art studies. These courses are taught by some of New York's most distinguished professionals and run from July 5th thru August 1st, Monday thru Thursday. They allow students ample time to see how theory is put to practical application in the great arts capital of New York. Each course carries 4 credits.
Courses of study include:
Photography
Painting
Graphic Design
Interior Design
Interior Design and
Environmental Analysis
Sculpture
Lithography
Dormitory space is available.
For more information on courses,
registration and accommodations mail
827-563-1040.
Parsons School of Design
Summer Programs Office.
66 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10011
Please send me more information on Summer Study in New York at Parsons
Name
Address
City/State/Zip
Ten Towering Reasons to Live Here.
1. Electricity: PAID
2. Natural Gas: PAID
3. Water: PAID
4. Cable TV: PAID
5. Location: ON CAMPUS
6. Transportation: ON BUS ROUTE
7. Security Patrol
8. Emergency Maintenance: 24 HOURS
9. Swimming Pool: OPEN MAY-SEPT.
10. Name: the TOWERS.
joyhawker towers apartments 4603 w. fifteenth
Now leasing for fall '79. Come in early for best selection.
100
Cou couotes
Spending another afternoon exercising her coyotes, Jujil armstrong offers YamiM a milk bong while Wanza wafts for another.
Staff photo by CHRIS TODD
Loud noises and strange people frighten the them to approach even Armstrong with caution each time they approach.
SPIRIT SQUAD 1979-80
THE FOUNDATION OF CHAMPION TALKS
Preliminary meeting is April 2, 5:30 pm
AUDITIONS:
1) Routines will be taught at the clinic
2) No experience necessary.
3) Everyone is invited to try out.
QUALIFICATIONS:
1) Regularly enrolled student at KU
2) Minimum grade point average 1.8 overall
3) A sincore interost in KU athletics
The KU Spirit Squad is sponsored and governed by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation. All students interested in learning more about becoming a member of the squad are urged to attend a spring orientation, and all questions will be answered and routines for trying out will be taught.
Auditions
--lemon tree 11 W.9th
Clinics Allen Field House
Tuesday -5:30-7:00 April 3
Monday
April 9 -5:30-7:00
Wednesday -5:30-7:00 Anrll4
Tuesday — 5:30-7:00 April 10
Thursday -5:30-7:00 April 5
Wednesday -5:30-7:00 April 11
Thursday 5:30-7:00 April 12
Minority students are encouraged to participate
Proliminaries April 14 —9:30 a.m.
Finals April 21 —9:30 a.m.
SCHUMM FOODS COMPANY
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Offer Good Thurs. thru Sun., March 29-April 1 No Coupons Accepted
The Downtown Eating Establishments
6
Thursday, March 29, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Budweiser presents...
TASTEBUD
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OH BOY! PIZZA!
WAIT A MINUTE,
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I DO, BUT I LOVE WHAT WE GET WITH IT.
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KING OF BEERSER • ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC • ST LOUIS
Thursday, March 29.1979
7
KANSAN
Sports
Staff photo by BARB KINNET
Successful sprinter
Lori Green, KU freshman, has made the transition from high
school to college competition. Heading into the outdoor season she has already set a big Eight record in the indoor 300-yard-run.
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Green goes on winning
By CARLOS MURGUIA
The name and finishes are the same but the competition has changed.
Sports Writer
It is still Lori Green finishing at or near the
hitched line of competing against high school
athletes.
At the collegiate level, the KU sprinter produces the same results—first place finishes. Green, a freshman, has wasted little time in showing the Big Eight that she wants to continue where she left off in high school.
"I felt really good at the meet," green said. "I ran good races because I ran my own races. In high school or college, winning is always more satisfying then losing."
Earlier this year, at the conference indoor championship meet, she turned in outstanding individual performances and won the 60-yard dash with a time of 7.02. She also won the 300-yard run in a Big Eight record time of 35.35.
GREEN KNOWS about winning. While attending Topeka West High School, she was the Kansas 4A champion in the indoor 60 and outdoor 100 and 220 for three straight years. She holds the 4A state records in the 100 (11.3) and the 220 (24.6).
Another adjustment she has had to make has been getting used to indoor competition.
"In high school, practice was shorter and less demanding," Green said. "I've worked a lot harder in practice here. It seems all we do is run, run, and run. There's more emphasis on technique here which is good because I need work on mine."
"IN HIGH SCHOOL, the only time I ran indoors was at the state indoor meet." Green said. "I hate running indoors and I don't get out. It too short of a race for me. I don't get out of the blocks fast enough and in the 60 start is the most important thing."
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If her weakness is the 60, her strengths are the 250 and 300, races more suited to her.
Green said her legs and her attitude were responsible for most of the success she has had.
"I run each race differently," she said. "I need to work on my reaction to the starter's gun. I have to work on exploding out of the blocks.
A direct relationship exists between Green's performance on the track and her horizonal ability.
"I DON'T WORRY about winning." Green said. "I don't believe winning is worth getting sick over, I have seen people get sick before and after a race. You cann't be scared and run a good race. If I run my best, then I am satisfied.
"I don't consider myself to be a cocky
person. I'm confident but also a bit nervous.
I am not sure if I will succeed."
run within my limits and realize that there are going to be times when it just isn't going
KUIs fortunate to have Green even an one or her bad days. Many other schools also
Green was recruited by national track
pawns Iowa State, UCLA, Prairie View A &
B.
"KANSSA WAS always my number one choice," she said. "I like the facilities and the program. After high school, I decided I wanted to stay near home."
She said she hoped to continue her success in the outdoor season for the Jayhawks. But whatever happens, Green said she wasn't sure about her future in track after college.
ATTENTION SOPHOMORE MEN
"I believe in doing what's best for you," she said. "Right now, competing in meets is great and I really enjoy it. There might be a few people who don't have my best interest and I1D do something else."
KANSAS ALUMNI ASSN. OFFICE
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Thursday, March 29, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Men to Oklahoma meet
By MIKE EARLE
Snorts Writer
Hoping to improve on its opening performance, the KU men's golf team starts play today in the 54-hole Oklahoma Intercollegiate tournament.
In the squab's first tournament,
the Inchestur Intercollegiate during spring
basketball, which was called "Basketball"
in 1926.
Coach John Hanna said he was disappointed with his squad's performance, but said he was confident the team would improve.
"The golf course at Pinehurst is very hard," Hanna said. "It was the first tournament of the year and we didn't have much opportunity to practice outside."
"I think we'll play much better this weekend."
KU WILL BE part of another tough field in the two-day tournament, which will be played at Shawnee, Okla. Defending national champion Oklahoma State will be on hand as will powerful Wichita State and Oral Roberts.
Graduate student Jim Doyle, a three-year letterman, and junior Mark Steiner, head the list of five KU qualifiers for the tournament.
Steiner carried a 78.7 stroke average last year, the top returning mark on the squad. Doyle was KU's top golfer at the Big Eight tournament last year with an 10th place finish.
The other three KU entrants are Doug Anderson, Mark Crow, and D.R. Sensenman.
Anderson and Crow, both transfer students, were the top men last year at
Senman, a sophomore letterman, has the second best average on the team so far.
"We need to get outside to play, practice and hit balls to improve. It's still early, I'm."
"WEVЕ GOT people playing 14 or 15 holes extremely well, then getting double or triple bogeys on a couple of holes," Humna said. "I don't have consistency and not of playing much."
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KANSAS UNION
843-1211
WANTED
INTERESTED PEOPLE TO SIGN UP FOR COMMITTEES
Free University
The Free University is an organization that serves as a clearing house for volunteer instructors in the Lawrence-KU community. It offers as well, an opportunity to students free enrollment in academic and non-
Besides putting together each semester's curriculum, we are also organizing several one day seminars on a variety of topics. We have a lot of room for new ideas and improvements on old ones.
Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of Orienteer Kansas, M. Oread Bicycle Club, and the KU Sailing Club as well as many special outdoor events. We nee people to help out in all areas.
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Chess, Game Tennis, Bridge, Backgammon,
Football Go, Arm Tarnish and Quiver Club
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indoor recreation
We're looking for people to help coordinate these events and others.
New ideas are always welcome for other indoor recreational activities.
Come in and apply.
Fine Arts
The Fine Arts area of SUA acts to supplement the "arts activities" of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for staging workshops, performances and exhibits in any of the arts areas . . . literature, art, drama, music, and dance.
Just like the big shows downstown, only better because we offer so much more and for a lot less.
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We are looking to expand the wide variety that we already have which includes: Population series, Summer series, Midnight series and many others.
Under consideration are a great directors', series, Sunday specials and an international series, visiting filmmakers and
SPECIAL EVENTS
We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands. One of our specialties is the outdoor concerts that include several groups and lasts as long as six hours.
Special Events involves a lot of students when it comes to promoting a show. Security, ushers, hospitality and light and clue are areas that must be con-
Check us out and see what you can do to help
SUA
TRAVEL
SUA Travel offers a unique, less expensive way to travel for the KU student.
not going to get worried for two or three weeks.
Past trips have gone to Padre Island, Vail, Appalachian Trail, the Kentucky Derby and many other places.
Creative minds are needed to promote these programs and develop new ideas.
ideas, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all a part of SUA Forums.
FORUMS
The Forums committee brings nationally recognized people to the University for stimulating and thought provoking programs. We also keep in touch with people on campus and in the local community who have something to say to a University audience.
SUA Public Relations is responsible for promoting the image and activities of our programming board to the students and the University community. Anyone with creative ideas for promoting SUA is encouraged to apply.
We need innovative people like you to help us with our people programs.
This coming year's activities includes fall and summer orientation and the Madrigal Dinner.
pr public relations
EXPERIENCE IS NOT A NECESSITY HOWEVER INTEREST IS REQUIRED MARCH 30 IS THE SIGN UP DEADLINE, SO DON'T DELAY FOR MORE INFORMATION, STOP BY THE SUA OFFICE IN THE KAN-
SAS UNIQN OR CALL 864-3477
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
"In our last tournament in the fall, we beat Wichita State and Nebraska. They finished 17th and 21st in the NCAA tournament last year. If you can compete with those teams, I see no reason why we shouldn't have a successful year."
KU women's golf team overcame gusts of wind up to 40 mph yesterday and grabbed the first round lead in the 36-hole Wichita national. The final round will be played today.
Kansas leads in first round of tournament
After yesterday's play, Kansas led second-season Nebraska 356-373. Southwest Missouri State is in third with 380 and Wyich State shot a 394. Kansas Newman is also competing, but does not have enough players to qualify for a team score.
The Jayhawks were paced by senior Nancy Hoins, who trails leader Karla Schroeder and junior Jennifer firing an 86. Claude Johnson of KU was in third with an 87, and Lisa Howard placed seventh with a 90. The two other KU participants in the field, Jenny Rogers and Michael Berry,
According to Kansas coach Sandy Bahan, the high winds that swept over the course of Hurricane Harvey made it difficult to
The squad will return home Friday for a meet with Kansas State and Nebraska.
"We were fortunate just to keep the ball on the course." Babaan said.
Track moves outdoors
The men's track team opens its out- door season Saturday and it's not a moment too soon for head coach Bob Timmons.
By GENE MYERS Sports Writer
Timmons is satisfied with KU's indoor season, capped by a tie for fourth in the NCAA Indoor March 10, but he prefers competing outdoors. This weekend's meet is the Arkansas Relays in Fayetteville, Ark.
"I'm just more receptive to outdoor track," Timmons said. "A lot of exciting things happen indoors, but the Olympics are much better off in track. That's where track should be."
Another reason for Timmons' preference is the added sprint races outdoors, and KU's strongest suit is its sprinters.
“There’s only one sprint indoors,” he said, and “we’re a strong sprint team. Not very many of our people feel that the big sprint is our race, and that’s the big sprint indoors.”
"OVERALL, we're just a stronger team outdoors, and because of our sprinters, we're better off outdoors."
'CELEBRATE OUR
The sprint corps should be bolstered by the return of Anthony Coleman, Kevin Newell and Deen Hogan. Both Coleman, Ku's top hurdler, and Newell, the top spinner, missed the NCAA Indoor with hamstring problems.
The Arkansas Relays shape up to be a showcase of talent from the Big Eight conference. The host Razorbacks, and the visiting champs, and Missouri, Big Eight champs, will be there, along with 15 titles, visitors from the two conferences.
Hogan, a freshman from Detroit, also has been battered by hamstring pulls and competed in only two races all season, one in early January and another in February. In both races, he came within a hundredth of qualifying for the NCAA Indoor.
"IT SHOULD be a tough meet," Timmons said. "We have the momentum after the NCAA Indoor."
"We felt bad about finishing second in the conference indoor because you never like to lose. The NCAA Indoor showed us we can win." *liabilities. Now is our chance to get going.*
Tennis team faces Iowa State in dual
KU's women netters open their Big Eight conference season tonight when they play a dual match with Iowa State University at Alvamar Racquet Club.
"Iowa State will finish in the second division of the Big Eight," Kivisto said.
He has said the Jayhawks could finish as high as third in the conference.
The Jayhawks will be looking to improve on their 7-2 spring mark, and KU coach Tom Kivisto said he did not expect a difficult match against ISU.
Games delayed again
The matches start at 6:30 p.m.
The Jayhawks are scheduled to meet Emporia State University Saturday at 1 p.m. for a doubleheader at Quigley Field. Kansas coach Floyd Temple said yesterday that Terry Sutcliffe and Dan St. Clair would be starting pitches in the two games.
KU's off-rescheduled doubleheader with Baker University has been postponed again. The games originally were set for March 24, but have been reset twice since then. The games had been scheduled for today, but have been delayed again at Baker's request.
Rally lifts Royals to 11th victory
From the Kansan's wire services
FORT MYERS, Fla.—The Kansas City Royals rolled with three runs in the eight inning and defeated the Cincinnati Reds 4-2 in a exhibition hockey game in 2019 exhibition baseball games.
Kansas City scored three runs in the eighth off Manny Sarmento. Coming up against Chicago, he
and Darrell Porter opened the lining and tied the score 2-2. Brett scored on U.L. Washington's 14, choice and, after a first against Zelb, Warwick score on Fred Patels's sacrifice飞
CINCINNATI took a 2-1 lead in the top of the eighth win after Dog Dew Bird when Champ Summers, who had doubled, scored two shots. Bob dropped Dave Collins' two-off fly ball.
started for Cincinnati and yielded six hits, including Porter's run-scoring singles in the game.
Brett, the Royals' All-Star third baseman who had surgery on his right thumb March 2, didn't start, but made his spring debut in the fifth inning, grounding out and singling to left. He had only one fielding chance, catching a pop up.
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Thursday, March 29, 1979
9
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TONIGHT: Howard Sankard of HUD will talk about "INNER CITY REVITALIZATION AND THE DISPLACEMENT OF THE POOR" at 7 p.m. in 233 Malton Hall. The Gay Services of Kansas is sponsoring the Rev. Rob Shivers, who will speak about "GAYS AND THE METROPOLITAN COMMUNITY CHURCH" at 7:30 p.m. in Parcor In C will speak about "WOMEN IN CRIME." At 7:30 p.m. in Serota, he will talk about "GROWING UP UNDER APARTHEID: SOUTH AFRICA PERSEVERSITY" at 7:30 p.m. in 318 Winslow Hall. The KU KARATE CLUB meets at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson Gymnasium. The KUADR CLUB meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Union. A STUDENT RECITUAL will be held at 8 p.m. in Swarthmore Hall. B.T. Spence, director general of the Northern Ireland Housing Executive, will speak on HOUSING PROBLEMS IN NORTHERN IRELAND at 8 p.m. in 134 Wescoe Hall.
TOMORROW: Howard Sumkai of HUD will talk about "PROGRAM EVALUATION OF FEDERAL HOUSING PROGRAMS" at 9 a.m. in 105 Marvin Hall. The KU Committee on South Africa will sponsor "RALLY AGAINST APARTHEID" at 11:30 a.m. outside Strong Hall. The KU FENCING CLUB will meet at 5:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson Gymnasium. The University Singers will give a SPRING CONCERT at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
-UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
RSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
- Compiled by David Edds
The Lawrence Fire Department had a ladder set in nine school trash dumbers in nineteen school trash dumbers.
FIRE
A fire official said the department
worked at 8:18 p.m. at Central
Police Station, 1900 Maple Ave.
The department received seven more reports of dumpster fires between 9:27 and 10:14 at Broken Arrow Elementary, 2704 Brooklyn St.; Lake Ridge, Louisiana St.; New York School, 323 New York St., where two dumpsters were on fire; Sunset School, 601 Schwartz; West Junior High, 2706 Harvard; Derrifield School, 1014 Hilton and Hillcrest Elementary, 1045 Hilton.
No damage was reported from any of the fires
The cause of a fire which occurred March 16 at 634 Greever Terrace has been listed as
University Daily Kansan
improper storage of rags that had been soaked in a flammable liquid.
The fire caused $7,000 damage to the structure and $2,000 to the contents.
The owner of the house was listed as Carol Danner. Her son, Lon Bishop, was home at the time of the blaze and suffered minor burns on his feet.
BURGLARY
A balance scale valued at $1,960 was reported missing Tuesday from Malott Hall. Police said keys or some other door opening device appeared to have been used to gain access to the room where the scales were kept.
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History, treatment and care conditions of Puerto Rico
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History, tradition and current conditions of Puerto Rico 14:00 - 16:30
Thursday, March 29 7:00 p.m. Strong Auditorium, 300 Strong
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Panel repair plan deadline relaxed
By PATRICIA MANSON Staff Reporter
NOCHE VENEZOLANA
Staff Reporter
"In an effort to show the state is bending over backward to be fair, we gave the contractor an extension of five days," Briscoe said.
Secretary of Administration's office, said yesterday that his office had given the contractor an additional five days to submit reports in order to repair the cracked and chipped panels.
The state has extended the deadline for a contractor to submit a plan for repairing about 140 panels that make up the outer walls of the new Bell Memorial Hospital at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Featuring traditional Venezuela foods
CULTURAL PROGRAM
Slide trip through Venezuela/Cultural items/Traditional dances and songs
Friday, March 30
Dinner: 6:00-7:30 p.m.
Lawrence Community Blogs
Cultural Program: 7:30-10:00 p.m.
Sponsored by the Venezuelan Club and Minority Attorneys
Charge for Dinner: $3.00 Adults/$1.50 Children
Cultural Program Free
Charlie Briscoe, a lawyer in the Kansas
town until April 1, which was the original deadline.
LAST WEEK, the secretary of administration sent a letter to DiCarlo threatening to terminate his contract if the plan were not completed in 10 days.
Briscoe said the contracting company, V.S. DiCarlo General Contractors, had asked for an extension because its president, Vincent DiCarlo, would be out of
Jim Williams, of Peters, Williams and Kubota Archives, 2500 W Sixth St., and Ernie Coleman, county federal funds office, the county commission yesterday morning.
All the above programs will be held at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
Courthouse project grows
If the request is approved, Douglas County would contribute 50 percent of the cost from 1880 federal revenue sharing and pay the remainder. Historical Society would pay the remainder.
The "weatherizing" project, which originally suggested the installation of storm windows, has come to include remortrating the stone exterior and cleaning and applying silicone waterproofing spray to the walls.
A project that was originally intended to cut utility bills for the Douglas County Courthouse has grown into a renovation with an estimated price tag of $272,200.
Coleman said cleaning the exterior stone masonry would remove discoloration caused by aging and weather and provide a surface for the silicone waterproofing spray.
Coleman said, "The idea is to cut maintenance in the long run."
by cleaning and spraying the stone, the lifepen of the stone and new mortar would be the same.
The cost of re-mortaring the stone would be $70,000. The cleaning and spraying would be
Also, 140 aluminum replacement windows, to cut winter heat loss and utility costs.
The remaining $20,000 would be used to
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IAWS CONVENTION
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MARCH 28-31 University of Kansas at LAWRENCE, Ks.
The 140 panels were found to be cracked and chipped last May. DI-Carlo was then told that the panels were "extremely badly damaged."
A vice president of V. S. DiCarlo refused to comment on the dispute.
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Friday March 30 7:00pm Hoch Auditorium
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If the contract were terminated, the state would not pay DIlCarlo the $25,000 it owed on the contract.
ALLEN WIECHERT, University director of facilities planning, said last week that some of the panels had been repaired, but many still were cracked.
The state is withholding the $25,000 until the district about the panels is settled.
Tickets:
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Non-students $2
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Wiechert also said DiCarlo had passed the dendrite test in the contract for completing the project.
Jerry Dickson, an assistant attorney general, said he and KU officials had instructed Dickson to disconnect DirciLo did not submit a plan for repairing the panels. Dickson, however, refused to say why.
The commission has to approve the request today so it can be submitted to the HHS.
install a skylight, refurbish outside doors and add two vestibules.
Peters, Williams and Kubota also designed the recent courthouse remodeling.
The commission tabled the request until this morning to read the information support.
Dickson was appointed by the attorney general's office to handle legal problems involving the United States government.
الأفضل. نحن بحاجة...
پدرش به ابن موسی گفت: ابْنِ موسى بن هارون بود و فرمود: پس او را بر تو نزدیک نمایید، پس من بابت او رفتند.
وبعد از آنکه او را بر بابت همه پسران برگرفته، فرمود: پس او را بر تو نزدیک نمایید، پس من به تو رفتند.
پدرش به ابن موسی گفت: ابْنِ موسی بن هارون بود و فرمود: پس او را بر تو نزدیک نمایید، پس من به تو رفتند.
پدرش به ابن موسی گفت: ابْنِ موسی بن هارون بود و فرمود: پس او را بر تو نزدیک نمایید، پس من به تو رفتند.
بابت ابن موسی گفت: ابْنِ موسی بن هارون بود و فرمود: پس او را بر تو nزدیک نمایید، پس من به تو رفتند.
بابت ابن موسی گفت: ابْنِ موسی بن هارون بود و فرمود: پس او را بر تو nزدیک نمایید، پس من به تو رفتند.
بابت ابن موسی گفت: ابْنِ موسی بن هارون بود و فرمود: پس او را بر تو nزدیک نمایید، پس من به تو رفتند.
بابت ابن موسی داد: ابْنِ موسی بن هارون بود و فرمود: پس او را بر تو nزدیک نمایید، پس من به تو رفتند.
بابت ابن موسی داد: ابْنِ موسی بن هار昂 بود و فرمود: پس او را بر تو nزدیک نمایید، پس من به تو رفتند.
بابت ابن موسی داد: ابْنِ موسی بن هار昂 بود و فرمود: پس او را بر تو nزدیک نمایید، پس من به تو رفتند.
بابت ابن موسی داد: ابْنِ موسی بن هار昂 بود و فرمود:遂 او را بر تو nزدیک نمایید، پس من به تو رفتند.
بازوردار...
بعد انتهاء عملية ترميز الفصل الثالث، فإن المستخدم بيده يراجع إلى السطر التالي وهو
الرسالة الرئيسية:
21- إذا كان لديك شركة ذات المملكة أو الموجودة في الشرق الأوسط، فإنك تستطيع تأسيس شركة مكتوبة في المملكة أو الموجودة في الشرق الأوسط من خلال تعريف قائمة التحويل بأي من الترخيصات المناسبة لك لمثل هذه الخسارة. وفي حالة وجود خسارة غير مستقبلية في الشرق الأوسط، فإنك تستطيع تأسيس شركة مكتوبة في المملكة أو الموجودة في الشرق الأوسط من خلال تعريف قائمة التحويل بأي من الترخيصات المناسبة لك لمثل هذه الخسارة.
MARCH 30
8am-8pm
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لمن
له :
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Downtown Lawrence
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We've changed our times— To Suit Your Times
Mon-Wed. Thurs-Fri. Sat. Sun.
10-6 10-9 10-6 1-5
10
Thursday, March 29, 1979
University Dafly Kansan
Preliminary budget suggestions determined for 29 organizations
In budget hearings last night, four Student Senate committees made preliminary recommendations on funding for 29 student organizations.
Budget hearings began Monday night. All committees recommendations will come before the House.
The Finance and Auditing Committee gave its approval to a $21,245 line allocation to the Student Senate's operating budget. This amount will be supplemented by all summer activity fee revenue for fiscal year 2013. The total budget is an estimated $42,845.
Finance and Auditing also ruled that there was no duplication of services between the Douglas County Legal Aid Society and the KU legal services program.
In the past, Legal Aid has relied on the Student Senate for 8 percent of its budget. Representatives of the society said they felt that the legal services program could not.
DURING THE present phase of legal services, Steve Ruddick, legal services
lawyer, and his staff are not allowed to represent students in court. Legal Aid can represent a student only if he falls below a $350-a-month income level.
Finance and Auditing also voted to approve an amendment to the Senate revenue code that would tight restrictions on spending from the Student Senate Unallocated Account, which is used for fail budget hearings.
The Student Services Committee made preliminary cuts in budget requests from 16 organizations. The groups' recommended allocations and original requests were:
Douglas County Legal Aid, $3,450 from $3,300; Academic Freedom Coalition, $250 from $44; Volunteer Clearinghouse, $44 from $1,843; Alpha Phi Omega, $55 from $1,661; Students Concerned with Disabilities, $365 from $396; Consumer Education and Student Union, $2,189 from $7,976; and Amnesty International, $295 from $155.
