Carter hints evacuation as bubble shrinks
From the Kansan's Wire Services
HARISBURG, Pa—Engineers slowly shrank a potentially explosive gas bubble in the reactor of the crippled Mile Island nuclear plant yesterday as President Carter went to the plant and suggested that a precautionary evacuation may be necessary within a few days.
A spokesman for the utility that runs the crippled powerhouse said last night that the bubble, which had measured as high as 1,800 cubic feet at times, was gauged as low as 222 cubic feet yesterday.
"It's now back over 400 cubic feet, but that just means we've got a very imprecise method of measurement," said George Troffer, manager of generation quality for Metropolitan Edison, which owns the plant. "It stops up and down, but the trend is definitely downward," he said.
CARTER, A FORMER nuclear engineer on a Navy submarine, said that if an evacuation became necessary, it would indicate a change is being made in the cooling system.
"Radiation is being monitored throughout this area and any trends toward increase in radiation will be reported to me," he said. "At the present time, the reactor core is ideal stable. However, within the next few days, important decisions will be made on how to bring it to a cold and stable state."
Carter promised "a thorough inquiring" into the accident and said he will "be personally responsible for informing the American people about this pari-
cipient incident and the status of nuclear safety in the future."
During their brief visit to the control room, Carter and his wife were protective yellow plastic boots and carried a dosage meter to record exactly to how much radiation they had been exposed. An official of Metropolitan Edison said radiation readings in the room were "almost zero."
A White House spokesman said the Curtains had not worn more protective clothing because the air in the building was too hot.
AN ESTIMATED 50,000 persons have fled the Harrisburg area since Wednesday's accident touched off the first of a continuing series of low-level radiation leaks.
"extra precaution" against possibly radioactive dust on the floor.
Local officials in the area of the plant readied contingency plans for such an evacuation and said that arrangements were nearly complete for moving patients from persons into institutions such as hospitals and jails.
Carter warned residents that an evacuation might be necessary and urged them to follow official directions if it happens. The president said that if the fire "all of us want the error on the side of safety."
Pennsylvania Gov. Dick Thornburg said in a statement that schools within five miles of the plant should remain closed today. He said state government was investigating the case, but with generous leaves forced for 'abentures'.
"We'd like to have things in shape," said Francis Hee, commissioner of Carroll Town, east of the plant. He said a thousand copies of a public notice had been distributed yesterday. The order had been distributed yesterday.
"All the rumors have been checked out and so far there is nothing positive."
The FBI stayed busy checking out "around a hand-donor runners" of attempted or threatened sabotage at the crippled power plant but confirmed none of them, a spokesman said.
Meanwhile, in California, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. asked the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission to a "precautionary and temporary" closing of a stochastic plant near a near duplicate of the stricken plant near Harshburg.
The Rancho Seco plant, near Sacramento, should be closed until the causes of the Three Mile Island incident are satisfactorily identified. Brown said in a telegram to the NRC.
Brown's concern about nuclear power plant safety
was echoed by consumer advocated Ralph Nader, who predicted that the radiation accident at the Three Mile Island plant would spell the end of nuclear power in this country.
"People at last are getting accurate information about the dangers," Nader said.
IN AN INDUSTRY devoted to stringing safety features and voluminous contingency plans, the dangerous bubble lodged in the roof of the reactor is emergency the emergency planners didn't anticipate.
The crisis caught nuclear technicians off guard. They had not anticipated such a bubble, had not designed the reactor to handle it, and had not planned how to deal with it.
"It's a new twist. . . It is not a standard assumption." conceived, "con关勤丹 Denton, operations chief of
The bubble was being slowly depleted by letting the gas dissolve in the constant circulating coolant stream.
K.U. and
South Africa
DON'T MIX!
Slaff photo by BARB KINNE
Apartheid Protesters
About 150 students listen to speakers Friday during a rally against apartheid in front of Strong Hall. The rally was sponsored by the KU Committee on South Africa.
Black students join anti-apartheid cause
Staff Reporter
By LAURIE WOLKEY
The Black Student Union publicly announced its support of the Committee on South Africa at the "Rally Against Racism" in front of Strong Hall Friday.
The Committee on South Africa contends that the Kansas University Endowment Association's investments in the university are based on the country's official racial segregation.
The crowd cheered as Tony Hunter, a member of the Black Student Union, began the rally with, "We support the movement and withdrawal of investments in South Africa."
The rally, sponsored by the committee, also had the support of the International Club and Latin American Solidarity.
THE RALLY, which began at 11:30 a.m. drew a mixed crowd of angry activists and curious observers.
Laird Oik, spokesman for the Committee on South Africa, told the group, "In 1973, the United Nations said South Africa was guilty of crimes against women." It has the Endowment Association invests there, they are investing in apartheid."
It began with several songs from "Tofu Teddy and the Brown Rice Cow People," a local five-member band.
Mongane Wally Serote, an exiled South African poet and the keynote speaker at the opening of the Africa Summit, a military state; IBM, GM and many other United States' firms do not help, as she does.
About 150 people listened as speakers called for the divestiture of investments by the Endowment Association.
Serote read poetry that expressed pain and hope for the future of South African blacks.
"It is when there is no hope, that hope begins to walk again." he read.
AFTER SEROTE'S presentation, Hunter pointed to Strong Hall and said, "When you hear poems like that from a man who has been there and then you
'See related story page six
hear what they are saying, you can't help but get angry."
However, the Endowment Association maintains that American investments in South Africa influence the South African investment toward more racially equal policies.
"Some of you were surprised to learn that the KU Endowment Association has raised $10 million in corporations with holdings in institutions shouldn't be surprised. This University has a reputation for its antipathy towards civil and human rights," he said.
The invitation said, "We feel that you have a responsibility to explain your policy to the members of the University and that you cannot promise you a sympathetic audience but we will guarantee your voice and speak your right to be heard."
Last week, the Committee on South Africa sent Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, an invitation to speak at Friday's rally.
"I implicit in our policy is the contention that such companies are materially contributing to the betterment of black business." The association said in a recent statement.
Some members of the crowd carried signs and banners at the rally saying, "People, Not Profits" and "We Don't Want Bloody Money."
Ron Kuby, a member of the Academic Freedom Coalition, also spoke to the group.
HOWEVER, SEYMOUR said, "No I'm not participating in that type of talk. You cannot make any decisions that way."
"One thing we can do is rally, to demonstrate our anger and force the administration to take heed to our words. We need to address the problem in nonviolent civil disobedience."
Monday, April 2, 1979
KUBY LATER led the crowd in shouts
See RALLY back page
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Vol.89.No.122
KANSAN
Although local anti-nuclear activists are not glitting over news of radiation leakage and the threat of an explosion at a Pennsylvania nuclear power plant, they are planning to use the incident to bolster their case.
By JUDY WOODBURN
Harrisburg prompts pardon plea
staff Reporter
Trouble at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Harrisonburg, Pa., started late Wednesday when the cooling system of the nuclear core malfunctioned and radioactive gases escaped into the atmosphere. More recent Friday a Friday to reduce pressure in the plant
About 50,000 people have fled the Harrisburg area since Wednesday. Preschool children and pregnant women were advised to leave the immediate area, because of the risk of radius of the plant were instructed to remain inside, with their doors and windows closed.
PLANS FOR A mass evacuation of the area were drawn up, but have not been completed.
Tim Miller, assistant professor of religious studies at the University of Kansas, said Saturday that in light of the Harrisburg incident, he would request an official护带 for 36 persons arrested against the police against against the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant.
Miller was one of 10 Lawrence residents arrested during the demonstration against the Iraq war.
near Burlington. He said he would write to
John, John Carlin immediately to request the
"Everyone ought to be pardoned," Miller said. "Now people will see that what we've been saying is true, and I feel certain that everyone in the country who has been arrested for nuclear protest will be pardoned."
MILLER SAID that what was happening,
in Harrison was "to spoopy for an
adult."
Chris Mecham, 94th's Rhode Island SI., who had been arrested and pleaded not guilty to charges made during the trial, would request an official pardon from Garlin.
Mechan was one of five persons found guilty in a trial March 23 on charges stemming from the January protest. The accused had said they planned to appeal the charges.
"I felt discouraged after the trial," Mecham said. "But this will make people more aware of what we've been saying all along."
Mecham said the Harrisburg incident prompted local nuclear protesters to schedule a demonstration April 9 and 10 in Burlington.
The quality of construction of the concrete base for the nuclear vessel has been an issue at Wolf Creek. Nuclear protesters have sought revocation of the construction
license for the plant, which is scheduled to begin operation in 1983.
BUT AFTER NEWS of the Harrisburg accident, some nuclear protesters in Lawrence now say they have an additional weapon that they about the safety of the Wolf Creek project.
According to a report Saturday by the Kansas City Times, Wolf Creek will have a pressurized water cooling system, as does the crippled Harrisburg plant.
"We're trying to make people aware of this similarity," said Pat Slick, who will start graduate work in religious studies this fall. Mr. Slick was in the Burlington protest in January.
Sibs, whose barn and family are in Barrisburg, said he had left to come to KU. He also went to the University.
He said members of his family had not evacuated their home and he was concerned that they were not aware of the danger that faced them.
"The they believe the government, the plant manager and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission that everything's okay," Shiek said. "The problem is that most people need a nuclear accident and radiation when it spills. They just don't realize the dangers."
CARLIN, HOWEVER said that, so far, Kamans had nothing to fear at Walt Creek. He also said the incident increased his awareness, safety precautions be taken at the plant.
Vic Poirier, a spokesman for the Kansas City Power and Light Co., said the Three Mile Island plant had been built before 1973, and since then, many design changes had been made in nuclear power plants. One of them is in which gasses were vented from the plant.
He said that KCP&L, which is building the Wolf Creek plant in cooperation with Kansas Gas and Electric Co., would get an analysis of the problems at the Harrisburg plant and make any necessary design changes in the Wolf Creek plant.
Hobart Woody, KU nuclear reactor operator, said that he was not concerned with the possibility of an accident similar to that at Harrisburg happening at Wolf Creek.
"Everything that calls for technology and advancement involves some danger," Woody said, "People feared electricity when Franklin discovered electricity. Cars were invented and people got killed in accidents," he added, backward. We've got to have nuclear power.
"I DON'T THINK people are too afraid of nuclear power. They just don't understand
Russell Mesler, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, said he thought the Harrison incident would only increase the confidence in nuclear safety precautions.
This demonstrates that we can have See REACTION back page
Some dryers blow a threat of cancer
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
If John Travolta had known what consumers are now learning about blow dryers, he might never have stood in front of the microwave Nigel Pevera and used one to dry his hair.
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission learned last week that private oil companies in Vermilionville, Md., had found that hand-held dryers, medium called blow dryers, dryers with metal knobs.
Asbestos, which is used as an insulator in the dryers, has been linked to an increased risk of lung cancer and other serious conditions. The commission's Kansas City division, said Friday.
The safety commission issued a special order that summoned nine manufacturers to appear at a meeting Thursday in Washington, Baxter said.
THE MANUFACTURERS are Schick,
Conair, Hamilton Beach, Clairol, Norelc,
Sunbeam, General Electric, Gillette
and American Electric Corp.
"These manufacturers make up about 90 percent of the blow dryers sold on the market," he said. "What we hope to learn from them is the names and model numbers of any of their products that have been made with asbestos."
However, the local Penney's, 830 Massachusetts St., was selling the dryers yesterday, although a clerk said the store was aware of the recall by its national of-
Also on Thursday, national offices of J.C. Penney Co., Inc. and Montgomery Ward and Company, said they had ordered suspension of sales of the drivers in question.
"The dryers are still sitting there," she said. "We haven't been instructed by our staff yet."
The manager was not available for comment.
"We do consider asbestos a potential threat to consumers," he said. "Tests have shown asbestos to be linked with forms of lung cancer."
The dryer models being studied were removed Friday from the shelves at Montgomery Road, 23rd St. and Ousdahl Road, a sales clerk said yesterday.
Susie Hanna, with the Lawrence Consumer Affaires Association, 819 Vermont
ST, said the association had received no inquiries or governmental warnings about
Hanna, a consumer representative, said the association could not tell consumers to ask for refunds on the dryers until an official statement was started by the Product Safety Commission.
But Baxter said the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission would not recall the products until it had completed its studies, and that the products endanger consumers.
He said the private research by EMV Associates had resulted from tests commissioned by an NBC television affiliate, which had tested new and used models independently and found one in five emitting wireless signals, such, if inhaled, could endanger consumers.
Baxter be expected the commission's testing to be completed within a month.
HE SAID the dryer was recalled only if the amount of asbestos fiber wan at a
Baxter said no level of asbestos emission has been established as dangerous by the government.
He also said that if dryers were recalled, all manufacturers would be required to replace them.
He said there were about 100 products containing asbestos being sold.
Baxter said the government was investigating the use of asbestos in other buildings.
Other Lawrence businesses concerned with the findings include a hair salon.
Debbie Daniels manager of Hairbenders, 1919 W. 24th, said she would stop the use and sale of blow dryers if they were recalled.
"I suppose I have no other choice than to stop using the dryers," she said. "And I'll stop selling the brands that are recalled. I guess it's a lucky thing that hair styles are currently going toward the natural dry look."
Bella Speaks
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
Bella Abzug, a former U.S. Representative, spoke to about 1,200 people Friday evening in Hoch Auditorium. Abzug was sponsored by the Intercultural Association of Women
2
Monday, April 2, 1979
University Dally Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports
OPEC pumps up oil price
CARACAS, Venezuela—Venezuela, a key supplier to the United States, has increased the price of its crude oil exports an average of 18 percent since February.
yesterday and said it would continue to be the sole operator of the 9 percent authorized last week by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
The OPEC price rise, decided in Geneva Tuesday, also allowed OPEC members to impose an unrestricted surcharge. Liberia, Algeria and Venezuela
The OPEC increases, which took effect yesterday, are expected to raise American retail gasoline prices by about 2 cents a gallon and increase the American bill for foreign oil by at least $4 billion from last year's total of $43 billion. Surprise could push the bill even higher.
U. S. gasoline prices rise about 1 cent a gallon for each 5 percent increase in the price of crude oil.
Tanzanian jets bomb Entebbe
NAROHI, Kenya—Tanzanian jets bombed Uganda's Entebee airport yesterday, severely damaging the main runway Libya had to ferry troops.
The attack was the first Tanzanian air strike into Uganda during the five-month war, diplomats in Nairobi said.
The raid appeared to be in retaliation for Thursday's Libyan bombing of Mwanza, a Tanzanian port on the southern shore of Lake Victoria.
Diplomats said Tanzania's Soviet-made MIG-21 jets might have put the airport temporarily out of service.
airport temporarily out of service.
Anti-knife rebels claimed it was only a matter of time before a final assault took place in central Kannah.
The diplomatic sources said Amin was still in Kampala, despite runners that he had fled northward. His whereabouts could not be confirmed.
Shah may move to Argentina
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina—Friends of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi have contacted Argentine government officials to see whether the former Iranian ruler could settle in Argentina, an Argentine newspaper reported yesterday.
Government sources would neither confirm nor deny the report.
The newspaper, La Nacion, said the Argentine military government of president Jorge Videle was consulting with other nations to test international drone technology.
The newspaper, quoting unnamed diplomatic sources, said the former Iranian ambassador in Washington, Ardeshir Zahed, had called on an American official to release the documents.
The revolutionary government in Iran has said it would ask the government of whatever nation the shah settled in to extradite him to Iran to be tried for
Silkwood lawyers finishing up
OKLAHOMA CITY — Kerr-McCee Nuclear Corp. may present its meeting last week in the $11.5 million plutonium contamination lawsuit against Kerr-McCee and its suppliers.
Lawyers for Silkwood's survivors invited Friday their presentation in the trial, which enters its fifth week today, might be completed by Wednesday.
Courhouse observers predict a lengthy defense and said the trial could last until May.
The trial of the suit, brought by Silkwood's family, has gained nationwide notoriety as the first personal injury suit ever tried involving off-site competition.
Testimony revealed that Silkwood had feared exposure to radiation and thought health and safety precautions were inadequate at the Kerr-MGee Clinic.
Silkwood, who died in a 1975 car accident, had suffered more than twice the amount of contamination experts said would have caused cancer.
The corporation contends Silkwood was responsible for her own contamination.
Airline lays off 13,300 workers
CHICAGO-United Airlines announced yesterday a hayoff of 13,300 pilots, attendants and other crew members because of a machinist strike that fussed
Spokesman for United, the nation's largest airline, said the layoffs were to have begin at midnight last night and would remain in effect for the duration of
A walkout by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace workers in United States midnight Friday, after the two unions rejected a contract offer.
Negotiators said they were having trouble getting to Washington for talks because the strike was clogging other airlines.
At Kansas City International Airport, all 22 scheduled United flights from the city were cancelled shortly before the strike, grounding 500 to 600 passengers a day.
Eric Gaughan, an assistant to the manager for United Airlines in Kansas City, said the 128 United employees in the Kansas City are who were not members of the company.
Walkout shuts down trucking
WASHINGTON — The trucking industry declared a nationwide shutdown yesterday against 300,000 Teamsters, after the union launched strikes against 75,000.
"This will cause a major disruption in trucking transportation, not a limited or selective stoppage," the industry said in a prepared statement.
Union President Frank Fitzsimons said, interference by high-level government bureaucats had played a large part in his decision to order the
Industry's decision to counter the strike presumably would make it easier for the Carter administration to obtain a buck-to-work order under the Taft-
The strikes and walkout followed a breakdown in contract talks before the union's contract expired at midnight Saturday.
Passman acquitted on all counts
A 12-member jury, made up of residents of the Fifth District, which Passman represented for 30 years, deliberated less than two hours before acquitting him. When the jury's verdict was announced, Passman jumped up and hugged his lawyer, Camille Gravel.
MONROE, La. — former congressman Otto Passan was found not guilty yesterday on all counts of acceptance illegal gratuities from South Korea rice and alcohol products.
Farmers won't get damage bill
his "perfectly obvious that I'm extremely pleased." Passman said after
leaving his church with Gov. Edwyn Edwards, the governor's brother, Marion, and Gravel.
In his closing arguments yesterday, Gravel described Passman as "an unknowing victim of an evil Korean conspiracy."
In a letter released by Rep. Henry Reuss, D-Wis., Babcock said the National竹业局 recommended not taking legal action against the farmers or their financial backers.
WASHINGTON—The Justice Department will not try to collect payment for property damages done in Washington by demonstrating farmers, according to a report from the U.S. Supreme Court.
Recent estimates set the demonstration's cost at $500,000 for the federal government and $2 million for the District of Columbia.
Weather
Skiers will be cloudy today and temperatures will reach the mid-104, according to Weather Service. Winds will be southerly, 10 to 20 mph. There is a 30 percent chance of snow.
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini triumphantly proclaimed Iran an Islamic republic yesterday, announcing that the "yes" votes of millions of Iranians in a referendum had created the nation's first
topped Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's regime in mid-February, said his countrymen had voted "to establish a government of righteousness and to overthrow and bury the monarchy in the garbage can of history."
Iran officially an Islamic republic
Khomeini, who led the struggle that
KHOMEINI'S VICTORY statement,
read by an announcer over Tehran
Hostile Arabs await Begin's Cairo visit
CAIRO, Egypt (AP)-Menachem Begin arrives today, the first Israeli prime minister to visit an Arab capital.
But Egyptian dislike of Begin and Arab outrage over the peace treaty will keep his welcome in a mere sheer of the one that he has given to Sotat got in Jerusalem 16 months ago.
Begins say he is coming as a friend, "to open my heart to every man, to offer me the opportunity of officials and people in the street, however seem little inclined to return"
The average Egyptian, primed by an Anti-Begin line in the press, speaks harshly of the Israeli leader, labeling him a traitor. He is a hard-hassler and a taceless orator.
"Postponing the visit would be a gesture of good will to Egypt," one Egyptian said.
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Begin and Satad talked by telephone yesterday, Israel Cabinet Secretary Arish Naor denied reports that the cabinet had asked Begin to postpone the trip.
But Egypt has to contend with Arab opposition to the treaty, dramatized by Saturday's Arab ministers' decision to cut economic and political ties with Egypt, and shows little sensitivity to Begin's domestic difficulties.
Begin hopes the visit will persuade Israeli opponents of the treaty that Egypt and Israel indeed are at peace after 30 years of hot and cold war.
Lawrence Clog Headquarters
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
GET ON THE RIGHT TRACK WITH INTRAMURALS
THE DEADLINE for entering the Intramural Track Meet is on Thursday, April 5th at 5:00 p.m.
Information Available in Rm. 208
Robinson Center
Recreational Services
radio, contrasted with continued concern by the revolutionary authorities over unrest among the nation's large ethnic minority groups.
Prime Minister Mehdi Bazarang, head of the Khomheini-appointed provisional government, warned rebellious Turkoman tribesmen in the northwestern city of Gonbad-e-Qabas yesterday that if the week-old fighting there did not cease the would send in government troops tomorrow morning to restore order.
KHOMENI SAID the nationwore referendum Friday and Saturday gave "unanimous" approval to an Islamic republic. But this apparently was not meant literally, because early returns over the weekend indicated a small minority of Muslims against establishing an Islamic republic, which has still not been fully defined.
A government spokesman warned, meanwhile, that new trouble was brewing in Arab-populated Kuhzestan province.
State radio and television said yesterday preliminary results showed 18 million had voted "yes." An estimated 18.7 million had been eligible to vote. The remaining returns from provincial towns show 90.3 million of the voters in favor of an Islamic republic.
As the results were announced, some motorists in downtown Tehran flashed a red light to show approval. But most citizens see no sign of a foregone conclusion. A Tehran bazaar merchant told a reporter, "Of course I will go to the police and ask what is the people had a revolution for."
Some voters complained about having to cast their ballots in full view of revolutionary officials and said regulation procedures had been erratic.
SEVERAL IRANIANS expressed fear that the Islamic republic would turn back the clock in Iran and limit the freedom of women—notions that Khomeini has tried to dispel but with only mixed success.