KU CAMPUS Veterans, $1.135 from
$1.702; Commission on the Status of Women,
$1.348 from $2.500, KU Ecology Club, $1.149
from $2.735, Women's Coalition, $785 from
$995, KU Students for a Radioactive Free
Kansas, $250 from $688, Non-Traditional
Student Organization, $1.035 from $2.220;
and KU-Y, $1.585 from $2.160.
The Culture Committee made preliminary cuts in budget requests from five student organizations. The groups requested allocations and original requests were:
Operation Friendship, $490 from $555; Tau-
Sigma Dance Ensemble, $1,807 from $2,107;
University Dance Company, $1,151;
Fiction and Fantasy Club, $335 from $1,500.
THE COMMITTEE tendedatively decided not to fund the KU Chinese Martial Arts Club and the KU Gung Fu Club on the other group had shown signs of permanence.
The Academic Affairs Committee heard budget requests from five groups. The groups' recommended allocations and original requests were:
Architecture Engineering Association,
$240 from $616; Student Bar Association,
$90 from $880; Philosophy Club, $300;
Student American Pharmaceutical
Association, $109 from $150; and Association
of Students interested in Asian Studies, $210
from $65.
Two paintings by Norma Gnage, Guamica, Puerto Rico, sophomore, valued at $100, were stolen last weekend from a studio in the Visual Arts Building.
But administrators say thefts of student work in the building are not a problem.
Theft rankles artists
Gnage said she placed her paintings on her rack in Room 420 of the building when she left Thursday, and by Sunday they were gone. She said she thought losses like hers were a problem that the administration should solve.
"I was supposed to hand them in by this week and now I don't have them at all," said Gaugh. "Now I can only turn in three days." He placed on. But somebody took my best ones.
"I pay my tuition and I am entitled to one rack to keep my paintings on," she said. "You feel confident enough to leave art in your studio." She walks in and takes your semester's work."
OTHER STUDENTS said the lockers were too small for large works and the studio doors were always open and unlocked. They agreed that thefts of student work and supplies were frequent, but seldom reported.
Kaylyn Munro, Colorado Springs, Colo., junior, is a printmaking major but she frequently works in the painting studios. She said printmaking students could leave school and drawers that were unlocked but less exposed than the painting storage racks.
"The doors are always open and anyone could walk in and take off with a lot of stuff." she said. "There's no way to get there without unless you cart them home every night."
Faculty and administrators in the Visual Arts Building said that the problem of stolen student work was not new and that little could be done.
DWIGHT BURNHAM, associate professor of art and Gage's painting instructor, said that the theft of Gage's work was the first he had heard about this. He said he considered having studios locked or than having studios locked for security.
"There's no security in the studios, but then if you lock things up nobody can work," he said.
Peter Thompson, associate dean of the School of Fine Arts, said that the thefts were not bad enough to require any measures to be taken.
"We don't have much work stolen," he said. "I would venture to say that more pursues are stolen out of classrooms than work out of studios on campus.
"However, students can always take things home even though I know it's convenient to leave them. It's not really a problem."
A career in law without law school.
Bus service to start on Saturday
After just three months of study at The Institute for Paralegal Training in exciting Philadelphia, you can have a stimulating and rewarding career in law or business — without law school.
As a lawyer's assistant you will be performing many of the duties traditionally handled only by attorneys. And at The Institute for Paralegal Training, you can pick one of seven different areas of law to study. Upon completion of your training, you'll be able to apply Service will find you a responsible and challenging job in a law firm, bank or corporation in the city of your choice.
The Downtown Lawrence Association will be sponsoring a Saturday bus service to carry students and faculty to and from campus, with the director of the association, said yesterday.
The Institute for Paralegal Training is the nation's first and most respected school for paralegal training. Since 1970, we've placed over 2,500 graduates in over 85 cities nationwide.
If you're a senior of high academic standing and looking for an above average career, contact your Placement Officer online at info@chapman.com.
We will visit your campus on:
Tuesday, April 3
The Institute for Paralegal Training
Museumplatz 21
80539 Dresden
Approved by the American Bar Association
235 South 17th Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 (215) 732-6600
PARKER
"Quality of Life For Lawrence"
Quality Education
I help achieve the highest degree of professionalism in our public schools.
Schumm for Lawrence
Vote
II. Continued support for Kansas University
Schumm City Commissioner-April 3
Pd. Pol. Adv. Pd. for by the Robert Schumar for city
Commission. Committee Steve Edmonds, Ed. Box 1194
THE ATTIC
927 Massachusetts Street
Bon Jour!
Venez voir nos arrivants
nouveaux de Paris
(Translation:
Come in and see our
new arrivals from Paris!)
Also see our beautiful
American designer jeans
by Calvin Klein!
Tres 5-13
Announcing: The first official SUA Academy Awards Contest Give us your best guess!
Prizes include:
1st prize: 10 free movie passes + *Gone With the Wind* poster
2nd prize: 6 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
3rd prize: 4 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
4th-30th prizes: 2 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
Mark one in each section.
Coming Home
The Deer Hunter
Hawsean Can Want
Mills Mill
An Unmarried Woman
BEST PICTURE
BEST ACTOR
Warren Beatty
Heaven Can Wait
Gary Busey
The Buddy Holly Story
Robert De Niro
The Dear Hunter
Laurence Olivier
The Boys From Brazil
Ion Voight, Coming Home
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
BEST DIRECTOR
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Bruce Coulson. Coming Home
Rolls-Royce. Coming Home
Comes a Horseman
John Hurt. Midnight Express
Christopher Walken.
Tucker Hart. Hart
Jack Warden. Heaven Can Wait
Anyone is eligible to enter, but may enter only once in a case of a tie, the entry received earlier will win. All decision are final. The game will be played in the Kansas Union, DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES IS WEDNESDAY. April 4th, 4:30 PM. The game will be announced Wednesday. April 11th
BEST DIRECTOR
___ Hal Ashby, Coming Home
___ Michael Cimino,
___ The Deer Hunter
___ Woody Allen, Interiors
___ Warren Beatty &
___ Buck Henry, Heaven Can Wait
___ Alan Parker, Mastery Express
Contest rules:
BEST ACTRESS
BEST SCHOOL MEMBER
___ Ingrid Bergman,
Aultum Sonata
Ellen Burley
Same Time, Next Year
Iill Clayburg.
Unmarried Woman
Jane Fonda, Coming Home
Geraldage Page, Interiors
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Dryan Cannon,
Heaven Can Wait
Penelope Milford,
no
oague Smith, California Suite
Maurene Stapleton, Interior
Meryl Streep, The Deer Hunter
Name_
Phone
"The Downtown Merchant Express will begin service on Saturday, March 31, and it will continue through the rest of the spring semester." Schumm said.
sua films
Schumm said the merchants had received many requests for the service. The merchants will pay the Lawrence Bus Co., the company KU on wheels rents its buses from, for the service. KU on Wheels bus passes therefore will not be honored.
The KU bus service, KU on Wheels, runs Monday through Friday, but no service has been offered for Saturdays. The new service may not be provided by Student Senate funds.
"Student and faculty who want to ride
that will pay 25 cents ride," Schumann said.
Use Kansan Classifieds
The bus will begin its service at 10 a.m. in front of Eldsworth Hall. From there it will go by Jayhawk Boulevard to GCS-Porlin Hall on the way to Ninth and Massachusetts streets. The service will make its final return from downtown at 3:45 p.m.
Schumm said the buses would operate twice an hour and would stop at all scheduled stops on the route. Bus schedules will be available on all KU buses tomorrow and schedules will be advertised in The Kansan today and Friday.
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
Dairy Queen Sponsors
LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL BAND DAY BENEFIT
Friday thru Sunday
10% of all our sales will go to help send the band to Portland, Oregon
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FUNNING DIEFEN
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Are the Kitchens Always Closed on Sundays?
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Serving: 5-9 pm
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Dinner $4.90 including Drinks.
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(913)841-4666
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(913)841 4666
天
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Thursday, March 29, 1979
11
University Daily Kansan
Editor's Note: Five candidates are running for three positions on the Lawrence city commission in Tuesday's election. A shopping mall planned for south of the city has been approved. The last week the city annexed the land where developers want to build the wall. Can
didates also responded to the issue of fluoridation. The commission voted two weeks ago to continue fluoridation but approved the installation of a water tap at the city treatment plant for non-fluoridated water.
Stories by Shirley Shou
City attracts Schumm
D. R. BLAKE
Robert Schumm
Robert Schumm, a Lawrence businessman, says he probably will live in Lawrence the rest of his life, and is concerned about its future.
"I've become more involved with the see and have a tremendous interest in seeing Lawrence progress," he said yesterday, when he appeared in seeing it maintain that quality.
Schumm, owner of four downtown restaurants, has refused to take a stand on the proposed shopping mail. He said he did not intend to visit downtown Lawrence to be a conflict of interest.
Scharmn said he had decided that an nexation of the land for the proposed mall
"The city should have control or lose control," he said. "But I expect to take time to study the issue closely and make sure my decision is the best for Lawrence."
Schumr, who is a graduate of the KU School of Journalism, is a director of the Downtown Lawrence Association and the Chamber of Commerce.
IN THE AREA of transportation, Schumm said Lawrence should start looking for a public transit system. But, he said, Lawrence would have to move slowly and keep the system in balance with the city's needs.
Schumm said the commission probably made the correct decision earlier this month on the question of fluoridation. However, he would not commit himself on the issue.
He said one of his priorities was neighborhood redevelopment and the preservation of existing historical homes and commercial buildings.
"It if comes up again, I'd study it though," he said. "But I would have to wait."
www.nytimes.com
Florence "Danny" Drury is running for the city commission because, she says, she is interested in government and because there are so few candidates.
Florence Drury
"I felt the voters ought to have a choice," she said.
Drury said one of her objectives was to listen to citizens and treat them fairly. She also planned to spend one night a week at city hall so citizens could talk to her.
Drury wants to give voters choice
She said some individuals have told her that the felt their concerns were not given answer.
Drury, who manages the Thrift Shop of 945 Vermont St., opposes building a shop.
ping mall here. She said that a large enclosed mall would not be a wise use of energy and that the proposed location would add to the city's transportation problems.
She approved annexation of the land where the mail would be built, but said she would not vote to change the zoning from residential to commercial.
DRURY SAID the city would eventually establish a public transportation system. Although a bus system failed in Lawrence and a city needed to try public transportation again.
"We need to be more flexible," she said,
"and we need to look at alternatives."
Drury said Lawrence must also look ahead to handling the expected energy shocks.
Drury, who taught math for two years at public schools in Lawrence, said she was in touch with the students.
"It is important for a large segment of the population, particularly the children," she said. "The solution of a tap for non-potable water is our city treatment plant was a pretty good one."
Other concerns Drury expressed included improving the efficiency of municipal services at decreased cost, "people" support and support of the neighborhood associations.
Hot issues lure Binns into race
Lawrence's mayor, Donald Binns, is running for re-election to the city community council.
"I have to confess, I revel in the controversy," he said yesterday.
Bimns, who has been mayor for two years and a member of the commission for four years, has been on the opposing side of Lawrence's most recent controversy, a lawsuit last week he voted against annexing land where developers propose to build the mall.
"BUSINESSMEN MUST take care to expand their businesses. They have aimed
"I would much rather see development downtown," she said. "But if it is denied now, I will make a plan."
at the college market and ignored too much the rank and file citizens," he said.
The city has made an investment in downtown, he said, and the development of the inner city and in the 600 block of Massachusetts is one of his priorities.
He also supports Bus 62, a system of transportation for the elderly, but opposes a public transportation system in Lawrence now.
"Fares account for only one-third of the cost," he said. "A transit system with a large number of restaurants."
Binnis said a public transportation system had been tried in Lawrence before but had not found success.
very cautiously in considering a public transit system.
"I DON'T THINK you would want to subsidize it," he said.
Despite expected increases in the cost of gasoline, Burns said a public transportation system would help.
"I'm not sure we're going to change the habits of people by putting in a system," he said.
In the recent fluoride controversy, Binns voted to retain fluorides in the city water
He said government was a means of helping people and he also said he would like to eliminate hostility toward city government.
10
Donald Binns
Landreth wants shot at city office
You only go around once, says Jack Landreth, and that is why he is running the race.
"It's something I haven't done, and I thought I would take a shot at it," he said.
Landreth, owner of a local insurance company, said he had been asked to consider running, and then decided he would run for the city commission.
But he has refused to take a stand on the most controversial issue during the campaign.
"My vote on zoning depends on studying the facts as they are presented," he said. "It's only fair to listen to the proponents before making a decision.
"The city shouldn't be put in a position of regulating competition," he said. "We must look at the cost the city would have in comparison to the benefits."
LANDRETH SAID the thing he would like to see most in city government was open communication between all facets of the community.
He said more long-range planning should be done. Although Plan 95, a plan for the city's growth, is a good guideline, he said, needs specific plans for man traffic arteries.
Landreth said he favored fluoridation.
"Listening to the amount of evidence the commission studied. I agree with the action of the Commission."
(1)
Landreth, a Kansas State University graduate, said he liked living in Lawrence.
"There is a great spirit of cooperation between the University and the townpeople and their community," he said. "Lawrence is a desirable place to live and I would like to keep it that way."
Jack Landreth
Francisco says variety needed
Many people feel they are not represented by the City Commission, Mariel Francisco says, and she wants to change that.
Francisco, a school instructor in the KU's School of Architecture and a 1973 KU graduate, said the commission should represent a variety of views.
Francisco opposes a regional shopping mall here because she said malls in other areas have contributed to downtown deterioration.
"Downtown affects all us, especially the neighborhoods, and it is important they maintain their present relationship with the downtown area.
**WE NEED to look at matters over time. "When you add a park space, you need to add staff. If we amex land, we need to have a fire station that can take care of those."
One issue that requires a set of solu
tions is transportation, she said. Street widening, cicle paths, taxis and a bus system should all be considered as parts of the transportation problem.
On the recent fluoride controversy, Francisco said she would vote against citywide fluoridation until another choice was provided.
She said the commission had not investigated ways of delivering non-food water to residents, although she commented its decision to install a tap for non-fluoridated water at the community center.
Francisco said she would spend one day a week in the city offices if she were elected and would give up one of her parttime jobs.
She has been on the Community Development Advisory Board in Lawrence for two years.
1974
Marci Francisco
MARCH 30th & 31st ...
TANTRUM!!
with . .
$2.50 admission
All tickets available at The Better Days Records & The 7th Spirit Cellar.
Doors open each night at 8:00 ...
Shows will begin at 9:00!
TONIGHT!!
SONNY TERRY & BROWNIE McGHEE
with . .
USED PARTS
Calendar of Events
Fri. April 6
Sat. April 7
Wed. April 11
F-S April 13-14
Sat. April 21
Wed. April 25
F-S April 27-28
Wed. May 2
Fri. May 4
Sat. May 12
F-S May 18-19
Calendar of Events
Fri. April 6
Gary Burton Quartet
Sat. April 7
Pat's Blue Riddim Band
Wed. April 11
Jan Hammer w/Dry Jack
F-S April 13-14
Fast Break
Sat. April 21
Pott County Pork & Bean Band
Wed. April 25
Lamont Cranston
F-S April 27-28
Cole Tuckey
Fri. May 4
Earl Scruggs w/Skunk Valley Boys
Supre Drya
Sat. May 12
Asleep At The Wheel
F-S May 18-19
The Lawrence Opera House
7th Spirit Club
642 Mass. St
(913)842-6930
and 7th Spirit Club
the Secrets*
The Lawrence Opera House
7th Spirit Club
The Lawrence Opera House
642 Mass. St
and 7th Spirit Club
(913)842-6530
12.
Thursday, March 29, 1979
University Dally Kansan
Spencer Museum will resound with music from another period
The setting will be the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art instead of the chambers of an Elizabethan castle but the music to be performed this Sunday will be the same as it was in 16th and 17th century England.
At least that is the goal of J. Bunker Clark, professor of music history and director of Collegium Musicum, the KU music ensemble dedicated to performing medieval, Renaissance and baroque works in their original style.
"Our goal is to get acquainted with older music for the enjoyment of the group and the audience." Clark said. "We also try to keep the style of performance as close to the original as possible. In the vocal group you attempt to eliminate the vibrato that singers use today. We also attempt to use old instruments."
CLARK SAID the concert Sunday will give four types of instruments: a viola da gamba, the of the ancestors of the contemporary violin, viola and cello; a positive organ, a small upright instrument; and a virginal, a small keyboard instrument that resembles a harpichord. Clark said the group of used套扣bubs, used套扣shawns, crumbers and baroque flutes, the ancestors of the contemporary oboe and flute.
Sunday's 3:30 p.m. concert at the museum will be a program of English music from the Elizabethan era. Edwin Smith, Thomas Moreley, William Byrd and Nathaniel Giles will be featured as well as some较精彩 lute songs, Weeken and John Bernet.
and Smith were being performed for the first time since their composition.
CLARK SAID two of the works by Gyles
Music performed by the Terpsichore Troupe, a recorder ensemble directed by Alan Luecke, Concordia graduate student, would complete the program. Clark said.
The 21 collegium singers and a smaller madrigal group called the Nymphes and Shepeardas are directed by John Williams, Lawrence graduate student in voice. Williams, a countertenter who has the range of an alto, will also sing a solo verse anthem. Williams is instrumentation of the group was flexible and the type of music performed varied.
"LAST SEMESTER, we featured Roman composers," he said. "Sometimes we do a theme from a certain period of music in our programs."
The Collegium Musicum style of ensemble
originated in 18th-century Germany, Clark said, for groups of amateurs who wanted to perform the popular vocal and ensemble music of the day.
"The only difference now is that the groups don't perform contemporary dance."
The KU ensemble originated during the war and was one of the first of its kind in the country.
"Interest in these groups has been growing steadily," he said. "Almost any college and university in the country has a number of professional groups as well."
"There's just an interest in learning about and playing older music. One of the aims of the group is to perform little-known music. I think we're succeeding."
Film depicts difficulties of Venezuelan Indians
A film that describes the plight of Venezuelan Indians at the hands of a U.S. evangelical missionary group will be presented Friday as part of Venezuela Night.
The film, "I Speak to Caracas," will be shown in the Lawrence Community Building, 115 W. 11th St.
The film, which has won three international film festival awards for best documentary, was released November, is narrated by a Venezuelan Indian shaman. A shaman is one of the characters in the film.
In Venezuela, the evangelical New Tribe Mission, is committing to help people in vulnerable groups, according to Lourdes Gouvea, Caracas, Venezuela, graduate student. She said yesterday that the missionaries are causing a whole culture to disappear.
"They believe the people are savages and worship evil spirits." Gouveia said.
In the film, the shaman denounces the actions of the missionary group. Gouveia uses a variety of religious and just religious activities. Equipment used for detecting uranium had been found in the film.
The film causes such a stir when it was shown a few months ago in Venezuela that a new movement, the Movement for National Identity, was founded.
Gouveia said the movement was attempting to make connections with the two groups, who shared the similar problem of a system that did not respect
Control of the Venezuelan Indians' lives by the missionaries was sanctioned in 1915 by a ruling from the Venezuelan government, she said.
Mass. st. run
MAKE THE RUN FOR
30c DRAWS
All Night
THE
BREWERY
714 Mass
THE
BREWERY
714 Mass
BEFORE THE RUN Jog in to
Mexico City Mexican Restaurant
CASA de TACO 1105 Massachusetts
12 TACOS ONLY $6
---
BIGK'S
708 Mass.
ALWAYS A BARGAIN
Mon-Thurs $1.00 Pitchers 7.9 PM
Tuesday 50° Schooners 7.9 PM
Friday DRINK & DROWN 1.7 PM
Guys—$3 Girls—$2
WATCH FOR BAND NIGHTS
SAIL ON IN!
LARGE
DRAWS
50¢
the
Harbour
1031 Mass.
SUNSHINE
RUN RUN RUN
to
QUANTRILLS
Q
SALOON
$1.25
Pitchers
Run on in
to
ROCKY
J's
8th & Vermont
(1 block east of Mass.)
30c Draws
$1.50 Pitchers
All Night Long
Run on in to ROCKY J's
BIG K's
708 Mass.
MASS STREET RUN SPECIAL
Live Music by
NIGHT SHIFT
No Cover
$1.50 Pitchers
BIGK'S
TONIGHT . . .
Don't Miss . . .
SONNY TERRY and
BROWNIE MCGHEE!!
TONIGHT . . .
Don't Miss . . .
SONNY TERRY and
BROWNIE MCGHEE!!
$3.00 in
advance
$4.00
day of
the show
with
Used Parts
Doors open at 8:00
Show at 9:00
The
Lawrence
Opera House
7th Spirit Club
Calendar of Events
F-S March 30-21 Tantrum w/Secrets
Fri. April 6 Gary Burton Quartet
Sat. April 7 Pat's Blue Riddim Band
Wed. April 11 Jan Hammer w/Dry Jack
F-S April 13-14 Fast Break
Tues. April 17 Boom Town Rats
Fri. April 20 Gatemouth Brown & Pott County
Sat. April 21 Pott County Pork & Bean Band
Wed. April 25 Lament Cranston
F-S April 27-28 Colo Tuckey
Wed. May 2 Earl Scruggs w/Skunk Valley Boys
Fri. May 4 Spyro Gyra
Sat. May 5 David Grissman
Sat. May 12 Asleep At The Wheel
Wed. May 16 David Allen Coe
F-S May 18-19 Albert Collins
Listings subject to change call us for information
642 Mass. St. (913) 842-6930
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, March 29, 197
13
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accreditation, goods, services and employment
Acquisition, procurement and distribution of
ACA-FRIEDERMAN CAMPBELL LLP. MAIN STREET,
AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS.
CLASSIFIED FOR FINANCE. 111-747-2000.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
15 words or fewer ___ $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional word ___ 01 02 03 04 05
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
1980 .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
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.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the URK business office at 804-6543.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Zen practice: daily 8 p.m. Introductory table
classes (4 hrs): daily 10 a.m. Introductory table
class (3 hrs): daily March 25, 10 a.m. Laughs-Charge
Brains
GREAT FOOD, GREAT SERVICE just like you like! If YY Restaurant open more than 10am, S-360 or S-360.
**INVEST.** In good health and your future lifeFood is now in stock at $15 per shareand is now jacking at $20 per sharewith promotion for $8 divided the first yearIn addition, you get a free mealPaul at B1-1434 or F.O. Box 891, London, England
DEFEND YOUR INALIABLE RIGHT TO
STUDIES. Students for a Liberation Society in the fight to
overthrow the government.
FOR RENT
Apt. 2 BR and efficiency close to pumpey UT11-
area paid clean, quiet and comfortable. 832-765-
6220.
Apartments and rooms furnished. Most units paid. bedroom KU and nearby town. No laundry.
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW MENTIONED
unturned from $700. Two laundry rooms, large
mortgages, free parking. OU bus route
INDOOR MOUNT at the mall or via 824 Frontier. Next door
842-444 or via 524 Frontier. Next door
Still looking for a place to call home? Nahmith will be here to assist you in the manager of the year. Stop by and look on over your new equipment. Stop by and give you all the details and send you an email to naha@nahmith-hall.com 1809 Nahmith HALL, Nahmith Hall Drive, 843-852-9556
Christian Housing. Now and Summer. Close to
seasonal amenities. 842-503-8281 between 2
keepers.
Paint safely, systems state three. Carese and adorn
decorate the painting with acrylic paint.
Clean up, paint well, air dry. Call artist.
Confirm with artist, arrange view. Call artist.
Mark 1 & 11 Apartments renting for summer holidays. Includes two bedroom apartments, 7 min walk to campus, 9 min walk to campus, conditioning carriage, balconies, off park access, carriage balconies, off park access. Mar for add info. 105 Min Apt # 82 - 820333
HOUGHTON PLACE: ITS BULL-FILL-BUT—We can make 10 and 12 month burgers together. We will rent for the summer term those quartz cakes — and checked. 2400 Alamann, 841-7575. 3-30
Sublease Apple-Craft Apt. for Summer, 2 IBR
Room, swimming pool, $250-$450
Ballroom, 814-361-8000
Most sublease furnished by a bedroom apartment must be furnished in the same manner as the unit. 8175 suites, 8141-8323, 869-8406, ask for S.K.Y.
Most subsurface sites once two bedrooms TraitIdle
Call 842-3993 only. Available 4-2
Call 842-3993
Get your housing now. Home, payoff, home,
buyer, renters, rentals.
Raten: 845-160-1611; 845-232-9222
Raten: 845-160-1611; 845-232-9222
Two bedroom. Two bathrooms, att. al. Old Edge.
Kitchen. Kitchen area, air conditioning, gas
heating. Kirchen, air conditioning, gas
heating. Guest rooms.
Must substitute 2 bedroom furn. apartment,
1-May $290 oo- motives - Call 841-356-8700
2-30
Spending the summer in Lawnware? Do you yourself want to spend time on ONC computers in my apartment! Call 414-239-7878.
Tayhawker TOWERS Apartments
1603 West 15th
Jayhawker TOWERS Apartments
1603 West 15th
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our
DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
You know, those great looking apartment buildings are great as inside and out and are available for great inns as well.