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
Term: Fall 1979 and Spring 1980 semesters
Term: Fall 1979 and Spring 1980 semesters
Compensation: Single room at double room cost
Requirements: Must be returning resident
Personal letter of application
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
sua films
Monday, April 2
Monday, April 2
Women in Art, part 2:
LOUISI NEVELSON
IN PROCESS
Dir. Susan Fanshell, Jill Gilmilow
HELEN FRANKENTHALE
Dir. Perry Miller Adato
MARY CASSATT:
IMPRESSIONIST
FROM PHILADELPHIA
Our Perry Minti Aatato
The Women in Art series contores
toneh in three films focusing
on three theatrical acclaimed
and admired artists the United States
has produced. Partially funded by
Spencer Art Museum.
Tuesday, April 3
SLAUGHTERHOUSE-5
Dir. George Roy Hill, with Michael Sacks, Valerie Perrine, Roelian Leimbam, Eugene Roche, Director Hill was faithful in adapting Kurt Vonnegut's novel to the screen. Billy Pilgrim "unstuck in time." 7:30 & 9:20
(1972)
Wednesday, April 4
Renoir's Classic:
Thursday, April 5 Cuban Cinema:
LA GRANDE ILLUSION
Faculty members and candidates
THE TEACHER (1877)
Dr. Oclavio Cortazar: Set in 1961, dura Cuba* "Year of Education" when over 100,000 youngsters volunteered with the Literary Brigade to teach literats, how to read and write. Cubsubasus PLUS: "The History Book," v.7.
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.
for Doctorate, Masters, Law and
Bachelor Degrees!
Order Caps, Gowns, and Hoods now!
Orders taken through April 27th. Monday-Friday 9 a.m.to 3 p.m Main Lobby, Booth No.1
THE KANSAS UNION
Monday, April 2, 1979
3
University Daily Kansan
Disaster was only a test
By DOUG HITCHCOCK and BRUCE THOMAS
Staff Reporters
At 1:30 p.m. Friday, a call came to Lawrence's Emergency Operations Center that a train had tracked in North Lawrence
Within minutes, Police Chief Richard Stanwix and Douglas County Sheriff Rex Robinson had sequestered themselves in a room at the Louisville police station to prevent the basement of the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center. 11th and New Hampshire streets, they would monitor the building.
In an adjoining room, city and county officials gathered at their assigned seats around a large table.
This was not a real disaster. It was an exercise in handing crises. Travis Brann, county director of emergency preparedness, had spent two months planning the operation, which involved several hundred people.
He said an exercise involving toxic chemicals was needed.
"I have no doubt in my mind that hazardous chemicals pass through Douglas County daily and we don't have a guardian angel to protect Lawrence or Douglas County from something like that," he said.
Fire trucks, police cars and ambulances were dispatched to the staged scene at Seventh and Locust streets in North Lawrence.
A field command post was set up near the site to give emergency treatment to the victims and to send them to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 253 Mahoning, or the Red Cross Shelter, 11th and Vermont streets.
The victims included volunteers from Lawrence High School, the University of Kansas and area organizations, including local churches.
Some of the tougher volunteers ignored the cold air. They defied articles of clothing in order to get molded rubber wounds and food spills on their hands and feet.
The volunteer victims, nearly 40 in all, were divided into groups, with different injuries. Some received blue make-up to simulate a wound.
Just before the mock train wreck occurred, people ran from victim to victim, giving them a second coat of red food coloring.
At 1:20, the train that was to wreck rolled past, right on schedule. The first call to the police was made by a Union Pacific reporter.
By 1:30 p.m., the first police car had arrived. During the next 30 minutes, two fire trucks came. The first ambulance arrived just before 2:00 p.m.
Ted McFarlane, director of the ambulance service, said the ambulance's response was slow because a mix-up at the dispatch center led to delays.
Soon, the railroad crossing at Seventh and Locust streets was blocked by police and sheriff's cars. One of the fire trucks unrolled
Volunteer victim Mary Frances Krul, 1819 Main, said, "I can't believe that they're putting out the fire before we take to the
Another volunteer victim, Harrel Smith, 1800 Ohio, said, "These practices have helped. They'll still panic, but they'll have a vague sense of what happened."
After the 90-minute exercise, the participants gathered at the emergency center to discuss it.
Buford Watson, Lawrence city manager, called the exercise a success but said it showed areas that needed improvement.
Communications need to be improved, he said. Fire Chief McSwain said he had not heard any messages sent to him in the building.
There was also no radio communication among the three units There was no communication to the emergency because the police, fire depart- ment and ambulance had been deployed.
Officials will meet April11 to discuss the exercise further.
KBI to look into alleged brutality
Staff Reporter
By DAVID EDDS
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation will begin looking into allied brutality by two KU police officers at Wednesday's protest of the opening of the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty.
Randall Seiden, Fairway junior, had told Mike Malone. Douglas County district attorney, on Friday that he wanted to file complaints against two KU police officers.
Soiden, who said he represented the lawrence jewish community, said that he was "not really interested in doing this."
were upset about the way things were handled."
Malone said he had told Seiden that the incident had to be investigated before it could be investigated.
"I contacted KU police officials, and all of us agreed that an outside agency should investigate the allegations," he said. He also saw an eyeswitness to a person getting hit."
Seiden alleged that police had used excessive force Wednesday in arresting Steven Schwartz, Barrington, R.I., freshman.
Schwartz, who had been shouting pro-
Israeli slogans, was arrested after scuffling with police at the protest sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students and the Iranian Students Association.
Malone said the KBI investigation would probably take about a week. Videotapes taken by KU police at the protest will be recorded and witnesses will be interviewed, he said.
However, Mike Hill, KU chief of police, said Schwartz' arrest had not been videotaped because the photographer had not been in position to film it.
Malone would not identify the two officers.
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Committee exceeds boundaries set by Senate for allocations
Despite lengthy deliberations that lasted until the wee hours Friday morning, the Student Senate Culture Committee's final fiscal 1980 budget presentation exceeded the maximum revenue code by more than $2.390.
According to the code, the committee was allotted $9,602 to allocate to five student organizations. However, the final allocated institutions totaled $12,008
The groups' recommended allocations and original requests were:
Operation Friendship, $485 from $655;
Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble, $1,433 from $2,107; University Dance Company,
$1,042 from $1,151; Science Fiction and
Entertainment from $1,900; and
International Club and its subsidiaries,
$8,580 from $1,541.
Bill Scott, co-chairman of the culture committee, said the Senate had given the five groups $12,851 during fiscal 1979
"Our budget funds these groups for $43 less than last year," he said.
The Senate unallocated account is used to pay for supplemental budget requests from student organizations during fall budget hearings.
LAST YEAR's over-allocation was paid out of the Senate's unallocated account, according to Keith Maib, Senate treasurer.
The committee also made its final recommendations on five line allocations set by the revenue code. The amount of line allocations is determined by projected enrollment figures for the fall and spring semesters.
"the budget is far from being settled," he said, "I hate to see them dip into the unallocated. But if their budget improves, that's where it will come from."
The committee voted not to fund the KU Chinese Martial Arts Club and the KU Gung Fu Club. Each had requested $300.
All budget recommendations from Senate committees will go before the full Senate April 8.
KU bands requested $29,085, but the committee approved only the revenue code allocation of $10,968. Scandinavian said it would pay for the bands' $25,750 of what had been cut during fall budget hearings. The band would be spend for five new instruments.
Bill Scanlan, co-chairman of the committee, said the committee also would draw up bills for additional funding from the unallocated account for the three other line allocations that had requested increases. They were the Chamber Music Series, University Concert Series, and University Theatre.
Four of the five groups funded by line allocations requested increases.
The approved line allocations for the groups were:
KU Bands, $10,989; Forensics, $3,663;
Chamber Music Series, $3,653;
University Concert Series, $2,742, and
University Theatre, $2,304.
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The Douglas County Emergency Service Council Presents
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ADULTS $3.00 HIGH SCHOOL & UNDER $1.50
KU STUDENTS WITH ID $1.50
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan edition staff. Signed columns represent the views of the editorial staff.
APRIL 2,1979
Death penalty barbaric
We are said to be human beings—rational, compassionate creatures. Yet we continue to act like barbaric uncivilized animals.
We are said to hold life sacred. Yet we continue to ask for and approve laws that allow us to pluck the lives of our fellow men.
We are said to be seeking peace and harmony with all people. Yet we continue to seek a legal sanction to kill. And we call it capital punishment.
Today, the Kansas House will consider adoption of a death penalty bill. It is approved, as most political observers say it will be, we cannot call it murder. The judge will be little more than vengeful, irrational animals—perhaps even worse.
DESPITE WHAT may be said on the House floor by death penalty proponents, there can be no logical or emotional defense of a death penalty. It is morally wrong.
Capital punishment contradicts all that we hold true as a society. In science, we seek to save and lengthen our lives. In government, we seek to improve the human condition and protect lives.
What, then, is rational about killing a human at punishment for a crime? What is rational about killing a human at punishment for a crime?
Some might say a death penalty would act as a deterrent to serious crime, particularly murder. But studies do not support this theory.
"Centuries of history leave any deterrence at all a matter of doubt," according to Judicature, the journal of the American Judicature Society. "And psychology confirms that persons contemplating commission of crime are either not thinking of punishment or are confident that it will not happen to them."
THE KANAS SENATE approved a conference committee report last week that would provide for a sentence of death by lethal injection for convictions of first degree or felony murder.
Because conference committee reports cannot be amended, the House is faced with a yes-or-no vote. If approved, the bill will go to Gov. John Carlin, who has been opposed to the governor's proposal. The governor has said he had not ruled out signing a bill that would meet constitutional requirements.
It is not too late to stop the death penalty in Kansas. But there is no time for hesitation. Call your legislator and ask your opposition to legalized killing.
Only 63 votes are needed to approve the bill and earlier this year the House passed a different death measure, 82-42.
Today, the rationality of man is on trial in the Kansas House. Don't let human reason fall prey to the animal. Now is the time to act.
America should protect natural wilds of Alaska
BY CECIL ANDRUS N.Y. Times Feature
ByCECILANDRUS
WASHINGTON—The debate over Alaska National Interest Lands has been ongoing. It is important that conservationists. That portray misses the point: At least two-thirds of Alaska will be open for development. The real issue: If the rest will be protected for all Americans?
Two years ago, the administration called for designation of 92.5 million acres of wilderness in the U.S.'s largest areas. Within these proposed boundaries lies wild, mostly untouched territory. This includes the nation's highest mountain and glacier, its greatest mass of high peaks and glaciers.
No one can seriously argue that these places do not have national importance. In fact, some argue we seek protection for too little of Alaska.
THE PROBLEM we took seriously, though, was striking a balance in land use. We developed and applied two basic principles. First: Include only areas of true national significance, and use watershed or ecosystem boundaries to be sure that they will remain as healthy, self-sustaining habitats. Second: Exclude areas of purely economic value whenever possible.
By applying these principles, we achieved a unique plan. We located and marked for protection places that will continue to stun future generations with their beauty, natural productivity and historical significance. Also, more than 90 percent of Alaska's high-potential onshore oil and gas production areas remain available for exploration and development.
LAST MAY, the House of Representatives, passed an Alaskan lands bills. 277-31. An end of filibuster threat blocked a bill that would authorize a statutory protection for our proposed areas about to expire. President Carter decided too much was at stake not to act and exacerbated the situation in Alaskan lands. Under emergency powers, I withdrew 110 million acres from all claims. Subsequently, Carter designed 66 million acres under provisions of the Antifactures Act.
The genesis of Alaskan conservation goes back more than 40 years when there was a
call for protection of all land north of the Yukon River. Little thought was given to that proposal, though, until oil was discovered on state land at Prudhoe Bay in northern Alaska, and its impurious wilds were threatened by construction of the Trans-Akla pipeline.
LEGISLATION TO clear land titles for the pipeline and settle Alaska native claims struck a bargain between Alaska and the rest of the country: America would support development in Alaska if Alaska were to move to conservation there for all Americans.
While this bargain indicated that selection of Alaska's vast 104 million acre statehood grant might be slowed to allow native Americans to gain a sound economic future. But many Alaskans and their allies in the resource industries now seem to have forgotten the agreement between Alaska and the United States.
Too often conservation has been an effort to salvage some remnant of beautiful land or a small population of once-numerous animals. In Alaska we have a second land, the Tundra, a healthy, productive lands, simply by allowing them to continue in their natural state.
Few nations ever are favored with the chance to make a decision to protect their natural heritage. If we decide to reject this opportunity to conserve and develop, we will remember with which our grandchildren will remember us. Let's do it right, for once, the first time.
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 afar with the university, the letter should include the university logo, home town or faculty or staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
Cecil Andrus is secretary of the interior.
A one-time carpenter and carpenter spent some six months researching the subject of hydrogen weapons manufacturing. While doing his research, 36-year-old Howard Morland, a freelance writer, learned the skills of the most deadly weapon—the hydrogen bomb.
Irony apparent in free press debate
Morland's discovery, based on information gained legally, and often with the help of Department of Energy officials, has set off one of the biggest debates concerning the question of freedom of the press and authority since the Pentagon Papers case in 1971.
The issue arose when the Justice Department asked Progressive, a monthly magazine published in Madison, Wis., to not publish its article, "How the Hydrogen Bomb Works."
WHEN MORLAND and Progressive's editor, Erwin Knoll, refused to suppress the article, the Justice Department asked a federal judge in Milwaukee to issue a restraining order on the article, stating that it violated provisions of the Atomic Energy Act of 1946. The department maintained that the article contained "secrets of hydrogen weapons manufacture—"restricted data" as defined by the Atomic Energy Act.
"Disclosure of this information," Justice Department lawyers said, "would increase the proliferation of nuclear weapons, and thereby severely undercut the arms control and disarmament policies of the United States."
Last week, U.S. District Judge Robert W.
Mary
Ernst
Warren issued a preliminary injunction to the company, which thought the article was violation of the terms.
But there are several ironies involved, and each point to a dilemma higher courts will face in deciding where freedom of the press ends and national security begins.
MORLAND, FOE of nuclear weapons, had written the article with the opposite stance in his book. He accused him of. He was accused of contributing to the proliferation of nuclear weapons.
The Progressive contends that the university did not intend to show people how to build a hydrogen bomb in their backyards, but to educate the public so that it might "better be able to make decisions on such issues as the need for underground weapons testing." In fact, Michigan had no more technological equipment than the chemistry and quantum mechanics while working on his degree at Emory University in Atlanta.
The article did not show Idi Amin, Uganda's tyrannical leader, how to build a bomb, the Progressive argues, as Judge Warren had said he feared it might.
A SECOND IRONY is that although the Atomic Energy Act prohibits dissemination
The constitutional problem, then, is not stolen documents or Morland's access to classified material. The problem exists because Morland's review of available results is resulted in a description of the hydrogen bomb that is dangerously close to the mark.
of secrets about hydrogen weapons, Morland obtained all of the information openly and sometimes with the help of the government.
What Morland did, said Knoll, could have been done "More swiftly, more efficiently and perhaps more accurately by any modest foreign intelligence agency."
So, while most might agree that a court could and should prohibit publication of any secret government paper explaining the technology of a nuclear weapon, should the courts prohibit publication of an article based on public sources, gathered by the press, only because the product comes too close to material the government thinks is secret?
SUCH A QUESTION delves further into the heart of the constitutional protection of freedom of speech than the Pentagon Papers case did.
The government has claimed that even if some information is never in government custody, Congress had intended to have it "classified at birth." This would mean that it isformation concerning the design, construction, and atomic weapons could be prohibited by the government by decree whenever it was so inclined.
A final怒叫 by that by filing suit, after not doing so when other magazines published explanations of atom bombs, the government asked to ban them. The government did in fact, hit on the "secret of the Hearst" close enough to it to cause great worry. The purpose of Morland's article was to explain the hydrogen bomb, not to present a "make-up" for it and to dictate or corrupt leader in the world.
HOWEVER, THE Justice Department has now drawn enough attention to the article to imply, or possibly to confirm, that information is sufficient to inform construction such a weapon.
No sane person wants to see a model for a hydrogen bomb make its way into the hands of someone such as Armin—that would certainly have disastrous results. But there has been little evidence to show that this weapon if moriland's article were printed.
Yet the government has convinced a federal district judge that prior restraint of speech is necessary for national's security. As the case makes its way to a Supreme Court hearing, more concessions are in order.
Whether the case ends with the publication of Morland's article or not, it is certain to be one of the most important events in the affairs of the press in national security areas.
And for every question the courts may answer in this controversy, an equal number of unanswered ones will likely remain.
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TA credentials sufficient for teaching
To the editor:
A letter appeared in the March 20 issue of the Kansan criticizing the quality of learning at the University of Kansas anssim instructors with "little or no experience" were a major cause of the problem because it was the lack of knowledge and knowledge of pedagogical techniques.
I do not dispute that there is a teaching problem. On the contrary, the quality of teaching around here seems to have reached an all-time low. However, it is my duty to negotiate that the large number of teaching problems have a major cause of this problem is unjustified.
Secondly, the writer of the letter states
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Firstly, the writer of the letter implicitly assumes that grade- and high-school teachers have college degrees in their fields many teachy assistants do not. This is untrue.
Almost all TAs and Asls are at least a baccalaureate degree in their field or in a closely related one. Those few who are undergraduates have been deemed by their departments to be especially well-prepared in the area that they are teaching.
STATE U.
BY T. M. ASLA
HOW, MY BROTHER! HOW CAN-UM I HELP-UM YOU, NOBLE VISITOR? WANT ME SHOW-UM YOU AROUND CAMPUS?
ACTUALLY, CHANCELLOR, I'VE BEEN YOUR HEAD OF MINORITY AFFAIRS FOR FOUR YEARS.
ASLA
that TAs and AIs have not formally studied education. This, perhaps, is true, but (a) KU professors are not required to have preparation in the field of education and (b) it has been my experience that getting an education curriculum does not a teacher make.
As a former student of education, I must comment that I found most formal education courses to be a little impractical. I do not want them to remember a few semi-illiterate secondary-school teachers who were prepared in education, supposedly, who would have given me much more. I have to have five.
Yes, we may assume that on the average, professors have a broader and deeper knowledge of their field than a graduate student. But of what use is a vast knowledge if the individual lacks the ability to communicate it?
If the course is a fundamental one, a graduate student in the field can be expected to know the basic material well. In fact, a strong case can be made in favor of a graduate student who has pathy with students, themselves being students, and their having the subject matter fresher in their memories. Finally, this is true because a graduate student pursuing state-of-the-art research is forced to learn much more, much and perhaps more than a professor.
If an individual (a) prepares ahead for each meeting with students, (b) is available to consult with students, (c) puts a little effort into designing projects and assignments, (d) listens to feedback from the students, (e) stays present during on time, and (f) possesses a reasonable proficiency in the language in which the class is taught, then this person
will most likely be a reasonably good teacher.
Colleen Kitchen
Assistant instructor of computer science
Carter should pacify opposition in party
Jimmy Carter is not in an invenable spot, but he is positioned to make history and save his job. His future is threatened more than ever because of the Republican Party by any American hopeful.
To the editor:
If Carter can re-secure his liberal, labor and Southern allegiances (no small task), he will be vulnerable to Republican attacks only in the electoral college.
Carter should mobilize vice president Walter Mondale, ex-darling of the liberal Democrats and labor, to pacify liberal Democratic dissenters.
Kennedy himself will not run, because he wields more power outside the White House than he would from within. If Kennedy could, and he can, save Carter's and the Democrats' hide in 1980, his power would be even greater.
Mondale would then be positioned to make his own bid for the White House in 1984. Teddy Kennedy, D-Mass, should also be enticed to rally support for Carter in most all wings of the Democratic Party in return for national health insurance concessions.
Carter can save himself by following a "Rose Garden" strategy in 1890. Carter's campaign in 1890 will be very different from his 1870 efforts, mainly because he is now a man of color and not an indignant outside knocking away at the Washington establishment.
A decision by Carter to campaign exclusively from the White House—an idea Gerald Ford should have more fully accepted. For example, Revive Carter's reputation as a stylish, straight-talking leader, an image that has failed since he closed his fire-side chat and gave up on his job.
A no-campaign strategy that included return of federal election funds would fit perfectly in Carter's austerity plans and move the deficit solidly to the quadrennial hustling.
This strategy leaves Carter vulnerable in the primaries, but he is vulnerable there anyway. Party insurgents and their energized脐engers can unset the existing powers—as Lyndon Johnson learned in 1988, Democratic establishment learned in 1976.
By not actively campaigning, Carter could turn a liability into an asset, as he
Carter's political pick is not so sour that he cannot save himself by following the conventional wisdom of electionering. More good might result however, if he did follow these steps. If he lost, an admirable precedent would still be set.
And, if he lost, so what. Who would want to be president now anyway?
Doug Carter
Needham, Mass., graduate student
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USPS 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August Group, University of Kansas and March Group June and July Group, University of Kansas July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday groups. Kansas 6608 Subscriptions by mail are $15 county and $25 for six months or $3 a year. County and $25 for six months or $3 a year. $15 a semester, paid through the student account. Postmaster Send change of address to the University Hall. The University of Kansas, Eckert Building,
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 2, 1979
5
Blood is The Lifeline For A Lifetime
Wouldn't you do just about anything to save a dying friend's life? Well, do something today to insure free blood for you and your family and friends. Donate your blood now for the future-it's for a lifetime!!
BLOODMOBILE ON CAMPUS April 2,3,4 11:30 am----4:30 pm each day Union Ballroom
If You Won't Donate Blood, Who Will?
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Alpha Delta Pi Sigma Kappa Delta Upsilon
6
Monday, April 2, 1979
University Daily Kansan
House to vote on death penalty
By GENE LINN Staff Reporter
The Knasas Legislature begins the final week of its regular 1979 session today with work unfinished on many pressing bills, including a death penalty bill and the KU budget.
Legislators have scheduled a three-day wrapping session to begin April 23.
Kansas House leaders said Friday that they planned to vote on a death penalty bill drawn up by a House-Senate conference committee. The Kansas Senate passed the bill Thursday, breaking a six-month capital punishment votes in the upper chamber.
Legislature
House Majority Leader Robert Frey, R-N.J., said the probability would pass the bill, although some representatives were disappointed that the conference committee bill was broader than the one passed last year.
THE HOUSE legislation called for death by injection only for first-degree murder.
State Capitol
penalty for both first-degree murder and for felony murder.
If the bill passes the House as expected, it faces an uncertain fate in the hands of Gov. John Carlin, who has said he would not be a roadblock to a constitutional death penalty bill, even though he personally opposes capital punishment.
Carlin objected to the inclusion of the felony murder clause in the present bill at his news conference Friday. The governor's press secretary, Bill Hoc, has said Carlin would wait until the House acts before deciding whether to veto the bill.
As for the KU budget, there is a chance that the Senate Ways and Means Committee will approve the budget.
sity's allocation to more than what the House has already allocated.
THE SENATE committee already has increased the Board of Regents schools' faculty pay raise from 6 to 7 percent, and the University of Kansas Medical Center's budget.
In other matters:
- A House-Senate conference committee will work out the differences between the bills passed by both houses that would allow private clubs to sell liquor by the drink to members.
The House version of the legislation first passed by the Senate would put a 10 percent tax on liquor sold by the drink and scrap the alcoholic class B clubs to have recipient memberships.
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- The House probably will vote today on a Senate bill that has been amended by State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, to reduce the maximum amount of ounce of marijuana. The new maximum penalty for possession would be a 100 fine, the minimum for a $2,500 fine, one year in jail, or both.
Glover said Saturday that the vote would be close. If the bill passes as amended, it will be up to the Senate to decide whether to concur with the amended bill. The bill will go to a conference committee if the Senate does not concur.
What's New in Emerson's Data Division? Everything.
Though we've only been a separate division of Emerson Electric for about a year, business here in the Data Division has been terrific. In fact, we've grown so fast that we've moved into roomy, new facilities in the Emerson Corporation Headquarters. Now there's plenty of room for us - and you - to grow.
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analyzing user needs, in writing programs and in seeing that they're implemented.
When it comes to computer techniques and equipment, we believe in using the best. Our ENSO environment will soon be on-the-art; its SOI, TSO, CICS, DL/ I, TAL and Pavalet.
New Opportunities.
At Emerson, you won't be cubby-hole into one narrow aspect of programming. Programmers here see their projects through from start to finish. They're involved in
The opportunities for Programmers have never been better. Right now, we're looking for Programmer Analyst Trainees. Those people selected will interface with our customers in the analysis and design of manufacturing and/or financial applications. They'll also be involved in constructing and implementing the systems. If you're a computer science major, or an accounting major with a strong computer background, you could be qualified for one of these positions.
We'd like to tell you more. Contact your placement office to find out when the Emerson recruiters will be on your campus. Or, write us for more information
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SPIRIT SQUAD 1979-80
COLLEGE OF SPORTS
Proliminary meeting is April 2, 5:30 pm
QUALIFICATIONS:
AUDITIONS:
AUDITIONS:
1) Routines will be taught at the clinic
2) No experience necessary.
3) Everyone is invited to tryout.
Auditions
1) Regularly enrolled student at KU
--are encouraged to participate
3) A sincere interest in KU athletics
2) Minimum grade point average 1.8 overall
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.
Clinics Allen Field House
Tuesday -5:30-7:00
April 3
Wednesday -5:30-7:00
April 4
Thursday -5:30-7:00 April 5
Tuesday 5:30-7:00 April 10
Monday
April 9 -5:30-7:00
Minority students
Wednesday
April 11 -5:30-7:00
Thursday
April 12 -5:30-7:00
Proliminarios April 14
—9:30 a.m.
Finals April 21
—9:30 a.m.
Police erase protest videotape
By DAVID EDDS
Staff Renorter
Student criticism prompted KU police to erase a videotape they had made of Friday's rally protecting South African university students. University Endowment Association.
Mike Thomas, director of KU police, said, "Some of the protests asked that we erase the tape. Since there were no problems at the rally, we didn't object."
Ron Kuby, Lawrence senior and coordinator of the rally, said, "I was told by Chief Hill that the tapes were taken in the rain. But there was no violence at the rally."
Mike Hile, KU chief of police, said Kuby and several other students had requested the erasure of the tape, which occurred from the second floor of Strong Hall.
Thomas said the police had videdetact some campus events not only to use as evidence, but also to use in training KU police.
JM DENNEY, director of police at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said, "There was nothing of value as evidence on this tape. It would have been erased anyway. And not just because someone wanted it erased."
Thomas said his department would not erase videotapes in the future just because students wanted the tapes erased.
"We would definitely keep the tape if there were any problems or any laws broken," he said.
Kuby asked Hill why student groups had not been warned that police videotaped events.
Hill said, "We've taped so little in the past that we have never informed groups in advance."
He said Wednesday's protest against the Egyptian-Iraeli peace treaty was the first protest videotaped by KU police.
HILL SAID athletic events at the University had been routinely filmed since last fall.
However, police did not videotape Wednesday's arrest of Steven Schwartz, Barrington, R.I., freshman. The district attorney's office has received allegations
that police used excessive force in Schwartz's arrest.
Photo 1
Video view
Hill said, "No shots if Schwartz' arrest were taped. The photographer wasn't in position to get shots of his arrest."
From a second floor window in Strong Hall, KU police videotaped Friday's rally protesting South African investments by the Kansas University Endowment Association. According to police, the tape was made to use as evidence in case of violence at the rally.
Photo by BRUCE BENEDICT
Thomas said the Kansas Bureau of Investigation would review the arrest.
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Copyright 1979
*University Dally Kansan
Monday, April 2, 1979
7
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Weekend Roundup
Women golfers win triangular
The KU women's golf team, led by the strong performance of freshman Cathy Eyre, defeated Nebraska and Kansas State universities in a triangular match in Lawrence Friday. Kansas outscored NU 344-522. K-Sate scored 199.
The Jayhawks' victory avenged a loss to NU suffered last week in the Wichita Inferior.
Eyre was the medalist in the match, touring the Alavarm Hills course in 81 strokes, four better than second-place Jane Deeter of NU. K'S Ually White finished third at 86 and Nancy Hons, who was the individual runner-up in the Wichita match, fourth after shooting an 88. Jenny Rogers finished in a tie for sixth place with an 89.
Eyre, who did not make the trip to
Wichita, said, "I was surprised I didn't think that I would play this well early, so I had to go."
"The rest of the team had been traveling and had to play on Wednesday and Thursday," Eyre said, "and they were probably a little worn out."
Eyre also said that she could have had an advantage over many of the players because she had not had to play three consecutive competitive rounds.
However, White, who improved her score by 12 shots over her first round performance in Wichita, said she thought the Jayhawks played much better Friday.
"We were a little surprised when they (Nebraea) beat us," she said, "but we had doubts that we could beat them. We just had to go and everyone to play well at the same time."
Men's golf team better, gets 5th
Showing marked improvement from its opening performance, KU's men's golf team placed fifth in the 54-hole Oklahoma Invitational tournament this week at Shawnee, OKa.
Wichita State University, the defending champion, won the title with a total of 678 KU placed behind host Oklahoma City University with a team total of 903.
KU golf coach John Hanna said he had been pleased with his hauls' scores and team efforts.
"We played pretty good," Hanna said. "It was the first time in a long time we played basketball."
Oklahoma State, ranked No. 1 in the season's first poll of 16 coaches by Golf World Magazine, placed third. OSU coach Danny Jones and his teammates at home to catch up on their schoolwork.
Junior college transfer Mark Crow
finished with a 54-hole total of 224 to lead KU finishers. David Keady of Oklahoma City University and Eric Mork of Wichita State tied after regulation play with totals of 215. Keady parried and won a one-hole sudden death play to claim the individual title. Other KU totals: Jim Doyle, 228; D.R. Cox, 230; Anderson, 231; and Mark Stenker, 230. Team scoring is determined by adding the four lowest totals from the five-man squad.
Hanna said that it would be a while before the squad reached its potential.
"We need a little more time to work on the short game." Hanna said, "and I think we'll play better in the next game."
"We beat Wichita State on the last day in team scoring--we shot a 294 and they finished with a 302. It was as good as we've played in a long time."
KU's next tournament will be the Cyclone Invitational April 6-8 at Ames, Iowa.
Women win first outdoor meet
The KU women's tennis team scored a 6-3 victory over Oral Roberts University Saturday on the courts at Allen Field House.
The Jayhawks' first outdoor meet of the season on their home courts was played under overcast skies and in cool temperatures, but the weather didn't 'fake KU.
Other KU winners were: No. 3 Mary
Sufferer 6-2, 6-0 over Jill Camper: No. 5
The Jayhawks picked up four singles
tied, and by Val blows of the ROUK
tournament.
Kathy Merrity 6-2, 7-6 over Donna Waller,
and No M. Lissia Leonard 6-0, 3-6, 4-6 over
Paule Brennan, KU's No. 1 player, Carrie
Fotopoulos, lost to Linda Kral 6-4, 3-6,
and No. 4 Shari Schrufer lost to M.J.
Stallings 6-0, 7-5, 7-6
In doubles, Kral-Breman defeated Fotopolos-Block-34, 6-2, 6-4; No. 2 Stauffer-Schrüfer beat Farrington-Culver 34, 6-2, 6-4; Theo Lahely-Merion beat Welling-Walp
The victory gave the Jayhawks a 9-2 spring mark, and an overall record of 16-6.
Kansas splits dual tennis meets
Before the men's dual tennis match won Wichita State University Friday, KU coach Kim Vitoi referred to the contest as "Kansas against the world."
KU lost all nine matches to the six Shockers, five of whom are foreigners.
In doubles, KU's No.1 of Hosking-Collor lost to Nichols'O'Rourke 6-4, 6-4; Krizman-Sewall went to McMahon-Dyke Ruysser-Wertz got to Puchyk-Ga 6-4, 6-3.
KU's 1. singles, Mark Hosting, loss to Mark McMahon, the M10 colleague player in the nation, 7-5, 6-4. Other finishers were: 2. No Chef Chellier to Myron Puchk yuc 6-3, 8-4, 7-5. Bill Krizman lost to Bill Nichols 6-3, 2-4, 7-5. Bill Krizman lost to Brad Dye 4-6, 6-1, 9. No Rick Wickens Nigel O'Rourke 6-4, 6-4; and No Joe Ruyser lost to Steve Guey 4-6, 6-3, 7-5.
Kansas came back, however, to win a meet with North Texas State University Saturday, 6-3. North Texas State's only game was against Houston, Cody Beat KU his Hosing 6-4, 6-4, in No. 5 singles, when Ricky Smelling beat KU Wertz 6-3, 3-6, 6-4. In doubles, KU won every match but No. 2. In that match, Krizman not to test in Camp-Smelling 4-6, 6-4, 7-6.
Hot Rangers rake cold Royals
From the Kansan's Wire Services
From the Kansan's Wire Services
POMANO BEA, Fla. — John Grub
smacked a two-run horner in the fifth inning
and hit a two-run single in the eighth to guide
Texas Rangers to a 6-1 exhibition game victory yesterday over the Kansas City Royals.
Rookie Danny Darwin, in starting in place of Jon Mackail, yielded only three hits and had five innings of shutout pitching to get the Chicago City starter Marty Pattin took the loss.
But the Rangers received a double setback concerning their top two startings, Matlack, a left-hander scheduled to start in Thursday's American League.
Ferguson Jenkins, the second man in Texas' pitching rotation, was examined for a sore Achilles' tendon and told to rest for two or three days.
opener, will be idle for the next four or five days and will miss that assignment because of a twinge he felt in his left elbow during warm-ups.
Royale Willy Wilson hit a solo homer off Rangers' reliever Sparky Lyle in the ninth inning.
The Rangers also beat the Royals 8-6 on Saturday. Today the Royals face the Atlanta Braves at West Palm Beach, FI., for their last exhibition game. Kansas City opens its regular season at home Thursday against the Toronto Blue Jays.
Spottswood's hits help KU win 2
Bv TONY FITTS
Good pitching for both teams had kept the game tied 2-2 for four and a half innings until Spotswood ended it with his 406-foot shot ever the right-center field fence.
Sports Writer
DAN ST. CLAIR went the distance for Kansas, striking out five and giving up six hits. Both Emporia State runs were stopped by a short defensive play in the second innning.
Sports
In college baseball, each game of a doubleheader is scheduled for seven innings.
KU's John Spottawnd ended what had been updrawn to be up a long afternoon by taking a seventh-inning home run to win the second game of KU's doubleheader with the visiting team.
Tim Reiser, who came on for Emperor State in the fourth, struck out four and two. He also scored in the fifth.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Spottswood said he wasn't used to the role of tie-breaker.
first game 6-1.
"I've never won a game with a hit like that before," he said. "It's a great feeling."
The Jayhawks had other opportunities
earlier to军 on the game. They left a total of six men on wine, three of them due to KUJ
"THE DISAPPOINTING thing in the second game," he said, "was not moving guys over when we should and when we did move them over, we couldn't get them in."
The first game hadn't been quite so disappointing for the Hawks. Terry Sutafilie, who were saved some of last season by striking out and retiring the last 13 batters he faced.
Suliface was 10-0 last year, with a 1.72 ERA but has struggled this season. Going into Saturday's game, he was 1-2 with a 2.74 ERA and number of reasons for his slump, according to Derek Jarvis.
"HES HAD A little stiffness." Temple said after the games, "but pitchers are still very tight."
Photo by STEPHAN SPECTOR
"But today he looked like the Sutcliffe I remembered from last year."
"He also tried too hard. He's draftable this year, being a junior, and he's aware of it. It bothered him that he couldn't be effective, and he had been forcing it a little.
Washburn came from behind to win the race. The Ichabods went on to beat KU in all four of the meet's races.
"Everything was loose." it great to be healthy again. My rhythm was back and healthy again.
Succiffe said he had felt good on the mound.
"BUT I'VE GOTTA give more of the game to matcher Danny Graham. He called a real attack."
Brian Gray, the designated hitter, batted in three of the six Kansas runs. He broke a 16-4 and fourth inning with a leadoff home run and seized two more baserunners in the fifth with a double.
The Emporia State catcher helped KU score two more runs, as Spottswood came home twice on throwing errors. Spottswood, who lost the day, added three base hits to his homer.
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Kansas will meet Missouri Southern University in a doubleheader at 1:30 tomorrows.
The 'Hawks then will play a make-up doubleheader against Baker University Wednesday and travel to Kansas State University Saturday for their conference opener.
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Kansas 119 00 0 - 2 1 2
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Fambrough starts spring drills
KJ
Bv NANCY DRESSLER
KU women's eight crew team strains in its race against Washburn University at Lone Star Lake Saturday afternoon.
Sports Editor
Don Fambridge officially begins his awesome task today, the first day of spring
The new KU head coach begins his second stint in that job with more than 100 players. Of that number, half are returners. And the other has a 1-10 record as well as a Fambridge does.
But from his office in Parrot Athletic Center, Fambrough is nothing but a fountain of enthusiasm for football's future at Kansas.
"Before when I was head coach, I knew that the kids could do because IQ been an artifact of my upbringing. I anticipation. I have a lot of youngsters I know little about. I'm more excited than
Concentrating crew
HE WAS AN assistant coach for 19 years and was head coach from 1971-74. Fambridge was hired again as head coach in December to replace the fired Bud Moore. He says he is ready to overcome the idea that losing is a part of KU's program.
Don Fambrough
"I couldn't be more pleased with the attitude of our team. I've been in this situation for too long."
BUT HE ALKO knows what it is to win. In 1973, he led KU to a 7-41 mark and a trip to the Liberty Bowl in Memphis, Tenn. KU lost that game to North Carolina State, 31-18.
Fambridge knows what it's like to lose. The first time around as head coach, his teams went 19-25-1, including a 4-7 season in 1974 which Kansas lost its last six games.
And winning is what is on Farbrough's mind as he begins his second term at the KU bureau.
ST. JOSEPH'S
"I don't want to talk two or three years from now. We over a lot to a fine group of seniors and we're going to do everything in order to see them go out as winners," he said.
Mike Hibach, one of the nation's premier kickers, returns for his senior year after finishing 23rd in the nation in putting last season with a 41-4 yard average.
"A lot of people ask if I think I can turn the program around in two to three years. I'm glad."
WITH 51 returning lettermen, KU is the most experienced team in the Big Eight, on paper. The Jayhawks' strengths are their drivers and kicking game, Fambridge said.
Returning receivers include Kevin Murphy, David Verser and Russ Bastin, a trio Fambrough called "an exceptional group of receivers."
And another potential strength is at quarterback. Fambrough is especially optimistic about the position because of the offense. An offense Kansas is likely to use this season.
SUCH AN offense will use two running backs in addition to the quarterback, and a fourth in case of a turnover.
"It's a multiple-type offense," Fam-
brough explained. "I think we can adjust it
with the other."
At quarterback, the personnel include Brian Bettek, who was granted a hardship after being injured early in last season. Roger Foote and Bill Lilis.
Harry Sydney, KU's quarterback for much of last season, will be tried at running back.
Fambrough's favorite signal caller going into the spring drills is sophomore Kevin Clinton, who hit 33 of 82 passes late in the season for 439 yards.
"HE REMINDs me of another young man I had before. That man was David Jaynes. The two are very similar," Fambrough said.
Jaynes was KU's quarterback in the 1972 Liberty Balloon loss. He passed for 5,132 total yards in his three-year career and holds 17 KU individual records.
THE INTERIOR positions, on offense and defense, are KU's biggest weakness. Eight of them will be eight junior college transfers would help fill the voleys left by such seniors as Franklin Young, Brandon Bowers and
"We believe in the pass if we have the people that can run it," he said. "But we have to have an offensive line to give protection. That's No.1."
throwing the football much more this season.
Clinton could make the pro set offense work. Fambridge said, which means
Returners Dave Fleether, Mike Gay and Bob Fires are highly tauged by Bambrough to be the best.
Ten players will miss contact drills because of injury, including Warren Harris, John Ojole, Joe Tumphin, John Calovich, Brad Wonack, Jay McAldan, Robert Gentry and John
Sports Writer
The objective of spring drills, Fambrough said, is to let the new coaching staff and the team know what they should do.
"I don't want to have a predetermined area of my position." Fambridge said. "I am not sure I want to work here."
By GENEMYERS
KU's second track season has picked up right where the first one left off.
Snorts Writer
'Hawks dominate outdoor opener
Kansas won the 16-team meet with 94 points despite winning only one event. National track power Tennessee State University finished second with 85 points.
By CARLOS MURGUIA
Still riding the crest of momentum of its fourth-place tie in the NCAA Indoor March 10, the men's track team, along with their coaches, acted the action in its outdoor season opening.
No team scores were kept, but KU had more athlete places in the top five than any of its 13 competitors in Saturday's Arkansas Relays in Fayetteville, Ark. However, Missouri, Big Eight Indoor champs, had seven first-second finishes to KU's five.
Despite adversity, the KU women's track team successfully opened its outdoor season by winning the Memphis Invitational in Memphis, Tenn., this weekend.
KU takes Memphis meet
KU's difficulties began in the finals or the 440-yard relay. Go into the finals.
Pole vaulter Jeff Buckingham led the KU delegation by breaking his own world junior (19 year old and under), record, the Arkansas Relays record, and the track record. The freshman vaulter, who was 23, was second on the NCAA Indoor, skied 17-6/5, bettering the best of 17-4, set Feb. 24 at the Big Eight Indoor.
relay team of Sheila Calmsee, claire
Oversteak Gown Powell and Low Green had
The Jawhaws were in the lead in the innals but on the last hand-off, Poss trapped the ball.
The 400- and 1,600-meter relay teams also registered meet and track records.
AFTER CLEARING 17-4½. Buckingham moved the bar to 17-11, to record the best collegiate vault in the nation this year and to break KU's mark of 17-7, sed by Jan Johnson in 1970. He missed each of his three attempts.
THE 400-METER relay squad didn't have
as easy a time winning, but its 400.2 clocking
BAD LUCK ALSO plagued Calmsee in the dressing room run She and her nieces and nephews were neck and neck into Cheeseborough were neck and neck into the last five yards when Calmsee pulled the ball over the fence.
in the 1,600-meter relay, Stan Whitaker opened a 14-meter advantage on the third leg, and KU coached to victory in 3.09.6. Lester Mickey anchored the relay team to its four-second victory. Dean Hogan and Tommy McCall ran the openings legs.
was seven tenns of a second faster than the meet record and second-place Oklahoma State. Billy Washington, Anthony Coleman, John R. Miller and David Blakey ran on the relay team.
Newell, who had been sidelined with a pulled hamstring muscle since the Big Eight Indoor, was KU's only double winner, adding a first in the 100-meter dash. His 10.4 mph pace of a second off his career best, even bounce, had to battle a 3.4 mile-an-hour headwind.
KU's other champion was Mike Stankill in the javelin event, which is staged only the outdoor season. Stankill fired the javelin by jumping over the second-place finisher by 18 feet.
Rain delays games
Rain forced the postponement of two basketball games last night.
Kansas Finishers
The women's game between Alpha Phi and the Everreadys was rescheduled for tomorrow at 6 p.m. and the men's game between Delta Upsilon No.1 and the Leftovers was rescheduled for Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Because Robinson Gymnasium's rook was leaking in several places, the men's and women's intramural basketball Hill championships were postponed.
Kansas Finishes
10,000-meter run - 2. Keendal Smith, 30:64.
18,500-meter run - 2. Keendal Smith, 30:64.
Sleeping bag - 2, Tim Tays, 9, 15.9
400 mmHg
90-meter relay. 1 - Kauanai (Hawaii) Washington, Anthony Cofeen, Kevin Reagan, David Whelstone, 40.2.
40. - Lester Michigan, 66.3, 4. Nan Whitaker, 47.3, 3.