Beautiful 2 bedroom duplex at Minneapolis St. for rent, two months old, C/A and new kitchen with kitchenette. Call (718) 534-3900.
Roommate wanted. 2 BIR $120 month + ½ yr
4-13
842-107-60
ROOMS AVAILABLE for next semester-in-30
member student cooperative, within easy walk-
away location. Licensed Lawyers from $50 to $80,
using utilities.
B41-8494 or B41-8412. Ask for Tom
4-5
*Groups*
5. bedroom house for rent during the summer.
Partially furnished. Call 842-9386.
4-4
Must sublease unfurnished 2 bedroom Mals and
Room June 1st to 867 person. Call 814-850-
814 or 814-850-839.
Summer suitor's 2 bedroom, Appletappt Apt.
3, Swimming Pool, Close to Campus
1080 West 5th Street
Female to submit 1 BR Apr. for summer aid and acid-free filtered shampoo. Female to submit winter dryer. Non-smoker preferred.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now an Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to students. Please call or email: ralyn@art.mit.edu for ration 31 For exam preparation. *New Analysis* on Western Civilization. Criteria; Mila Bookstore, & Oread Bookstore. **U**
Attacker, starter and generator. Specialist in motive drives, power units and motive MOTIVE ELECTRIC 834-9600, 2000 W, Gth, 16 hp. ELECTRIC 834-9600, 2000 W, Gth, 16 hp.
60c Schoenners at Louse's every Friday from 2
littl. 5.
4-3
Fender Murray Bridge Guitar with strings, straps, cable, neck, slide, tuner, speaker cord, speakers, cord and covers. Very good condition. Fender Murray Bridge Guitar with strings, straps, cable, neck, slide, tuner, speaker cord, speakers, cord and covers. Very good condition.
SunSneez - sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription lenses are our selection,稼察镜, 841-579-7700, 841-579-7702.
WHY BENT? When you could own this beautiful building, you would never have to take it like new. Like new appliances, disqualify, central air, washer-dryer area, 6 smoke alarms, skipped and waterhed layer areas, 8 smoke alarms, skipped and waterhed layer areas, breezes, tree tipping garden, storage building, roof breezes, fire alarm systems.
WATERED MATTRESSS $59.83 2 year warranty
WHITE LIGHT 704 Mass 138,136 /ff
ENTERTAINMENT
MON-THURS 7:90-8
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7:40-8
50. Schooners & $1 Pitcher
FRIDAY 1:70-8
DRINK & DROWSN
EVERY WEDNESDAY
708 Mass.
HERE'S WHAT'S HAPPENING!
BOKONOON IMPORTS LTD. Organic shampoo,
conditioner, and body wash designed to
gorge, lift, and beat in the midwest.
www.bokonoloons.com
Integrated Arm® Keyword, $100 to $600 weight
of arm. All new models have 24/7
$300 conv arm charge. $100, $419, $849 or
$1,599.
BIGK
GUIDE
Watch for truck on Sundays selling produce,
Foods, Bills & Ill. Also wood crafts
Canada Teck Deck. Latitude RK-120 two legway deck
with 360-degree incline. Lightweight, with 725 mm
peak decibel indicator lights. $275 per room.
Available for lease or purchase at www.canadianteck.com.
INFINITY QA loudspeaker. brand new with 5-
warranty. Lowest and sound greatest. 2-30
hours.
DAILY
74 Honda 750 Price negotiable Call 842-1825
after 6:20
Pioneer stereo, amplifier 80 watts, like new.
$50.00 negotiable.
3-30
7800 miles. Serious inquiries only. 811-494-3641. Paul
Trifium TR-7 Repair Operations Manual, 1972-
1977 New 815 Call: Bell M41 814-7748 3-20
Tanight
Rock Cornish Game Hens
Roasted with Orange Glaze
$5.29
April 5, 6, 7 - June Pazzo
Classical Guitarist
The Elkridge House
123 Maple Street
(210) 841-9000
74 Honda 750 Price negotiable Call 842-182-1630
MINGLES DISCO
now sending hirs d'œuvres
4 to 7 Monday, Friday
imm. inad, 2220 Miaw, 8th
64h
Have an Awesome night! might be 20.00 refund on $6.00
with this offer. Pay $19.00 for Drug Store, 8011 Mass., 835-742-8000. We'd
like to hear from you!
...
It's enough to make Julia Child's midday water-
melon salad. With the addition of Corned Beef Cone and Salami Shoppin' Jelly, it's a delicious meal.
SAVE! on
Mountaineer books, size 11, cost $320, sell for
$95.00 each. Mountain Books, size 8, cost
$90.00, make offer. 842-2488
1974 Norton XL500 Commands: 4500 Miles, Fast,
Fast, Fast. Exe: Exceptional Comms
1974 Norton XL500 843-2527
10 Speed Men's men, include lighn, powers, lock, and chain $50 or offer. CALL 842-8778-3798
Saint-Corina Typewriter like, like new.
Must sell immediately. CALL 841-1165. 3-20
PAUL GRAY'S
Jazz Place
JAM SESSION
NO COVER
Yamaha 1971-750, 26e. New Chair, Pipes, Point.
Callek Derek 842-6562
Hway 40 N. Lawrence
1963 MG3 first year made Engine totally rebuilt,
82-109 Extra hard. Extra hard.
82-109 Battery, 82-109 - $30 - 30
- v20 Mass. 843-575
* * * * * * * * * * * *
NAVY, on EXCEPTIONAL, SETTEO EQUIP-
MENTS, SOLAR FIELD, NEW ZEALAND,
SU2000 - new TEMPORARY SU2000 - NEW
ZEALAND
NAMES are opening up on questionnaires this GARAGE
GALLERY, which will be used to assess the quality of
garages in the city. (320) 521-7200, Saturdays,
Sundays and Thursdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
www.garagegallery.com
Mercedes Benz 220 250 300 new tires, 10,000 miles on new engine. K3200. K414-7627. 5 miles on new engine.
1955 National Acoustic-Electric Good
Condition 841-1491 3-30
Black & White portable w/ TW rolling stand
Calls alternately, early evening: 842-842-342
Friday through Saturday
TONIGHT!
— FOLK BLUES LEGEND —
SONNY TERRY & BROWNIE McGHEE
Showtime—9:00
Doors Open—8:00
The Lawrence
Open House
$4.00
7th & Mass
Citizenpro™ Mark I V 1975; $3,800 mobilite; new
corporate pwn I V 1975; $2,600 mobilite; new
corporate pwn I V 1975; $2,600 mobilite; new
One pair of Norlite skis, size 9 l/2 m,
Used once. $75.00 Call 841-7912 4-4-4
1974 Moustang II, 4 cav. 4 speed, AC, excellent
condition, and Lowe Alpine backpack 423-6200
LOUKE'S
EVERYTHING ATTENTION 2-5
152 ECORDINES
$10 PER CHOICE
100% WATER
1879 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
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3084 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3085 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3086 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3087 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3088 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3089 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3090 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3091 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3092 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3093 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3094 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3095 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3096 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3097 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3098 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3099 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3100 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3101 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3102 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3103 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3104 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3105 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3106 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3107 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3108 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3109 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3110 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3111 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3112 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3113 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3114 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3115 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3116 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3117 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3118 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3119 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3120 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3121 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3122 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3123 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3124 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3125 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3126 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3127 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3128 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3129 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3130 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3131 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3132 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3133 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3134 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3135 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3136 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3137 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3138 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3139 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3140 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3141 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3142 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3143 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3144 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3145 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3146 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3147 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3148 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3149 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3150 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
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3153 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3154 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3155 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
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3157 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3158 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3159 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3160 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3161 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3162 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3163 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3164 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3165 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
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3167 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3168 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3169 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
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3171 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3172 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3173 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3174 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3175 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
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3177 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
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3179 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3180 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3181 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
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3183 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3184 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3185 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3186 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3187 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3188 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3189 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3190 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3191 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
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3195 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
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3302 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
3303 Tupon City, Ctft Gt Liftchip. Am-FM 456
330
Hwy 40 N. Lawrence Across from Icabid
Batteries 30
Exquisite antique trunk for sale. Beautifully reu-
painted. Laundry 1809 $450. Call 814-6812. 4-4
1975 Yatasha 6200, 5,000-kilowatt, excellent condition (includes
wheelchair lift), 725k, best offer 8345.247 after 6 months,
725k, best offer 8345.247 after 6 months
RESTAURANT & PRIVATE CLUB
STEAKS, SEAFOOD & ITALIAN CUISINE
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
WED. — SAT.
Memberships Available
711 W. 23rd
Carriage
Lamp
round back Madis
Shopping Center
Batteries
3, 4 & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
$24.30 with
All with
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION'
THE BATTERY SHOP
842-2922
FOUND
Y
JVC AM-FM Sliter Stores 75-W. Ch. (90-
260) 1-800-342-8474
Stores 2 Tape and/or Accumulator Cases
Films: 2 Tape and/or Accumulator Cases
1973 Vega GT7, good condition. New radial tires.
AM. FM/BM. Storz 840-286. 4-4
Single key found 17th. & Ohio. Call 841-8242 t.
claim.
74 "500" Duster, 36.690 miles, new tires, excellent condition. Call 814-4511 before 5:30 p.m. or 8:30 a.m.
HELP WANTED
Women's prescription gloves with rose colored prescription gloves at Bailey Hall, C4201-1577. Display Harma H64-1235.
Small, yellow taffy bitson, about 5 months old,
claim by calling 46-9720 at 5:39 p.m.
Now taking applications for Fountain & Grill
Restaurant, please visit www.fountaingrill.com.
Apply in person at Vitas Restaurant, 1579
North Ave., New York, NY 10026.
Summer Jobs New York Party Cruises Co. 51 Parks, 5,000
Summer Jobs New York Party Cruises Co. 51 Parks,
Mountain Cat Co. 4,800 E. Fevervale, Kalsgill, Pa.
EXOTIC JOBE LAKET TAHOE,CALIFORNIA
581-764-3900,581-764-3900 summer.
Over 35,000 people needed in Cali-
taharauro, ranches, cruisers, river rafts, & more.
581-764-3900,581-764-3900,581-764-3900,
581-764-3900,581-764-3900,4-23
581-764-3900,California 59560
JOBS MEN WOMEN SAILBOATS
CRUISE SHIPS No experience. High pay! See Carribean, Hawaii, Europe, Worldwide Summer job at Carnival, Carnival Cruise Line, Box 60129, Sarasota, Ca. 92580 4-24
One of the Midwifes oldest moving and storagemen is now taking summer applications for positions as midwives (60%) or only apply. Apply in person at 13:00s W. 62rd St., 715 N. 93rd St. (913) 631-2828 or partially employ. Applicant
Delivery Drives Needed. Salary — commission.
Delivery Drives in person, in appointment, 4 to 6pm p.m.
or call 823-323-8920.
One of the Midwest's oldest moving and storage companies, DOW, provides drivers and helpers. Will train qualified employees to meet DOW requirements. Hard work need only be demonstrated by a phone call or call (919) 613-1400. Good Opportunity.
Established Lawrence Hand needs solid, innovative, creative Rock Handist. Call 843-2571-49.
Opening for part time evenings and weekend Nurses Aid for female quadripleuria in nursing could be available all manner Will train Provide training 6-12 months 841-792 841-793 841-794 3-Ack for Child 3-29
A student assistant for female quadripleuritis
needed for Man. afternoon and Wed. morning.
Students would be assigned a student to school (thus own vault), living with them, and a substitute (Call: 641-8423 or 642-801-2011).
Landscape Laberence Oil and paint time positions,
Landscape Laberence Garden Center, New York
& Garden Center, New York 2-390-564-8711
Work summer in homewood area. Substantial earnings possible. Five-hour area. Many sales opportunities. HIGH PLAN $1,954 404WHN! Call colleague Nate. 362-727-1101. Interview available. 3-80 today.
Research Assistant in Neuroimmunochemistry, B.S. from University of Kentucky, UK, with one-year progressive助理护理 $4,000-$6,000 per year in NYC since March 20, 1978 through April 9, 1979. Master's degree in Biological Sciences, or foreign information please contact Professor Deodre M. Browning, Ph.D., Department of Biology and Technology, University of Kansas, and Technology University in Kansas. University of Kansas is an equal Opportunity University.
Research Assistant; Graduate student in Biology, Engineering or Computer Science to assist in research activities and device. Requires experience in active motor control of a robotic device is initially for 12 months, with possible commitment to a 4-week preferred. Salary negotiable. To hire please contact: J.W. William J. Bell, 603 Hall Street, New York, NY 10017.
Full time secretary needed for Child Development office. Position requires office worker, primary data manager, and recordkeeper. Prior experience required. Send resume to Job Center, 100 Kentucky Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15213. Opportunity Employer
Hunter's-waltzes, fun area restaurant and club.
Celebrate spring with a spring party and summer parties at Hunter's-waltzes.
Cookes position, opening very soon for load handling. Work includes grill cooking, sandwich making and baking with grill cooking equipment. Full and part time from environmental availability. No travel required to be efficient and aggressive. Call Anna or Rebecca at 612-374-5888.
Positions open 2nd & 3rd shifts for waitresses
Position in person County Kildare
W320, W338
Help wanted at Two Vista, 1780 W. 210th Street
shift from $6.95 per hour. Agree to pay
up to $300/month.
$600 per 1000 mailing cardware. Guaranteed
95% full service. MYHIAH (802) 892-3990.
FN 7581
KCU Upward Board Program has opened for enrollment with weekly high school students during the fall of 2016. Students will be offered a comprehensive literacy, reading or English, and commemorative celebrations of their graduation. Students will be offered a sensitivity and creativity necessary to work with students in grades 7-12. Applications available at Sea Crest Academy, the WPAT, or high school teachers preferred.
LOST
15 yr old female form black, prey & white hairline,
wilder tail, dark brown eyes, 841-346-1168, 841-346-1169,
www.hairline.com
HELP! Look early in Sitting. Break out again, gold ring, engraved with initial 2. In vicinity of Computer Center (Mirrory). Great vertical cutout. Yes? If found, please call 415-847-6622 or 415-847-6623.
MISCELLANEOUS
THISIS BINDING COPYING - "The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center in headquarters for green bindings and copying in Lawyers. Let us see you at 8M or phone at 932-601-7808."
NOTICE
DEATH WHY BOTH? ECKANKAR
Absolute Sense of Sound 862-842, 841-
839, 838, 837, 836, 835, 834, 833, 832, 831, 830, 829, 828, 827, 826, 825, 824, 823, 822, 821, 820, 819, 818, 817, 816, 815, 814, 813, 812, 811, 810, 809, 808, 807, 806, 805, 804, 803, 802, 801, 80
J. HOOD BOOKKEEPER The Boots school librarian, who also works as a book cover and papyrusist in all search fields. Go to www.hoodbooks.com for more information on the collection of a full search service for books and materials from the library system. 440-811-9444 (440) Mau Laird, Lawrence, KS 80411-8144
VETS—Are you getting your benefit May-
day? Compare VetInsights 864.847-8478.
www.vetinsights.com
PERSONAL
EASY EXTRA INCOME Extra $1500 Buffett Income
EXTRA INTERESTS 959 million Interest
EXTRA ENTERPRISES 959 million Interest
RECKS BIKE SHOP is now upright 280 Rajah, Md.
Arizona. Rebeka's 1052 v rear rack. 841-662
quick, quick repair. 1052 V rear rack. 841-662
quick, quick repair.
PFX HILL SURGERY CURE. Applying up to 200% of the cost for a 360° surgical procedure (750-1150). 974-520-3100. 1400-835-6100.
BARRIOE SPECIALS! $16 Moo. Tues. Fri. Sat.
MAID'S DIRECTION NIGHT! $16 picture
$16 picture
To Knise and Maun:
The loft is ready and waiting
Get psyched for Friday night.
The Red Head and the Old Lady
Glaub Leibman counseling referrals now handed
through UCI. 861-536-8360 or Headquarters 841-
290-736-8360
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Absorption up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing, Birth Control, Counseling. Total Litigation for appointment. General Surgery for appointment. 490 St. Worth, Oakland Park, Ks - 812-365-4900.
Gee Schmitters and 160 Pipers every Friday
after 2-5 and 11am at Lincoln's bar.
4-5
FXY: Would you like some tips on how to quit
the information Center's FXY line? (e.g.,
call the information Center's FXY line.)
Gibraltars: Monday dine beer (plus liquor porch).
4.4.
Bring this ad to Glithart & pet 20% off cover.
Visit www.glithart.com or Thursday
Hillery Retail Shoppe Center
BUSCH BASH
GREAT FOOD, GREAT SERVICE just like you
have at Olive Garden. Mon - Wed 10am,
Fri - Sat 9am, Sun 11am
f. 5pm. 11am.
Bring this ad to Olbrish & Gibraltar and receive two (2) discount cards of our Olbrish & Gibraltar. 4/4
Shopping Center
Gibraltar once hour Tuesday and Thursday at 9.90 p.m.
Ladies dinner and drink for free, 8.90 p.m.
$10 Pitchers 7-9 PPM. Mon-Thurs. Tuesay and
Saturdays. Tern-Toys.打巨牛 KN
A Great New Taste in Draft Beer
KU PRISHEE CLUB will meet Saturday, March 13th at the Riverside Pavilion. Male or female must be a placer. Information is available by calling (800) 425-2690.
Starts Monday!
Wanda at Hairi Birth wants to show you the joy of her life. A beautiful 1928-1937 portrait, about her birth, 1929 West 842-864-601.
3-Night Special Watch for Dotails
It Could Only Nappen at THE HAWK
Resident: waited summer, $80 monthly, in unit.
Roommate: hired as bedroom, $80 monthly,
quiet, quiet, 411-623
Attractive young man just coming out not seek
other young man. Call anytime day or night.
(212) 856-7890
LOWENBRAU PARTY Tomilhit al-试魚魯
bourger and wine 3:29
MUSICIANS established R.C. Lesterwood based
in Los Angeles, CA and its larger
fans. Songwriters, band members, self-esteem
and business coaches.
The Great Gildersleeve, will have you laughing till you cry, perhaps a tear at old fashioned Madame. You will be surprised and delighted.
KOSHER SABBATH DINNER
Hillel presents:
Friday, March 30 5:30 p.m.
Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive (Across from Hiltcrest Shopping Center)
$1 Members — $2 Non-members
Sunday, April 1, 12:30 p.m.
ALL YOU CAN EAT
BLINTZE BRUNCH
Yechiel Golander speaks on the "Situation in the Middle East Today"
L.J.C.C. 917 Highland Drive
(Across from Hillcrest Shopping
Center)
$1 Members — $2 Non-members
Attention all men! Young, hearty individual with a great sense of humor and much looks keen. We look for people who are well known and dress Profile appropriate to be at least 21 years old, nationality, and photograph. If possible, please contact us to apply.
Oil-Baby, I am keyed for Plaza Party on Sat.
YOUR RAINOW
5-29
OOK-Administration for the Governor, Dallas, Kansas.
Assistant Attorney at Law, St. Louis and the Atlantic Office, and the April
Attorney General Office.
Need help in math or CS1 Get a tutor who can
provide your math or CS1 problem. Please
841-767-9171
Burdett 841-767-9171
The University Information Center is now accepting applications from applicants who have been May 25 and August 19, 2019. Applications will be processed on a first-come, first-served basis. Deadline is at 6 p.m., April 13, 2019 or April 13, 1979 for each position. For Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action, see www.university.edu/affirmativeaction.
CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT
Jazz Concert, Jazz Concert, Jazz Concert, Jazz Concert
and black jazz blue jeans and polo shirt.
Participate in a jazz concert for one year. You will be introduced to the instrumentation for jazz concerts. Participate in a jazz concert for one year. You will be introduced to the instrumentation for jazz concerts.
Class 3 Kluon Class, Winners announced!
Tired of feeding yourself? Naimah Hall is offering for the first time ever a boarding plan. The plan can cost you $2,500 but it works well if you choose this plan. SKIP MASHTIM HAIL, 919-348-8538. Naimah Hall, 812-8538.
HBRWriting EDITING. Your manuscript, theme or title paper edited into an effective, grammar-free, and concise book, thinking with precision and smoothness. Outlines and articles also available. Editions 842-1351
Will take your children in my home in Exc-
18-3578. Experienced, references M-3578.
EXPERT TUTORIALS, MATH 1009-122, GPS 644-3772
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14
Thursday, March 29, 1979
University Dally Kansan
[Photograph of] Margaret Chase, a prominent women's rights activist and civil rights leader, speaking at a podium. She is wearing a tweed coat and glasses. The background is dark with a curtain.
Emily Taylor
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
Protest ...
From page one
the boy, but he said the gun probably was carried to show that peace was worth keeping.
DURING THE protest one marcher, Muhiedee Eblisharari, Bengahaja, Libya graduate student, said, "We are not against the war and we will be with justice. A peace that will last forever."
Mark Cerney, Lawrence junior, a counterprotester, said, "These guys are just making a lot of trouble here. The protesters are just creating a disturbance."
Many of the protesting what said a state should be set up in what is now israel “in which no religion prevails. It should be a place for Christians, Moslems, Jews and abluts.”
Other protesting students said human rights were at the center of the problem.
An unidentified student from the Gaza Strip said, "The peace is not fair.
(President) Carter talks about human rights. The Palestinian people didn't get it.
**MOHAMED SHERIF**, Tripoll, Libya
not giving
protesters the proper
feeding.
"We are looking for peace, the counter-protesters are blocking our way, the police are shutting down."
Hill said 14 KU police officers were assigned to keep the protest orderly. He said six plainclothes officers and eight uniformed officers watched the protest.
Hill said the protest was video-taped by the police.
"The tape could be used for reference by prosecutors, but that is up to the city or other authorities."
However, Thomas said. "We also will use the tape for our own good. The tape will be used in the training and instruction of officers."
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Capt. Verner Newman of the Lawrence police department said 13 officers of the Lawrence department were on campus to train training session for supervisory personnel.
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SEVERAL LAWRENCE police officers were on campus during the protest, but they were not involved in keeping the demonstration under control.
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According to Ann Eversole, chairman of the University Events Committee, the committee had been notified of the proposed plan for the Organization of Arab Students' week.
4. Important Notice for Admission into Italian Medical or Veterinary School
5. PLEASE BE ADVISED THAT STUDENTS INTERESTED IN THE MEDICAL AND VETERINARY SCHOOLS FOR THE COACHES FILE PRE-REGISTRATION FORMS AT THE EASIest DATE PRE-REGISTRATION MARK DEADLINE DATE ESTABLISHED BY THE YEAR OF SALE.
"It is just a coincidence that the officers were on campus today. The training session was on campus."
The Institute has been responsible for processing more American students for foreign medical schools than any other organization.
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But, Eversole said, notification is not necessary as long as the University's secretary is present.
EVERYTHING IS GIVEN TO THEM.
I 35 KC
Equality battle still being waged former dean tells IAWS delegates
By MARK L. OLSON
Emily Taylor, dean of women at the University of Kansas from 1956 to 1974, opened the 1979 National Convention of the Intercollegiate Association of Women Students last night with colorful stories of past IAWS conventions.
883-4210 or 883-2535
Staff Reporter
But she quickly pointed out to the delegates gathered in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union that the 1970s, the "Decade of Water Quality," threatened decline of IAW's membership.
Taylor is director of the office of Women in Higher Education for the American Council on Education. She said there was a case involving the 1963 release of Betty Friedan's book, "The Feminine Mystique," but that resurgence has faded steadily since that time.
"the battle for equality is far from won," she said. "In some ways, the attitudes ofcolonial women have changed."
TAYLOR BLAMED much of the decline
on a misinterpretation of the effects of Title IX by women's groups.
She said many women had interpreted the passage of Title IX to mean that they had achieved their goals, that there were "no discrimination," when in fact it was only a beginning.
TITLE IX requires equal treatment of men and women in federal aid programs.
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"The business of bringing women into full
"The business of with men is not finished." she said
The last national convention at KU was in 1955, Taylor said, and would not have fit in the Ballroom because of the great number of women and groups that were involved.
TAYLOR ADDRESSED fewer than 70 people last night.
"Some of the best discussions I've ever had have been at IAWS conventions," she
In the 1950s, Taylor said, IAWS was a in the hardest group we saw. It was publicity, publicly publicized carefully, and made good use of the relationships they had cultivated with many of the day's public figures.
AT ONE POINT, she said, noted feminist Gloria Steinem was invited to speak at a national conference. She usually paid a substantial speaker's fee, but she not only waived the fee she appeared at the conference but also donated.
Taylor said sacrifices must still be made. She said she heard a discussion the other day that dealt with a topic she had debated when she was attending IAWS conventions.
KU's tot project studied
It concerned the ability of a woman to combine a career and a marriage.
said, "I hope the fun hasn't gone out of IAWS—surely it hasn't."
Three members of the President's Committee on Mental Retardation arrived in Kansas City, Kan., yesterday to study KU's Juniper Gardens Children's Project.
The visitors are members of the Prevention Task Group on Environmental Concerns and Minority Affairs. This study is part of a national evaluation of projects that have had a significant effect on educational and economic problems in inner-city areas.
The committee members are preparing a report at the request of Joseph Califano, secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, to submit to the president.
"We are looking at exemplary projects specifically aimed at prevention of retardation from environmental, that is, sociological factors," she said. "A member of the task force, said yesterday."
Juniper Gardens is one of the top five such projects in the country," she said. "It is a beautiful and serene environment."
THE JUNIPER GARDENS Children's Project was established in 1965 by members of KU'S Bureau of Child Research, the nursery school for children and family life and special education, and local
Ends Thursday
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"We've been talking about marriage and careers for a long time," she said. "Women have succeeded in combining them for a long time, too. The sooner we quit talking about choices, the sooner we can get down to reality."
Ends Thursday
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A bird is running in the air. There are clouds and a sun.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
Fewer students use credit option See story page 11
Friday, March 30. 1979
CLOUDY
Vol.89,No.121
Lawrence, Kansas
Senate OKs death penalty
ByGENELINN Staff Reporter
TOPEKA- The Kansas Senate narrowly approved a death penalty bill yesterday that is likely to become the state's first death sentence in 1972. The Court struck down the old law in 1972.
The bill will go before the House today or Monday. The House had approved a death penalty bill for first-degree murder earlier this year by a wide margin, 82-42.
Death penalty foes in the Senate have repeatedly blocked Kansas House efforts to reinstate capital punishment in recent years. This year's House bill passed the Senate 21-19.
The bill passed by the Senate yesterday would impose the death penalty for felony murder as well as for first-degree murder. Felony murder is the killing of a person while committing or attempting to commit a felony, according to the bill.
"Some people will say they favored some punishment for first-degree murder, but I don't," Frey said. "I haven't taken a poll, but I don't think we'll lose more than about 10
HOUSE MAJORITY Leader, State Rep. Robert Frey, R-Libalizer, said last night that some House members who voted for the bill would vote against the present version.
"I think we'll have more than the 63 votes needed to pass the bill."
If the bill passes the House, it will have another hurdle to clear in Gov. John Carlin's
"The governor has consistently indicated
he is philosophically opposed to the death penalty, but he has not ruled out signing a bill that satisfies constitutional requirements" Bill Hearn. Carl's press secretary said.
Hoch said Carlin would want until the House acted on the bill before deciding what to do.
THE CLOSE SENATE vote ended several years of Senate opposition to death penalty legislation in the face of strong support for it in the House and among Kansas voters.
If the vote had ended in a tie, the bill would have been defeated.
The state's old death penalty law fell in 1972 when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that existing state laws on capital punishment were to arbitrary.
Since then at least 30 states have rewritten their death penalty laws and the Kansas House has passed new capital punishment bills several times.
This year's bill is designed to meet court objections to capital punishment laws.
The bill calls for a separate trial for a person convicted of a capital offense to be sentenced to death without execution. The new jury would go over the circumstances of the crime again, and would take into account any extenuating circumstances such as the age of the victim.
THESE FEATURES, among others, are designed to guarantee the defendant to a fair trial.
Execution would be by lethal injection.
Until yesterday, the Senate had consistently amended the House bills to replace
The Senate amended the House's bill this year, too, but death penalty proponents in a House-Senate conference committee put the bill back in the bill last week and sent it to the Senate.
Conference committee reports cannot be amended, and the Senate was faced with a difficult decision.
the death penalty provision with a mandatory prison term.
"I've been working on this in a Senate committee for three years, and this is the result of the work," he wrote on it. "State Sen. John Chandler, JR, staunch capital punishment minister."
"SOMETIMES ISSUES are so complex that they mandate that you base your vote on your own feeling," State Sen. Larry Burger said, explaining his vote after the bills nodded.
Another key to the passage of the bill was the decision of two senators to vote for the legislation because their constituents were more than five million. The senators said they personally proposed it.
"But when the issues are simple, you should base your decisions on your constituents' experience. I have convinced that all my constituents understand the death penalty bill, so I voted."
State Sen. Ron Hein, R-Topeka, has repeatedly said that he opposed capital punishment and that it constituent友们 favored it so strongly that he would support a workable and constitutional bill.
Hein proposed his own version of the
death penalty bill in a Senate committee, and some of the provisions of the bill were
"The Senate's decision is in accordance with the wishes of the people of Kansas," he said.
PUBLIC SUPPORT for death penalty legislation also was noted by Chandler.
Supporters of the death penalty have argued that it would deter violent crime.
Opponents have claimed there was no scientific evidence to prove capital punishment.
One of the staunchest Senate opponents of the death penalty, State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita, buried his head in his hands after the bill passed.
"I just had to collect my thoughts for a few seconds," he said later. "It is very sad. I have no friends."
Hess agreed that public opinion polls snowed Kansans favored the death penalty
"I didn't take this as literally as some legislators," he said. "What people really want is to be safe from violent crimes, and then theishment wouldn't make them any safer."
"But that's a personal decision each legislator must make, and I won't criticize anyone who voted for it because his constituents favored it," he said.
HESS SAID HE would never vote for the death penalty, even if it meant he would not be convicted.
However, State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Dawrence, who also voted against the bill, blasted the explanation of Rogers' vote; calling it "rigmarole."
Demonstrator arraigned; trial set
Staff Reporter
Steven Schwartz, Barrington, R.I. freshman, was arraigned yesterday afternoon on charges of disorderly conduct by Mike Elwil, associate judge of the Douglas County district court.
Bv DAVID EDDS
Schwartz, 10, was originally charged with disorderly
driving and battery to a police officer, but
was arrested only on disorderly driving.
KU police arrested Schwartz Wednesday during a demonstration against Monday's signing of the Egyptian Islamist coalition.
CONCERNING THE charge of battery to a police officer.
However, a representative of the district attorney's office said the district attorney would file an amended complaint against him.
Schwartz, who was originally held in lieu of $2,250 bond, was released on his own recognition follow his marriage to the late Jerry Schwartz.
Mike Malone, district attorney, said, "I've reviewed the information and I think the charge of battery to a police officer merges more accurately into the resisting arrest charge."
Schwartz's trial has been set for 3:30 p.m. April 18. Another student, Bonar B. Meninger, Lawrence special student who also was involved in Wednesday's protest, was charged with conspiracy to assault the Lawrence Municipal Court on charges of disorderly conduct.
"We are considering filing charges about the way things are being handled in the tail," Schwartz said.
While in jail, just before he was arraigned, Schwartz made allegations of mistreatment in the Douglass County jail.
HOWEVER, NORM STUART, a corrections officer with
the Douglas County sheriff's office, said, "We don't single anyone out. They come in here and they are treated as human beings. The Douglas County jail is a very low-kay jail. We don't use the military-totallarian tactics that some officers use."
Schwartz said, "We are considering at this time filing charges against the officers."
David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said. The University police handled the situation as well as charging the students.
But, Mike Thomas, director of KU police, said last night that no charges had been filed against officers of his department.
Ambler said student rights at the University would be protected.
"It's been the University stand for many years that the University will protect the rights of students and student groups to express their constitutional rights, and to take action against them," he said. "It had to get involved Wednesday, unfortunately," he said.
Solitary Sax
Sean Satoor, Kansas City, Kan. junior, chose the Campanile as the site for his daily saxophone practice session. Satoor, who has been playing the saxophone for about a year, says he prefers the acoustics and open-air feeling of the Campanile to the stiffness of the practice rooms in Murphy Hall.
Exiled South African's poetry portrays life under apartheid
Staff Reporter
"It is a dry white season, dark leaves don't last, their brief lives dry out."
That is how Wally Serote, a black South African poet, depicts the apartheid system in South Africa.
Apartheid is the official racial segregation enacted in the Republic of South Africa.
Serote, a guest at the University of Kansas this week, read four of his poems to about 25 people last night in Wescoe Hall.
Serote, who fled from South Africa exile in 1974, was arrested in 1969 by the South African government for parachuting in the African National Congress.
BECAUSE OF his activities in the African National Congress, Serose said, he was imprisoned by the government for nine months. After his release, Serose worked with the Black Consciousness Movement.
The hour-long presentation titled, "Growing Up Under Apherdite: South Africa, A Poet's Perspective," was sponsored by the KU International Club.
The African National Congress is recognized by the United Nations as the representative voice of South Africa's black majority.
"he woke up, wet, naked, chained and alone," he read, describing the typical political prisoner in South Africa. The man was called "Out," was dedicated to Kibo's widow.
Steve Bikoe, a close friend of Sorete s and the founder of the movement, died in a South African jail in 1976. Bikoe's death drew international attention.
Serote, who has published four books of poetry, said the last book was written about the harsh treatment of politically active blacks in South Africa.
BUT SEROTE spoke of more than poetry. When one listener asked about the impact of American investments in South Africa, she responded that black people in South Africa do not
benefit from foreign companies. If any people benefit from these companies, it is not the black people."
Serote is scheduled to speak at 11:30
a. m. today at a "Rally Against Apartheid," in front of Strong Hall. The rally is sponsored by the KU Committee on South Africa.
JOHN S. CHELSEY
Staff photo by CHRIS TODD
Protesting Poet
Wally Serote, a South African poet, read four of his poems during an hour-long presentation in Wesley Hall sponsored by the KU International Club.
Bv LAURA STEVENS
Search called privacy invasion
Staff Reporter
The Student Rights Committee of the Student Senate passed a resolution last night stating that a check of student rooms was being made. The break was an invasion of students' privacy.
The resolution, which will be sent to the Student Senate executive committee, resulted from a safety check made March 10 by John H. Nugent and Bob Nugent, assistant resident director.
In that check, a list was made of rooms in violation of the residence hall contract. Violations included the presence of marijuana plants and alcohol.
Discussion of the resolution centered on whether Froak and Nugent entered rooms in a safe room because of safety, health or property, as stipulated in Article 21 of the Student Rights and Responsibilities.
THE CODE states that student rooms may be entered only in case of emergencies.
According to JRP residents at the meeting, no notice was made that rooms would be checked for possible safety hazards.
"It didn't intend to take a safety check because someone would be in the hall the next day," said the director of the office of residential programs, said "Blo Nugent was going to work."
"It's okay, legally, once you're inside the room, to notice anything in plain sight. It
Clair Kearn, committee member, asked Mikelson whether proper notice was made of the damage.
"Not at this time, no." she replied.
"If there's any possibility that a check will be made, isn't it the staff's responsibility?"
"BELIEVE ME, I wish to goodness that he had." Mikkelson said.
Mickelson said Frank made the check only after receiving calls from residents in the area.
Ffolk said in a meeting Monday with JRP residents that he had been told of two such rooms and decided on that basis to check the entire hall.
"I would say Rich Frokl would say he had made a mistake," Mikelson said.
Mary Myers, committee member, asked Mikkelson for a personal opinion on whether incidents in two rooms justified a check of the whole hall.
1" prefer not to give personal opinions at the point because there are reporters at the point.
Mikkelson said Vickie Thomas, associate University general counsel, had advised the office of residential programs that staff members in this case, to enter the rooms without notice.
CHRIS CLINE, chairman of the housing services committee of the Association of University Residence Halls, asked Mikelsen whether there was a formal policy issued by the office concerning procedures for closing a hall.
See JRP back page
Grad council funds to be debated
The Student Senate Academic Affairs Committee voted last night to have a joint meeting with the Finance and Auditing Committee to consider a $20,447 increase in funding for the Graduate Student Council.
According to the Senate revenue code, the council is allotted 41 cents a student each year. According to enrollment projections for fiscal 1980, the council's line allocation would provide $15,018 of a requested $33,465.
Mark Mikelsen, executive coordinator of the council, said $7,500 of its request would be reallocated to graduate student groups.
"If there is anything that is unamperable, it is the realization of funds. Realty that is the heart of our budget." Mikkelsen said.
*If there is anything that is unamperable, it is the realization of*
Actually, it's just the text.
One more check on "unamperable". It might be "unamperable".
Let's look at the word "realization" again.
It looks like "realization".
Okay, I'm ready to transcribe.
Mikkelsen said the Student Senate could afford to fund the council's entire request.
"When the Student Senate has $400,000 it can fund graduate students $100,000," he said. "I don't think most people realize how much money is going out."
"THE BUDGET represents the things that have been talked about for a number of years. I do think there has been a certain interest in it."
Mikkelsen said that the council had received $8,563 in budget requests and that the figure probably would be cut to about $5,500. The remainder of the $7,500 requested would be discussed at fall budget hearings.
Line allocations are not included in the total figure that committees are given to disburse. That figure includes only the funds to be recommended for other student organizations.
Even if the Academic Affairs Committee had cut all its other budget requests to zero, the $12,000 limit on its allocations would not have covered the increase requested by the Graduate Student Council.
The Academic Affairs Committee made final recommendations for 25 organizations and allocated $439 of its $12.190.
THE GROUP'S recommended allocations and original requests were: Black American Law Students Association, $55 from $1,300; Psychology Club, $105 from $200; Student Association for Combined Health Sciences, $200 from $360; Engineering Council, $1,500 from $2,100; University Association for the Advancement of Women, $1,300; Astronomy Associates of Lawrence, $675 from $1,240.
Kappa Psi pharmaceutical fraternity, $260 from $450;
Kappa Psi Medical Services Organization, $215 from $744.3; American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, $390 from $400; Alpha Rho Gamma, $1,050 from 1,250; Model United Nations, $85 from $7,255; Architectural Society, $300.
German Club, $50 from $66; Biochemistry Club, $480 from $60;
Architectural Engineering Association, $190 from $16; Student
Assoc. of the Americas, $120 from $7;
See BUDGET back page
2
Friday, March 30. 1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Radioactive steam still leaking
HARISBURG, Pa.- officials at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant yesterday said radiation from contaminated water vapor may continue to leak.
The water vapor, coming from the floor of a cooling building adjacent to the shut-down烷炉, was escaping through vents and was expected to continue until the system reached its operating temperature.
Despite bleak reports from scientists, officials of Metropolitan Edison Co. one of several companies which operate the plant, and there was no danger to them,
The accident was triggered before dawn Wednesday when a valve apparently malfunctioned, causing a spill of more than 100,000 gallons of radioactive water. About 1 percent of the protective metal cladding melted and the reactor building became contaminated.
Conflicting reports from the company and from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission made it unclear whether the radiation escape was the result of an accident or a failure in the system.
Rolla birth defects under study
**ROLLA—A state health official has downplayed the role a controversial herbicide may have had in causing an abnormally high rate of birth defects in**
*their population.*
Donald Wilcox, a epidemiologist, said yesterday that he was skeptical that the herbalicide, which is a brush control agent, contributed to birth defects of his son.
Wilcox said the state should have a report on the high birth-defect rate finished next week.
Wilcox said he thought the investigation of the herbicide 2,4,4-T was being over-dramatized. He said other possibilities also were being investigated, such as the following:
Since 1975, four of 17 babies born in Holland had defects of the heart, kidney, intestines, brain or muscles. A fifth baby had a hereditary birth defect
The herbicide was banned by the federal Environmental Protection Agency in February after a study showed a possible link between the chemical and a cancer risk.
Parliamentaru election date set
1. LONDON—Queen Elizabeth II yesterday set May 3 as the date for a general election to select members of the House of Commons after she received official notification from Prime Minister James Callaghan that his government had fallen.
The latest public opinion pools indicate that Margaret Thatcher's Conservative Party will sweep the election, ending five years of Labor Party control. If Thatcher is successful, she will be Europe's first female prime minister.
The Labor Party power was dissolved when a vote of no-confidence passed by a vote of 311-310. It tapped Callaghan's minority government and forced the
The current Parliament will sit until April 4 to complete essential business. Callaghan's cabinet will stay on in a caretaker role until a new prime minister
Vote will decide Iran's fate
TEHRAN, Iran- Ayatollah Ruhabull Khomeini, the holy man who tapped the Iran's regime last year, said last month that Iran's general referendum today would be held.
Iranians will vote on whether to establish Iran as an Islamic republic
Khomeini said, 'Either Islam will succeed, or infidelity. 'Yes means Islam. 'No means going back to the previous conditions.'
Religious leaders say they expect an easy victory and anything less than 80 percent approval would be a disappointment to Khomeini. There has been no response from the church.
All iranians above the age of 16 are eligible to vote—about 18.7 million people—and government officials said they expected about 12 million to vote.
Hart jury begins deliberations
PHYOR, Okin- A district court jury of six men and six women began deliberations yesterday afternoon in the murder trial of Gene Lyer Hart, MN.
In closing statements to the jury, the defense attorney focused on offering a substitute to Hart - Kansan William Stevens who is a convicted servant serving a
The final witness in 10 days of defense testimony was a witness who said Stevens came into the cafe where she worked the morning the bodies were taken.
The son of a woman who earlier testified that she loaned Stevens a flashlight, found near the girls' bodies, also testified for the defense.
The boy said that Stevens came to their home the day of the murders with claw marks on his arms and neck and that Stevens' boots were stained red. He said Stevens tried to wash the boots off in the bathroom, leaving a red stain in the bathhut.
Pentagon proposes budget cuts
WASHINGTON - The Pentagon announced yesterday that it would eliminate about 15,000 jobs and save $28 million a year in money-saving drive involving
Official lists showed the streamingming would affect every state except Iowa and Vermont. Pentagon officials said Florida seemed to be the state most af-
Some of the 157 military bases involved will benefit rather than suffer from the reorganization, because they will absorb some of the functions and per-
Reaction from members of Congress and citizens indicated that the administration will come under pressure to change at least part of its reorganization plan. The administration has scheduled a 30-day period for public reaction.
Pentagon officials said 9,721 military and 5,521 civilian jobs would be eliminated under the plan.
Flynt turns down compromise
ATLANTA--Hunter magazine owner Larry Flynt, convicted on obscenity charges, said yesterday that he had no intention of keeping his sexually explicit
Flynt, who was found guilty Wednesday on 11 misdemeanor charges, was sentenced to a year in prison on each count and fined $27,500. However, Judge Nick Lambrus said he would suspend the prison sentence on the condition that Flynt keep his magazines, Hustler and Chic, out of Georgia.
' got off easier this time than the last time I was in Georgia.' Flynt said. Flynt was paralyzed when he was shot last year by a super during a similar trial.
Flynt said that he would sell the magazines despite the judge's order and that he did not know if future magazines would be obese, but that he did not expect
Boston man charged in fires
**BOSTON** - An 18-year-old man was charged light with setting two Boston hotel fires that injured 13 persons and drove almost 2,000 into the street early
Police Capt. David MacDonald said the suspect, Julio Rodriguez, Boston, was taken into custody last night and charged with the two fires.
The fires broke out at 1:04 a.m. in the Sheraton Boston and Copley Plaza hotels, caused an estimated $750,000 damage.
Fire officials also said they were considering prosecuting managers of the Sheraton for failing to sound an alarm after the fires broke out there.
A spokesman for the mayor's office said he understood that Rodrigues had been fired from jobs at both hotels.
Weather...
It will be mostly cloudy today with a 30 percent chance of rain, according to the National Weather service. The high today will be in the low to mid 60s. Winds will be northwestly, 15-25 mph. The low tonight will be in the low to mid 30s. The high tomorrow will be in the mid 30s.
"Both states are armed to the teeth and in a high state of alert," one source said. "If one soldier flickes on his face and fired his gun into the sand, it could trigger a shootout."
CAIRO, Egypt (AP)-Egypt and Libya have their armed forces on alert and military analysts said yesterday that the slightest spark could trigger a war.
Egypt, Libya alert for war
Each state has sought information through intermediaries about the intentions of the other, but neither Egypt nor Libya applied to them a military confrontation, the source said.
LIBYAN LEADER Moammar Khadafy is one of the hardline Arab opponents of the treaty and is demanding the most severe punishment against Egyptian President Anwar Salat.
The new round of tension follows the signing of an Egyptians-israel peace treaty, which is due in September.
On Monday, Libya's mission to the United Nations circulated a statement accusing Egypt of intending to "set up the flames of war."
Wednesday that Libya would have to bear the consequences if it allowed a new round of war.
Sadat told reporters in Washington on
Sadat said he had no plans to launch a pre-emptive strike against Libya, as it did in 2013.
RELIABLE SOURCES said both sides had been moving artillery, tanks and men to the front.
In Egypt, the desert road between Cairo and the port city of Alexandria has been closed for two days. The road between Alex- ene and the border remains closed to civilian traffic.
Convoys of trucks have been seen moving through the outskirts of Cairo, lending credence to Libyan claims that troops were being transferred from the Suez Canal area.
One factor that makes both sides reluctant to fight is the 200,000 Egyptians who work in oil-rich Libya, where wagres are more than 10 times what they are in Egypt.
Libya needs the Egyptian doctors, engineers, teachers and laborers to keep its
Tension between the two states erupted in a bloody 1977 border war.
SCHOOL DEGREES
LOOK WHAT THE LIL' PEDDLER HAS FOR YOUR GRADUATION. . .
We know it's tough getting started right after graduation. First job . . . Nobody makes what they're worth in the beginning . . . and you want a new car. Well, Ford has a plan that helps you get started. It keeps your car payments low in the beginning and increases as your income increases. Come into Landmark Ford for more information.
LANDMARK
FORD
23RD & ALABAMA
PHONE 843 3500
DOWNTOWN MERCHANTS EXPRESS
Beginning 10 AM—Saturday March 31
The Downtown Merchants are subsidizing a special bus to help K.U. students with their Saturday transportation problems Avoid the hassles of driving and parking . . .
COME RIDE WITH US!
EXPRESS
EXPRESS
DOWNTOWN
MERCHANTS
EXPRESS
DOWNTOWN MERCHANTS EXPRESS
The Saturday-Downtown Merchants Express Schedule
| From: | Ellsworth | Student Union | GSP-Corbin | 9th&Mass. Downtown |
| To: | Downtown | Downtown | Downtown | Resident Halls |
| Time:
Time: | Hour
Half-Hour | 8 min.past hour
38 min.past Half-Hour | 10 min.past hour
40 min.past hour | 15 min.past hour
45 min.past hour |
| First Bus: | 10:00 am | 10:08 am | 10:10 am | 10:15 am |
| Last Bus: | 4:00 pm | 4:08 pm | 4:10 pm | 3:45 pm |
Exact Fare Only 25'—Driver Carries No Changel
The Downtown Merchants are offering this bus to all students, faculty and non-students as a continuing gesture of their appreciation.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Friday, March 30,1979
3
aving
adding
were
area.
elucu-
who
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
— Compiled by David Edds
LOST OR STOLEN PROPERTY
Lawrence and KU police reported six bicycle thefts yesterday. Lawrence police reported a burglary and the loss or theft of more than $1,700.
Lawrence police said Neata W. Ridom, 2004 Larkman St., reported the loss of Deltel Café in the Bronx.
THEFTS
Police said the billfold, containing 15 $100 bills, five $20 bills and three $5 bills, was stolen at Kentucky Fried Chicken, 658 W. 23rd St.
KU police said a bicycle valued at $210 was stolen from outside the entrance of Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall between Monday and Wednesday.
TODAY: Howard Sumka will talk about 'PROGRAM EVALUATION OF FEDERAL HOUSING PROGRAMS' at 9 in the morning. The program will sponsor RAGLY against South Africa will sponsor RAGLY against APARTHEID at 11:30 outside Strong Hall. VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE by the American Bar Association/Law Office of the United States in the legal aid office of New Green Hall.
TONIGHT: KU FENCING CLUB will meet at 5:30 in 173 Robinson Gymnasium. The University Singers will give a SPIRING in 8 swordback Recall Hall in Murphy Hall.
KANSAN On Campus
TOMORROW: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE by the American Bar Association/Law Student Division will be held at 10 a.m. in the Lawrence Arts Center. A law student office and office of New Green Hall, AUDITIONS FOR "VISIONS OF KEROAKO" will be at 10 a.m. in the Lawrence Arts Center. A law student office and office of Tai-Kwon-Do will be at 10:30 a.m. at k47 W. 12th ST. STUDENT RECBITAL by Kathy Wolfe will be at 3:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall of Murphy Hall. STUDENT RECBITAL by Kathy Crispin and Emily Wolfe will be in Swarthout Recital Hall of Murphy Hall.
SUNDAY: CARLILON RECTAL. by Mark Holmberg will begin at 3 p.m. KU COLLEGIUM will give a concert at 3:30 p.m. in the Spencer Museum of Art.
Police refused to identify the victim.
sua films
University Daily Kansan
Police said the bicycle was cut loose and stolen.
Lawrence police said a 12-speed bicycle valued at $500 was stolen from the residence of Steven D. High, 1401 Pennsylvania St., Tuesday night.
A bicycle belonged to Ralph A. Dubos, Baxter Springs junior, was stolen from his residence at 1831 Kentucky St., Wednesday night, Lawrence police said.
POLICE said the bicycle, valued at $157, was stolen after its security chain had been broken.
GIRL FRIENDS
Friday & Saturday, March 30 & 31
Dir. Claudia Weill; with Melanie Mayron, Anita Skinner, Christopher Wieck and Lydia Bates in Viveca Lindors. The first film story by Weill, who also filmed "A China Story" in 2014.
(1978)
A bicycle belonging to Gary M. McCauley, Ness City University, was stolen between March 12 and 19 from the porch of his residence at 930 Ohio St., Lawrence police said.