Dreen Hogan, 85.2
100- 1. Kevin Newell, 10.4; 2. Tim Jones, 10.8
100- 2. Tommy McCall, 15.6
Javelin 1, Mike Stancifl 229-1; 5, Ruben Scott, 195-9
206-3; Tim Jones, 212.2
High jump-4. Steve Rainbolt, 6-9 %.
Triple jump - 2. Sanya Yowaolab, 56-11%; 4. Steve Canton,
49.3%
1. 600-meter relay - Kimana (Drean Hopen), Tommy McNall, Nan Hammer's Leaker, 3,994. 8.100-meter relay - Kimioka (Drean Hopen), Tommy McNall, Nan Hammer's Leaker, 3,994.
Pole Vault—L. Jeff Buckingham, 17-6 $ _{3} $ .
Instead of having Green and Calmese running in the 200, KU was represented only by Green in the finals. Green placed second in 24.3.
The only first-place Kanaas was finish by Maureen Finholm in the 5,000-meter run. She finished second with personal record of 10:27.4, finished second. Fitz also finished third in the 5,000-meter run.
Lori Lorty placed second in the 400-meter hurdles with a fast time of 641. Another second-place finish was turned in by the two-mile team of team Deb Hertzog, Michelle Homa, Denise Homa and Finohm with a time of 9:3.6.
Although she jumped as high as the
inner in the blink jump. 34. Shawn Corbin
wrote that she had just missed the
In a very close 1,500-meter race, Brown was third, 437.1, just 1 second less than Simpson in a perfect best time of 4:41.3. Vicki Simpson contributed a three-fold place in the 800-meter
Tami Rose led KU's field events with a throw of 18-21 for a third place in finish the javelin. Finishing htth were Gayle Crane in shot put and Douglass in the shot put with a throw of 8-9.
Softballers take 3rd
Kansas took third in this weekend's Texas
Kennings' invitational softball tournament
Ichabods swamp KU crew teams
By BRETT CONLEY
Sports Writer
The KU crew teams were swamped by Washburn University Saturday afternoon at Lone Star lake when the Fighting Ichabods won all four races.
It was what KU coach crew Dose Rose termed a "battle of the have-nots" as both schools raided in shells rented from the Kansas State University crew team.
The men's varsity eight was the only race that was not close. KU jumped out to an early lead, but it then became Washburn's race.
Washburn's men's eight has been rowing since last season, and its timing and technique overcame any KU advantage in size and strength.
KU fell behind by one and a half boat three-fourths of the way through the
KU'S BEST SHOT at victory came in the men's novice four score. KU led by one-half length through most of the race until the final period, but Dave Roffe's seat came untracked.
course, and Washburn sprinted to win the race by three lengths.
In the women's eight race, KU again found itself ahead for the first half of the race. Washburn pulled even at the three-quarter mark, and in the spring for the finish, the Ichabods overcame KU by seven feet.
Because Rokfahr was rowing the stroke position, the crew's timing was thrown off and Washburn caught KU at the finish line as the Jawahaws almost came to a stop.
It was nearly the same story in the women's novice four race. Washburn picked up the stroke halfway through the race, then cut it out and three-fourths of the way through the race.
THEN, FOR THE first time in any of the four races, KU managed to gain on Washburn in the last part of the course. The race was won by KU for a five-foot victory in the final five比赛.
Despite being shut out, Rose said it had not been that poor a day for KU.
"Considering it's only our third semester we did very well," Rose said. "I expected us to win some of these races, but it's only a relative thing. We will have to find out how we stack up against other teams as the year goes along."
"I was very pleased with the novice four crew. When they learn to row a little better,
KU's next meet will be the Big Eight championships this weekend at Stillwater, Oka. KU will compete against KState, Alabama and host Oklahoma State University.
8
Monday, April 2, 1979
University Daily Kansan
On Campus
TODAY: INTERFERENTRY
COUNCIL BLOOD DRIVE will be from 11:30 to 4:30 in the Union Ballroom. A PRINT EXHIBIT by Cima Katz of the Art Department will open at 1:30 in the Art and Design Building Gallery, WALTER HENNING, Argonne National Laboratory, will talk about the reactive materials used in HEAVY-ION REACTIONS "4:30 in 322 Mallett Hall. KU COMMUNEET ON SOUTH AFRICA will meet at 5 in the International Room of the University.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME
TAX ASSISTANCE by the American Bars Association/Law Student Division will be available from 6 to 8 in the legal aid office at Green HALL. HASKIN' $4 \frac{1}{2} SELLS ACCOUNTING DINNER will be at 6 in the Kansas Room of the Union. NONTRADITIONAL STUDENTS MEETING
will be at 7 i.e. the Jayhawk Room of the Union. OREAD STRING TRIO will be presented by faculty at 8 i.e. the Swarptow Recital] Recital in Murphy Hall.
TOMORROW: COLLEGE ASSUMELY will meet at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union, VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSUME! By the end of this session Division will be available from 6 to 8 p.m. in the legal aid office of Green Hall FRENCH AND ITALIAN PROGRAM and DINNER will be at 6:30 p.m. in the Legal Aid Office of Green Hall IRANIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION will meet at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. INTERNATIONAL CLUB will sponsor two South African films" Spear Attackation", and "A Lata Confidan". At 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
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Collins concert charms audience
By ROBIN SMITH Staff Reviewer
Judy Collins is an enchantress:
Her bewitting powers empowered more than 60 people throughout a two-hour concert last Friday in Hoch Auditorium.
And once again, her crystalline voice left a broad-based audience spelled with fear.
With 40 years and 17 albums behind her, Collins has continued to improve her mystical potion as a singer. She achieves her impact by mixing smooth melodies with
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
PINKY LANE
any story Collins entertained about 3,000 people Friday evening in Hoch Auditorium. Bowie singles some of her early hits, Collins performed many songs from her new album.
Review
Judy Collins
sweetly melancholic songs and adding a pinch of simplicity every now and then.
Collins apologized for a 45-minute delay in the concert, saying that she just had wanted to talk with Bella Abzug, a former U.S. musician, before the concert began. During the intermission of Collins' show, Abzug stood up and began singing "bubble gum and wearing a KU corazon belt."
COLLINS beg her concert with two and familiar tunes, "Chief of New Orleans."
Then, after appealing to her nostalgic disciples, Collins introduced songs from her earlier works.
The audience applauded the mention of the album. But Collins, who has returned to the stage after a long absence, reacted to the success of herrebirth with awkwardness.
Perhaps she felt insecure performing without her traditional guitar; perhaps she would have enjoyed her ability to come back, but her chitchat with the audience between her songs found
"I think of Lawrence as my second home," she said. "I had a husky dog who came here to live with some friends of mine. I saw a man with a mangy roosing around."
AFTER RESPONSE from the audience to that tidbit, Collins trailed off into one of her new songs, "Dorothy." As one might have guessed, the song is about our treasured and symbolic Dorothy of Kansas. However, precious Dorothy is now
middle-aged and, considering the emptiness of her present existence, never should have
"Dorothy was a fool to help, she could have stayed," Collins sang.
"I guess it only serves her right, for trading all that color for black and white. All her sorrow, all because there ain't no way to stay in Kansas when you've been to Or."
COLLINS CAREER has spanned a long period and even today she brings back a trickle of songs from her past. Collins lbedt out "Pretty Pohy" from her folk era, while spotlights faded from blue to red as the lyrics changed from passion to death.
From the rock upsurge and into the popout of the late 60s, Collin refrained from using slogans and sang only "The Hostage." "The Hospice prison overthrow in which the singer is a guard who is killed when the Governor invades the prison with bombs and gas during a riot.
Collins has calmed down through the years, and the mellowness of "Through the Eyes of Love," a theme song from the Wall Street series "Ice Castles," disappointed many fans.
However, Collins redeemed herself during the second half of the concert. Relying on her traditional floor length gown and bewitching power of her voice, the audience applauded for 10 minutes after "Send in the Clawns."
Collins returned for only one encore, "Angel, Spread Your Wings," which depicts an Emily Dickinson outlook of accepting death.
A true performer who uses only her voice to convey a feeling, mood and enchantment, Collins ended the concert with a gracious bow to an admiring audience.
Spheeris show canceled
A sign over Hoch Auditorium doors Friday night read, "We regret to inform you that Jimmy Spheiris will not perform tonight."
According to Randy Levy, promoter for Schon Productions of Minneapolis, Minn., which put on the concert, Spheeris, who was to perform before the JudyCollins concert, did not perform because of a "technical problem."
Levy said that no one had told Collins that there would be an opening act.
"I admit it, it was my fault," Levy said Friday night. "Judy didn't really know what was going on. She didn't know Spheris and she had never heard him play before.
"She had planned on doing the show alone and it is kinda hard to rearrange a show when all of the equipment is down."
According to a crewman who works for Collins, Collins herself "uused" Spheris.
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BAHAI FIRESIDE WORLD UNITY
KU BAHAI CLUB
Will meet on Monday April 2 in the International Room of the Kansas Union
Everyone is Welcome!
Benefit Cabaret for PI Delta Phi Scholarship Fund
CABARET
APR. 3
April 3, 8:15
Big B Room of Kansas Union
Tickets Available in Department of French and Italian - 201 Wescoe West
The KU
as well as
Free instruct
Come sail with
KU Sail
We
Learn To Sail!
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.
KU Sail Club Meeting
Wed. 7:30 KU Union
(Lessons start at 7:00)
SUA
Attention 35mm Photographers
★ New Exclusive Product ★
4x6
Inch Color Prints Are Now Standard Size From 35mm Kind color Film
- 30% Greater Picture Area
- Outstanding Quality on Beautiful Clear V-Surface
Kodacolor Film.
- Service Time 1 to 2 Days
- Price only 30° Per Print
- Processed in Lawrence
WE LL MAKE THE MOST OF WHAT YOU've SHOT .
Now you can get larger prints, higher quality faster service, and a better price than at any other photo store in Lawrence.
VII
OVERL PHOTO
THE HAWK introduces BUSCH DRAFT BEER with a three-day special!
BUSCH
BEERWARE
BUSCH BASH
APRIL 2, 3, 4
STARTS at 7 P.M.
TONIGHT (Monday)
10 ounce BUSCH
"ALPINE GOBLET"
$1.10 (Refills .35")
The Goblets are yours to keep!
In the past, glassware has not lasted until closing.
Come early to avoid disappointment.
It Could Only Happen at . .
THE HAWK
1340 OHIO
In the past, glassware has not lasted until closing. Come early to avoid disappointment.
1980 ROCK CHALK REVUE
We have openings for positions of business manager and producer.
Applications available Thursday, April 5 in the KU-Y office 110B Kansas Union, and should be returned to the KU-Y office by Friday April 13.
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 2, 1979
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, points, amenities and expatriate
affordance in the United States for employees of
American Express Corporation. Employer or
REBORN BENGAL, MADHURAN.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
times times times times
15 words or
lower $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
01 02 03 04 05
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found tren can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding five days. These ads can be placed in person or via the UDR business office at 861-455-3700.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
**INVEST** In good health and your future, Live Panda Inc. lives a company with a solid sales pipeline and strong production capacity. 894 division the first year of expansion. Live Panda Inc. will be paired with Paul at 814-444-444 for P.O. BOX 801; Lucy at 814-444-5555.
DEFINED YOUR INALIASABLE RIGHTS to life,
property, and the rights of others to them.
Tolerate their impugnance in the fights for
human rights.
Spring Festival Book Sale April 1-15% off
6ff Art Museum Book Shop
Energy is an issue. Use your votes to vote tomorrow.
Greg Baldacci, Marvin Mellon, Treasurer
Marvin Mellon, Treasurer
Employment Opportunities
Students majoring in business, pre-med, pre-peace,
pre-biology, or other academic disciplines. Mail 507
at 917-268-3000 for interview. For interviews with
students at the College of Arts and Sciences, call
415-877-3833.
ENTERTAINMENT
Early international estate? Come to Small
International Estate in New York City.
11-12 of 3 First Presbyterian Church Get
lists at www.firstpresbyterian.com
FOR RENT
Roommate wanted. 2 HR $120 month + 1% income
822-1007
4-3
App. 2 to IIH and friendship Cisco to campus.
UI-IIH, 2 to IIH and college, counsel to campus.
Assessments and rooms furnished, parking, most
rooms. Phone: 824-5767 Rid near town.
Phone: 824-5767
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT-
$1,250 a month. 1 bedroom, furnished,
unit interiorized with fireplace.
On KU is this rustic INDOOR HEATED POTTIE. Next to FIRST FLOOR, 3rd Frontier. Next door to Roan's HOME.
Christian Hunting Now and Summer. Close to
360. 924-852-7988, no. 842-6004, between 2
5:00 and 11:00. Keep trying.
NATURAL HALL for a place to call home? Naturnal Hall is the second location in the recreation of the year. Stop by and look at the room where you can enjoy your meals with good will be given to give you the details and information. Call 813-555-9000 or visit NATURAL HALL, 1809 Naturnal Hall, 813-555-9000.
5 bedroom house for rent during the summer.
Partially furnished. Call 842-9386. 4-4
Mark 1 & 11 & Apartment 2 now reading for sum-
mer housing. Fall 8 (815) one week.
Annual apartments 7 mins away, air conditioning, carpeting,
baths of 3 bathrooms
Fire safety system make three rooms safe and location left to pets you sleep late! Only one block walk. Garden, pet or cigarettes deposit; quiet garden. For great views, Views 68-42-9 600 app available.
Most sublease very nice two bedroom Trailridge
Suite available only Available June
Call 841-3993
Get your housing now. Move, apartments, homes,
sales, rentals, and more. 812-641-5200
Karen 812-641-1601 841-332-5200
Fax 812-641-1601 841-332-5200
ROOMS AVAILABLE for next semester - in 20
member student cooperative, within easy walk-
away from campus. Savings from $50-$80 include:
Lawrence rent from $50-$80 include:
Wilmington rent from $81-$94 or $81-942. Ask for Tom or
Steve.
Becoming the counselor in Lawsuits? Do you believe that you can help me with your case in my apartment! 841-729-9777
Ven. know these, great looking, spiritually
grown ladies, are welcome and one is
welcome for a great friend to call and one
is welcome for a great friend to call.
Beautiful 3 bedroom double at Missouri St. for
421-807-6958, C/A and new kitchen
bathroom. #421-807-6958.
Halleries 421-807-6958.
Must uniformized 2 bedroom Mats and
June June 18, 97 person. Call 841-8168
or 841-8168.
Summer sublease! 2 bedroom Applegate Apt.
Swimming Pool, Clive to Campus
456-917-8300
Female to male 8 hr BP. All for summer aid and at least 6 hr BP. For winter aid. Flatten weather dryer. Non-smoker preferred.
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
Summer Sublease. Nice, two bedrooms apartment,
close to campus, water paid, AC call 7865
7865
Subluate 2 bedroom Meadowbrook apt. for $300 + rce/ month: 842-1644 4-5
MUSN macaque snubneck 2 bedroom apt. for sun-
pan, rent. Campus. Rent $50-$250. Call: 4-5
1147
Female or male teammate wanted to share beautiful 75 yr. old country home on 4 acres of land. Provide a kitchen with oven, ham hacks, dry kitchen, dogs and pets. Purchase 8-46 utility lines. Call after 6:00 893-3507
FOR SALE
Aestern Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make outs of Western Civilization Makes sense to us (for example, chapter 3) for exam preparation. *New Analysis*. For exam preparation. *New Analysis*. For exams. Mails Bookstore, & Oread Bookstore. *tl*
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialist in
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-906-2000, 2000 W, 6th (H).
6le Schooners at Louise's every Friday from 29
till 8. 4-3
Fonder Muffin Baster Mixer with strings, cords,
speakers, cards and covers. Very good condi-
tion.
Sun-Series - Sun glazes are our specialty. Non-sun-
Series - Sun glazes are our selection, reasona-
tive prices 1021. Masson 843-5770.
1021. Masson 843-5770.
WHY RENT? WHY you could own this beautiful room?
Like new appliances, disposable carmels, like. Like new signatures, disposal
WATERED MATTRESSS $9.96 3 year warranty
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. $18.36-128
BOKONOG IMPORTS LTD. Organic shampoos,
conditioners, and dry shampoos for all hair types,
growth-promoting, and best in the midwest.
www.bokonog.com
Watch for track on Sunday's selling produce,
Foods, Fifth, 8th & Illinois. Also wood
cakes
Yamaha 175-74 290-cm, New Chain, Pipes, Point CALL, Derek 842-562-66
4-2
One pair of Nordica skis, stock size 1/2 l, 9 l/2 m.
Used once. $75.00. Call 841-7912. 4-4
Black & White portable T.V. w/o rolling stair
C& Call afternoon, early evenings 842-452-421
Friday-Saturday
Continental Mark IV, 1975, 38-800 miles, new
building. Continental Mark IV, 1975, 64-840 miles,
after 5 p.m.
Mercedes Benz 230, 1900, new tire, 10,000 miles on engine. New Carli 841-7857, after 5 p.m.
1875 Toward, Collison GT Liftback 3-apg; AM-FM
1927 Vaughan MA 600, 5000 miles excellent condition. **Sold by owner** back tire 155/60R14 for $275. Back tire 155/60R14 after 825 for $349. Bundle 155/60R14 and 155/60R14 for $289.
Exquisite antique trunk for sale. Beautifully re-
stored. Late 1860s. $450. Call 841-7820. 4-4
74 "360" Duster. 36,600 miles, new tires, excellent
condition. Call 841-4511 for 3:30 p.m. or
8:30 a.m.
Year sets of Psychology today and/or Human behavior magazine. Various sizes of curtains 'Magellite' free-standing fire place, reduced price, £29.99. Used air conditioners. 842-63-496-6 p.m.
1974 Mosting H II, 4 cu. ft., 4 speed, AC, excellent condition, and Lowes Alpine backpack 845-604-3222
1973 Vega GT, good condition. New radial tires.
vinyl roof. AMF Storm 864-2300. 4-4
35 x 10 x 24
Fiber stereo receiver, tube-type 200, watts, powerful power 519 w/o case. 864-6129. Keepy trap.
ITALIAN used car CLASSIC The Flat 124 Sport features more than 50 seats, more features than new row car - speed DOHC 106, wheel die brakes, and more. Body is clean, the wheels are fitted, and theft protection. Fixation 4-4 easy. Reasonable Call 841-703-170
JVC AM-FM Stories, Receiver, W 75, WH-C,
94-128. FM-AM Stories, Receiver, W 75, WH-C,
94-128. Floor Plan, Paintings, and ancillary Cau-
ses.
STARFISH SAILHAOT; Daren sail and line,
Davenport sail; 824-636-4555
Excellent condition. $255. 842-636-4555
KU Nursing School Uniforms Brand new size
14 Cheap 843-883-883
4-4
LOURSE WEST
ALL YOU CAN DRINK
ALLOWED ON MONDAY NIGHT'S
Games: $1.95 to $4.00
Lunches: $2.00
Tha & Mealodge
ENTERTAINMENT
GUIDE
BIG K'S
MONTH-TRUES 7:900
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7:900
5.0' Schooners & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1:700
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
Mount self audio Reflect Taritaul in snail mount
mate 640-2916 kit. Moving make off
mate 640-2916
Blackboards. Moving, must wilt near 4 & 8 feet highest quality, pure steelalized steel with aluminum frames. Will sell with or without overlay and decorative over murals. Aldrich 400, 814-4427
DAILY
75 Yamaha DY3-250 Enduro Top condition—All street gear. Audi -493-804-988
4-6
Microsewage Antique brace 1915 Ramsch & Lomb
8024339609429
Oak carrying case ATHENA 1910, 814, 841-747
SAVE! on
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
All with
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
THE BATTERY SHOP
842-2922
Friday 40 N. Lawrence
Attoms from school
500 Yamaha runs good. Must sell for best offer.
Call 813-749-1000 after 5:00. 4/4
D
Batteries .30 INSTALLATION!
HERE'S WHAT'S HAPPENING!
Sherwin Clawson's Used Cups $99.00 new Mug,
$125.00 used Mug, $125.00 Rite Staples, $95.00 Mug
Fireplace! Brand new 178-14, 160-13 & 735-
$399 cut to $18 per square foot. Ray Bass
Mass Stiffener
FOUND
75. Hunda CVCCC 40,600 miles A, C, M; enasite
Cell: 844-1426 844-1297 842-2087
844-1426 844-1297 842-2087
Women's prescriptions镀光带 with rose colored hair. Capillary Hall Cathedral Daphne Harris, 842-1230
TRH-6. Triumph owner's Four new redwall
gloves. All three are made of polyester.
4-1 Bay St. Rockwell, 5-39. M4-6
One Indie's Times watch with gold band Promo
number. At the Library's School. Call 843-1853
for mark.
HELP WANTED
Set of Revs. rusty. Probably lost before snow.
Call 864-1591 4-3
Cooks positions opening very soon for head cooks and grill cooks. All around experience required. Must be able to read and follow special recipes. Must be proficient in all aspects of special Cooks and part-time employment available. Skills necessary, nice personality are absolute must. All needs to be met. Call 413-826-0500 for appointment. 4-11
Now taking care of applications for Fountain & Girl
Applicants, apply in person at Vernon Heydon,
Apply in person at Vernon Heydon.
JORB • MEN • WOMEN • SAILBOATS!
CRUISE SHIPS! NO experience. High pay! See Carribean, Europe, World Summer camps
• DAYS FROM JFK • INFO: 61029, Sarasota, Ca. 95800 • 4-24
61029, Sarasota, Ca. 95800
BECOME A MONTSSONS TEACHER Classes
are now open 6am-8pm, Monday-Friday.
404-632-9777 or mail. Montessori School
158-838-7037
Bummer Jones, National Park Co. on 21 Parksville, $500.
Bummer Jones, National Park Co. on 21 Parksville, $500.
Mountain Co. 6, Feverwater, Kallupilp,
Heila wanted at 7a.m. Tea, 1700 W 21st Street
shift from 8 p.m. 1-3 p.m. Apply in appl.