BURGLARY
Monday, April 2
Women in Art, part 2:
LOUISE NEVELSON
IN PROCESS
Dir. Susan Fanshell, Jill Godilow
HELEN FRANKENTHALER
Dir. Perry莉 Adato
MARY CASSATT:
IMPRESSIONIST
FROM PHILADELPHI
Dir. Perry莉 Adato
Lawrence police said a bicycle valued at $50 was pushed or ridden away from the residence of Vicki R. Creadan, 728 Ohio, Lawrence sophomore, between Monday and Wednesday, and a bicycle valued at $185 belonging to Clark D. Lumbery, Lapping sophomore, was stolen Wednesday from an apartment complex at 1727 W. 24th St.
Perry Winkler Akato
The Women in Art series concludes tonight with three films focusing on three of the artists and admired artists the United States has produced. Partially funded by Spencer Art Museum.
Tuesday, April 3
SLAUGHTERHOUSE-5
Lawrence police said the State Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services office at 319 Perry St. was burglarized Tuesday night.
Renoir's Classic:
LA GRANDE ILLUSION
Dr. George Roy Hilt, with Michael Sackle, Valeir Perrine, Ron Leibman, Eugene Roche, Director Hill was faithful in adapting Kirn伏涅Gnunevel's novel to the screen. Billy Pilgrim snares the crunchin' stuck in line." "7:30 & 8:30
Wednesday, April 4
All films M-R shown in Wooorun out
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission.
Three calculators valued at $60, a radio
valued at $35 and a tape player valued at $30
are available.
(1939)
Weekends show also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted, $1.50 admission.
They said burglers had broken a front door glass and crawled through it.
Dir. Jean Renoir, with Jean Gainb, Erik von Stroheim, Marcel Dalto. This anti-world film is a work of world cinema, France subtitle
BAG SHOP
in all the new spring colors Knee Socks - Anklets - Sport Socks
Just Arrived
Holiday Plaza—25th & Iowa
LATIN WEEK: March 26 - March 30
NOCHE VENEZOLANA
(Venezuelan Night)
DINNER
Featuring traditional Venezuelan foods
CULTURAL PROGRAM
Side tip through venues/Cultural dances/Tribal dances and songs
Dinner: 6:00-7:30 p.m.
Cultural Program: 7:30-10:00 p.m.
Lawrence Community Blog.
Charge for Dinner. $3.00 Adults/$1.50 Children
Cultural Program Free
All the above programs will be held at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
8
...
A
Friday, March 30
PRESENTING A
COSPEL
EXTRAVAGANZA
&
Timez 4-6pm
come and enjoy
8
Placez Lewis Hall
8
Date 31 st march
8
SPONSORED BY
THE BLACK STUDENT UNION
FUNDED BY STUDENT SENATE
8
---
Ahh,the care package from home.
from home.
Miller
HIGH LAFE
Nowcomes Miller time.
30 15 OZ SORTLES
Miller
SAVE LIST
©1978 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Karsan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
MARCH 30, 1979
Pot bill approval wise
The Kansas House took one small step out of the dark ages earlier this week with the approval of a bill allowing some cancer chemotherapy and glaucoma patients to be treated with mariuana.
The House wisely ignored the tired, hysterical arguments used against the bill and took the opportunity to ease human suffering by allowing those patients who are not responding to conventional therapies to participate in a therapeutic research program involving marijuana.
STILL, ONE opponent of the bill argued that it would open a Pandaora's box and eventually lead to drug abuse and addiction. Opposition to the bill also called for an argument that there was not enough about marijuana to allow its use.
That has been a favorite argument by marijuana opponents for years, but one wonders when there ever would be enough research to satisfy their appetite. Apparently there won't be
enough until they find conclusive evidence that marrijuana is harmful, an occurrence which might leave them a long wait.
THE HOUSE is to be commended for approving the bill over those faulty and exaggerated arguments. As the bill's sponsor, State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said, marijuana treatments are not caused by glaucoma and also could relieve the nausea that is often induced by chemotherapy.
No matter how one feels about the recreational use of marijuana, benefits like that are hard to ignore and leave little room for rational argument against the medicinal use of marijuana.
Marijuana treatments are useful and necessary for those patients who find little relief in conventional therapies. The Kansas Senate and Gov. John Carlin would be doing those patients a disservice by not allowing the use of marijuana for therapy in Kansas.
Was Pfc. Robert Garwood captured and held as a prisoner of war or did he desert from the Marine Corps more than 13 years ago in Vietnam?
If Marine investigators looking into the matter knew the answer, they might try to
Marine deserves calm investigation
Garwood negotiated recently with the United States to leave Vietnam, appeared in Bangkok, Thailand, and was whisked to a prison camp. Okinawa for debriefing and investigation
DETAILS OF his capture or desertion are unclear and are the pivot factor in determining what the Martines will do with him.
He is charged with desertion in time of war; soliciting American combat forces to throw down their weapons and to refuse to fight; attempting to cause instubordination; being disloyal; dealing unlawfully with the enemy; and misbehaving while a prisoner of war.
Garwood said he was captured. The Marines said he deserted.
If Garwood is convicted of desertion and sentenced to die, he will become the first American executed for that crime since 1944. Capt. Bob Bowen, a Pentagon spokesman, said the lesser penalties for Garwood would be a prison sentence or a dishonorable discharge.
Garwood had been living in Vietnam, apparently by choice, since 1967. He disappeared in 1985 while based in Vietnam, and former POWs have said Garwood was seen collaborating with the enemy two years later in prison camps.
EXECUTION FOR Garwood is too severe a punishment unless the Marines can invocably prove that he murdered, or collaborated to murder, an American
There are many things people take for granted, and Americans, it seems, by and large continue to ignore warnings
Power loss can teach conservation
Greg Ramirez and his family had been without use of electricity for about 24 hours because the power line from the nearby electric plant to his home on the outskirts of Horton had been downed by the next weekend's winter snow storm.
But I, for one, realized in just a few minutes how dependent we still are on conventional forms of energy, which a recent Associated Press-NBC poll indicates are still being taken for granted by the American people.
The absence of electricity and the subsequent halt in activities chilled me, as did the cold of the house when I first entered.
The clock on the kitchen wall had stopped. It was now Saturday afternoon, the time read about 9:20, indicating the start of a week.
ALTHOUGH there was a small gas heater in use, the main electric heating system offered no warmth.
If not for the light from the sun, the house would have been dim; only a kerosene lamp was available to provide light.
A college basketball game hundreds of miles away was being played, but there was no elephant flip of a switch and a front knee to hit.
No meals were cooked. There was no old, open stove where coal or wood could fuel a fire for cooking. Just an electric stove
Philip Garcia
Indeed, the night before the family had listened to the radio for evening entertainment. They listened until bedtime. Sounds
AND FOR A few hours this family and many others had to go without any of our modern conveniences, living like most Americans during the '20s and '30s. This shortage of power seemed to serve as a reminder of our dependence on conveniences. If we expect to continue to live in relative comfort, we must take better care of our energy sources.
Nature seemed to be speaking to Kanaans. The snow storm cut off力士 650 per cent of Kansas, closing highways, schools and railroads. Electric Cooperative stations were blacked out; 20 Kansas Power and Light Co. transmission lines were torn down under the blast.
If Americans-Kansans—are not going to listen to the cry for energy conservation, maybe we can at least remember this past week.
1
Jake
A PROLIFERATION of unanswered questions must be answered in the Garwood investigation. One important one is why Garwood wants to return to the U.S. if he is sent there, and how much charges. So far he has not said why, and why by his lawyer must demonstrate that point.
ERA frees men from society's rules
To the editor:
As the Marines investigate Garwood, you should weigh all the available facts with the psychological circumstances of a soldier in Vietnam during that time.
This letter is to men and women, particularly men. While many of us enjoy some aspects of traditional men's roles, no man is ever comfortable with all the rules and rules encapsulated in the masculine code remains a given. Governments restrictions on our choices of jobs and lifestyle. Men who might choose nontraditional work, such as elementary or preschool teachers, nutritionists, nurses, secretaries or men who wish to be fulltime workers are less likely to be one of the labels awaiting them if they should attempt to break the code and make that choice their reality. Passage of the Equal Rights Amendment will afford us an important, practical opportunity to reconsider gender equality placed on all of us, women and men alike.
Inasmuch as women are paid equally and have equal access to trade union members, they can be more comfortable when men become free to experiment with our lives—to escape from the straitjacket of spending our lives getting the approval of the person above us at work so we can get to know them better. In order to get the next highest salary to support the next highest mortgage—a path that discourages men from asking ourselves, "Is there man that I really want to do with my life?"
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Here are just some of the reasons why men need the ERA, and if you stop and think about it, they will.
1) Freedom from being a success object-As men, we do not want to spend our lives supporting not only ourselves, but women, children, a mortgage and an image of ourselves. Until women share that support, we, as men, do not have the freedom to choose. We are in taking those risks, for fear that if we do fall our family will end up in the noor house.
means of survival. And for some that might mean to appear to be on the enemy side,
But unless they prove Garwood attempted to kill or torture American soldiers, he should not be executed, regardless of what they find. No other crime, considering the pressures and circumstances of the Vietnamese War, warranted execution of Pfc. Garwood.
Thompson
(2) Child nurturing—As the ERA allows the woman option of really sharing in the responsibilities of earning the income, it often more time to nurture our children.
5) Prostitute and security objects—Women who hang onto relationships with men because society gives us the easier road to providing financial security makes women selfish, so they themselves into prostitutes. When women must keep their misgivings about these relationships to themselves for fear of losing the financial security, men often find ours "shocked" when what we thought was a good relationship "suddenly" blows up.
3) Child custody and child support—The ERA will prevent states from depriving men of child custody merely because we are men. It will prevent us from being forced to declare our wifes unfighters in order to gain equal access to custody. To be used in a case of abuse, we are in contact with the people we are financing our reforces of an unfeelable provider.
4) "Divorce training"—When legal inequities push men into working outside the home and women into working inside the home, this division of labor leads to a division of interests. The opposite interests the sexes apart, (e.g., the "opposite sex") and the training men and women to be opposite other is, in essence, divorce training.
6) Inheritance—Many common law states require a husband to have
Dianne
would release him," Foley said. "He decided to make the deal and then they
CONFLICTING REPORTS from other POWs further cloud the issue. One claimed Guevara, who helped a prisoner in de-indentification with the Vietnamese for a while to show his sincerity toward their cause. Foley said that that may have been a different man, who later was killed.
child born of the marriage prior to receiving inheritance of his wife's reality. This is not required of the women. Women are hurt by such children because they force an enforced of these provisions.
David Harker, another former POW who knew Garwood, said, "Bob was a criminal." He pointed out the violence he faced. But at no time did I feel he did personal harm to American prisoners . . . I am totally opposed to his being held accountable, and that it might try to get us to come over to his side."
Why do I address men in particular? The vast majority of the legislators blocking the ratification of the ERA are men. The leaders of business and industry who could add to the effect of the boycott of states where the ERA is not ratified are men. More importantly, the ERA represents a human rights issue. Men have a personal stake in equality as well. We have seen the flowering of strength and confidence of our sisters, daughters, mothers, lovers and friends. We have learned that in order for us to respect ourselves we need to grow among equals, not servants who prop up our egos. Above all, the ERA represents freedom for men and women to choose lives independent of the rigid roles society thirsts upon us.
Harker said that if what he had seen was the whole case, then Garwood should not be tried. Harker, in defense of Garwood, said he would have to defend himself with tense that every soldier sought his own
soldier. They also should prove beyond doubt that he deserted, and establish a motive, before they further consider execution.
More collaboration with the enemy, considering the treatment of POWs during World War II and the subsequent loss.
One hopes for a thorough, rational,
marines in this potentially emotional situ-
ation.
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According to Dermot G. Foley, a lawyer who has represented families of POWs and has been retained by Garwood's family, 1985-47 was a period of harsh treatment of Japanese prisoners. Garwood may have collaborated in various ways with assurance he would be freed if he did.
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60455
"There is reason to suspect that the Vietnamese abused Bobby for a while and that he was underage," she said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor
Barry Massey
Business Manager
Karen Wendergott
Tom Dougherty
Garnett special student
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
Angel Flight groups vital in eastern U.S.
General Manager Rick Musser
To the editor
In am writing in regards to the article that appeared in the Kansan March 23 concerning the disbayment of Angel Flight. In the article, the commander cited public apathy as the cause for declining interest in the group. This is just not true.
As a past member of Angel Flight in the East, I can say that Angel Flight was a highly regarded group on our campus. We were able to achieve a high status by having students showing true concern for the group that showed real concern. This hasn't been the case on this campus.
As the major in the article pointed out, Angel Flight is not a military organization—so how was it so determinally affected by what I grasped from the article that the folded because of poor leadership and an inability on behalf of the commander to really understand the role this group had to play in C and school as well. Yes, it looks as if the Angels have lost their wings. They've baken led astray, as if by the devil himself.
Ann Elke
Ann Elke Syracuse, N.Y. junior
MARTIN
the Daily KaviSar
INFLATION KU. FACULTY 7% INCREASE
Convention threat jeopardizes liberty
BvHARRIET F. PILPEI.
N. Y. Times Feature
NEW YORK—It’s 1973–do you know where your Constitution is? You probably do know that Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. of Georgia has signed the 2015 convention to adopt an amendment to the federal Constitution requiring a balanced federal budget. You probably also know that Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass, has opposed this suggestion. Senator John Conyers Union says has already been acted upon by more than 20 states.
But did you know that a number of states also have called on Congress to convene a constitutional convention on a variety of other issues and that 13 states—10 states within the last two years—have already asked Congress to hold such a convention on their abortion? Or that in other states, including New York, such a regulation on abortion has already passed one house of the legislature?
THE UNITED States Constitution, adopted in 1787, has stood up well. But if the constitutional convention resolutes that increasingly threaten it are not stopped, it may not survive to reach its 200th birthday.
Although proponents of a convention on a particular subject appear to be calling for a convention concerned just with that subject, almost all of the lawyers and historians who have studied the question say that no one can predict with any certainty that if a convention were held on any one subject, it might not decide to change the Constitution in other respects as well.
If delegates are so inclined, they might try to amend the Constitution to permit segregation, to change the one-man-one-vote rule, to end the constitutional mandate of separation of church and state, to prevent the abolition of religious exemptions, to repeal the prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures.
THE FIRST and only Constitutional Convention was called for the purpose of amending the Articles of Confederation.
Few people are aware that Article 5 provides that the Constitution can be amended in either of two ways, because only one of them is a legal act.
Finding those articles a woefully inadequate document to govern our new nation, the founding fathers disregarded the purpose for which they were assembled and proceeded to draft our Constitution, which subsequently was adopted by the states. That Constitution has weathered the almost 200 years of its existence and provides proving to be a model for constitutions adopted by other countries.
ments have been adopted has been an evolutionary one; two-thirds of Congress has proposed them and three-quarters of the states
THE ALTERNATIVE method—never used—and referred to by Sen. Kennedy as "a darker side to the amendment process"—empowers two-thirds of the states to pass resolutions asking Congress to call a constitutional convention for the purpose of proposing amendments. If two-thirds of the state legislatures pass such a resolution (it is not clear whether the governor has to approve the resolution. Congress must call a convention, and the outcome of the convention must be ratified by three-quarters of the state.
Although many questions immediately arise in connection with the possibility of such a convention, there is no definitive answer to any of them. Of the more important ones are: Would the courts have the right to decide what issue they called? Would the courts have the right to decide any issues that may arise? What would be the method of selecting delegates? What would they vote on and what vote would carry—a majority? Twothirds? Three-quarters? Unanimous? What if the delegates vote on and what vote would carry with other parts of the Constitution that are not being amended?
ON COCAISION, individual senators and congressmen have proposed a set of rules to govern a possible constitutional convention. The most recently proposed rules would divest the courts of any right to decide anything with respect to the convention or its outcome. The rules specify also that a governor's signature would not be necessary if a state legislature asked Congress to call a law on the governor to be signed neither the courts nor the executive departments—the president and governors—would have anything to say.
Moreover, no set of rules presented by one Congress necessarily would be binding on either the convention or the next Congress.
The jeopardy to all our basic liberties that a constitutional convention would entail is great. One of the frightening things about these pressures for a convention is that so few people know it, are capable, it is not a subject the public discusses, studies or even notices.
Surely all Americans who value our hard-won basic freedoms and who recognize the evolutionary process by which they have developed will not want to put them at the mercy of an uncharted nation. They may not understand what their views on abortion or a balanced federal budget may be.
Harriet F. Pilpel is a New York attorney.
STATE U.
BY T. M. ASLA
WHEN I LOOK AT THE STUDENTS, I SEE THE HOPE FOR THE FUTURE, WHAT DO YOU SEE, CHANCELLOR?
$120.00 PER CREDIT HOUR PER HEAD.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 30, 1979
5
sal inpoten
empted ers, he f what ang the stances of
Staff Reporter
Med Center may get more funds
图
Bv PATRICIA MANSON
The University of Kansas Medical Center may receive more money next year than
The Kansas Senate Make and Means
Committee approved a $129 million budget for the Med Center for the 1979-80 school year. $2.2 million more than the Kansas House recommended this
SLA
Of the $11.2 million, $44.4 million would come from state funds. The remainder would be raised through patient fees and federal revenue funds.
James Lowman, dean of the School of Medicine, said yesterday that he was in agreement with the president.
"The budget sounds fantastic," he said. "I am surprised by the increase."
Richard Von Ende, executive secretary for the University, also said he was pleased with the work.
The budget now will go to a joint conference committee so the House and Senate can resolve any differences in their proposals.
Von Ende and Lowman said they were optimistic that the joint committee would approve the increase recommended by the Senate.
Lowman said, "The House did give us more money than the governor recommended. At that stage, they were obviously too good." He's hopeful we'll get the additional funding."
In January, Gov. John Carlin proposed a $110.2 million budget for the Med Center. The House this month approved a $110.6 million budget.
The Senate's proposed budget provides $1.8 million to buy equipment for the new Bell Memorial Hospital, scheduled to open in July.
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Of the proposed amount, $1.4 million would come from savings and appraisals.
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Last month, a Med Center official told a joint committee that the hospital could be a money-making operation if it received funds for new equipment.
evening shift at the Med Center and a 10 percent increase for nurses working the
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The increase would help retain nurses, the budget report says. Med Center officials have said about 45 percent of the nurses quit each year.
The official, David Waxman, executive vice chancellor, said, "It's very, very important. If we don't get the equipment, we won't make the revenue."
The $1.8 million would be used to buy automated laboratory and billing equipment.
812 Mass. Downtown
The proposed budget also provides $1.3 million for the renovation of B.E. Allen. The project will cost $270,000.
The House this month did not recommend any funding for the hospital. Members of the Ways and Means Committee, which has been involved in the project, they needed more time to study the project.
The Kansas Board of Regents voted last month to buy and renovate E.B. Allen. The Kansas Legislature has not yet approved the purchase.
Center, although the state does not yet own the hospital.
The budget also includes $184,144 for 12
residency positions; $182,659 for 21 positions
in diagnostic radiology and $138,329 for 12
positions in the Med Center's clinical
laboratory.
for the Wichita Branch, the Senate budget also includes $40,853 for another faculty position, and $50,000 to fund a clinical research program.
The budget contains $405,831 to provide a 5 percent pay increase for nurses working the
The budget provides $128,017 to establish health education centers in Hays, Salina and Garden City and $38,740 to expand a training program in pediatrics in Topeka.
---
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Tickets available at SUA Office. North and various locations.
Doors open at 8:30 PM. An SUA and Schon Production.
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---
6
Friday, March 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Spring Fever
Catch it now!
Put new life into your car with hot bargains from Pioneer. This weekend TEAM is having a Pioneer Factory Authorized Sale. Not just a few systems, but the entire line of Pioneer car stereo products are 10% to 25% off. Hot spring deals on Pioneer car stereo components. You'll find them at TEAM! Catch'em now!
KPX-9000 $299.95
VOLUME
PULL BALANCE
REMOTE INJECT
PIONEER
AUDIOPHONE AUXILIARY
FM • MP • AM • SW
AM 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
LIMITED TIME
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LOVE
RUSH RADIO
BASS
AM FM
TREBLE
KPX-9000 An in-dash, component-style AM/FM Stereo Superuptrant cassette deck. Features: Phase-locked loop for FM stereo separation. Separate bass and treble. Loudness control for depth at low volume. Stereo/mono switch. 5-station pre-set pushbutton tuning. Accepts optional AD-306 noise suppression system to minimize multipath distortion and ignition interference. Electronically governed motor assures extremely low wow and flutter. Tape play indicator. Locking fast forward and rewind. Automatic replay after rewind. Automatic eject. Adjustable shafts to fit in the dash of most cars.
KPX-600 $199.95
BALANCE BASS TREble CASSETTE AUTO EJECT AUTO PLAY
VOLUME TUNED FM AUX OUT GROUP PIONEER
M 88 .92 .96 .100 .104 .108
KPX-600: A component underdash cassette play deck with super tuner FM. Features separate bass and treble. Loudness control for depth at low volume FM. features muting and stereo/mono switch. Electronically governed motor assures extremely low watt and flutter. Locking fast forward and rewind. Automatic eiect.
Pioneer has authorized TEAM this weekend to give away the GM-40 Power Amplifier with the purchase of any Pioneer component series car stereo unit. Regular price $79.95.
PIONEER
MADE IN CHINA
INPUT: 12VDC, 50/60Hz
OUTPUT: 12VDC, 1A
PIONEER
STANDARD AUDIO CABLE
GM-40 Component Power Amplifier features: 20 watt per channel power amplifier. Frequency response is to 40.000. Distortion no more than 0.06%.
KP-88G $169.95
LOUDNESS DOLBY NR
PIONEER CASSETTE DECK
VOLUME
BALANCE
BASS
TREBLE
DOUBLE MR PLAY
MIN MAX LEFT RIGHT MIN MAX MIN MAX
KP-889: A component, under-dash cassette play deck with Dolby noise reduction.
Features: Separate bass and treble. Loudness control for depth at low volume. Electronically governed motor assures extremely low wow and flutter. Locking fast for optimal performance. Rewind. Automatic eject. Dolby noise reduction and tape play indicator lamps.
KP-66G $139.95
PIONEER CASSETTE DECK
BASS TREBLE BALANCE VOLUME LOUDNESS
L L L R MIN MAX
KP-66G: A component underdash cassette play deck. Features separate bass and treble. Loudness control for depth at low volume. Electronically governed motor assures extremely low wow and flutter. Locking fast forward and rewind. Automatic replay after rewind. Automatic eject. Very small chassis size.
Pioneer Factory Authorized Speaker Sale!
From Friday, March 30 to Sunday April 1st all 18 different Pioneer speakers are 25% off. Listed below are just some of the values! Spring Fever is here. Catch it now!
HONDA
TS-695: Flush-mount 6"x9" three-way speaker. 20 oz solid ferrite magnet. Metal-finish frame with mesh grill. 40 watts.
TS-695: Normally $139.95 per pair.
Save $34.99. Now only $104.96.
TS-16
TS-168: 6½" round three-way speaker. Hom tweeter. Metal mesh grill for maximum sound transmission. Door, quarter panel, or rear deck mount. Deep dish parabolic cone for increased bass response. 10-oz magnet. 40 watts.
TS-168: Normally $119.95 per pair. Save $29.99. Now only $89.96.
TS
TS-121: 5 $ \frac{1}{2} $ " door-mount thin type single cone. Needs only 1" mounting depth. 20 watts. 80 to 16,000 Hz.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 30, 1979
7
Women given job hunting advice
By ELLEN IWAMOTO
Staff Renorter
Finding a job in the real world does not have to be frightening for a woman, said Dorothy Godfrey, a regional coordinator of the Federal Women's Program for the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
"Once you finish your studies and get that degree which has been dangling in front of you, it is really not so scary out there," she said.
Godfrey spoke last night about job hunting for women to about 55 delegates to the Intercollegiate Association of Women Students Convention.
"You are much more capable now than when you first came to college," she said. "College is not all academics. Women can do college much better equipped to live life."
*Learn from experience, the bad, sad,
super experiences. Out there it is literally
crawling with opportunities, it can be mind bogging."
ALL. OPPORTUNITIES won't come, on the door. Good luck, said because there is in line for it.
Women need to decide if they are looking for a job or a career. she said. A job is doing something for a paycheck but a career is knowing where you are going in a field.
Godfrey advised women to talk to people working in their field. Women are usually more eager than men to discuss their careers with other women, she said.
It also is probably better to turn down any job offers that are not in your field, she said, because experience in a chosen field is necessary.
Volunteer work that demonstrates leadership capabilities is good to put on display.
"Researching the business you are interested in applying to for a job is a valuable tool," Godfrey said. "In your interview you can ask a few good questions and think in
terms of what you can do to help the company."
AT THE interview, Godfrey advised,
at TWE wear jeans and tennis shoes or dress
outside.
"You're striving to be Mary Tyler Moore, not Dolly Parton," she said.
Gobrefey said that even when a woman found a job, she should continue to look
"After you have learned everything you can from your first job, it's time to look for
Godfrey added, "The price of equality women must pay is eternal vigilance. There is no time to let down. These are only real gains, so don't let them erode away."
"What is good for women is good for the nation. One problem is that women fail to recognize how great they are. Women must permit themselves to be depreciated.
"Once women get it together, it should be a whiz."
Ten Towering Reasons to Live Here.
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5. Location: ON CAMPUS
6. Transportation: ON BUS ROUTE
7. Security Patrol
8. Emergency Maintenance: 24 HOURS
9. Swimming Pool: OPEN MAY-SEPT.
10. Name: the TOWERS.
joyhawker towers apartments
4603 w. fifteenth
Now leasing for fall '79. Come in early for best selection.
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Fremont Hornberger, maintenance supervisor, said more than 42 of the 56 interior doors have cracked.
County commission signs grant for courthouse 'weatherization'
The Douglas County Commission signed a grant for the State Historical Society Wednesday, but cut $6,200 from the original grant request of $237,200.
Funds from the grant will be used to "weatherize" the county courthouse, 11th and Massachusetts streets. According to the grant application, the $180,500 grant will save $2,000 in energy costs each year.
and exterior remodeling of the 75-year old building.
The "weatherization" will include the installation of 140 double-pane storm windows; the replacement of a skylight window; and the returning of four outside doors.
The grant calls for half of the $180,500
He said the company that sold the doors to the county would take the damaged doors down in June and repair them at no cost to the county.
to be paid by county funds. The county will pay its share with federal revenue sharing funds.
The part of the grant cut from the application was for cleaning the outside walls of the courthouse and spraying the walls with a silicone waterproofing treatment.
BOB NEIS, county commissioner, said the silicone treatment was cut from the application because it would not add to the historical value of the building.
More than $1 million in Douglas County revenue sharing funds have been spent over the past three years for the interior
One problem encountered since the courthouse was remodeled has been the cracking of panels in the new ak doors.
Hornberger said the door panels cracked because they were made of green wood. They cracked when the moisture dried, he said.
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© Copyright 1979
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---
8
Friday, March 30. 1979
University Daily Kansan
'Halloween' satiates terror hunger
Reviewer
Bv VINTON SUPPLEE
One of the anomalies of human nature is the enjoyment of fright as entertainment. Real danger is to be avoided; vicarious danger is to be savored as an almost sensual pleasure.
John Carpenter's "Halloween" is a notable exception to the pervasive mediocreity of current horror films. An extremely well-made film, "Halloween" is credited with creating one of the most distinctive to earlier horror classics by drawing directly from them for inspiration and effect while retaining enough originality to be considered a worthy successor. As coauthor and director of "Halloween," Carpenter is primarily responsible for its success.
THE FILM CONCERNS two Halloween nights in a small Illinois town. The first, which serves as a prologue, takes place in 1963. The camera initially functions as the
KANSAN Review
eyes or a murderer, in effect converting the audience into killers.
The murderer sees a teenage girl and her boyfriend making love in a pleasant old house. The killer enters the house with a knife, then kills the girl for the butcher knife. As he leaves the house, he is recognized by a couple getting out of a car in the driveway of the house. They address him.
The camera suddenly shifts to the role of neutral observer, revealing the significance of the events. The killer is a child, the couple his parents and the victim his sister.
Fifteen years later, Michael escapes from an insane asylum and returns to his hometown. The asylum a chief psychiatrist, Dr. Hobson, helps him reclaim his life. Pleasance, follows Michael to warn the
cowhouse that they are in danger. Despite his efforts, history inevitably repeats itself. Michael stalks three teen-age girls who live near Lee Curtis, P.J. Solles and Nancy Loomis.
CARPENTER HAS a keen sense of atmosphere. The photography in "Halloween" is excellent and makes an integral contribution to the film's pervasive mood of dread. The use of filters converts the daytime sky into aicky yellowish-hot hue during night time, evokes a subconscious fear of the dark that is eerily realistic.
Carpenter has an unsettling ability to make the commonplace menacing. As Michael effortlessly prowls through the town in search of his prey, the reassuring familiarity of its typically American ambience suffused with a hidden, lethal danger.
Carpenter's attention to detail is skillful and sardonicly conceived. In one scene, two of the girls drive aimlessly around town, while another character that Michael is in the car following them.
THE FILM reaches its climax as the girls
الكولاءي، زيناير بر ...
مهرجان ...
MARCH 30th
8am-8pm
دبيه سعودية
OMAR MASJED
2715 SWOPE PARK-WAY
KANSAS CITY MO.
are babysitting in two houses across the street from each other. Laurie, the most innocent, is watching television with the children in one house. The Creature Feature Season 1 was on Planet. "During the last movie, one of the children looks out a window and sees Michael carrying a body into the other room," Laurie says. "For 'Forbidden Planet' gives the scene an unearthly quality that is grounded in a plausible reality. This is true of Halloween's entirety. The events it depicts are fantastic externally within the realm of possibility.
البلاطي، نويل مارث…
مبارك ...
MARCH 30th
8am - 8pm
OMAR MAS-JED
2715 SWOPE PARK-WAY
KANSAS CITY MO.
FREE Airform.
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BOOKS
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Spencer Museum
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Judah Collins
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"HALLOWEEN" INVOLVES a minimal amount of gore. Carpenter prefers to use psychological suspense to generate fear and he is successful.
He also has gotten fine performances from his cast. The three actresses made contributions to the portrait of the grimly determined psychiatrist makes him an effective therapist.
Judith Collins
Judith
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Judy Collins
Judith
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IN VIEW OF THE horror genre's general decline, Carpenter's achievement in "Halloween" is truly impressive. He has made a horror film that is intelligent, suspensive and frightening. It makes being scared a deliciously squirming pleasure.
JUDY COLLINS
FARD TIMES FOR LOVERS
Last week we wrote of the retribution that follows evil doing. "Be sure your sin will find you out." *Numbers* 32-23.
History reveals the truth of that statement. Only a very few examples are given as follows:
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
"The domestic peace and prosperity of the good old archarch. Jacob was sadly lamented; life is compelled to be made worse by his insistence on life before the aroused wrath of his brother — to suffer a long oppression and wrong in the family of Laban, his Khmanian; to suffer the death of his wife, whose death that suddenly he is bereaved of his favorite wife — Joseph is violent torn from his embrace by his own sons — and at last he is released from prison. The aged father seemed to respose, must be bled up to an uncertain destiny, and his cry is heard." All these things are true.
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
David was a good man, yet he sinned a great sin. And his sin had afflicted him with the curse of afterward afflicted in his domestic relations, his subsequent history remained the sad memorial. The Voice of God announced, "The sword shall never depart from your house!" The brother, killed Ammon! Later on Abasalam usurped his son, killed Amos! Finally, Abasalam usurped "man after God's heart" — a man after God's heart in the war
Examples crowd upon us from every quarter; every neighborhood furnishes them! Haman was hung on the gallews to be mortaled. Dogs athec the carcasses of Queen Jazebel, and kicked up the blood of her husband, King Ahab. Herods burnish leafless examples. But consider Pontius Pilus, who suffered in Sunday's public worship: "Suffered under Pontius Pilate."
he repented and accepted the severe judgement of God, reminding one of the words of Job: "Yea, though he lays me
"Plate, evacitating between the monitions of conscience and a miserable time serving policy, delivered up Jesus to be crucified. He believed him to be innocent; yet that his own conscience was wrong, he denied his conscience and condemned the innocent. He must secure his friendship of Ceasar, though it be at the expense of his master, but miserably he failed, and there was in the retribution which he suffered for the punishment to the crime. He hastened at nothing to please his imperial master at Rome. Yet he two years later sent a message to his master as an providence, in disgrace and abandonment, and with a burden on his conscience which was at the burning he, put and end to an existence which was too wretched to comprehend. He set forth the words: "He that confesses and forsake his sin shall lind mercy."
P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031
Nightlife
Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Spare Time
Tantrum with Secrets, March 30-31
Gary Burton Quartet, April 6
Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts St.
- Earl Robinson and the Red Hot Scamps,
- March 30-31.
Off the Wall Hall. 737 New Hampshire St.
- Smart Pills, March 30
* People's Record, New Hampshire St.
- Rosie's Bar and Grill, March 31
Concerts
- Judy Collins, March 30, 9 p.m., Hoch Auditorium.
- Swarthot Recital Hall.
* KU Collegium Musicum. April 1 3:30
- KU Collegium Muscat, April 1, 3:30
p.m. Spenzer MuseumAdr.
- University Singers, March 30, 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall.
- KU Jazz Ensemble II, April 3, 8 p.m., Swatworth Recital Hall.
*Jean-Pierre Ramalp with the Kansas City
Paintball team, April 3 at p.m. and April 4 at
6 p.m.*
Films
- Girl Friends dir. by Claudia Well with
Michelle Skinner, 3:30-7:00
and 8:00-10:00
and 11:00-March 30-31
- Women in Art: Louise Nevelson In Pro-
girl friends
FIVE PACKS
presents a film by Claudia Well "Girl Friends" starring Melanie Maxwell featuring Aksun Skinner. Elwall Wallace, Christopher Guest Bob Balaban, Gina Rogak-Amry Wright Visual Lifers, & Mike Kellin produced & directed by Claudia Well. coproducer Willie Westerholt music by Claudia Well & Vika Polen music, Michael Small
Distributed by Vermont Bureau & Aware of Communications Company
1918 Vermont Bureau, Inc. All rights reserved
presents
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"Melanie Mayron is romantic and offers evidence that some mysterious quality we call sex appeal is harder to define than it ever was and continues to be what movies are all about." — Molly Hashell, New York Magazine
W.
PG PARENTAL LIABILITY LIMITED
sua films
Friday 3:30,7:00,9:30
Saturday 3:30,7:00,9:30
cess, dir, by Susan Fansheli andILL Godilmon, Helen Frankelman, dir, by Berry Miller Adato, and Mary Cassatt Impressionist from Philadelphia, 730, April 12.
Recitals
Kathy Wolfe. cello. March 30, 3:30 p.m.
March 30 & 31
Kathy Wolfe, celio, March 30, 3:30 p.m.
Cathy Crispino, soprano, and Emily Young
violin, March 30, 8 a.m.
Woodruff Auditorium
Mary Lou Robinson, organ, April 1. 3:30 p.m.
Sally Shumway, viola and Brenda Elliot,
flute, April 12, 8 p.m.
Admission $1.50
Oread String Trio, April 2, 8 p.m.
Jon Davis, trumpet, April 4.8 p.m.
Alecia Toner, piano, April 5.8 p.m.
All recitals are in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Collins' talent, empathy get gig
Myres, a committee chairperson for programs and speakers, said Collins was one of several female performers on a list of special guests to Alan Shaw, SUA special events chairman.
The other singers included Joan Baez and Joni Mitchell, Shaw said.
Susan Myles, the one of the organizers, said yesterday that "The main reason we chose her was because she was the woman we wanted someone who would give a performance that was not necessarily toward the women's movement, but who was also a participant in the women's movement."
Singer Judy Collins' participation in the women's movement is one reason the Intercollegiate Association of Women Students steering committee suggested her as a flexible performer during the IAWS convention and conference, according to a convention organizer.
Collin will perform at 9 p.m. tonight in
Hall Auditorium. The doors will open at
10 a.m.
Her current release is "Hard Times for Lovers."
In 16 consecutive years of recording, she has released 15 albums, six of which have been gold records, grossing $1 million in sales.
Collinas has had a multi-faceted career involving singing, film directed, song writing. She is a producer.
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Tuesday & Thursday
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Friday—
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TGIF'N 4-7 ... 3.00 at the door ...
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Tues & Wed— Boogie Fever
Thurs-Sat— Shade Tree
DREAMS
THE CULTURE OF THE FUTURE
MICHAEL JACKSON AND TAMARA BENNETT
THE RULE OF THE CROSS
Arts & Leisure
LAURA HANSON AND JEWELLE MAYER
FILM 5063 XO
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10.49
THE ROCKY HORROR LOOK
"Virgin," screamed the audience as Janet's creamy face appeared on the screen, smiling even so sweetly at Brad, her fance. Her lines were obliterated by the din.
As the camera whirled to show Brad's face, the audience stopped jerking Janet to bellow, "Asshole," at Brad's innocent mouth.
However, none of this could be heard a few hours earlier in fact, there weren't any signs of the unpending war that was to follow, a fifth floor of the Kansas Union Saturday night.
The only clue was a poster at the SUA ticket window, that said, "The Rocky Horror Picture Show is out tonight."
In preparation for the event, the Gay Services of Kansas sponsored The Rocky Horror Spring format, a dance that was to precede the midnight showing of the movie
The multi-colored vests and the suede coats soon were infiltrated by an occasional silk baseball jacket and a few polyester shirts.
The early evening film showings brought a typical crowd, but by 8.30 the feel of things began to change
By 9 p.m. with fishnet hoose protruding from beneath their call-length trench coats are climbing the stairs to the Union Ballroom
cursors, black biank shorts, orange earlets belt with fashnet hoack and black high-backed shoes. Inside the ballroom, the disco music was cranked up.
Groups sat around tables, watching the action on the dance floor. The ballroom has become a sort of magnet, attracting masses of the costumed dancers.
Women wearing sparkly, gold sequined hats and matching vests began to arrive. Eventually two men walked past women.
Some costumes were fairly successful at
temps to clone characters from Rock
Horror. Others were generally rough, inter-
pretations.
A woman wearing a cowboy hat, jeans and boots danced with a young girl in a bridal jacket. Next to them was another young girl in a black dress. Fashion jacket, boots, and a brown leather vest.
a partnerless figure, save for the bottom half of a female manikin, dropped drunkenly around the dance floor, waiving in and out of dancers' flailing arms and legs.
At 12:30 a.m. the velvet ropes were pulled back and the eager crow ran down the hallway screaming like banshees. The auditorium filled quickly.
By midnight, the crowd at the dance was starting to filter out. Some left, others found a spot in line for the movie.
The cheers and whistles that throubled the opening lines of the theme song quickly turned to singing the lyrics.
The opening bridal scene started the name-calling. Brad began to speak to Janet after the wedding.
when the narrator apperences telling a story, but the narrator contends that the counter, their eyes turned into 'booorr-rrennnung,' followed by off-handed commencing, concerning the narrator's lack at bable.
The movie covered all the bases. It successfully satirized past horror movies. Parts of the script, "as if I have that knowledge," described a countenance's countless remarks to the narrator's paused, suspensive narrations, obviously were called from old films.
The crowd picked up on the clichés, mimicking them or changing the wording to alter the content. They voiced their lines, in unison, prior to the lines from the movie.
Photo by Randy Olson
Sorry by Doug Hildenau
The rishths that the Rocky Horror cult films are based on have counter lines and returns that the audience used Saturday night are, in use in the more recent times that are showing the film nationwide.
Some people have seen the movie 50 times and a few have seen it more than 100 times. Extended engagements at theaters like the Marathon in, in Kentucky (tie), Mo. The marathon race has been called the Big Joe you has shown Kansas. (It the film might for almost two years.
To some people who have seen it repeat edy, the audience is as important to the success of the film as the script, actors and costumes.
Michelle Wipper, St. Charles, Mo., freshman, said I saw the first time and I wanted to come back to participate. The team was fantastic, she said, get the people, not the movie.
An audience member who would give only work as his name said, "I've seen 34 times of the crowds. Usually there's a bit of the crowdly. What happens to you when you talk what they use to sound."
"They couldn't make it dirty as it should have been. It should have been a celebration of everything that is traditionally rude."
Layton July, winner of a costume contest held earlier at the dance, has seen the movie more than 100 times.
Despite the intensity of some people's en-
joyment, others are more pragmatic.
Mark said. Sometimes, Layton puts in there and does all of Frank·Furter·Porter moves. He knows most of the lines and all of the Frank's dances and songs.
Jeff Miller, Overland Park junior, said. You can't judge Rocky Horror like you judge regular movies "where are no standards to measure it against."
1904
21A 3323 22A
21A 22A 23A 24A 25A
101
SINCE 1970
THE WRESTLER'S CLUB
FASHION
A woman wearing a luxurious fur coat and holding a cane.
A DANCE PLEASURE
10
Friday, March 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
T.G.I.F.
AT THE HAWK
ELECT
ELECT FLORENC (DANNY) DRURY
CITY COMMISSIONER
- Resident of Lawrence over 30 years
* Former math teacher, Lawrence High School
* Present manager, Thrift Shop,
Plymouth Congregational Church
* Active in League of Women Voters
B.A. Univ. of Wis., 1941
B.S. Educ. KU, 1967
Political Advertisement
Paid for by the Drury for Commissioner Committee, Jim Postma, Treasurer
Political Advertisement
PETER PARKER
Bv DAVID COLBURN
Sports Writer
Women's tennis team waxes young Cyclones
Re-elect
The KU women's tennis team overpowered a young, inexperienced Iowa state squad 90 last night at Alamuro for the victory moves KU's spring return to 8-2.
The Jayhawks did not lose a set in sweeping the match from the Cyclones, a team with five freshmen among its top six players.
"This is a super warmup," he said. "It gets us in the frame of mind to play Oral Roberts."
to
District 497 School Board
In contrast to ISU, Kivisto said, he expects a tough match against Oral Roberts University. Matches are scheduled to be played at the Allen Fieldhouse. In case of inclement weather, the matches will be moved to the Alvarmar courts.
FOTOPULOS and Block teamed to
N.O.1 doubleheader over Vukim-
ka-Serbia-Stevni-Scherli-
Criminis-Rector 6-1, 6-4, and Merri-
on and Thea Llewery stopped Edwards-
s
I would appreciate your support
Charley Oldfather
There were no surprises in the match for KU coach Tom Kivisto.
Kivisto said ORU had added two Australians to its squad, giving the Titans added strength.
Paid Political Advertisement
Experienced ★★★ Interested
1980
SERVICE CALL NOTICE
Beginning April 1st 1979 there will be a $10.00 minimum charge per hour from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM Monday thru Friday.
After 5:00 PM to 8:00 AM week days and all Saturdays, Sundays and holidays there will be a $30.00 minimum service charge. This increase is due to increased operation cost.
There will still be no charge for emergency gas leak calls. To fix a gas leak found on the customer's property the owner can either call a heating or plumbing contractor, or the Kansas Public Service Co. There will be a charge for this repair service, based on time and material required.
For more information please contact our office.
KANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE
CALL 843-7842
GAS MAKES
THE BIG
DIFFERENCE
733 MASSACHUSETTS
SPIRIT SQUAD 1979-80
CHAMPION STUDENTS
Preliminary meeting is April 2,5:30 pm
AUDITIONS:
Auditions
QUALIFICATIONS:
AUDITIONS:
1) Routines will be taught at the clinic
2) No experience necessary.
3) Everyone is invited to tryout.
--are encouraged to participate
The KU Spirit Squad is sponsored and governed by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation. All students interested in learning clinical skills are invited to become a member of the squad are urged to attend clinics to be considered for questions will be answered and routines for trying out will be taught.
Clinics Allen Field House
1) Regularly enrolled student at KU
2) Minimum grade point average 1.8 overall
3) A sincere interest in KU athletics
Wednesday 5:30-7:00 April 4
After 36 holes of golf at the Oklahoma Invitational Tournament, the KU men's team is in fifteenth place with a team total of 695. They are followed by judges with a final round of 18 holes today.
Tuesday
April 3 -5:30-7:00
Doug Anderson shot rounds of 77 and 74 a total of 151 to kick UOI guards. Mark Gorman
KU coach John Hanna said the golfers had little strong winds and a brief rain show.
Thursday
April 5 -5:30-7:00
Men golfers in 5th
"It blew all day and it rained for 10 minutes," Hanna said. "We're showing improvement and not doing too badly in team scoring."
Wednesday
April 11 -5:30-7:00
Jayhawks stumble; take 2nd in tourney
Tuesday -5:30-7:00 April 10
Monday
April 9 -5:30-7:00
Minority students
Thursday
April 12 -5:30-7:00
Southwest Missouri State University
ranched third with 750, and Wichita State
State College.
Proliminaries April 14
—9:30 a.m.
Finals April 21
—9:30 a.m.
Kansas coach Sandy Bahan said she was not pleased with the team's performance
"I was disappointed and the girls were disappointed," she said, "but we have to develop consistency and this is an example of that."
Bahan said it was KU's poor showing, and not a strong NU performance, that decided
Nancy Hoins, who was in second place after the first day, slipped to third place after shooting an 82 yesterday. She finished at 168, four shots behind medalist Karla Williams, and another college. Cindy Johnson finished fifth at 178, and Sally White finished seven with a 184.
Washington deserves postseason benefits
Marian Washington is reaping the successful coaching season. And rightfully so.
She led this year's KU women's basketball team to a 48-10 record, the best ever achieved.
The record in itself is an accomplishment, but it deserves recognition because it was done without many of the elements that successful programs depend on.
One of those elements is money, a foundation for attracting top athletes.
Next year, Washington expects to have $5,000-$8,000 more for basketball scholarships. But that will only bring the total to $12,000, or enough for seven full scholarships.
This year, three players were on full
balances and three players no financial
balance.
TEAMS OF national prowess, such as UCLA and Louisiana Tech, this year's national runnerup, have enough money to buy the basketball team, even Kansas State University, which competes with KU for instate talent, has put more money into its basketball scholarships. Washington said K-States had about $17 million in college figure will undoubted increase next year.
Financial limitations make it tough for Washington to compete for recruits against teams in the area such as K-State, and Austin and Wayland Baptist, both in Texas.
But that's where the record has proved handy. "We are able to get the attention at last of the highly sought player ballers in the country." Washington said yesterday.
In fact, players have been calling her to inquire about KU's program almost faster.
There's another tribute to KU's rise in basketball circles.
WASHINGTON FINDS he is competing for players with such traditional national powers as Stephen F. Austin and Old Dominion, this year's national champion.
That same caliber of teams is also calling and asking to be included in KU's schedule
"I've just been bombarded with calls. The
women's wants to play us," Washington said.
UCLA and Stephen F. Austin both want Kansas to come to their schools to play.
SIDELINER
Nancy
Dressler
trips, such as one to the West Coast, impossible.
But some teams are making games more attractive by offering to pay for part of the cost of traveling to their areas, a reflection of ingressiveness to add Kansas to their schedules.
SOME GAMES already have been made final for next season. Both USC and Kentucky will come to Lawrence for games, for the Kansas State team, Allen Field House. Kansas has been invited to participate in a tournament in Plainville, Texas, that in the past has featured the Crimson Tide.
And because of her role as not only basketball coach but also administrator; Washington finds her schedule of appearances booked solid.
"I thought I'd been busy before. I'll probably be more busy in the next two months than ever with speaking engagements alone," she said.
That's easy to understand considering this year's accomplishments, which included winning the Bigt Eight tournament, winning the Central Region sectional tournament in the Central Region sectional tournament. Sophomore Lynette Woodard led the nation unofficially in scoring with a 31.0 point average and she was named to the 10-team Kodak All-America team for the second time.
KANSAS HAS REACHED a plateau in women's basketball and it hasn't been easy. The program has been taken from nowhere to a No. 14 national ranking this year by Washington, who has managed to attract the top four moments of money and national recognition.
And Washington can now foresee of the same with a solid nucleus returning next week.
"This was one of the nice years for me. I had players who were a joy to work with. They gave positively on and off the court," she said. "We've done a heck of a lot with a little bit."
By MIKE EARLE
Sports Writer
The KU soccer club kicks off its season with a pair of matches this weekend.
The club goes against Baker University at 2 p.m. tomorrow in Memorial Stadium and travels to Manhattan Sunday to play Kansas State's soccer club.
Because KU's soccer club is not funded by the University's athletic team. team
Soccer club starts spring season
2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY
Sat. March 31 2:30 p.m.
and 7:30 p.m.
Fri. March 30 7:30 p.m.
Sun. April 1 2:30 p.m.
members pay their road expenses and schedule their opponents.
DYCHE AUDITORIUM
Tickets $1.25 at the door sponsored by the K.U.
Science Fiction Club and Fantasy Assn. Partially funded by the Student Senate
"We're more or less coaching ourselves," senior team member Patt Catallain said.
The club has been practicing at Holcom Sports Complex. The field there was recently marked and chalked for regulation play. Goals have been put up.
The club has scheduled an invitational
tour and 8, with six teams
scheduled to participate.
There is no admission charge for tomorrow's game with Baker.
Bowie to Kentucky
LEBANON, Pa. (AP)—Sam Bowie, the nation's most recruited high school basketball player and the NCAA's choice as the outstanding player this season, has decided to attend the University of Kentucky.
Chick Hess, Lebanon High coach, said Wednesday that the 7-5 Bowie had picked Coach Joe Hall's Wildcats from among more than 400 colleges and universities that played in Kansas. The Kansas was reportedly among the final three or four schools Bowies considered.
Norma Rae
"ATRIUMPH
Vincent Cobb, New York Times
"WONDERFUL"
Charles Champion,
Los Angeles Times
Incent Camp.
"WONDERFUL"
Charles Champion,
Los Angeles Times
"A TOUR DE FORCE"
Richard Greuer,
campaigner
"OUTSTANDING" Steve Arvin
"A MIRACLE"
CASS"
crew Shau!