350 646-7798.
EXOTIC JOBS! LAKE TAHOE, CALIFORNIA
2014 Job Code #1. $1700-$1900/summ,
over 25,000 people required.
trainers, ranchers, cruisers, river rafts, & more.
800 hours required. Q4, BQR 629,
Sacramento, California 93268.
Positions open 2nd and 3rd shifts for waitresses
apply in person Country Kitchen
[1003] W 23rd St
Research Assistant in Neuropathology B.S. from University of Kaiser-Premier Medical procedures $5,000-$12,000 per year beginning March 20, 1979 through April 9, 1979. Sterling is an experienced information please contact Professor Crawford and Tracey University of Kaiser-Premier Medical管理和 Tracey University of Kaiser-Premier Medical variety of Kaiser-Premier as an equal Opportunity Employer.
KU Welcome Board Program has openings for KU Faculty and Staff members June and July, 57th. $200 per month. Must be a current KU faculty member or communicate effectively with inner city students. Must be willing to work with minority students and necessary to work with minority students and applications available at 269 Carruth or high school teachers preferred. KU Faculty or high school teachers preferred.
Part-Time or Full-Time ADC Architectural
Drafting 842-3260 4.5
Established Lawrence Band Hand solids, agree-
creative, rock Hook Assist. Call 893-2571-4
2
Pizza People. Experience helpful. Apply in person.
800-632-4172. From Mails from 2:00 p.m.
Sea Bath.
Hotels-waitress, the area restaurant and club,
the school, the office, the people for spring and summer, part-time rooms.
The University Information Center is nowpcw-
ing. Begin May 22 and Aug. 19, 1979. Applications
may be sent to the University Office at
Fall, April 13, 1979. The University of Kansas
has an Opportunity-Affective Action Employer
Sales clerk wanted - 20 to 25 hour/week. Apply in person. Green Liquor. W 23rd. W 24th.
COLLEGE MEN *Recreating summer in Colorado*
*Work with children in camp setting. Hackers
work with children in camp setting. Hackers
outdoor programs. Write new include
in college curriculum.* 8916. Or contact McKnight.
844-7420. 844-7423 McKnight.
A student assistant for female quadripricapital. Student needed for Monday afternoon and Wednesdays until 8:45 a.m. Students learning to school that own vans (felicitate 862-432 or 862-1011 afternoons and evening-962-434 or 862-1011 afternoons and evening-9
ATTENTION SUN WORKSHIPS. Floating restaurant at Lakeside of the Orkney望窑 fry cooks and servers that serve you what you feel comfortable in, good housekeeping and very keen view call Frank Acky anytime. 314-265-7888
GOREANS JOBS--Summer year round, Europe
S. America, Australia, Ata, Italy, All Ecfs. 6160-
523-7282, Embassy, Kapens ad sight seeing Free
Write--In, Lee B., Bo D-KA, Camden Del,
CA 83263
Need some spending money? Weekdays, Old-Fashioned
Dinner. Get a couple of meals at 4, Monday between 2 and 3.
Friday between 1 and 2. Saturday between 2 and 3.
COMPUTER PROGRAMMER The Information and Research Department of the City of Kawasaki has a wide range of computer applications. This program offers opportunities to develop computer programming in Cobol or Pascal. Our computer programs are available for immediate use, and the latest in min-computer technology, to give you an appropriate data processing and computer interface. We need a Bachelor's well-qualified program and expand into other new areas. We provide training and engage into other new areas. Double working atmosphere, and modern office environment. We are encouraged to send an annual resume by May 1979, any amount requested to be received by September 1980. Mail your resume to Municipal Office Building, 201 N. Seventh Street, Kawasaki, KA803 6100. An Email Opportunity Employer.
Part of platinum reddish pink frame glass leftover from the original design.
The department of mathematics will have access for undergraduate students to the MATH DEPARTMENT. Students in background in undergraduate mathematics, come to room 103, on or near 2/9 DUTIES. Times tables 10:30 and 1:30 DUTIES. To beRooming in room 103. NALAYR 81,000-8,500 desk. Four times table 10:30 and 1:30 DUTIES. Four times table 10:30 and 1:30 DUTIES. The office of the dept. of math and application works with t
G. P. Levy's is now taking applications for cooks.
He is being invited to apply in person at Nial Loew Hall.
Local West - 3 & 20 Court care with KY ID 16
Central East - 3 Court care with KY ID 16
Central West - 2 Court care with KY ID 16
Central East - 2 Court care with Mary Care with KY ID 16
LOST
Lea a quart of gold wire frame glaze, on
Monday, March 27 and Tuesday, March 30.
March & April: 841-260-8920.
MISCELLANEOUS
THEISER BINDING COPYING The House of
themis is the subject of a lawsuit being
enjoyed and enjoying in Lawsuits. Let us
add to this list some of the most
bewildering copies we have ever seen.
NOTICE
DEATH WHY GOTHEN?
ELEANOR
7163
7763
BATTLE
WHY GOTHEN?
ELEANOR
842, 843, 811
VETS. Are you getting your business in the
check report? 118 B-108 604-3428 4128
If you would like to earn a xtra money Reception Services needs people to help with the
transcription of audio files and Intranet Wrestling-If interested call 641-528 & ad 464
Faculty & Staff Offer your child a superlative summer camp experience in the magnificent North Woods. Cull R. C. Hydein at 841-7541 or AFCA Camp-Milahara at AFCA-Aerated Camp.
Rentals may be in Lawsuits. Driving School is
unavailable in Lawsuits. Please contact the
party with any transportation provided, or call 212-693-0875.
SCHEDULE ONLINE
PERSONAL
EASY, EXTRA DISCOUNT $999.00 Starting Sale!
DENVER INSTITUTIONS
DEVELOPMENT ENTREES, 305 W. 14th St., Denver, CO 80209
(808) 267-3222
RCKS. RHSE SHIP is now open for 2018. Integrate
with us to help your business grow.
Portland, OR 97230. portland.rhse.com
portland.registrar 97230. VendorID: 41-692-02
www.rhsec.com
FOX RILL SURGERY CLINIC. Aberrations up to 12
FOX RILL. pregnancy tests; Birth Control, Con-
trols; Lactation. For appointment call 9-800-
to 5, Parks 406, 408, 409, 108, 109, Overland
Park, KS.
HARBOR SPECIALS 6-8pm Thursday
GARDEN SPECIALS 10am-4pm Monday through Saturday
MADIS HARBOR NIGHT 7-9pm W/ $1,600 meal
HARBOR SPECIALS 10am-4pm Monday through Saturday
MADIS HARBOR NIGHT 7-9pm W/ $1,600 meal
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortions up to
15周. Pregnancy Testing, Birth Control,
Diabetes Total Ligation For appointment
call 9 423-300-6380 480 W
1600. St. Overland Park, KS
Goyle-Lachman references, reefer new handbags
Valeant Int. Info: 840-368-9050 or Headquarter:
841-235-8356.
Attention all men! Young, beautiful intelligent and charming. We have looks charming, manners and much more than you may imagine. Please indicate your name and phone number. Primer specimens to be at least 25 mm in length may be submitted by mail or fax. Phragmose if possible to win AUCTION #001.
OOK Amplifiers for Onionstone, Delta Ragan
Airways and the Airlines Association.
And the Attendant Office and are due April
CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT
*Design: Design year's newl 1998 SR, Short,
Short labeled drawing. We will like blue and yellow.
Finished drawing. We will love this class
membership for next year plus you are
April! It is going your entries in the HOCO office,
and your own workspace. Anything goes!
Next year's Sr. Classes 4-6
Affirmative young man just coming out of sneaks and main man. Call anytime or sight at 842-3632
Design Next Year's
Sustainable Content
Deadline April 6 on Win!
See persons
Gibbitales Monday dimer beer (plus liquor pool):
4-6
--to run
Monday 5 pm
Tuesday 5 pm
Friday 5 pm
Wednesday 5 pm
Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday 5 pm
Wednesday 5 pm
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING Troupe at
Oklahoma Friendship, 7.09 p.m. at the Center,
10th Flr Entrance, Oklahoma City, Nov.
30-31, 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Club Name:
pierce or partners necessary. Call 841-801-0
for information.
Dear Sara Hempel-Kapur Affairs Did you like like this? If so, please reply with a happy face or show how to be happy at home. And we would like to be happy! Your kindness makes our world go round.
It is easy - Writing instruction boxers
quintion: NM 73120
POI XB85 8403
question: NM 73120
Honor Student. Mr. Magna Curn Laude, Why don't you go down to the backcourt at Watkins Library and check out the test reserve flats? You'll have no choice but just just走 one way. So get to gut data here — I mean just the way
Attractive intellectual young man just coming
from college. Man call anytime day or
night. 813-7211
Did you know that at the beginning of every Student Senate meeting there is a 12 minute room in the building so that anyone can express view and they might get involved? At 12:30 in the B8-room,桌会 talk to 4-8.
A background in architecture and art design
is required. Send resumes to the job, pin,
committee, or Equal Opportunity
Education Department.
SERVICES OFFERED
Need help in math or CSN Get a tutor who can
help with your math or CSB problems.
Bullet 811: 847-3250
Tired of feeding yourself? Nassau Hall is offering for the first time ever a boarding plan meal plan week can be yours! If you choose Hall, you can give a meal in a vault. **NASSUH HALL**, 1890 MAIN ST., Nassau Hall. (855) 324-6767
RUESCHHOFF
LOCKSMITHS
Complete Lock & Key Services
1015 W. 9th 843-2182
IBWITHING EDITING. Your manuscript, thesis or term paper edited onto an effective, grammar-free manuscript that is confident in presenting with precision and smoothness. Outlines, tables and articles also available. Editions 842-1321
EXPANT TESTER MATH 000 1234, hall 854, 7772.
EXPANT TESTER COMPUTER SCIENCE 100 299
ATTENTION JEWISH STUDENTS
Reservations needed for 2nd
night Passover Seder
Howard Ave. at 73rd St.
Kansas City, Kansas
beaches April 16th
9am
Send checks to KM Lafayette
801-745-8000
Students interested in
attending the night Seder
with a family, call
the office at 804-3488
or djay @ 804-5144
welcome!
MATH TUTOR MA in math, pattern, three years professional experience. MSSI-341.
Will help your children in my home in Raleigh,
North Carolina. Experienced Caregivers.
543-857-3067
Pete bane, Bob Braun, Brian D. D., Glenn
Bauer, and David Foster have all
perfect partners. I have you all, Pete.
I hope you're happy!
Schonebner and 1,500 Pitchers every Friday afternoon (9-5) at Lauren's bar.
4-5
Bring Ols ad to Gibraltar and receive two pieces for the prize of one Gibraltar bill.
Bring this ad to librarians and get 10% off cover.
Buy from Walgreens or Thrifted.
Hilary Bloosberg, LLC
Honorable wanted, summer, 85 month, room,
10th floor, on second, bedroom, N4-
434, quaint, quiet, M1-615
MISTERIANI established R.C. Lawrence, Inc. based in New York City and later Washington, D.C. with two warehouses as well as an office location.
Giltbright house hour: Tuesday and Thursday @ 9.30am
and drive for free; Friday @ 8.30am
(light floor plum).
Male mainstreet liquor, winerier, $55 month. 150
male mainstreet liquor, two bedrooms, 85
smoker, quiet, 411-623-9050.
Male models Arts & Design, Group Rates Evening Mon., Tues. P-O Box 1025 4-10 Beginners Wheat Weaving classes offered. Enrollment in Deuter's Decorative Arts. 1065 E. Hambleton Drive.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WASH is available with
Aice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center.
Aice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
to Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m on Saturday at
Mast.
$1.00 Pitchers - 7-9 P-M, Mon - Thurs, Tuesday
Saturdays - 7-9 T-P, big Kgs. 4-2
TYPEWRITER TUNE-UP. Have that SCM Electronical portable check out for those year-end inmates at Strom's Office Systems, 1409 Vermont Road. Don't risk a breakout, at 4-11
Bristolshire is now being taken for Wood Carving. A unique and unusual pleasure to be experienced! Classed at The Royal Decorative Arts Trust in Bristol.
Academic Interest. The Lawway Open School
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476.
TYPING
Lawrence School Excelling Summer program. Study and hiking in fine arts, organic gardening and building high quality classical clauses in Language Arts, Math, and Re-entry programs in Language Arts. Call now 780-654-2190; download scale billment
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4900. ff
Typed/Editor, IBM PCs/Pitch, Quality work,
Photoshop, Illustrator. Desk illustration welcome.
Email: design@microsoft.com
7 year experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Professional, knowledgeable. Law papers, term papers. Mire
Holden. W42-7284.
Experienced Typed-term paper, thesis, mike.
Bachelor's Degree in Journalism, sending correlation
483-565, Mrs. Wright
Quality typing guaranteed- IBM Select, Termite
paper tests, dissertations, carolie Carole
Experimented hybrid-thesis, dissertations, term papers and conference presentations, selective listings 841-831, 1133; reports. 842-831
COMPUTERIZED THENS TYPEING. Have your thems (based on CP7000 and you can have them as a prebuilt engine) or all original engines. Call PROFESSIONAL for any of the systems on the most advanced (typing system available) on the thems.
Now accepting term paper for quality typing,
Lymn, 841-206 after 5:30. If
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10
Monday, April 2, 1979
University Daily Kansan
---
Nuclear...
From page one
water and then allowing it to escape from the water outside the reactor.
"It's slow but it's safe," said Bloch Lengel, engineer for Metropolitan Edison.
Officials hoped by midnight yesterday to hook up two "hydrogen recombiners" to slowly remove hydrogen from the reactor containment building. Denton said.
THE RECOMBINER, in an igloo of lead bricks outside the containment building, take hydrogen and combine it with oxygen, in a process involving heat and a catalyst, to form water. The water then will be stored as radioactive waste.
Reaction...
Scientists also are concerned about the possibility of hydrogen and oxygen mixing, in flamable proportions, in the buildup of hydrogen in the reactor, but inside the containment building.
From page one
some faith in the NRC to deal with these problems," he said. "No one was hurt. I don't mind when it only affects the power of women. I have been enjoying high profits all along."
The concentration of oxygen is too low to allow an explosion. Even if an explosive concentration were reached, it would take a long time for the gas to be no ready, source of spark inside the core.
But nuclear protests initiated nationwide
weekend the weekend that many people
pay royalties to Iranian state media.
Ballooning.
"It was the last straw for some people," he said.
Bill Beems, Lawrence senior and spokesman for the KU Students for a Radioactive-Free Kansas, said he and other members of the group had received letters from KU students and Lawrence residents concerned about the Harrisburg incident.
Beems said that some people had called him in response to "The China Syndrome," a movie now showing in Lawrence, that exposed the mistrust accident at a nuclear power plant.
BEEMS SAID that members of his group had been distributing leaflets outside the movie almost every night of its showing. He said he found it to be an excellent tool' for getting people involved.
But because the bubble cannot be measured directly and its presence and composition can only be inferred from other sources, it is important that many are treating the problem with urgency.
'The movie has made people who aren't normally aware of these problems much
more conscious," he said. "By passing out the leaflets, we've giving them the oppressive feeling."
The leaflets requested support for a bill in Congress that would terminate the granting of construction licenses to nuclear fission power plants.
The leaflets also request donations to The Wolf Creek Legal Support Fund for the demonstrators who pleaded not guilty following their arrest in Burlington.
BUT SOME students object to the leaflets tactic, saying that it is merely preying on the emotions of people who have seen the movie.
"The movie is fiction," said Howard Epstein, Topeka junior, who saw the movie last week. "And then to be handed a flier that's related to something that's real makes you want to transfer that false information into something that's concrete. That's not right."
But Epstein said that he was concerned about the possibility of a nuclear accident, similar to the one at Harrisburg, happening at Wolf Creek.
"Maybe it's good that this kind of thing happened in the early stage of the game so that it won't get handled with less care than it deserves," he said.
Rally...
of "Out" and "Divest" that easily could be heard inside Strong Hall.
From page one
Other speakers at the rally echoed Kuby's sentiments.
Kenneth Brouhard, a member of a public service employees union, said, "We support your rally. We are against discrimination at KU and all over the world as well."
Brouhard, a former steamerfitter for KU's facilities operations, said he had been transferred to general construction by the University against his will. However, he was given the transfer resulted from personal differences between Brouhard and his supervisor.
Jeff Longfoher, a member of the Young Socialist Alliance, said, "We are not surprised that KU is not willing to engage in such an event. South Africa is an investor's dream."
ANOTHER SPEAKER, Sharron Parker.
president of the Black Student Union, said,
"There is a problem when the people's money is being used and they don't even know what it is being used for."
Parker also criticized the videated surveillance of the rally by the KU Police Department. Members of the police department, including a law enforcer, ran from the second floor of Strong Hall.
Mike Hill, director of KU police, said after the rally, "The main purpose of the tape is for problems like shoving or other disturbances. Everything here was very peaceful."
"Why are our pictures being taken? They say it is for security. Security from what?"
But one student watching the rally, Dette Colgan, Bonner Springs senior, said, "I think the surveillance by the University is a pity that more people aren't aware of it."
JACK LEMMON, JANE FONDA,
MICHAEL DOUGLAS
"The China Syndrome" PG
GEORGE C. SCOTT & PETER BOYLE IN
GEORGE C. SCOTT & PETER BOYLE in
HARDCORE
Eve 7:30 & 9:30
Sat/Sun Mat 12:30
Varsity
R
N
I
C
"TAKE DOWN" PG
Eve 7/20 & 8/25
Hillcrest
S.Mail 14/11
"HALLOWEEN"
Eve 7/40 8/9-40
D-Mat 10/21 Hillier
"MOMENT BY
MOMENT"
Ew7/8 06/23
5-9M at 150
Hillerest
THE CRITICS LOVED IT AND
SO WILL YOU!
NOW SHOWING
"impressive. A movingly moody shock film." - Vincent Canby, NYTS "a movie to savor. It will taint your senses." - Gene Shalti, NBC TV
Richard Chamberlain *in* Peter Weir's
THE LAST WAVE
Weir's
VE
PG
NOW SHOWING
Cinema Twin
Eve 7:35 & 9:40
Sat/Sun Mat 2:30
Donald Sutherland Brooke Adams Leonard Nim
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
United Artists
From deep space..
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 Kids. Come and enjoy an esthetic blen-
dling 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
SUA
Inequity historical, Abzug says
By MARK L. OLSON
Bella Abzug is a former U.S. representative, a lawyer and a mother. In front of U.S. woman, she is a high-spirited motivator and unabashed storyteller. In the fast-paced chaos of New York City and Washington, she has made people listen to her argument for equal treatment for women.
Staff Reporter
"We began as a flawed democracy. The rights were for men. They were great guys, our forefathers. They wrote a great document, but they didn't give a hoot about our foremothers."
"It is not an accident we should still be struggling for the Equal Rights Amendment in this country."
AS A MEMBER of the House of Representatives, Abzug fought to pass legislation she wrote banning discrimination against women in obtaining credit, loans and mortgages.
In a January 1977 Gallup poll, Abzug was shown to be one of the 20 most influential women in the world. A U.S. News & World Report poll of her congressional peers in February led her as the third most influential member of the House.
Now, out of elective office and recently deposed by President Carter as co-chairman of the National Advisory Committee for Women, Abeg is bringing to the grassroots what he knows will must use their collective strength to bring about change.
"I've never had any trouble reaching someone," she said, "even under the Nixon administration, which I mercilessly attacked, or the Ford administration or my own Democratic administration."
ABZUG RECALLED an occasion in 1971 or 1972 when she thought she was not in the good graces of the Nixon administration.
She said she and her husband, Martin, had been invited to the White House, but she was telling Martin that she did not want to be there.
"Martin asked, 'Why not?'" she said, "and I told him I had been saying some pretty mean things about the president--like 'Let's impeach him' and he said we had given him a speech," she placed he was going to live when he became first man.
An outspoken activist for women's rights causes, Abzug was appointed by President Carter in 1978 to be cochairman of the National Advisory Committee for Women and a member of the Board of Directors, director of the National Conference on Puerto Rican Women.
CARTER APARENTLY found the committee's criticisms of his policies more than the handlers' comments, with 72% saying they were too strong.
resignations of 26 of the committee's 40 members, in a show of solidarity.
She mentioned the attempts made to play down financial scandals involving Bert Lance and the drug scandals involving Carter's drug abuse adviser, Peter Bourne.
Abug said that she thought she had been tired as a sagegirl and that a double standard existed within the CSA.
"Those in power are usually unwilling to share it with those who do not have it," she said. "Essentially, what we are confronting is a male power structure, and it is unwilling to share its power with women."
Abzug balanced her remarks about the firing with a few words of faith for Carter's long-ange intentions.
"Fifty percent of all women work today. In the last 20 years women have been pouring into the job market, and yet they only make 60 cents on the dollar compared to men.
"I think he is going to have to show some specific accomplishments.
"I think there is a lot of pressure on him now," she said. "I think he wants to do for women's rights what Lydon Jones does."
Eighty percent of women's jobs are clustered at the bottom, or older. Of those who live below the poverty level, 63 percent have
"We demand the kind of equality for men and women that will enable us to move forward."
Women told job commitment vital
By ELLEN IWAMOTO
Staff Reporter
The doors to traditionally male professionals are just beginning to open to women, but commitment, time and money are needed if women are to continue to make use of recording to Ray Cainn, regional director of the Environmental Protection Agency.
Camin, former associate dean of the college of Business Administration and professor of economics at Wichita State University, spoke to about 80 of the 90 students of the Intercollegiate Association of Women Students convention Friday in the Kansas Union.
"We have reached a point where women no longer face professions only in teaching, nursing and as secretaries and mothers," she said.
But, she said, those women rising the fastest are those who are making the extra effort.
CAMIN SAID she disgraced with some feminists who thought a certain number of hours in a day was enough to a commitment. He must be willing to give up more of their time.
"And when you get that job," she said,
"be innovative, be willing to be a little naughty."
Many employers have two standards, Camin said. They expect women to have experience, but men need to show only potential.
In her own office, a man from the personnel office came to her one day and told her he had found a woman who was the best qualified for a job.
"by just his tone of voice," she said, "I knew he found it hard to believe."
Camin she thought employers should take the responsibility to encourage women to apply for jobs. A statement that women were tired because they do not apply is not valid.
WOMEN HAVE a heavy burden for some time to come, she said. All women will be judged competent or incompetent based on what a few individuals do.
In addition to speeches such as Camin's, many of the delegates attended 13 workshops offered as part of the convention Friday afternoon and Saturday morning. Some of the workshops explored interracial communication, abortion rights and sexual myths.
Operation Friendship
Building Bridges Between Cultures
East European & Middle Eastern dances taught by KU Folk Dance Club. (no experience or partners necessary)
International Folk Dancing
Tonite: 7:00 pm
The Center 1629 W.19th
Funded by Student Senate and the Baptist Student Union
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In a workshop titled "How the Law Affects Women," two lawyers explained a woman's role in divorce and other proceedings.
Some women ask the court for separate maintenance, which is usually called legal separation. Finances are still shared but the couple lives apart.
Eileen Hine, a lawyer for a private law firm, McDowell, Rice, Smith in Kansas City, Kan., and Rose Stewart of the Kansas Legal Services in Lawrence, said divorce lawyers had to work after no fault grounds for divorce were instituted in most states, including Kansas.
"IT IS A final marriage without calling it divorce, which some people prefer to accept."
Another workshop, titled "Women and Medicine: Taking Control of Your Health," was led by Josie Nurse, M.D., and Libby Stoddard, a professor of the Holistic Birthing Center in Topeka.
The women emphasized the importance for all women to take control of their bodies.
"You are responsible for your own body and you should make the decisions about Norris. "Doctors provide opinions and information, but you make the final decision."
Schumm for Lawrence
Too many women have the "fix-m attitude," which is unhealthy, according to Norris, because doctors became too paternalistic.
Women should consider changing doctors to find one to fit their needs. Hiney said.
"Quality of Life For Lawrence"
Continue to support City Programs dealing in Educational, Art and Science, and Recreational Activities, etc.
Vote
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Commission Committee Steve Edmonds. Box 1194.
1970
At that time, hoping to find some satisfaction in life. 1
Green Pastures
At that time, hoping to find some satisfaction in life, I started drinking and getting high. All that did was wear out. So I came to KU, thinking that since I was tired from home - I would have a great time. I didn't.
Soon my cue would come and I would make my appearance on stage; others in the cast felt excited, yet I was disappointed inside. I had looked forward to this performance for a long time. Now I felt empty . . .
During high school I loved acting and lived from production to production. I was like the goat who wandered to the next hill because the grass looked greener—found that it wasn't, but looked to the next hill because it looked more and more distant from his keeper.
After I came to Lawrence, I met some Christians living in my fraternity. They explained Christianity in terms I'd never heard before, even though I had gone to a church all my life. They said our sin was like a running away, a separation from God—much like the goat—and they saw no other way out. I joined fellowship with our Creator. What had the most impact
Another Life changed by Jesus Christ
on me was their personal relationship with the living God. That was revolutionary to my understanding of Christianity, so real and dynamic, compared to my concept of God as a being.
Later, I asked Jesus Christ to come into my heart as He had promised in the Bible that He would. True to his word, He has never left.
To follow Christ will take me a lifetime, but to accept Him and become right with God took only an honest invitation from my heart. I'm not blindly hoping like I was in high school, because I know that I have an eternal life with God that has already started.
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THE LIFECHANGER"
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ERA foes ready for annual committee battle
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporter
When the Kansas Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee meets today to decide the fate of the Equal Rights Amendment, we will be considering unaddressed question.
While ERA supports insist the battle to declare the amendment void centers only on women's rights, anti-ERA groups say it is a matter of constitutional integrity.
rief conflict is based on two different interpretations of the ratification amend-
The amendment passed by Congress specified that three-fourths of the states must ratify the amendment within seven years before it could become law.
Although Congress has called for a three-year extension, some anti-ERA groups have
declared the amendment "null and void"
and has hard-ratified satisfying states now are
the only available.
TO FURTHER complicate matters, three of the ratifying states have voted to rescind the agreement. Because the say recission is not valid, the states are counted among those that have ratified the agreement.
"ERA is not the question right now," said Sita Turness, regional coordinator of the Province. "We need to accept the question." The question right now is whether or not we allow the federal government to just rise to power."
amendment. Then Congress changed the rules in the middle of the game. Now, even some pro-ERA legislators are saying that the Congress is out of line on the time extension. My own legislator told me that the constitution is a violation of state's rights.
Barbara Hanna, a former state coordinator of the Preemily Family Forum, voiced concerns about the
"The ERA doesn't need to be rescinded anymore. It just needs to be declared null."
Underlying both women's opposition to the ERA is a belief that the federal government should not intrude upon state laws. In their own words, we provide adequate protection for women.
"the ERA is not necessary," she said. "I absolutely believe that American women can do anything they really set their minds to." The study showed that passed provide adequate protection. There
HANNA SAID ERA supporters would be better off devoting their energy toward
have been some inequities and they do need to be better enforced, I'll admit, but the
"The big thing is, is that we already have rights and benefits as women. Those who says we need more are wrong. The pre-ERA laws are discriminatory, the pre-Chauchie old laws that they say are discriminative as proof we need the ERA. The point is, that even under ERA, those laws would have to be changed, so why don't they change them instead of wasting their time on ERA."
Because of the recent expiration of the seven-year ratification period, both women say they are optimistic that the amendment will be declared void.
However, that pronouncement is unlikely if committee members are influenced by the
opinion of Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan
IN FEBRUARY, Stephen released an opinion that said he would not consider Kansas' ratification void once the ratification date had passed and that he thought Kansas could not vote to rescind its ratification.
Amit Gotberg, KU student and a member of Kanans for ERA, agreed.
Because of that opinion, most pro-ERA groups consider this week's committee
"My expectation is that the bill will be in committee," said John Mettner, a lobbyist.
"THIS YEAR is the seventh straight I've been to the statehouse. It's getting pretty old and I think the whole thing is routine for the committee," she said.
"The ratification process is unique from any other and makes it possible to reconsider denying ratification, but impossible to rescind it," she said.
Gottberg said she did not consider existing laws adequate protection against fraud.
"I grew up being very aware of the legal barriers to achieving what I wanted," she said. "Now, I want a piece of the constitution that recognizes me as a person and allows me to discrimination or the basis of sex. ERA is a very permanent kind of protection."
"Although Kansas has very progressive laws, what if I moved to Florida where the laws are more progressive? What happens if the Kansas law conservatives and changes their laws? A constitutional amendment can't be changed that kind of security and protection."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas -Lawrence, Kansas
I will not be afraid to go anywhere, even if it is a difficult one. I will always have my horse with me.
Ridin' the rails
pot Rose, 145 Delaware St., chose this unusual path to exercise his horses on yesterday. Rose said his skis, Hsv and Lady, have gotten out of shape during the winter, so he
tries to exercise them daily. Rose is a member of the Trailriders Association, a group that teaches children how to ride horses.
Outbursts interrupt nuclear forum
By LYNN BYCZYNSKI
Staff Renorter
Shouted obscurities and arguments disrupted a meeting of more than 100 people who gathered at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 927 Vermont St., last night to discuss nuclear power with three KU professors.
The forum, sponsored by Radioactive Free Kansas, a Lawrence nuclear-cancer center, has asked questions about Thursday's accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Harrisburg, Pa. The accident resulted in the release of radioactive steam into the atmosphere.
But as one student observed as she left the
hall, "People only came to vent their anger and their frustration."
TIMOTHY MILLER, assistant professor of religious studies, opened the discussion by questioning Friesen about the severity of the accident in Harrisburg. When Friesen answered with an analogy about the dangers of other forms of energy, Miller left
The scientists from KU were Benjamin Friesen and John D. Zimbrick, professors of radiation biophysics, and Philip Hedrick, professor of systematics and ecology.
A woman persistently heckled Friessen, despite angry remarks from the audience.
"These men are scientists, not politicians.
Let them speak."
At one point, a man rose and shouted.
Prescott Ripley, 3005 Topeka Lane, moderator of the meeting, questioned the professors about the effect of the radiation on milk production and planted on farm and dairy products in the area.
THE HALF-LIFE of iodine 131 is eight days, which means that only half of the original quantity of the element will remain in eight days.
The only radioactive element that could be transferred to humans is iodine 131, *B*2.
"The farmers around Harribburn haven't just because their milk will go into cheese
Those products will be virtual free or radioactivity by the time they are eaten, he
The forum soon reverted to a discussion about the merits of nuclear energy.
One man asked, "Can you gentlemen,
with your bias, justify the development of
this type of device?"
When Frenes answered, "Yes, if you're interested in developing any sources of food," she said.
Members of Radioactive Free Kansas agreed before the forum to join the Kansas City People's Energy Project in picketing between 4:30 and 6 p. p.m. today at the Federal Building, 601 E. 12th St., Kansas City, Mo.
Reinstatement of death penalty rides on Carlin
From Kansan Staff and Wire reports
TOPEKA-In what one of its main supporters called "a historic moment in Kansas, a bill that would reinstitute the concept of gay marriage," Legislature to Gov. John Carlin yesterday.
If Carlin signs the bill or allows it to become law without his signature, murders could be sentenced to in Kansas for the first time since a 1972 U.S. Supreme Court decision struck down the state's previous capital punishment law.
One one has been executed in Kansas since 1983. The state's gallows at the penitentiary is now a memorial.
The bill went to the governor when the House voted 78-47 to adopt a conference committee report approved last week by the Senate. 21-19. That was the first time the governor had made an investment in the seven years since the Kansas law was invalidated by the Supreme Court.
House approval came despite pleas by anti-death penalty legislators to reject the Senate's expansion of the bill to include a prediction despite a prediction Carlin would veto it.
CARLIN'S APPROVAL or acquiescence are not a sure thing, because the governor has said he personally opposes capital punishment.
However, he pledged during his election campaign last fall that if the Legislature sent him a constitutional bill, he would not veto it.
Paul Wilson, KU law professor, said any death penalty bill would have to follow recent U.S. Supreme Court guidelines to be constitutional.
"The court ruled that if lower courts used too much discretion, their decisions might be less effective."
A House death penalty proponent, State Rep. Robert Frey, R-Liberal, said the bill was designed specifically to meet Supreme Court guidelines.
He said this was accomplished by a trial system that was divided two pieces.
IN THIS SYSTEM, a person convicted of a capital crime would be given a second trial to determine whether he should be executed or given a jail sentence.
The second jury would consider any aggravating or mitigating circumstances. If the defendant were given the death penalty, the judge would rule against Supreme Court would review the verdict.
"This is a well-framed bill that does what the people have shown they want done," he said.
Wilson said he could not comment specifically on the bill because he had not
seen it, but he said all the states that have had death penalty bills accepted by the U.S. Supreme Court recently have used a form of the divided trial system.
THESE STATES have also allowed mitigating evidence to be admitted in the courtroom.
"I don't think the battle is over," said Sean Don Allegrucci, D-Pittsburgh, a staunch death penalty fee. He said he had talked to Carlin and planned to talk to him again.
"He has serious reservations about that felony murder provision," Allegruc said.
The Senate broadened the bill's application to make those convicted of murders that occur in the commission of a felony, such as armed robbery, subject to the death penalty, as well as those convicted of first-degree murder.
Carlin has publicly stated his opposition to expanding the death penalty's application under the bill. Whether that will cause him to veto it remains speculative, however.
BILL. HOOCH, Carlin's press secretary,
said that expanding the death penalty to include felony murder might make the bill unconstitutional.
However, Wilson, who specializes in criminal law, said he did not think adding felony murder to the bill would make it unconstitutional.
Hoch did not rule out the possibility that Carlin may vow the bill because it includes felony murder, even if the governor decides the bill is constitutional.
"I suppose that first we'll look at the constitutionality of the bill and then at the felony murder issue," he said. "But we'll look at the bill before we decide what to do."
POLLS CONSISTENTLY have indicated that a substantial majority of Kansans support reimposition of the death penalty in some form. If Carlin were to veto this bill, regardless of his philosophical or technical background, he would be byestimated as damaging to him politically.
However, Hoch said 36 telephone calls relating to the death penalty issue were received on the governor's new toll-free number. It was the first time on Saturday, and 33 of them opposed reimposition.
The bill would make death an alternative punishment to life imprisonment in cases of first-degree murder and felony murder. One person could be held on the basis of accused person, and a second jury would determine the penalty, taking into account the facts of the case. The judge before reaching a decision on the penalty.
Death would be by lethal injection under the bill, a change from Kansas' prior law, under which those sentenced to die were put to death by hanging.
Fears haunt patients as they start new lives
Bv GENE BROWNING
Staff Reporter
Sarah is an art student at the University of Kansas and Carla is a lab technician with plans to attend
Many mental patients, however, can never break away from their dependence on a mental hospital. Those who do need help from outside, according to the U.S. Department of Project Acceptance and a former mental patient.
But life has not always been this way for Sarah and Carla. Both women have been patients in mental hospitals. They are among the 20 million Americans hospitalized in mental institutions between 1971 and now.
Sarah is font of cats and likes to live alone. Carla enjoys growing plants and weaving.
Project Acceptance, a group of former mental patients based in Lawrence, helps patients recently with depression.
Build said hospitalization often provided an escape for a person, but could give the patient a dependency
said. "After finishing my bachelor's degree in 1972, I was hospitalized for a long fairly period of time."
Sarah said she still experienced the fear of the hospital that she first felt when she went there in 1971.
"The first time I was in for a month or so," Carla
Carla agreed.
"I have recurring nightmares about the hospital. I have a dream where a doctor has a multi-barreled machine gun shooting at me and I wake up screaming."
“There is the struggle to make up for the lost years in my life and to rebuild my life,” Carla said, covering her face with her hands. “A lot of time is lost to this person and person. It really undermined my confidence.
But hospitalization provided the escape that Carla and Sarah had wanted. The problem was getting back
"You learn to be afraid," she said. "When you're in the hospital you never know when what you're doing is going to get you into trouble. By trouble, I mean they increase your medication.
"I was in school the last time I freaked out. I have the fear that that will happen again."
Sarah said she was lucky when she got out because her mother took her in. Then she got a job and moved away from home. She said if she had not had anyone to help, she'd have got out she would have had to return to the hospital.
Budd said one of the first problems a former mental patient faced after leaving the hospital was
"WITHOUT AN ADDRESS you can't get welfare,
and without welfare you can't live," she said.
She said welfare money was barely enough to live on.
"It's very strange to leave a state hospital. And it's very strange to realize that you have a room of your very own. That the door isn't locked. That you can come and on as you please."
"I was getting $79 a month from welfare when I moved to Lawrence. I paid $20 for the apartment and I bought a house."
When she first got out, Carla said, she also experienced fears of living outside of the hospital.
"It can be very difficult having not been responsible for preparing your own meals for six months," she said.
"YOU HAVE TO get up in time to fix breakfast
before going to work and figure out what you're going to do for lunch. Just the daily things of not being used at work.
"The first problem I faced was being very tightened to try to hold a job. There are little opportunities for growth in our education, a publication about what you've been doing for the last year. There was fear of whether or not I could get up on my own."
Budd said patients also had trouble finding jobs when they were released.
Carla recalled her first attempt to get a job with painful slowness.
Sarah said employers' fears were unfounded.
"They think, Are they going to do something to hurt me?" she said.
In general, mental patients tend to be very
EMPLOYERS ARE usually sympathetic to problems former mental patients face, but can be very hard to handle.
She said this fear was amplified in employers' minds.
- Employers may not hire mental patients because they are unsure if they will be dependable, if they will work with a child.
obedient, very docile and very easily manipulated," she said. "They are very easy to get along with because they have been trained to respond to the needs of a staff and doctors."
Sarah also said she was afraid to contact other people.
"WHEN I FIRST came to Lawrence, I was afraid to talk to people, afraid to go out of my apartment," she said. "但它 wouldn’t have done any good if I had to spend so much time talking that concentrate long enough to have a conversation."
"I came to a place where my big social interaction was taking to the neeole at the grocery store."
Fear never leaves former mental patients, Budd said. But she said organizations such as Project Acceptance helped former patients cope with their fears.
Patients talk out problems and make friends with people who have common problems. But the patients would eventually have to work out the problems themselves, she said.
Carla said, "You have the fear of being insane. You can only be afraid for so long, until it gets boring. And after you get bored, you say, 'All right, insanity is real, it exists. What happens now?'"
2
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and ware reports
Kansans request nuclear study
TOPEKA-A Kansas Senate committee yesterday agreed to introduce a resolution to study the safety of the Wolf Creek power plant, in response to pleas
The Senate Ways and Means Committee accepted the proposal by State Sen. Winter Wint, R-Otawa, requestd $30,000 for an interim study of the plant
Although the federal government supervises the safety of nuclear power plants under construction, Winter said the state should be able to conduct its own testing.
Even if the plants are constructed according to all federal regulations, Winter said, he questioned whether plants truly would be safe.
"We want to know whether nuclear power plants are safe and if there are any inherent defects in them," Winter said.
The resolution would allow the state to hire professionals to study the Wolf Creek plant.
Eauptian reaction to Begin cool
CAIRO, Egypt - Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin said yesterday that he "dreamed deeply" his first taste of normal relations with Egypt, but not to the extent he had.
"It is a great day for Israel." Begin told reporters after stepping from an Egyptian army helicopter that flew him to the pyramids of Giza.
Begin climbed the first few tiers of the Pyramid of Nephrem. The televised event was tinged with emotion because Israelis, in looking to peace, have said,
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat avoided the welcoming ceremonies, sending instead his Vice President Hony Mubarak and a few cabinet leaders to greet Begin at the airport. Officials said protocol did not require Sadat's presence because Begin is not a head of state.
Several government officials and Egyptian reporters accompanying the prime minister grumbled that the Israeli leader should have waited until the elections.
The news media, which is controlled by the state, and the public demonstrated little enthusiasm for Begin's 28-hour visit.
Air raid provokes Amin order
NAHOBI, Kenya—President Idi Amain made a surprise appearance in Jinja after an air rail dayed by Tanzanian jets on the city, residents reported.
Townpeoples at Jinja, 50 miles east of the Ugandan capital of Kampala, said Anim appeared and ordered panking people to return to work, shortly after the attack.
According to one witness, Arin said, "We have shot down the enemy." A second said Aimin vowed he would "teach the attackers a big lesson."
Amin also reportedly inspected damage from the raid.
The invading force of "Progenies and Haze."
The invading force of Tanzanians and Ugandan exiles also bombed an oil depot in Kampala, residents and dinomats reported yesterday.
Kampala residents said the city was almost deserted, fuel was no longer available and the market was almost bare.
No firing was reported from the western suburbs of the city, where the main force of Tanzanians and rebels reportedly was facing 2,000 Libyan troops.
Teamsters lockout cuts shifts
WASHINGTON - Thousands of auto workers short shifts yesterday as a trucking industry lockout of 300,000 Teamsters took hold.
The nation's two largest automakers, General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co., said an estimated 48,000 assembly line workers were sent home early.
The lockout, ordered after the union launched a strike over a contract dispute, was expected to halt a sizable portion of interstate shipments.
Truck traffic in Kansas and Missouri was down noticeably yesterday following the strike and the lockout.
Truck traffic in Kansas was "really light, except in the coffee shops where they're doing a lot of talking," a Highway Patrol spokesman said.
The Missouri Public Service Commission began considering a plan to let independent drivers load loads over routes normally allocated by the state to meet traffic needs.
Acquittal prompts Nixon call
MONHOE, Lai - former Rep. Otto Passman and former President Richard Nixon congratulated him yesterday on his acquittal in the Korean rice-buying
"He was very kind to me during my tenure in Congress. I grew the red tape and go directly to him," Passaad said. "I think it nice that he still thinks of me."
Passman, ks, Said尼姆 telephoned to offer congratulations on his acquittal of charges on accepting $145,000 from Korean rice dealer Tongan Park and of charges on accepting $125,000 from Taiwan rice dealer Yuen Park.
Judge calls accident irrelevant
OKLAHOMA CITY—The presiding judge in the Karen Silkwood trial yesterday urged juries for the third time to disregard publicity on the Pemmons case.
U. S. District Judge Frank Thesis told the six jurors that the nuclear accident has no relevancy on deliberations in this case, and that exposure to news of the accident is not relevant.
Religious sect files complaints
WINFIELD—An attorney for the Holy Ground Mission near Wilmot, 18 miles northeast of Winfield, said yesterday the mission had filed complaints of criminal trespass and assault against two parents for the abduction of their children from the mission last month.
Audie Long, a Dullas attorney, said two members of the Kansas division of the mission filed a complaint against Thomas Davisson, Mooresville, Ind, and Betty Koch, Phoenix, for the March 5 abduction of Michael and Jamie Davisson, 22 and 21.
Cowley County Attorney Bill Ellis said he planned to file misdemeanor charges against Davison, Michael Davison's father, and Koch, Janie Davison's mother, who have admitted to being present during the abduction and the deprogramming of their children.
The deprogramming ended with a reconciliation between the parents and the children, and the Davissons went to Indiana.
Members of the Holy Ground Mission, an international sect, say they are the Anglicans and have discovered parts of Noah's Ark on Mount Arafat in Turkey.
Martha Halstead Chaffee, the former acting county fairgrounds manager, was married with depositing county pay-out warrants totaling $701 into her own accounts.
The money was intended for judges and exhibitors at the 1977 Sunflower State Expo.
Wife of sheriff is arrested
TOFERA—The wife of Shawnee County Sheriff Jim Chaffee was arrested yesterday and charged with 24 counts of forgery stealing from an incident involving the suspect.
The investigation started about one month ago following a routine audit, they said.
Setting the record straight
Randy Seiden, Fairway junior, was incorrectly identified because of an angry error as a spokesman for the Lawrence Jewish community on page three.