NBC TV
"FIRST CLASS
Gene Shultz
NRC-TV
a MARTIN RITT/ROSE AND ASSEYEV production INFORMATION PAE
SALLY FIELD RON LEIBMAN BEAU BRIDges PAT HINGLE BARBARA BAXLEY screenplay by IRVING RAVETCH and HARIRET KRIJ, JR music DAVID SHIRE director of photography JOHN A. ALONZO, A S.C. produced by TAMARA ASSEYEV and ALEX ROSE directed by MARTIN RITT IT GOES LIKE IT GOES" lyrics by NORMAN GIMBEL music by DAVID SHIRE COLOR BY DELUXE*
PG ART DIRECTOR
LAKER
PG PARENTAL GUIDANCE SUGGESTED
SOME MATERIAL MAY NOT BE SUITABLE FOR CHILDREN
Now playing at a theatre near you. Check local newspaper for specific theatre listing.
Friday, March 30.1979
11
im
Bv MARK W, GATES
Credit option use declines
Staff Reporter
University Daily Kansan
- The number of students at the University of Kansas using the credit/no credit option has steadily decreased since the option's inception in 1969. Don Tibrel, data systems specialist for the office of admissions and records, said yesterday.
"Students have realized that there are too many pifits in it," he said. "I think it'll die."
in fall 1972, 2,290 students used the credit/no credit option. Last fall, one tenth of that number, 291 students, chose the program, where there are no plans to end the program.
The credit/no credit option is open only to undergraduate and may not be used in the case of a default.
STUDENTS CHOOSE the option during the third or fourth week of classes. The instructor is not informed if a student chooses the option.
If the student receives an A, B or C, the transcript will show "Credit." If the student receives a D or an F, the transcript will show "No Credit."
"This option was set up to encourage students to get into academic areas they wouldn't otherwise have enrolled in." The number of buildings of Architecture and Urban Design said.
"In the context of our highly grade- oriented system, it isn't appropriate," he said. "Students think more in terms of grades rather than what they're learning."
Tribble said complaints about the option included receiving credit for those hours if they were transferred, receiving No Credit for a D, receiving only Credit for an A and having little motivation when a student received the same credit for A, B or C work.
These courses are not figured into the student's grade point average and once the students have chosen the credit/no credit option, they cannot change their mind.
"ON A LIMITED basis, it is good to have if it encourages a student to take a course that is remote to his major." George Worth, chairman of the department of English.
much in the last ten years," he said. "In the '60s, students were very anti-grade. Now, if anything, there is too much emphasis on grades."
Kahn agreed with Metzler.
"Attitudes towards grades have changed
Only one course a semester can be chosen under the option.
of Engineering, said he had not encountered any students who had had difficulty getting courses with the Credit notation transferred to another school.
"Most universities transfer passing grades at the C level," he said. "I can't univy any university not accepting a Credit from a recognized institution like KU."
Lawrence
Clog
Headquarters
J. J. Angelas
Holiday Plaza
25th & Iowa
HoursMon-Thurs 10:8-30 Sun 12:30-5:30
Fri-Sat 10:5-30
"If a student happens to be working into a program where grades or grade points are needed, it is best to report it to Tribuled. It is "harmful." Tribuled says, "It is an ambiguous notation. Some schools interrupt no credit as F when some schools interrupt no credit as F when
Don Metzler, associate dean of the School
There is disagreement about how easy it is for students to transfer hours if they have no homework.
Number of Students Participating in the Credit/No Credit Option at the University of Kansas, 1971-78
Number of Students Fall 1971 Spring 1972 Fall 1972 Spring 1973 Fall 1973 Spring 1974 Fall 1974 Spring 1975 Fall 1975 Spring 1976 Fall 1976 Spring 1977 Fall 1977 Spring 1978 Fall 1978 (tenative) 1871 2287 2290 2441 1729 1437 1003 935 506 568 315 329 241 337 291 351 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0
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Two groups to celebrate peace treaty
"It's not meant to be a counterdemonstration or anything of that sort," she said, referring to the campus and treating the treaty yesterday and Wednesday.
Mohamed EH-I-Dhiher, academic adviser of the Egyptian Students Association, said, "Atmahd Abou-Helaw, president of the Egyptian Students Association, has assured me of the association's support for the celebration."
Registration at Arts Center ends tomorrow
Hillel, the campus Jewish student organization, is planning a celebration of Egyptian-born peace treaty today. Judith Hillel, junior and senior of Hillel, said.
The celebration will be held in conjunction with the Egyptian Students Association outside the Kansas Union from 10 a.m. to 2 o.m. she said last night.
The registration deadline for april
classes at the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth
and Seventh Floor of 208 Lexington Ave.
*Tutition fees for the classes range from $10 to 15. Class schedules and registration form are available at www.scholars.org.*
The quiling workshop will meet for three sessions. The applique class will meet for one all-day session. Other classes offered by the Center will meet for eight sessions.
Classes for adults and children include batk, dak, dance, painting, drama, mime, jewelry, beadwork, jugging and music and will be workshops for quilting and appliqué.
Classes will begin Monday at the Center.
Arensbe
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I. Continue redevelopment of neighborhood.
II. Continue redevelopment of Central Business District.
III. To take from the land only what we need and try to move more than we use.
"Quality of Life For Lawrence"
Vote
Schumm
City Commissioner-April 3
Pd. Pol. Adv. Pd. tar by the Robert Schumm for City
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1980
!!TONIGHT!!
The Lawrence Opera House proudly presents
TANTRUM
!!TONIGHT!!
The Lawrence Opera House proudly presents
TANTRUM
with
Doors open
at 8:00
Show starts
at 9:00
Tickets available
at
Better Days
and
the 7th Spirit
$2.50 adm.
the
Secrets*
Calendar of Events
F-5 March 20-31 Tantrum w/ Secrets
Fri. April 6 Gary Burton Quartet
Sat. April 7 Pat's Blues Riddim Band
Wed. April 11 Joe Benson w/Perry Jack
F-5 April 12-14 Fast Break
Tues. April 17 Boom Town Bits
Fri. April 20 Gatemouth Terra & Patt County
Sat. April 21 Patt County Park & Boom Band
Wed. April 25 Cement Creation
F-5 April 27-28 Cake Trucks
Wed. April 29 Earl Strange w/Snow Valley Bees
Fri. May 4 Sperre Grye
Sat. May 5 David Erickson
Sat. May 12 Antony At the Wheel
Wed. May 16 David Allen Coe
F-5 May 18-19 Albert Collins
Listings subject to change, calls for information
642 Mass St. (913)842-6930
!!TONIGHT!!
The Lawrence Opera House proudly presents
TANTRUM
with
with
Doors open
at 8:00
Show starts
at 9:00
the
Secrets*
The Lawrence Opera House 7th Spirit Club
**Calendar of Events**
Month 20-21 | Johnson / Jordyn
Fri. | April 6 | Bury Barton Quartet
Fri. | April 7 | Pats' Park Ribbon Band
Wed. | April 11 | Jon Hummer / Sry Jacob
Fri. | April 11 | Fast Break
Fri. | April 12 | State队
Fri. | April 20 | Gatemouth Brown & Patt County
Fri. | April 21 | Park County Park & Bang Band
Fri. | April 23 | Jackson
Fri. | April 27-28 | Celeb Schoen
May 2 | May 4 | Earl Struggge / Shaun Valley Bayes
Fri. | May 4 | Sporra Gyra
Fri. | May 4 | Scooter
Wed. | April 13 | Ashley At The Wheel
Wed. | May 14 | David Allan Coe
Fri. | May 18-19 | Albert Collin
12
Friday, March 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
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Be sure and try our original Mexican Pizza (plenty of meat and cheddar cheese). call ahead 841-6181
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4 to 11 p.m.
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A background in architecture and urban design provides Mark Kelly with the skills to design buildings, structures, and facilities. The Dept of Architecture Office and participation in neighborhood development will be integral to the work of the group.
Marci Francisco is qualified to do the job.
Marci Francisco
Political Adv. CITY COMMISSION Committee to elect Marci Francisco Marvin McDougal-Treasurer
INTERESTED PEOPLE TO SIGN UP FOR COMMITTEES
Free University
Besides putting together each semester's curriculum, we are also organizing several one day seminars on a variety of topics. We have a lot of room for new ideas and improvements on old ones.
The Free University is an organization that serves as a clearing house for volunteer instructors in the Lawrence-KU community. It offers as well, an opportun- tive enrollment in academic and non-academic courses.
Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of Orienteer Kansas, Mt. Oread Bicycle Club, and the KU Sailing Club as well as many special outdoor events. We need people to help out in all areas.
sua outdoor recreation
iR
indoor recreation
We're looking for people to help coordinate these events and others.
Chess, Table Tennis, Bridge. Backgammon.
Football Gn Arm Wrestling and Guardeder Club.
New ideas are always welcome for other indoor recreational activities. Communicate with us.
The Fine Arts area of SUA acts to supplement the "arts activities" of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for staging workshops, performances and exhibits in any of the arts areas . . . literature, art, drama, music, and dance.
films sua
Just like the big shows downstreet, only better because we offer so much more and for a lot less.
We are looking to expand the wide variety that we already have which includes: Popular series, Summer series, Midnight series and many more.
SPECIALEVENTS
Under consideration are a great directors, series, Sunday
specials and an international series, visiting fillmakers and
artists.
Special Events involves lot of students when it comes to promoting a show, security, ushers, hospitality and light and stage are areas that must be considered.
We are best known to students for our exciting large scale concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands. One of our specialties is the outdoor concerts that include several groups and lasts as long as six hours.
Check us out and see what you can do to help.
SUR TRAVEL
SUA Travel offers a unique, less expensive way to travel for the KU student.
Past trips have gone to Padre Island, Vail, Appalachian Trail, the Kentucky Derby and many other places.
Creative minds are needed to promote these programs and develop new ideas.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
FORUMS
ideas, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all a part of SUA Forums.
The Forums committee brings nationally recognized people to the University for stimulating and thought provoking programs. We also keep in touch with people on campus and in the local community who have something to say to a University audience.
We need innovative people like you to help us with our people programs.
SUA Public Relations is responsible for promoting the image and activities of our programming board to the students and the University community. Anyone with creative ideas for promoting SUA is encouraged to apply.
This coming year's activities includes fall and summer orientation and the Madrigal Dinner.
pr public relations
SUA
EXPERIENCE IS NOT A NECESSITY HOWEVER INTEREST IS REQUIRED MARCH 30 IS THE SIGN UP DEADLINE, SO DON'T DELAY. FOR MORE INFORMATION, STOP BY THE SUA OFFICE IN THE KAN-
SAS UNION
OR CALL
864-3477
Prizes include:
Announcing: The first official SUA Academy Awards Contest Give us your best guess!
1st prize: 10 free movie passes + *Gone With the Wind* poster
2nd prize: 6 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
3rd prize: 4 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
4th-10th prizes: 2 free movie passes + choice of limited posters
Mark one in each section.
BEST PICTURE
___ Coming Home
___ The Deer Hunter
___ Heaven Can Wait
___ Married and Exped
___ An Unmarried Woman
BEST ACTOR
Warren Beatty,
Heaven Can Wait
Gary Busey,
The Buddy Holly Story
Robert De Niro,
The Deer Hunter
Lewis Oppenheim,
The Boys From Brazil
Ion Voight, *Coming Home*
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Bruce Dern, *Coming Home*
Richard Farnsworth,
*Conna a Horseman*
Matthew Bender, *Express*
Christopher Walker,
*The Deer Hunter*
Jack Wardone, *Heaven Can Wait*
Anyone is eligible to enter, but may entail only once. In case of a tie, the entry receives earliest win. All decision are final. In lieu of a ticket, fans can attend in the Kansas University DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES IS WEDNESDAY. April 4th, 4:30 P.M. will announce will announced Wednesday April 11.
BEST DIRECTOR
Hal Ashby, *Coming Home*
Michael Cimino,
The Deer Hunter
Wally Allen, Interiorers
Warren Beetty &
Buck Henry, Heaven Can Wait
Alan Parker, *Midnight Express*
Contest rules.
BEST ACTRESS
___ Ingrid Bergman,
___ Autumn Sonata
___ Ellen Burstyn,
___ Same Time. Next Year
___ Jill Clayburgh.
___ An Unmarried Woman
___ Jane Fonda, Coming Home
___ Geraldine Page, Interiors
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Dyan Cannon
Hearson Can Wait
_Penelope Milford_
Coming Home
Maggie Smith, California Suite
Maureen Stapleson, Interiors
Mary Louise Hankins
Name ___
Phone ___
Maupintour travel service
AIRLINE TICKETS
HOTEL RESERVATIONS
CAR RENTAL
KOMAL PASSAGES
TRAVEL INSURANCE
ESCORTED TOURS
CALL TODAY!
843-1211
sua films
AIR SERVICE
800 MASS.
THE MALLS
KANSAS UNION
843-1211
JACK LEMMON, JANE FONDA,
MICHAEL DOUGLAS
"The China Syndrome" PG
Granada
VIEW SHOWING OF CITY
1320 ALAMO AVENUE
Eve 7:30 & 9:40
Sat Sun Mat 2:30
Just Once everyone has to be a winner.
GEORGE C. SCOTT & PETER BOYLE in
"TAKE DOWN" PG
Eve 7:30 & 9:30
Sat-Sun Mat 2:30
Eve 7.20 & 9.25 Hillcrest
S-S Mat 1:45
DARE to be SCARED!
HARDCORE
"HALLOWEEN" E
THE CRITICS LOVED IT AND SO WILL YOU!
NOW SHOWING
Varsity
Cinema
LET TOMLIN JON JOAKVILLE
"MOMENT BY
MOMENT"
Eve 7:40 & 9:40
S-S Mat 2:00 Hillcrest
Eve at 7:20 & 9:20
Sat-Sun Mat 2:40
Eve 7:30 & 9:35
S-S Mat 1:50 Hillcrest
NOW SHOWING
"Impressive. A movingly moody shock film."—Vincent Canby, NY Times
Richard Chamberlain Peter Weir's
THE LAST WAVE PG
CINEMA TWIN From deep space...
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
Evnt 10'45 A/V
Sat Mar 30 United Arts
"A movie to savor. It will tantalize your senses."—Gene Shault, NBC-TV
Donald Sutherland : Brooke Adams - Leonard Nimoy
at the
Davisity
THEATRE OF ART
Showtime 12:00
It will make you feel
new funny!
R. COLE
CHEECH & CHONG in
Up in
Smoke
Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan. 864-4358
BELLA
Friday March 30 7:00pm
ABZUG
Hoch Auditorium
Tickets:
Students $1
Non-students $2
Advanced Sales at
SUA Office
Presented by LAWS in cooperation with NLA Forums
Presented by AWS in cooperation with SA Forums
KANSAN WANT ADS
HELP WANTED
Now taking application for Fountain & Grill
taking lunch at 12pm. Apply in person at Vina Restaurant, 180
Meadow Dr., New York, NY 10017.
SummerJob. National Park Co.'s 21 Parks, 5,000
Mountain Cone. National Park Co.'s 23
Mountain Cone Co.'s 8, Evergreen, Kalispell, WY.
EXOTIC JOBS! LAKE TAHOE,CALIFORNIA!
Meet a unique upsize tip $1700-$400,amount
over. Oversee 8 yrs of experience in
tournaments, ranchers, cruisers, river rafts & more.
Work with 50+ students. QS-24,
Baccalaureum, California. $36,000.
JOBS MEN WOMEN SAILBOATS!
CRUISE SHIPS! No experience. High pay! See Carribean, Cruise Europe, Greece, Summer舱中,
Half Price! Tailgate with 59 and 68 at Box 60129, Sacramento, CA 93080.
4-24
Battery Power Needs Software + commutator
Cable Wire Device Bed and Carrier for 0.40 a/m
cable by cable 18 a/m² (medium)
Work, summer in kuwait area. Suburban area. Send resume to Kuwait College of Engineering Call Sealah Mollat. 316-223-711, Interview www.kuwait.edu/kmc
One of the Midwest's oldest moving and storage companies is Tempus, a new summer application housing houseguest's goal* of needy people only apply. Apply in person at 12.905 W. 63rd St. (913) 631-4800 or www.tempustools.com. Employer宝库.
One of the Midwest workers moving and storage drivers will be required to drive deliverers and helpers. Will train qualified employees to meet D.O.T. requirements. Hard work needs only a little training. You can call or e-mail (912) 631-1440. Equal Opportunity Employer.
CONTEST!
CONTEST!
Design Next Year S. Dr. Shurt
Deadline April 6.
Sen Personals
See Personals
Positions open 2nd and 3rd shifts for wattresses
apply in person Country Kitchens
103 W 28th St
A student assistant for female quadriplegic students will teach (or help) a variety of classroom classes. Job includes typing papers to school student (has own van) helping with homework. Job includes typing and emailing 4423 or 843-1011 evenings and 3-30 afternoons.
Part-Time or Full-Time ADC Architectural Drafting 484-3580
4-5
Established Lawrence Band needs od, anger,
creative Rock Basstit. Call 845-237-4
- 2
ZIPPie People: Experience helpful! Apply in件
people & Me interactions From malls on 2:4d &
Bee Bai
Research Assistant: Graduate student in Biology, Engineering and Computing, and constructing computer interface devices. Requires experience in servo motor technology, and designing initial 12 months with possible continuity. To begin May 15, 1978 or possibly earlier. Contact Dr. William J. Bell. 945 Snow Hale 306-654-1111.
Research Assistant in Neuropharmacology, m.a.
diaglycan research program. $825/mo for year-end
funding. $1800/mo for annual funding from March 20, 1979 through April 9, 1979. Starts
offering further information please contact Professor
Joseph Kravchuk or Technology University of Kansas.
Machatog and Technology University of Kansas is anEqual Opportunity
University.
Full time secretary needed for Child Development office, monthly reports, and keep records of child's monthly report, and keep personality, Send resume to Barry and Seed personalty. Send resume to Barry and Seed personalty. Center 100K Kentucky. Equally Opportunity Employer.
Help wanna at Tac Via. 1700, W 23rd Street,
shift from shift 6 p.m. 1-4 m. Apply in p.p.
805.
BECOME A. MONTESSORI TEACHERS
Classroom Teacher at Montessori
Kindergarten, Plus 125th
School, Kent, KY.
Montessori Plus 125th
School, Kent, KY.
Cooks positions opening very soon for head cooks and grill cooks. All around experience is required. Must be able to read and follow special recipes and have new ideas for special dishes. Part and participation in personality are absolute must. Also needs to have a Sanctuary 843-0640 for appointment. 4-11
KU Upward Bound Program has openings for KU students in August and June, July, and August; time $800 per month. Must be a student at KU and communicate effectively with inner city students. Apply to work with minority students and students available at 293 Carruth or 194 Appalachian Academy. KU Faculty of education school preferences.
Houtte-weestres, fine area restaurant and club,
people for spring and summer, part-time event
people.
Saints clerkies wanted - 20 to 25 weeks week. Agree in person. Lemon's Gliuror W 23rd, W 24th.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, March 30, 1979
12
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, good service, and equipment
Affordable, easy access to campus, and great amenities.
Affordable, easy access to campus, and great amenities.
Affordable, easy access to campus, and great amenities.
Affordable, easy access to campus, and great amenities.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
times times times times
15 words or
$3.00 $2.25 $5.00 $3.00
Each additional
word 01 02 03 04
WEEKDAYS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ERRORS
many items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be played in person or taken to the CUR business office at 864-1254.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Zen practice daily 6 p.m. Introductory talks
12 p.m. on Monday, April 14th
weekday retreat March 30, April 17, May 2
GREAT FOOD, GREAT SERVICE just like you do
GREAT BEEF, HIGH QUALITY, 3-4
t. Sunday; 4 t. midnight; 9-30
**INVEST** In good health and your future life, **Invest** is the name of the company. It is now issuing stock at $40 per share on behalf of the Trustee. For first year Squallent Trustees increase in shares by 81 (4/41 - 4/44) and pay a W.O. P.D. 881, Lawrence.
DEFINE YOUR INALIABLE RIGHTS to HIS
STUDENTS for a Liberalizable School in the SGA.
Students for a Liberalizable School in the SGA.
FOR RENT
Roommate wanted: 2 BR $120 month. + 1½ utility.
842-1607 4-3
2. IHR 2 BH and efficiency. Close to campus, UUI-10579.
Clean, quiet and comfortable. 843-7579.
FRIENDER RIDGE APARTMENTS. NOW SENT:
2867 W. 13th St., East Village, NY 10043.
unframed, from $176. Two image units,
including three closets. Indoor HEATED FOOF. Pool. opening hours:
indoor HEATED FOOF. Pool. opening hours:
INDOOR HEATED FOOF. Pool. opening hours:
BOSTON EAST PLAZA. Front Road, New York to
Rosetta East. EAST
Aquatimina and rooms furnished, parking mo-
nent. Phone: 843-5677 KU and near town. IPS
phone: 843-5677
Still looking for a place to call home? Nemathtown Drive, 845-839-6100. The master of the year. Stay by and look over the master of the year. Stay by and look over the master of the year. Stay by and look over the master of the year. Give you to tell the details and give you to drive the Nemathtown HALL, 1800 Nemathtown Drive, 845-839-6100.
Fire safety system make these rooms safe and location left you sleep later! Only one block walk. Garden with cabins or chairs, deposit quiet Garden for spring great views. Views 840-82-4
Comp available.
Christian Houghton Now and Summer Close to
12-4-00. No. 842-685 between 2
3:00. Keep trying.
Mark 1 & 1-12 Apartments new renting for summer season. Apt. 1, 875 West 4th Street, 9 min walk to campus and 9 min train to school. Carry balances, off-street parking, carriage balances, off-street parking. Mar for add info. 1015 Mile Apt. #3. 842-900-3800
HOUGHTON PLACE: ITS FULL- BUT - BUT we make it and a 3-month season so we will have to wait. We will move out later, but we will remit for the summer term those quarters that have not been completed and checked. 2000 Alhama, 841-5775
Subtlemen Agile-Craft Apt. for Summer 2 2 HIL
Switzerland, Swimming Post-$2,600
Bali 341-8600
5 bedroom house for rent during the summer
Partially furnished Call 842-9086
4-4
Most sublease very once two bedroom Trailtagite
only available. No avail. Call 843-2993 (nurses)
4:24
Get your housing now. More york apartments, homes
for rent in NYC. Up to 60% off. Free shrimp.
fatten. 843-1601. savings. 843-1612.
ROOMS AVAILABLE for next semester - in 30 member student cooperatives; within easy walk-away access. Graduate students from Lawrence, Bristol from $50-$80 and utilizing utilities: 814-8484 or 812-8492. Ask for Tom A. 43
Mnt sublease 2 bedroom form apartment Agr.
1-May 15, $200 + utilities Call MH-230
Spending the summer in Lawrence? Do yourself a favor. Call ON or call in my apartment! Call 811-242-9567.
Now you know these great looking apartments, you'll be sure to go in and see them. We're greatly grateful for our open, airy and affordable location!
Jardinker TOOTHS Apartments
1603 West 15th
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our
DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
Beautiful 2 bedrooms of Minneapolis 30- rent, two years old, C-A and kitchen new.
Two bedroom, two bathrooms, art of Old England, historic fireplaces, air conditioning, electric stove, air conditioning, food service, kitchenette, large wood burning fireplace.
Must subsisture uniformized 2 heatovac Malt gel®
481-8186, 481-8186, 567, 967, Cell. Call 841-8186,
841-8186.
Summer 2016 – 2 bathrooms, Applicant's Ag.
427th Student Pool, Close to Campus.
Aidney 2015 – 3 bathrooms, Applicant's Ag.
Most sukibase furnished one bedroom, apartment
with balcony. AVAILABLE:
V72, 841-NC4, 865-NC4, 890-NC4, for $399.
Part-time in abroad BHP IIEF for corporate and public
partnership with a focus on international growth.
Permanent position. Bachelor's degree plus 2 years of
part-time experience. Non-member preferment.
Email: HR@bhp.com
Summer Sublease. Nice, two bedrooms apartment,
either in campus water pool, AC call 815-760-2420.
Sublease 2 bedroom Meadowbrook mot for $19,000 - $260, clever month - 842-1644. 4-5
MUST mulebase spacities 2 bedroom apt for campus.
New campus. Hotel $00-$351. Cell 864-792-6360.
PRIVATE CLUBS
GUIDE
RESTAURANT & PRIVATE CLUB
STEAKS, SEAFOOD & ITALIAN Cuisine
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
WED... SAT
111 W. 23rd
Parriage
Round back Mackenzie Centre
MUSIC
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
TONIGHT!
EARL ROBINSON'S
RED HOT SCAMPS
926-8351
The Lawrence
Opera House
T. Spirit Club
7th A Mass
Always
great looking ladies
Never
a cover charge
Coors on Tap.Most bottle & Can Beer-55 $ ^{c}$
MINGLES DISCO
now serving hord d'oueries
4 to M Monday. Friday
Ramada Inn, 2222 W. 6th
842-7030
FREddy Mercury
This ad worth one free draw Limit one per person.
MONDAY: 25° Draws
$1.25 Pitchers
Monday we start all over again.
TUES: ___ 15° Draws
80° Pitchers
TANTRUM & THE SECRETS
Tonight and Saturday
$2.50 Showtime 9:00 Doors Open 8:00
中國人民解放軍軍政委員會
THE OTHER PLACE
LUNCHEON
MENUS
FRI: ___ Same as Thur.