Judith Paltin, president of Hillel, a Jewish student organization, said, "We are facilitated with Hillel. He never approached Hillel about filing charges of police behavior."
Weather ...
Today will be mostly cloudy with a chance of snow flurries this afternoon and the evening. Temperatures will reach 40, according to the National Weather Service.
FARMINGTON, Mo.—(UPI) A fire whipping quickly, through a one-story boarding house on the outskirts of town yesterday killed 25 persons, including some state mental patients, and injured seven others.
Boarding house fire kills 25
The fire, which began at about 5 a.m., destroyed the Wayside Inn, which housed 13 patients from the Farmington State Hospital for the mentally handicapped.
Firemen from nine communities ran water lines from the nearest hydrant one half mile away at the Ozark Village motel, café and bostermount.
"We found several persons inside the door. They just couldn't get out," said Assistant Farmingion Fire Chief Bob Oder, who helped pull bodies out of the ruins.
THE FIRE started in the kitchen and quickly spread through the brick-and-
"All these people were up and around. They weren't bedridden. They all could take care of themselves," Bob Howard of the Missouri Highway Patrol, said.
Most of the dead apparently suffocated in the smoke. Two bodies were burned beyond repair.
THE INJURED, who were treated at the hospitals, included two firemen and the
Farmington is located 50 miles south of St. Louis.
The residents, awakened by a smoke alarm, were dressing as the fire swept through the building. Several bodies had on one sock or one shoe.
The most seriously injured of the seven was Glen Oxen, Flat River fire chief, who was shot in the arm.
of the survivors, 7-year-old Ralph Steinmetz, said he was awakened by a knock from behind him.
home's attendant, Dorothy East, who was in shock.
Larry Limmeyer of the state fire marshal's office and the fire apparently went to a nearby building.
"I PUT MY clothes on, grabbed my coat and ran out on the roof." he said.
St. Francis County Sheriff James Hickman said, "One person was going around and knocking on doors. They got him in the car and they got to pick his pants. He never made it out."
But both the back and front of the building were engulfed in flames, and Steinemitz, his
hair singed from flames in the ceiling,
escaped through a side door.
The Rev. Robert H. Babka of St. Joseph's Catholic Church, regularly visited the revered site.
"The home was beautiful," he said. "They had done a lot of lotering. There were never any complaints. It was not at all your typical idea of a nursing home—a hovel."
Nuclear bubble's threat shrinks
HARIBURG, Pa. (AP) - Engineers achieved a "dramatic decrease" yesterday in a gas bubble that has held a stranglehold on the island and disabled Three Mile Island nuclear reactor.
Plant and federal officials said the hydrogen bubble had shrunk to a much safer size and the reactor's temperature had dropped significantly.
"I am certain it is cause for optimism," Harold Denton, Nuclear Regulatory Commission operations chief, said. He said the bubble was showing a decrease in size.
the changes meant the five-day crisis has passed, maintained efforts to prepare for a precautionary evacuation of 25,000 residents still within a five-mile radius of the plant.
But the signals were clear. The situation had improved substantially.
Technicians continued efforts to eliminate the bubble completely, chiefly by the method they have been using all along; letting the gas dissolve in the constantly circulating cooling water and then allowing a escape from the water to outside the reactor.
In Japan and western Europe, anti-
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The governments of Japan, France, the Netherlands and West Germany sent observers to the troubled Three Mile Island plant in Pennsylvania despite their insistence that similar incidents could not occur at their facilities.
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nuclear protests were held in reaction to the Three Mile Island accident. The Soviet Union said the accident was the result of capitalist energy monopolies.
In the southern West German state of Baden-Württemberg, officials said that they have issued special iodine pills to prevent within a mine and a half of nuclear plants.
State Interior Minister Guntram Palm
BMW
Recreation Release Upcoming Recreational Events
The Intramural Home Run Derby
The Intramural Handball Tournament Deadline
will take place on Saturday, April 7th at 11:00 a.m. in Quigley.
Field. Participants may enter this event until the start of this tournament.
has been extended to Friday, April 6th at 5:00 p.m.
6-7:30 p.m. in Robinson Pool, Additional information and entry forms may be
obtained in room 208 Robinson Center, Recreation Services.
Recreational Water Polo takes place every Sunday from
208 Robinson University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 66045 (913)864-3546
Recive Line 864-3456
The Dam Run Co— sponsored by Recreation Services will take place on Saturday, April 7th at 10:00 a.m. This event is open to all runners. There is an entry fee for the event.
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Prizes include:
Announcing: The first official SUA Academy Awards Contest Give us your best guess!
1st prize: 10 free movie passes + *Gone With the Wand* 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
- Haven Can Wait
- Male Friend
- An Unmarried Woman
BEST ACTOR
—— Warren Beaty,
—— Heaven Can Wait
—— Gary Busey,
The Badly Holly Story
Robert De Niro,
The Diver Hunter
Laurence Olivier,
The Boys From Brazil
Jo Vontage, Coming Home
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Bruce Dern, *Coming Home*
Richard Farnsworth,
*Comes a Horseman*
Johan Hurtner, *Mission Express*
Christopher Walker,
*The Deer Hunter*
Jack Warden, *Heaven Can Wait*
BEST DIRECTOR
Anyone is eligible to enter, but may enter only once. In case of a tie, the entry received earliest win. All decisions are final. Entry will be displayed in the Kansas Union. DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES IS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 4:30 PM. The entry will be announced Wednesday, April 11.
BEST DIRECTOR
___ Hal Ashley, Coming Home
___ Michael Cimino,
___ The Deer Hunter
___ Woody Allen, Interiors
___ Warren Beaty &
___ Buck Henry, Heaven Can Wait
___ Alan Parker, Midnight
Contest rules:
BEST ACTRESS
___ Ingrid Bergman,
Autumn Sorata
___ Ellen Burstyn,
Same Time, Next Year
___ Jill Clayburgh,
An Unmarried Woman
Jane Fonda, Coming Home
Geraldine Page, Interiors
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Dyan Cannon,
Heaven Can Wait
Penelope Milford,
Coving Home
Maggie Ponth, California Suite
Maureen Stapleton, Interiors
Maryl Streep, The Deer Hunter
Name___
Phone ___
sua films
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
Free University offers courses without grades
By JULIA GOPELRUD
Staff Renorter
Students who don't like to take tests or scribble down notes may do well in some Free University classes, if they have fast hands.
Free University classes, such as juggling,
sign language, disco dancing and basic
home maintenance are offered this
semester through Student Union Activities,
according to Hal Eden, SUA Free
University adviser.
"Free University is an opportunity to share what you know in a setting outside the University in a way that students don't have about grades or requirements," Eden said.
Steve Cramer, SUA Free University campus in New York, most of whom are from KU, judge during formal enrollment March 5, 6 and 7. Forty to 90 volunteer teach classes each week.
Students can still enroll in classes by contacting the instructor directly. Eden
EDEN SAID teachers were found through
admissions or personal contacts. Some
persons walked into the SUA office and volunteered to teach a class, he said.
Cramer said, "I don't require teachers to know everything about the course they're teaching. I do require them to be enlightened. You cannot know something, they will find out about it."
David Dixon, instructor of the juggling class, said he contacted SUA about teaching the class because he had taken it two years and because it was not offered last semester.
He said 10 of 17 persons enrolled in the class attended class for the first time last year.
"It's very easy to learn. You can learn how to juggle a single pattern of three-ball games."
JUGGLING IS physically and mentally relaxing and an unusual skill to have; he
Mike Jones, one of two instructors of the basic home maintenance course, said that he was contacted by SUA to teach the course, which was offered for one class period. He said that although only two out of 14 students came to the class, he thought it
was worthwhile for him to teach it and beneficial for the students who attended.
David Romano, a student in the beginning sign language class, said he learned about it after Ms. Kelley's presentation.
He said he took the course because he worked with children as a school psychologist and wanted to be able to work with deaf children and adults if necessary.
ROMANO SAID he had wanted to take a sign language course for three years, and was planning to take a KU graduate course in sign language this summer.
The teacher of the Free University class, April Benton, said the class was enthusiastic and learned quickly. She said she would not teach another student much might teach more Free University classes.
Eden said the curriculum was determined by what class instructors wanted to teach and by what classes the staff wanted to see offered.
The classes are free, except for those that have a materials fee.
Free University was started in 1968 by an English professor as a protest against KU's rigid schedule and curriculum. Cramer started the program and gave it a release until 1973. SUA began funding it in 1974.
AMBULANCE
Construction accident
Harlan Withington, Lawrence junior, was reported in fairly good condition at Lawrence Memorial Hospital last night after he
Photo by DIANA CRANFORD
slipped from a beam on the second floor of the Mallott Hall construction site yesterday and fell almost 30 feet. He is being treated
Blood drive misses first day goal
Ninety-three pints of blood were taken in the first day of a three-day blood drive at the Kansas Union, which was considerably less than 10 percent, co-chairman of the drive, said yesterday.
"We were supposed to have a whole parson of ROTC guys come in," he said. "We were supposed to have a whole parson of ROTC guys come in."
"I think a lot of people forget about it," he said, and "I also think a lot of wals-tweens were afraid."
Goble said the first-day goal for the drive, uled. "Blood is the Lifeline for a Lifetime in the Park." He added that at the Kansas Union Ballroom. Fourteen of them had to be deferred for medical
The drive will be from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. today and tomorrow in the Ballroom.
Goble said the turnover time, or the amount of time yesterday that it took most to become a member.
ALTHOUGH THE hometowns and living blood vesterday were different, their
reasons for taking the time out to do it were similar.
"I've done it the last two years," Janet Cahoun, Chickaska, Okla., senior said.
Dick Keeney, Newton freshman, said, "It doesn't take too much time. It might be a lot of work."
There were others who had a more material goal in mind for spending a half-hour on their backs with a needle in their arm.
"I want a gold card—eight pints." Dan Smith, Wichita heftian. "I'm trying to get that money."
ACCORDING TO Nancy Shepard, a registered nurse who works for the American Red Cross, the blood the students need to perform their training to the regional Red Cross center in Wichita.
There it is tested to determine the blood type, and to check for hepatitis, syphilis and chlamydia.
After the blood is tested, Shepard said, it
She said that the life of whole blood was approximately 21 days but that most of the blood was frozen until it could be used later. The blood is stored in cells, or cells, for example, in three years, she said.
can be separated into different parts, including plasma and red blood cells, or left as
Shepard said the 13 nurses in the Ballroom who were taking blood were part of a 40-member team that originates at the Red Cross center in Wichita.
Shoepard said the Wichita center, which opened in 1947, was the second oldest blood center in the country.
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KU prepares for drop
KU Sail Club Meeting Wed. 7:30 KU Union (Lessons at 7:00)
Robert Cole, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, iwi waiting for KU's enrollment to begin its projected work before he comes to grip with the problem.
Staff Renorter
SUA
By BILL RIGGINS
Examples of unattached funds could be those allocated to fill staff vacancies or to fund research, Cobb said.
Cobb said that he was not asking departmental chairmen to cut 2 percent from the budgets, but just to identify 2 percent of their funding that was "matached" to tenured faculty positions, or a higher percentage for those in office, or assistant instructor positions.
Although KU's enrollment increased slightly this year, Gee Smith Jr., member of the Student Government, enrolled at the seven Regents schools would decline by 16 percent in the next 10
"By maintaining that flexibility in the budget, if re-allocations have to be made, it won't be as painful," he said.
"IF WE ARE to maintain the flexibility necessary to be able to respond to the needs of our clients, we behave us u departmentally and College-ward, to retain the capacity to adjust."
But Smith said enrollment at the University of Kansas was projected to drop by only 13 percent, equivalent to 1970 enrollment levels.
Looking ahead to the projected drop and the reduction of funding that could follow, Cabb recently asked departmental managers to their departmental budgets by 2 percent.
"We are determined to prevent, forever if possible, giving timely notice to our
untenured colleagues for financial reasons alone," he said.
"A figure any lower would not lead to much brainstrainning and a figure any higher would only lead to more anxiety," he said.
Brower Burchill, chairman of the division of biological sciences, said he had responded to Cobb's request but that it had not been easy.
The 2 percent figure, Cobb said, was his own idea.
Earl Nehring, chairman of the political science department, said, "We think we don't have enough money anyway. Trying to cut 2 percent is like pulling out a couple
ONE REASON for Cobb's advance planning is that the College faces not only a challenge to get students moving away from the traditional liberal education to a more competitive environment.
But Cobb said that trend had not been as serious at KU as it had elsewhere.
Landgrebe, chairman of the chemistry department, said he had not yet responded to Cobb's request and wasn't sure that he would.
"An increase of three-tenths credit hours per student per semester would produce the 2 percent increase in total enrollment we hope for," he said.
But Burchall said he thought Cobb's request was a good idea.
"WE MIGHT simply tell Dean Cobb we have found a way of cutting the 2 percent but not tell him how. We'll keep it a minute until the time comes," Landrebeck said.
A part of the advising program, he said, would be to encourage students to be more demanding of themselves.
COBBA SAID he thought one way the college could maintain student engagement more effective adviving program for students. There are 912 students enrolled in the College this year.
"Unlike many other universities, the rapid increase in enrollment in professional education in the last several years has not been at the expense of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; our students have remained relatively Cobb."
"It is a threatening thing; people take it that way," he said.
Landgrebe said the only area from which 2 percent could be cut was salaries.
"We DID AS Dean Cobb asked to do and I hope we don't have to follow through," Burchill said.
"I viewed the request as one to make us start thinking about cuts," he said. "He's right for preparing us for what might happen."
"Such a carnalistic or parasitic relationship would not only jeopardize the rights of students in the climate, but it would also produce no net gains for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences."
Cobb also asked each chairman to suggest ways that enrollment in his department could be increased by 2 per cent, matching other departments within the College.
About 55 to 60 percent of all KU students are enrolled in the College, Cobb said, and he expects that figure to remain fairly constant.
Jazz concert features soloist, Red Combo act
Tenor saxophonist Chuck Berg will be the guest soloist with the Jazz Ensemble II at 8 p.m. tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murmurh Hall.
Ronald McCurdy, Belle Glade, Fla. graduate student, conducts the 23-piece group, which will perform three numbers played by a professor of radio, television and film.
In addition to the full ensemble, the Red Combo will perform during intermission.
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In high school in Wichita, so many of the experiences in which my friends were seeking earlings like outward signs of unappreciation, rebellion, or just dismay. Towed off hints.
Freedom
While I was growing up I never questioned the existence of God. The Bible神话 that Jesus Christ died for my wrong attitudes and actions in something I was acquainted with through weekly Sunday school classes. Thus "the truth" of music, however, was superficial and had little to do with my personal life. In 1985 I told a group of old people that I was Christian; yet there was not anything personal about my thoughts at God.
When I come to KU to study music, I was living away from my family for the first time. I急忙 want to flew from an extratime of our connection and away to standard. As my independence increased, I needed to learn more about music to grow me. I missed definition and challenge in my life.
With this sense of something missing I was drawn to some people met at the end of my second year in school. They talked about Jesus Christ as they knew Him. Their belief in a personal God was based on the history of the Christian life of Jesus, death, and resurrection. Serving their God was a life lived for him, provided us to automatically consider his life and consider it in God's hands. It was then that a decision to accept Jesus as my Savior and Lord.
Another Life changed by Jesus Christ
Since that time I went my life changed, not in a religious system of rules, but by being loving. God says that my niece freely lives in being able to whose hope is right and carry it through.
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NAPA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
APRIL 3,1979
Students must vote
City Commissioner Barkley Clark remarked last spring that the most pressing issue facing Lawrence in the years ahead would be the question of growth vs. no growth—would the city continue to expand until it was overrun by a sprawling suburban wasteland, or be controlled? Law enforcement be controlled and orderly?
The first hint of which direction Lawrence may take probably will come in the city commission's vote on the bill, to be sent on mail on the southern edge of the city.
Covering more than 60 acres and providing about 1,000 jobs, the mall undoubtedly would have a major impact on Lawrence's future. The decision on whether or not to go ahead with the mall will be an important one.
AND TODAY, Lawrence voters will go to the polls to decide which commissioners will be making that decision for them.
There are five candidates for the three positions that are open on the city commission. Three of those candidates, Marci Francisco, a part-time instructor in the School of Architecture for Ford Drumset with The Griffin Shop, and May or Donald Binns already have their oposition to the mail.
ine two other candidates, Robert
Schum, a restaurateur, and Jack Landreth, owner of an insurance company, have declined to take a stand on the issue.
BUT DESPIE the importance of the mall, there are other issues that are vital to the future of Lawrence. Public transportation, floridation of the city water supply, and the continued growth of Lawrence neighborhood areas are all concerns with which the new city commissioners will be faced.
It is important that students participate in deciding who will make these decisions.
It is a popular myth that students are a transient population with little interest in civic affairs or local politics. But that myth holds about as much relevance today as the once-prevalent myth that nuclear power plants are impervious to accidents.
IN REALITY, many students consider Lawrence their home, and the student population at KU is an important force in the political landscape of Lawrence. Because voter turnout in local elections is often low, the student vote could have a big impact on today's election. All we have to do is vote.
Considering the importance of many of the issues that will be decided during the next two years, it would be foolish not to.
Khomeini's government grossly misinterpreted
To the editor:
Mary Ernst's editorial of March 23 titled, "Women's protest fuels Iranian strife," did nothing more than to perpetuate the grassroots campaign of fear and concern in the new government of Iran.
'first, Ernst implied that Ayatollah Khomeini has declared the traditional chador as the proper dress for Moslem women, and that the failure of women to wear the chador on International Women's Day was in opposition to Khomeini and to be a victim of discrimination. Aliqalization is absolutely false and has been created and disseminated by people unfamiliar with the meaning of Khomeini's recommendation to women to "cover themselves." In total ignorance, but being pressed to give some explanation, the press had misconstrued it to mean the women who wear the chador, which covers a woman from head to toe.'
Also, she failed to explain that the Koran encourages polygamy only under conditions in which a woman is without support and needs help. Even in this case the husband must be able to treat all wives equally and justly. In other cases, the Koran states that one should not save one's life to "save one wife. Polygamy is thereby encouraged only when it benefits the women.
In addition, Erment adply displays her lack of research when she tries to give impressions on how she likes the food.
Ernst also stated that it was unbearable that Khomeini "disapproves of the Family Protection Act of 1975, which grants Moslem protection for his children and protects them against arbitrary rejection or polygamy by the husbands." Clearly, she doesn't realize that such a law is absolutely superfluous under an Islamic government system. Instead, grants women the right to initiate divorce.
Fortunately, a few well-researched reporters have clearly reported the Ayatollah's statements, and explained them in such a manner that they are conducive to Islamic belief. The MacNell/Leerer report emphasized that Khomeini didn't command attention, but he is required that the governmental employees not attend work scantily dressed.
If Erat believes that this enlaces a woman, she would find it educationally beneficial to teach her students the campus who dress modestly so do totally voluntarily, and feel absolutely no bondage in doing so. The dress definitely reflects her desire not to cover, and it is not the traditional chador.
KANSAN letters
coeducation introduced in Iran only recently. The fact is that education in Iran has traditionally been separate and remained separate throughout the Shah's reign, but this situation has existed, up to the present, only on an infinitesimal scale, in only a few private schools, and in only a few large cities. Since so few schools were ever co-educational, abolishing co-education would have an impact on the Iranian educational system.
Implicit in her argument is, however, the misconception that separate education for women means unequal education. Again, a lack of gender awareness encourages all people, men and women alike, to be maximally educated, and to use their knowledge in a socially beneficial manner. In no way does Islam, Iran's new government, Kohani, encourage women's ignorance.
Lastly, it is most ironic that we oppose a government's performance that, almost undoubtedly, will be popularly chosen March 30. We have no more right to oppose law enforcement under a popularly chosen government, than anybody has the right to oppose law enforcement in the United States, if it is supported and upheld by a majority.
Nevertheless, Ernst had taken it upon herself to denounce the banning of liquor and X-rated movies, even though these are often seen as a sign of disregard. It is ironic that Ernst is shocked by a government that punishes adultery since, even in Christianity, adultery is strictly prohibited. And this is why adultery in our society that is ignored or even accepted. But Islam teaches us a moral code that is above this type of abuse, so we must not lower these standards to anything.
It should become apparent to American people that the energy we spend criticizing another people's way of life could be far more constructively used by leading our behavior directly to a lifestyle in which their behavior directly reflects their moral conscience.
Nancy Haskins Lawrence junior
Black foe of divestment merits notice
Amid the calls for withdrawal of U.S. corporations from South Africa and divestment of investments in corporations that operate in that country, there is a lone cry from a black South African leader for Yankees to stav.
His name is Gatsha Butheleje. He is the chief minister of Kwa Zulu, one of the black homelands established by the racist South African government. Butheleje is founder and chairman of the National Cultural Liberation Movement. A local poll indicated that minister was recognized by at least 50 percent of the blacks as their leader in South Africa.
If this is true, his recent comments on divestment and withdrawal of U.S. corporations from South Africa merit attention. Mr. Browne also said in November, Butchele said that the evils and horror of aparthief must end. But for "superiliberals," as he calls them, to believe that elimination of American corporations will be a step toward the end of aparthief is false.
Says Buthelzi: "It is morally imperative that American firms remain active here and support us in our struggle — even though we may aspects may well present problems."
P
Buithezi says that as industry expands, propelled by domestic and foreign investment, the number of men is increasingly appearing, and blacks, out of necessity, are being advanced to more responsible positions. The black man thus benefits from opportunities he needs to function in South African society.
FOREIGN INVESTMENT creates jobs, jobs bring money to the blacks, who make up 71.6 percent of all industrial labor, and money means power, he said.
Philip Garcia
Moreover, he says, participation of the blacks in society reduces the chances for a bloody revolution, which neither the whites nor the blacks need.
Buthelezi advocates the implementation of the "Sullivan Principles," which are resolutions that compel U.S. corporations to modify their business operations in South Africa so that basic human rights are provided for blacks.