SAT: ___ Same as Fri.
1717 W. 6th
WED: ___ Same as Mon.
SAT: ___ Same as Fri.
THUR: ___ Same as Wed.
HERE'S WHAT'S HAPPENING!
BIGK
MON-THURS 7-9:00
$1 PITCHERS
WEDNESDAY 7-9:00
50' Schooners & $1 Pitcher
FRIDAY 1-7:00
DRINKING AT
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
American and
'Get your ship together'
Get your ship together
Saturday afternoon play pool and pinball while enjoying your favorite cool one!
(Free small draw with this ad)
Open 12-12
The Harbour Lites
"A first class dive"
.Clip Out for Weekend Reference
BEER/AMUSEMENTS
Closed Monday
店饭都京
Famous Peking Cuisine for the Most Distinguishing
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure you and of Western Civilization! Makes sense in college for all the classes at 51. Four exam preparation. *New Analysis* of Western Civilization. *New Analysis* of Town, City, State, and World. *Milk Institute*, & Open Book.
FOR SALE
69. Schlossen at Louvre's every Friday from 2
to 5.
70.
Pondle Morning Glue (Castor with strings, corks,
and rubber bands) is a wonderful blend of colors and
recipes and even serves as a good conditioner.
Very useful.
Sunday, Sun glam are our specialty. Non-
Sunday sun glam are the usual resorts, seasonal
101st Mass. 843-570-3700
WITH BSN7T you can own such a beautiful water garden. It features 1 large diaphanous, diaphanous central carport with two sunrooms. Like new diaphanous, diaphanous central carport has 2 water-dryer areas. 5 m² stealth stainless steel and warm white lighting. A covered planting box free of debris. Digging garden is easy.
Attorneys, statutes and memorandums. Repertoire of
law, including criminal, civil, real estate, contract,
MOTIVE, Electricity, 832-6030; 2009 W. 4th St.
Washington, DC 20001.
WATERPROOF MATTRESSS $39.98 3-year warranty
WHITE LIGHT 704 Mass. $32.50 [386]
BIOKONSON IMPORTS LTD) Organic Advanced
Technologies and need to be delivered to the end-
用户.
T.G.I.F.
Every Friday
3-6
3.5 DRAWS — $1.50 PITCHERS
THE
BREWERY
714
Mass
Watch it trick on Sundays. Satisfy producer:
Fish Foods, 8th & Illinois. Also wood-
cake.
International Army Keyword 2100 40 weight
Aircraft Cargo Airplane (700 lb) International
aircraft cargo B100 $44,941.43
aircraft cargo B100 $44,941.43
Attention recent motion picture student, for sale. Bowie H16-16 movie camera. Four lenses. Mini-Drive Mono-Drive like new. price $4,000. $799. $799. Max. $2,000. Manu. 853-8330. 3-20
Power item amplifier 80 watts, like
3-30
4600 m negotiable
INFINITY QA backstage. Backstage with 5.
watches. Luxes and sounds great. $30
watches.
14 Hands 70s Price negotiable. Call 842-1822.
after 6:30 3-50
Through TR-7 Training Operations Manuals 1975,
1977-New - B112.500 Call. Mail. B411-7300
- 3-20
I have to rank John O'Doherty, mainly wishing he was the next president of the Board. Based on Center Creativity & Salutations Snipe 1019 (2-4-16), Mr. O'Doherty has been a great leader.
1926 Washington 409 Hatty 13,绞线 condition
7500 miles with National history; only 844-4844, Pam
Schaefer.
Mountainviewing beach, 802.11.1d, rent $250, sell $250,
mountainviewing beach carriage wheel which covered
$499, make $250, sale $250, make $250, sale $250,
make $250, sale $250, make $250, sale $250,
Have an Aviator night? $2.00 refund on $5.00
first night. Save $1.00 on $7.00 third night.
Buy 801 stolts $9.00 or 801 stolts $8.00. We deliver.
$29.00 for 801 stolts.
1947 Norton 800 Commander, 800 Miles, Paths,
Bikes. Excellent Condition.
8160-5321 8307
8160-5321 8307
Smith-Cunningham Typewriter like, like new
Smith will immediately CALL: M41-1465 3-30
Yanahua 1974 - 500 tpc New Chains, Pipez, Paint
CALL: Derek A123-6622
4-2
If you are setting up an apartment this GARMAGE
home is on your side. Dixieaux, insurance,
housing, landscaping, appliance & warehouse
with 811-315-6119 building too (DSL) Enterprise.
March 21, 9:00 a.m. - 2:30
One pair of Northcliffe shoes, size 9 (1.2 feet)
Used once. $75.00. Call 841-7312. 4-4
NAME: BX PEXSTONALN OR INTEGER EBQAQH1
TYPE: 32-bit signed integer
DIMENSION Mx50Mn80 = DIMENSION h364Mn80
DIMENSION h364Mn80 = DIMENSION b364Mn80
Black A White partridge W r rolling shirt
K call offenders early evening 842-432-854
--having been born just the 14th Annual Refreshment
hawning has become our favorite day of the year.
On Wednesday, April 25th, we will be honoring
Wesley Minnehah Ministries.
1975 Yasai Hotel 600, $3,000 per room, extended condition,
1976 Yasai Hotel 800, $4,200 per room, extended condition,
1976 Yasai Hotel 1200 for two night offer. $6,250/3-6
days.
Mercerian Raz 223, 1290 new tires, 10,000 miles on new engines, 8290. Call 841-7455 for 4-day check.
Continental Mark IV 1975, 20,000 miles, new
carriage, based at $250,000. Calls: 841-324-6211
after 5 p.m.
1928 Tampa, Culver City 67 Littelfish, Sacramento,
Oakland 50 St. Helena, Albuquerque 49 Lakeport, Omaha
Pacific Northwest Foundation, 838-813-3471
www.pacificfoundation.org
IVC AM FM STARE Receiver, W. D. Ch. 91,
800-256-7343, ivcamfm.com/records
Flight Plan, Phone and Podcasts Capsule
www.ivcamfm.com
Equitable Auto-trunk for sale Beautifully
rebuilt Late 1980s $450 Call 814-692-34-4
1933 Vega GT, panel construction. New radial tire.
roadway. AMT厂, Muni Plaza, 862-2500. 4-4
1974 Mastating H. I. eye 1 speed AC, excellent
condition and Low Airflow linkback K2-60-8
AIRCELL
Fibre shelter receiver 120w, wattless,
powerful 520w in case 644-6120 Keep Dry
320W 120W 644-6120 Keep Dry
Year sets at Psychology today and on Human Behavior magazines. Various sizes of curtains, free-framed five pieces, reduced price new mattresses. Lead air conditioners AEI-4-64 8-pm.
74 "2007" Master, 36,000 miles new; five years' excellent condition. Call 811-6411 for details. 5 3/4 x 9 1/4
FOUND
Small, yellow little baboon by 5 months.
Small, yellow little baboon by calling by 433-6428 by
2-90 p.m.
Women's artistry, preservation with rose embroidery
Women's needlework Hall of Fame
Dadchester Hall 641.1325
One lady's Towson waltz with gold band. Found in
the Library of Columbia University, Call 801-3250,
for Mark
Call of Keys, really Probably before snow
Set 864-1968
4-3
LOST
Pair of plastic rollish pink frame glasses lined
with white polyester. Price is $849.
@ 864-1052. This will be a reward.
HELP! Lost early in Spring Break—man's
engagement, engraved with initial J. in vicinity of
Computer Center Maniax. Great sentimental
741-692 or 868-4521. Please rail call
741-692 or 868-4521.
[Wed] Wed, 3-28 (7p) Card with credit to KV ID & B
card with credit to KV ID & B card with credit to KV ID & B
card with credit to KV ID & B card with credit to KV ID &
B
Lawn, a suite of cold wire frame frames at
Rockland or Robinson Green, Monday
March 6. Securities are sold by
Bankruptcy Lawyers in Rockland,
Maryland.
MISCELLANEOUS
PATRICK BINDINI* CORPORING. The Firm is a global business firm specializing in the development, maintenance and inventory management of BINDINI software in libraries in the US and Canada. For more information visit bindinilog.com.
NOTICE
DEATH WHY BOTHHER ECOKRAKAN
THE RESPONSIBLE FOR Sindul Seal 843-292-1522
7902
VIPS: Also you will getting your business license
Maker in your company you sign up. 904-721-8444
VIPS: Visit us at www.vips.com
PERSONAL
RIKS HIRE SHOP is now open 200 Railway
Street, Chicago, IL 60611 (412) 555-7000,
phone quick inquiry. [Vernon] Vermont, 611 4500
(412) 555-7000.
EASY EXTRA INCOME $2000 6900 8300 Holding Company
OF DENTERTON ENTERTAINMENTS 50th Anniversary
of DENTERTON ENTERTAINMENTS 50th Anniversary
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortion up to
17 weeks, pregnancy tests, Birth Control
cams, Toll Station. For appointment call
(304) 825-4369, (304) 825-4368, (304)
825-4361, Overland Park, KS.
Hillel presents:
KOSHER SABBATH DINNER
Friday, March 30
5:30 p.m.
Lawrence Jewish Community Center
917 Highland Drive
(Across from Hillcrest
Shopping Center)
$1 Members — $2 Non-members
ALL YOU CAN EAT BLINTZE BRUNCH
Yechiel Golander speaks on the "Situation in the Middle East Today"
Sunday, April 1, 12:30 p.m.
L. J.C.C. 917 Highland Drive (Across from Hillcrest Shopping Center)
$1 Members — $2 Non-members
Gale Ladleman, refelectant, new humbled
KFI Info: 841-259-3060 or Handcuffs 841-
259-3060
HAROUSE $929.125, 4 hm Mon. Tues. and 5-8 hm Wed.
MADIS MAIN DEFENDING NIGHT" $169.100, 5 hm Wed.
FOX HILI SURGERY CINCIC Abortions up, to
17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing. Birth Cushion.
Total Ligation. For appointment call 9
805-426-3200, 490-111
St. Oeland Park, Fla.
600 Schultens and $1.00 Pickers every Friday
from 2:55 to 4:00 at Louis' bank. 4-3
Pete Bemus Bob, Bob. Carolina, DD, Glen.
pardon for insults. Pete Bemus perfectly
perfected. I love you all. Pete
perfectly
Bring this ad to Glutenfree and creme, two
price versions of our Gluten-free, Hilarious
Shopping Center.
Wards of All That Heathen might be shown the path of
their way, and their own souls. 1919 West, 82nd St.
& S. 60th Street. 1919 West, 82nd St. & S. 60th Street.
Be Bring this to Gilberts and eat 20-40 cal. cover
meat, poultry or fish, and drink three Thursdays' Hourly Shopping Center
Gluten-free form: Tuesday and Thursday. 8% milk, 4% butter, and dry fruit for Friday. 9%, 6% milk, and dry fruit for Saturday. (pasture-raised porch)
Male teammate wanted, summer 285 months, 1 year
on ice, weight 64.5 kg, arm height, waist
height, net height, n117; GJ123
KU PHRIESH CLUB will meet Saturday, March 13th at 5 p.m. at the KU Library. Make it a personal information card to KU Phriesh Club.
MTIS01CAN70 established by G.C. Langeren based in
Berlin, Germany and now part of Jellied
International with New Integrations and Jellied
International.
Roommate wanted manager $85 monthly, 12 hrs
weekly. Req. Bachelor's in business, bedroom,
neutral, must. N41-6130.
Attraction young men just coming out sex
call them Call anyone day or night BD-
862-362
--for tending yourself? Naimish Hali is offering for the first time ever a boarding plan. You can choose from various options, but can be yours if you choose this plan. Stop with Naimish Hali. 1690 Naimish Drive, B3-8550 Naimish Hali. 1690 Naimish Drive, B3-8550
Prolongs long and short term
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WHAT IS IT?
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FROM 2-6
OICR - Application for Onsite Dell Repair
OICR - Application for Onsite Dell Repair
Hall and the Alarm Office, and are due Aug
14. Call 800-765-2202 for information.
The Local Glidewater hotel, will have you landing
from the airport directly to the beach. Time to
convenience on KAAN U, Sun 7 to 9 pm.
Call 612-354-0080.
Attention all new Yangs, beautiful intelligent
technology, a team of 100+ engineers who have learnt chinese, mandarin and much more, are ready to perform these tasks and driving Prefer applications to be all lead 21. Attention to detail is essential for success in the industry. P.O Box 3457, Shanghai, P.R.C.
The University Information Center is now here in Brooklyn. Professor Keller will begin May 22 and Aug. 19, 1978 Applications for the position may be submitted to the University Office on Friday, April 13, 1979. The University of Kansas has a new Opportunity-Affective Action Engineer.
For God so loved the world that he gave his
world should not perish, but have everlasting life,
and should not die.
CONTENT CONTENT
Diana. Do you remember April fool's night?
No.
$1.00 Pitchure 7-9 P.M. Mon.-Tuesday Tuesday 5-9
Pitchure 7-9 Owl Big Kgs 4-8
Gibbaltan Monday dime beer (plus liquor pool)
Tam, Mac- okay. It is not a door when it's趴.
Please come home - Door 3-30
SERVICES OFFERED
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can call your math or CS problem. Call 811-4792. 811-4792
JAWFING EDITION. Your manuscript, thesis or open paper collated into an effective,广谱ed format that can be shared with thoughtful use with provision and innocence. Outstanding papers and articles also available. Eye-witness #842,135
Male models Arts & Design, Group Rates. Elevate
Mini, Trucks, P-P O, F-O 10-12 4-10
*
Will inherit your children in my home in Indiana, Wisconsin. Experiment references: CAMPAIGN
EXPORT TUTORIALS. MATH 009 - 152; call 844-3772.
TUTORIALS. COMPUTER SCIENCE 100 - 200;
COMPUTER SCIENCE 100 - 200;
TUTORIALS. CALL 844-3770. QUALIFICATIONS. RE-
SOURCES. IMPRIMING. For general problem cue-
lation.
MATH TUTOR MA, in math, patience, three years professional experience. B2S-341.
Beautiful Wheat Weaving classes offered. En-
dition of Designs Derivative Art 100, Na-
fau University, 246 E. 75th St., Chicago, IL
Ensemble is now in line to take on Wood Cary Music,
an acclaimed classical music company. Decorative Arts
guild Chinese culture in the Art Department.
TYPEMITTLE TUNE-UP. Have that SCM EEC machine portable checked out for those year-end amounts of things. Other Systems. 1940 Vermont. Don't try a breakout at a cristal time.
Academic Tournament The Lawnery Open School
Open House and Memorial Call-in Call: 811-640-3200
811-640-3200
Lawrence Open School Exciting Summer programs, including art classes, nature classes and fishing art lessons, organic gardening, and hands-on woodworking. Based in Lawrence in Louisiana Arts, Math, and Reasoning classes for grades 7-12. Based at 750 S. Broadway, call New York, NY 10026, ext. 2448, wide stair fall. Call newyork.us/award.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. u
TYPING
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980.
Tapitek/Editor IBM Pixel Elite Quality work
discount. Desert dissertation welcome.
Mail: 842-5127-9212
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Support for letter, paper lamps, paper books.
842.0734
Experienced Typist to print papers, thesis, in-
luments. Prepare resumes, spelling corrections,
RX5253, Mrs Wiley
Experimented tymp- therese, dilatrations, term-
minal noise, IMH control selection, ear-
harmonic analysis.
Quality typing paraphrased: IMB- Sollective, Termite
Nutrients, dissimilates, caroles, Carole 816.
Nutritious
COMPUTERIZED THIESN TYPING. Have your thiesn typed on CP-3000 and you can have the original system run a professional thiesn with original engines. Call PROFESSIONAL THIESN for help. On the on-set adjusted system you will see an adjuster screen.
Experienced trust with scientific background
HIV Monitoring Selective I Cyl Cell Jn. 821, 32-39
ISSN 2370-6545
Now according term papers for quality typing
typeing 481-3066 after 5.30
if
Trained on Elite Electric Typewriter by expert-
s in the field. Proofreading. Mail:
817-7377 FAX: 817-7377
TYPING over 20,000 pages ahead. Quality work.
Meet with us for your needs or online or LINE.
WE OVER. We take all your fee.
Email: info@vizion.com
Archivum - expediential typem - form papers, thumbnails.
Archivum - expediential typem - form papers, thumbnails.
Cover art: 76 pages. pg. 284-292. Donna S. Vogel
WANTED
Driver for rampup to KU Medical Center, Mon-
day: 8 a.m. to 9 a.m. 803, 812, 812, 841, 566, 756,
after 4 a.m.
Wanted: Female. non-monitor roommate for
dormitory. Wednesdays, April 24th fall 5-90
Saturday. June 1847-1874
TENNIS PROS WANTED--Excellent Summer Results
and great support. Great player background, excellent playing and coaching skills. Complete resumes, pictures, in KC, Bellevue, Bellevue Ave., Suite 161, 7817 Chase, MSD.
www.pros.org
Relatively quiet and sometimes females
are allowed to do their work in the apartment
Please call 612-874-3900, 612-874-3901.
MUSCINOCEAN - established by K.C. Lawrence, based in New York and Florida. Fills client and travel requirements. Call Jody 847-359-1222.
Midterm cover and exchange for babygift. Must
be 25 weeks old or older. Weekends. Prefer available summer and 1976-80 cover.
WANTS TO BUILD RAILWAY 1-4th floor apart. From May
2022. Galveston Gulf St. 611-843-5222.
Homecare wanted for 5 member cooperative starting April 1 Call #351-2278 for details. 4-4
Femalehospital women’s softball team seeks qualifi-
cated athlete. Send resume to: FEMA-Hospital,
Call after 3 P.M. on fax to 841-6826; e-mail:
califresne.hospital@fema.gov
Female for 3 bedroom houseware at Traitlidge
for Fall. For information all 814-8635
Female roommate needs to need 3 bedroom
room next fall $116/mo. Call 842-3230. No pet.
14
Friday, March 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
JRP...
"This is one of the problems we will rectify for next year," Mikkelson said. "This is a new office and we do not have a written policy."
The office of residential programs was organized for the first time this year after the offices of the dean of women and dean of women were abolished.
James Flynn, a JRP resident and member of the committee, said he was upset that he had not been notified that his room had been entered.
"The people that were cited for these violations did not receive their citations."
"I DID NOT know that my room had been entered until I saw this article in the Kan-
Don Wampler, another committee member, asked Mikelson whether disciplinary action for violators would go any further.
"I feel I could ease my judgment if I knew," he said.
Mikkelson said, "It's if you're to go any earlier, the residents have been contacted [in]".
She said she thought she not violate the confidentiality of the students involved by revealing what action would be taken without their permission.
Don Johnson, a committee member, said he thought the root of the problem was that the team's leadership was not involved.
"There should be a very definite policy for closing halls and handling these kinds of people."
Mikkelson said that there were policies for closing halls, but that they were disregulated.
"Were these policies followed in a very efficient manner?" Johnson asked.
Mikkelson again declined to give a personal opinion.
CLINE SAID, "We're not here to decide whether that's the way it should have been handled. We're here to decide whether this has been an invasion of privacy."
Student American Pharmaceutical Association, $102 from $160; and Association of Students Interested in Asian Studies, $510 from $605.
From nage one
Budget . . .
In its final budget recommendations, the Student Services Committee came within one cent of allocating the total amount given it by the Student Senate.
The Black Student Union and Consumer Affairs Association received the biggest cutoff.
The committee allocated $26,154.10 to 16 organizations requesting funds.
The BSU originally requested $79.88, Last night's budget cut reduced that to $2.264. Consumer Affairs originally requested $11.333; that was cut to $7.590.
THE OTHER 14 groups' recommended allocations and original requests were;
Douglas County Legal Aid Society, $3,600 from
$300; Academic Free Download Cooperation,
Volunteer Clearinghouse,
$44 from $1,901 of Headquarters,
$6,168 from $14,125.
Alpha Phi Omega, $50 from $1,661;
Campus Veterans, $1,019.92 to $1,702.99;
Commission on the Status of Women,
$1,358.86 from $2,600.00; KU Eagle Club,
$1,409.92 from $2,600.00; Women's Disabilities,
$1,438.28 from $996.00; Women's Coalition,
$758 from $996.00; KU Students for a Radioactive Free Kansas, $225 from $888.90; Non-Traditional Student
Groups, $225 from $2,200; KU-Y, $1,690.06 from $2,160.86; Amnesty International, $355 from $1,352.
The Sports Committee met all its requests totaling $94,406.
RECREATION administration was allocated $32,452.02; intramurals, $38,580.02; criicket, $135; fencing, $42; frisbee, $109; hang gong, $145; karate, $85; rugby, $62; soccer, $79; crew, $25; volleyball, $390.
The Culture Committee had not finished making preliminary recommendations by midnight. Bill Scanlon, co-chairman of the committee, said the final recommendations would be made.
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AURH Student Positions
AURH Summer Intern Program'79
Approved by the American Bar Association.
Term: May 30 through July 28
Compensation: Room and board at JRP and a stipend of $960
Requirements: Must be returning resident, enrolled in no more than 4 summer school hours
Information: List of intern responsibilities and applications at residential wall deks, Office of Residential Programs, AURH office.
AURH Committee Chairpersons
Term: Fall 1979 and Spring 1980 semesters
Compensation: Single room at double room cost
Requirements: Must be returning resident
Personal letter of application
Information: List of committee descriptions and chairperson responsibilities available at the AURH office.
Return all applications no later than April 6th at the AURH office at 210 McCollum
AURH is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer
A
AND THE WORLD'S FAMOUS STAR TREK BLOOPERS
March 30 - 7:30 pm, March 31 - 2:30 pm & 7:30 pm,
April 1:20 pm
partially funded by Student Senate
SCIENCE FICTION CLUB PRESENTS
Dyche Aud.
STANLEY KUBRICK'S
Adm. $1.25
SUA
2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY
HERBIE MANN in concert
With The K.C. Philharmonic
Sunday, April 8, 1979, 8:00 in Hoch
Auditorium. Reserved seats $4.00 and
$5.00. Tickets available at the SUA office
and Kiefs. Cones and enjoy an esthetic show
of the musical colors of the orchestra
with the timeless jazz sound of Herbie
Mann. Presented by SUA and The Kansas
City Philharmonic Orchestra.
SUA
Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842-5824
IN ASSOCIATION WITH FEYLINE & MARTIN WOLFF PRESENT
WITH SPECIAL GUEST
Jay Ferguson
Gabriel's
TICKETS AVAILABLE IN LAWRENCE AT SUS BOX OFFICE AND
CAPER'S CROWN CHOOSE BEGGAR SECOND COMING.
TIGER'S, DAVEY'S LOCKER OR DIAL-A-TIC AT (816) 753-681-
STATAN AT THE REORD STORE: TOPEAK AT MOTHER-
K. U. Committee on South Africa
Today!
11:30-12:30
Outside Strong Hall
FRIDAY, APRIL 27 8:00 PM
ALLEN FIELDHOUSE
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE
ALL SEATS RESERVED: $8.00 $7.00
RALLY AGAINST APARTHEID
THE DOUBLE BROTHERS
Doobie Brothers
Kansas University does not need blood money. Demand that it stop holding investments helpful to a racist regime. Show your support for dis-investing from South Africa.
Join the rally!
with any pizza delivered (Limit four)
Heaven comes to your door
Gabriel's Delivery Offer Giant 22 oz. Soft Drink 20c
1034
Convinced
Coming to K.U. from a small town background was quite an eye-opening experience for me. In pursuing my liberal arts education I was presented with ideas and philosophies that I had never considered before. My roommate, for example, believed that learning was more about interest than particularly interested in knowing what wasn't true—she just enjoyed searching.
I had grown up in a Christian home and at an early age accepted the things I had been taught concerning God. Church and Sunday School were a regular part of my life, and I had
never questioned whether it was all true or not. Now, as I saw to new viewpoints and began to experience conflicts and pressures in my own life, I wondered: "Do I believe just what I have been taught, or is there a solid basis for my faith?"
My questioning led me to a closer examination of the Bible. Not only did I read the Bible, I eagerly read books that discussed the validity of the New Testament documents, the historical evidences for the resurrection of Jesus Christ, and fulled Biblical prophecy. The testimonies of former skeptics were of particular interest to me. One skepic was philosophy professor Cyril E. M. Jeal. He believed that Jesus was only a man, that there was no such thing as a sacred body, that there would be destroyed
Another Life changed by Jesus Christ
Living through two world was demonstrated to the saintless of man, however, and he came to the realization that Jesus Christ was the only solution. As I continued to read I ran across many respected, well-known people who had come to the same conclusion. Lew Walker, author of *The Words We Were Given* and clearly set out to write the Bible, but ended up becoming Christians instead.
My investigation and the testimonies of men like these served to reaffirm what I had already thought to be true. There really is a God, and I can entrust my life to Him. Aside from these intellectual reassurances, I also saw tangible evidences of God in work in my life. The evidence that the world is not just a blind leap of earth, but a rational foundation on which I can base my life.
8
Coupon
For your preyage of
"THE LIFECHANGER"
to new Lite, Box 211, Lawrence
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Marna Regehr
K.U. Union Employee