Through shareholder preagative, education institutions can adopt the Sullivan Principles, which company management must comply with.
The principles were introduced two years ago by Leon Sullivan, a Philadelphia clergyman and member of the board of the University of South Africa, to a substantial investment in South Africa.
- A call for non-segregated eating; restroom and work facilities.*
- THE PRINCIPLES include:
- Equal and fair employment practices for all employees, which includes the establishment of unions and collective bargaining;
- Equal pay for equal work for the same period of time;
- Initiation and development of training programs to prepare large numbers of blacks and other non-white for supervisory, administrative and technical jobs.
work environment in areas of housing, transportation, schooling, recreation and
- Improve the quality of life outside the
According to Sullivan, as of March 1979, 110 U.S. companies doing business in South Africa had signed statements to implement the principles; 75 colleges and universities have signed statements urging corporations to effect the principles.
Sullivan says that on-the-scene monitoring of corporations is essential. "Without monitoring, the program will fall," he says.
INDEED, opponents to the Sullivan menability may rightfully ask whether such resolutions rid black South Africans from the agony they endure because of apartheid. Separatism, exclusion, denial of advancement and advancement—in short, outreach to black Africans—has left black South Africans in disagreeable conditions that insult human ethics.
Some statistics of the apartheid malady:
The black population in South Africa makes up 70 percent of the total population, yet the homelands they live on comprise only 25 percent. Worse, the land is eroded and over-used. All of the urban centers, industries, mines, etc., lie in the remaining 67 percent of the country.
Although wages for blacks have increased, so too have the wages of whites and inflation. Economic woes continue to plague blacks, as they have in the past.
In September of 1975, black industrial workers earned $125 a month while their white colleagues earned $89. That same year, the poverty line for a black family of six was calculated at $149. Thus black families lived on an income considered
insufficient to meet basic necessities for survival.
MINE WAGES in 1752 were $878 a month for whites and $90 for blacks. Of the total income earned in South Africa, on the average, 43 percent companies occupy 15.4 percent of the work force.
And the question remains: To what extent do the 350 to 400 companies doing business in South Africa add to and sustain this racist government?
Will it change in ownership of stocks cause U.S. corporations to withdraw en masse? Or would they continue to invest?
Can Sullivan's principles realistically help bring an end to apartheid? Can his International Council for Equality of Opportunity Principles truly monitor corporate accountability and render negative economic consequences for companies that violate the principles?
Buthelezi wonders whether liberals in South Africa and elsewhere are trying to prove a political point rather than being truly interested in the welfare of South African blacks. He states that one must live with the people, in the dismal conditions to understand that American investment is essential for eventual emancipation of his country's blacks.
Apartheid must cease. It appears that U.S. corporations and educational institutions will seek a peaceful change in government rule through the use of the Sullivan principles. And that is the goal—peaceful change.
But can South Africans agree that the continued presence of U.S. corporations in South Africa is good or bad? Will South African blacks be able to bring about black majority rule through the courts?
WAIT, BEFORE WE GO IN, THE LEAST WE CAN DO IS WIPE OUR FEET.
LAWRENCE GUIDE TO MISSING STOP SIGNS
STUDENT'S RIGHTS
MARIN TA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Resume deception a crowded field
By JOHN SMITH
N. Y. Times Feature
NEW YORK—After the dismissal of a New York Times and the WCBAM-AM weather forecaster because he had misrepresented his academic credentials, friends urged me to write down this far-flung-unique 12-year-old story:
"Congratulations, John, you've got the job. We had more than a hundred applicants, and most of them were far and away the best, and samples were far and away the best, and I enjoyed our interview!" On the end of her interview, she said, "I felt very
STATE U.
"OH, JUST one little matter," the manager added casually. "Columbia seems to have misplaced its records of your journalism degree. Can you call them and straighten things out and bring your diploma when you come in tomorrow?"
I tried to keep my excitement from being too apparent. But after three months of unemployment checks, answering ads, visiting agencies and sending out resumes, it was hard to keep calm about a $15,000-a-year job. I almost shouted, "That's great!"
BY T. M. ASLA
personnel manager welcomed me on board as his public relations director.
1ST DRAFT STATE U. BILL OF RIGHTS WE HOLD THESE TRUTHS TO BE SELF-EVIDENT THAT Except where void or prohibited by law
My emotions hit the 85-degree drop on the Coney Island Cyclone without warning. "Uh . . sure." I managed as nonchlamy as possible.
There was no diploma, no graduate degree. It was something I had added to my resume after observing that potential students had a family to support and desperately needed a job. And after all, I had won a scholarship to the Columbia journalism school and had dropped out only because economic conditions forced me to go work. I didn't really much of a life.
Or so I had thought. Now the sweat came pouring out. Trapped.
THE NEXT DAY, after a sleepless night,
I arrive at my-handed, having decided to
sit here.
"You lied!" The personnel manager looked at me incredulously. "You just outright licked!" A pause, then: "I'm terribly disappointed!"
I knew from friends how common it was for people to exaggerate their qualifications. I knew people at top advertising agencies and leading universities who were hired on the basis of falsified resumes, and all public alike because of their job performance.
"I look..." I decided there was nothing to lose at this point—"I'm not trying to justify what I did. It was wrong and there's no excuse for it. It's because of my experience—and that's real—and you liked my clippings. Besides, lots of people elaborate on it. I bring it up when I review their resumes.
That night I slept soundly, relieved and reformed. Whatever happened, I had learned my lesson. I would never again lie on a resume. I would stand or fall on my own shoulders. That was worth the self-demigration. Despite this new self-respect, I could not help a certain amount of women next the morning as judgment.
THE PERSONNEL manager was somber. "I don't know. I'm sure you can do the job. But we've got to be able to have a relationship of trust. I just don't know." A pause, as grappled with morality. "I guess this over. Come back tomorrow-normally."
Thus, in the best tradition of happy endings, I got the job, and we were able to do it.
John Smith (a pseudonym) is public relations director for a New York City non-profit agency whose directors believe, "one's degree of competence is like a sheepkin
KANSAN
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Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60045
Editor
Barry Massey
General Manager Rick MURRAY
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
"IT WON'T HURT TO HELP"
Giving blood just doesn't hurt. It helps guarantee free blood for every member of every KU student's family.And of course, free blood for yourself.
Giving blood helps to maintain a contribution quota to retain this privilege of free blood.
750 pints is the goal. Help KU reach this goal while helping yourself.
It won't hurt to help.
If you don't give blood to save a life-Who will?
DONATE BLOOD April 3,4
11:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
KANSAS UNION BALLROOM
Sigma Nu Alpha Gamma Delta Lambda Chi Alpha Pi Kappa Kappa Gamma Kappa Alpha Theta Delta Chi Beta Theta Pi Phi Delta Theta Alpha Kappa Scholars Gamma Phi Beta
6
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Soccer club wins two weekend games
KU's soccer club got its spring season off on the right foot by winning its opening game.
KU routed Baker University 6-4 Saturday at Calabasas. The game was a calabasan scored two goals to load KU inscoring. John Laymen, Dan Coon, Roger Ebert and Robert Alotmore each added three goals.
Sunday afternoon, the club traveled to Manhattan and shut out the Kansas State team.
The club will host the Jayhawk Invitational tournament this weekend in New York.
Baseball team in doubleheader
Kansas plays host to Missouri Southern State College this afternoon for two games at Quigley Field. The games are scheduled to begin g 1:30.
Jayhawk coach Floyd Temple said yesterday that pitchers Mike Watt and Kevin Kerschen would start for Kansas. Kerschen has the best ERA of any KU pitcher this season. His 1.76 is only a few better than Watt's 1.83. Both are 40 on the season.
Warren Turner, Missouri Southern coach, said his team was similar to Emporia State's 1985 championship games last weekend. Missouri Southern was runner-up to Emporia State in last year's game.
Turner said he did not yet know who would start at pitcher.
Some of Missouri Southern's top players are Red O'Dell, an outfielder who received an honorable memention in last year's NAIA all-America selection; Mike Allen, a senior receiver for the Browns; Snider, second baseman hitting .321; and Joe Bidinier, an outfielder from Lawrence.
Missouri Southern is 12-11 this season. The team lost a doubleheader to Oklahoma State, last time in Big Eight champions, and was knocked out by Kansas at the KU's first conference opponent Saturday.
More experienced paddlers will finish in about 40 or 45 minutes, while those with less practice may take up to 70 minutes. In a canoe, paddlers of the Routes North Club, said Sunday.
The races, which are sponsored by the Rogues Canoe Club of Lawrence, cover a 14-mile stretch of water on the Kansas River. The race begins at the Lecompton Bridge and ends at Lawrence Water-Park, Fourth and Louisiana streets.
SOUL FOOD
Copeland has been a cane enthusiast for about two years and owns his own 18% footfiberglass canoe, which he said was made specifically for flat water
Canoe and kayak enthusiasts will paddle downstream April 14 for the first annual Mid-America College Canoe and Kayak Championships.
However, a tornado watch or electrical storm would cause a race to be canceled, he said.
WESTERN CITY
Sunflower Surplus, 804 Massachusetts
rents canoes for $1 a day and offers a
special $5 a day price for the race day.
People who want to participate but do not own a boat can rent one. SUA's Wilderness Discovery, a rental service, offers a $14 rental price of $14 each for a week.
There are nine race events in the April 14 races, seven of which are considered championship events. The top championship events will receive awards.
The mission design SBQUL
works to help you for your store
and to sell your products.
It will save you $50 White for $40
or $15 Red for $20.
The inventory is both curated
and is built enough to carry books
for your store. The book collection
to take a natural color with
Bright colors and $40 in
decorations.
The C.O.D. in Adds
makes residents and
cashiers more comfortable
and 3-week delivery.
Ruggers win 2 against KC teams
The pre-registration fee for the race is $5. The fee is $6 the day of the race.
$5, the fee is $6 the day of the race.
Registration or requests for more information can be mailed to the Rogues
area of University of Kansas, 1911 Stewart Ave.
SOUL FOOD INDUSTRIES
B.O. BURKLEY, Fortune 10, 65817
KANSAN Sports
By DAVID PRESTON
Sports Writer
The KU rugby club overcame the damp weather this weekend and won two of three games against teams from the Kansas City area.
Saturday, the KU ruggers defeated the Kansas City Old Boys 26-0 and Sunday split two games with the Kansas City Rugby Club. KU's first side lost 15-9 Sunday, but the second side came back to win 15-10. All three players played at Swice Park in Kansas City, Mo.
Tuesday, April 3
SLAUGHTERHOUSE-5
Dir. George Roy Hill, with Michael Sacki, Valele Perrine, Ron Leblan, Eugene Roche, Director Hill was faithful in adapting Kurt Vonnegut's novel to the screen. Billy Pligrin wore a buckling stuck in time."* "70:38 & 93
sua films
Dir. Bernardo Bertolouci, with Robert Deniro, Gerard Departelle, Donald Sutherland, Dominique Sanda, Burt Lancaster, Shelley Hayden.
LA GRANDE ILLUSION
Wednesday, April 4
Dir. Jean Renoir; with Jean Gabin, Frenice Pierrey, Erik von Strohne, Marcel Dalo. This anti-wilm film is a thriller of world cinema, Francis subtiles.
Midnight Movie
OUTRAGEOUS
1900 (1972)
THE TEACHER (1877)
Friday & Saturday, April 6 & 7
Dir. Richard Benner, with Craig Russell, Hollis McLaren. PLUS: "Bambi Meets Godzilla" 12:15am.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission.
Dir. Octavio Cortazar, Set in 1961, durin Cuba's "Year of Education" when over 100,000 youths volunteered to join the Literary Brigade teach illiterate peasants to read and write. Their plaques PLUS: "The History Book, v.7."
Weekends shows also in Woodruff at
11:00, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless
otherwise noted. $1.50 admission.
Thursday, April 5 Cuban Cinema:
Leading scorers for the KU squad against the Old Bears were Doug Gunn, who scored two tries worth four points apiece, and Joe Duffy, Shannon Mix and David Kim, who scored three points in the Diedrich and D弥紧 Shinke each scored a penalty kick, worth three points apiece.
(1977)
"OU is as good as any one of the Kansas City clubs," Boyle said, "and if all of the teams play the way they should, it will be OU and ourselves in the finals.
ACCORDING TO Bill Boyle, presiding officer of the KU club, the games last weekend were a good warm-up for the Big East season in Week 12, week in November, OKla. The KU club, which is one of the favorites in the tour, has won eight strong competition from Oklahoma's squad.
Sleemon led KU against the first side of the KC Rugby Club with a penalty kick and a conversion worth two points of Steve Merdinger's try. For the second side in KU's Kim, Dumy, and Ken Dunn scored tries, and David Hay scored on a penalty kick.
COFFEE
Taco Via'
Sun.-Thur. 11 a.m.-midnight
Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-1 a.m.
2 Taco Burgers for $1.00
good April 2-8
841-4848
carry out
23rd & Ousdahl
carry out
BOSTON (UPI)—The New England Patriots announced yesterday that the team had resolved its differences with the University of Colorado, freeing Chuck Fairbanks to coach the Big Eight school for what is estimated to be a $300,000 out-of-
The agreement ends four months of legal bickering that resulted in two lawsuits and left both New England and Colorado without head football coaches.
Patriots free Fairbanks
would consider potential candidates and hoped to have a decision within a week.
The Patriots had successfully blocked Fairbanks' move to Colorado through the
AND ARE DUE
IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR MEMBERSHIP
FRIDAY APRIL 6th.
Anti Apartheid week FILMS
ATTENTION SOPHOMORE MEN
--courts. The school had to pay damages for interfering with Fairbanks, work while he
(Junior Men's Honorary)
APPLICATIONS MAY BE PICKED UP AND RETURNED TO THE
TUE. APR. 3 7:30 Forum Rm. Union
Owl Society
KANSAS ALUMNI ASSN. OFFICE
--courts. The school had to pay damages for interfering with Fairbanks, work while he
*Soccer of the Nation* is a record and hard-hitting report on the struggles for freedom in North America (16 W. Africa; and Ethiopia). It examines the historical路在 of South Africa's apartheid regime.
According to court testimony, Fairbanks first was approached about the Colorado job in November, 1978, and said he would be offered it. The weekend of Dec. 8 and 9 he was offered the job and other extrares, which would bring his salary to $200,000 a year.
FAIRBANKS, WHO took the Patricks' coaching job in 1973, had a 46-40 record. His skatey tenure as coach and general manager of the Ice Hockey club in history to Mike Holakov's seven.
Softball games need site
If a field can be found in Lawrence, Kansas will take on Central Missouri State University.
Ultraline archival material, contemporary documentary sequences, still phot taken outside South Africa, as well as animated cartoons and Tarra Moves. Series of the Nation analyzes the impact of apartheid and reveals South Africa's strategic international role and the interests of the Western powers on the development and development of the liberation movements of the peoples of South Africa, Botswana, and Namibia.
However, as of last night, KU coach Bob Stancillid did not know whether the games would be played. He said he expected to know by 10 this morning.
Chuck Sallivan, team counsel, who announced the settlement, said New England
KU hardly will have had a chance to catch its breath if it plays today. The Jahyaws took third last weekend in the Texas Women's Invitational tournament in Denton, Texas. The team did not finish the game. Date Sunday night because of rain delays.
The film features interviews with leaders of the African National Congress of South Africa, the Pan-African National Congress of Anastasia of South Africa, the African National Council of Zimbabwe and the South-West African People's Organization (SWAP); and also, interviews with members of anti-apartheid movements of several countries and political and government figures.
A LUTA CONTINUA (THE STRUGGLE) CONTINUES: the most comprehensive and best-instrumental film on the national liberation movement in Mozambique, a strategically located country in Southern Africa. In September 1970, an Afro-American film crew joined a column from the guerrilla army of the Zimbabwean forces to document the liberated area. For six weeks they lived, marched, and slept with the Mosambican people. Filming took place in a remote, arid village.
KU won three of four pool games in the tournament's early going. Teams in the second round would play one or two pools. Each team then played every other team in its pool to decide who went on to win.
unearned run. He moved to third on a single by *Amos Ots* and scored on Pete LaCock's
SOURCES SAID the Patrons scaled down the original demands to $600,000 and the university responded with an offer of $400,000 to buy out the remaining four years on Fairbanks' New England contract, valued at about $600,000. The move also paves the way for New England to name a new coach.
The Braves then scored in the same inning on an infield hit by Gary Matthews, a Kansas City error and Dale Murphy's RBI single. Charlie Spikes drove home the run to break the tie in the seventh when he and Mike Lukin hit back-to-back doubles.
KANASB Tarkio College, 10-0; Texas A&M University, 4-2; and Northwest Louisiana State University, 8-2. Sam Houston University triped KU in its fourth group, 73-9.
A LUFA CONTINUA also features combat footage of a Portuguese offensive and an analysis of Portuguese military tactics and the Moorim resistance, revealing why the Portuguese army was not able to prevail.
The film presents historical background on Portuguese colonization in Africa and analysis of the ways that the colonizers exploited the resources and the environment to dimension of the revolution, including how Fellows provide health, educational and social services to the marginalized.
PLUS: A LUTA CONTINUA
It was a defensive battle that had Sinclair
TWU AND SOUTHWEST Missouri State battled to a 1-1 tie in the championship game before darkness forced it to be postponed.
"I thought we played better than the week before," Stanclift said. "We came up with a few more timely base hits.
A newly-added poster to the film deals with the April 19th coup by the armed Forces Movement in Portugal and its implications for the African liberation movements.
"We won the close ball games because of our defense."
Yesterday's game was the final game in exhibition competition for Kansas City. The Grapefruit league, which played 11-13 record in the Grapefruit league, the team record since 1972. Today they play their Florida farm club before returning home for a game on Saturday night against the Toronto Blue Jay s.
.50° donation
Sponsored By the International Club
up against Texas Women's University's Kathryn Asdende, regarded as the nation's top collegiate pitcher. Arendsen did not start but came on in the second inning, the same inning in which the game's only run was scored. TWU won the game, 1-9.
Niketo, who celebrated his 40th birthday Sunday, allowed the Royals one unearned run in seven innings through three hits and three strike outs. Reefer Garner on one to blank Rodriguez City in the final loss. Eduardo Rodriguez got the loss.
Paid by Union Activities Fees
Sinclair recovered in her third game of the day and pitched a no-hit shutout victory over Oklahoma State, 3-0, to lead KU to its third-place finish.
WEST PALM BEACH, FL — Veteran knuckleballer Phil Niekro scattered three hikes yesterday in his final tueup before Friday's National League baseball球员, helping the Atlanta Braves to a 21-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
George Brett reached second on a two-base error in the fourth on the way to the
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Rovals lose, end exhibition games
Greenbriars P
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEM
Cheese Emporium
Eat In or Out
Saup
Meats Soups Cheese
Holiday Plaza - 25th & Iowa
$1,500 FREE!
Have you seen the 8X6 sign in the Holiday Plaza, 25th & town? If beckon to it, let us use our electronic message, and the state our sign shines, you'll win all $1,500.
Tune into the "X" for details
96x radio
Stereo 95.7 F.M.
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 Kelts Conc and enjoy an echelite blond-
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
Re-elect
to
Charley Oldfather
SUA
District 497 School Board
Experienced ★★★ Interested
I would appreciate your support
Paid Political Advertisement
1980 ROCK CHALK REVUE
We have openings for positions of business manager and producer.
Applications available Thursday, April 5 in the KU-Y office 110B Kansas Union, and should be returned to the KU-Y office by Friday April 13.
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
7
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and
es
Accommodation, grooming, cleaning and整理.
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Equipment rental.
Bookings at BEST SELLER'S WAREHOUSE
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The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
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UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. New additions can be included in person or by telephone. The UDR business office at 943-458-106.
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864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
DEFEND YOUR NAILLIEABLE RIGHTS to life,
and protect your right to life. Demonstrate
for a 12-month Society in the fight
to save lives.
Summer Festival Book Sale, April 1-15 10% off
Spencer Art Museum Book Shop
GREAT FOOD. GREAT SERVICE just like you
are when you get home.
1 t 1 am., Sunday; 1 midnight
4-6
Ales is coming! Ales is coming! Saturday, April 18th. Towers 499-A
Employment Opportunities
Students major in business, pre-grad, pre-law
major. Majors 2007 and 2017 per month. For interview
requests, contact the school directly.
ENTERTAINMENT
Ethical international context? Come in Small
International group! 12:30-4:30 PM.
12:30-12:45 PM. Prestigious Presbyterian
Get tickets at:
www.skyscanner.com
FOR RENT
2.4 MH and efficiency Close to campus UHU-9379
Clean, quiet, and comfortable.
9379
Recommenlted wanted: 2 BR $120 month + ½ unit-
822-1607
Apartment and condominium furnished, parking most just outside. RU and rear town, 10F.
FRONTIER HIDE APARTMENTS NOW RENTING!
Studios, 1 bedroom, furnished, trimmed and
decorated with large windows. $199 per
week for private parking. On KU this route
is marked by a sign. Parking is available.
424-444 or see at 243 Frontier. Next door
628-627.
Christian Hospital. Now and Summer, Close to
Charleston. 842-620-8828, between 2:30
and keepying.
5. bedroom house for rent during the summer.
Partially furnished. Call 842-9366. 4-4
Still looking for a place to call home? Nathalim
Ashley is the best place in town, the member of the View. Sun by day and look in over
to give us a feel of his office. $5000 and we will be glad
to visit him on Friday at 10:30 AM at SMITH HALL, 1800 Nathalim
Hall, 842-535-9728
Mark 1 & 11 Apartments renting for sims
6-13. 7 bedrooms. 7 bathrooms. 7 walk-in garages.
7 minute walk to shopping center and courtyard,
garage, balconies, offered parking space.
For info, call Mar. 25 for addio
1851 Mile Ave.
Spending the summer in Lawnware? Do yourself a favor. Call 811-247-6566 or in my apartment! Call 811-247-6566
ROOMS AVAILABLE for next week in-30
tenner student cooperative within easy walk-
away from campus. For information call:
Lawrence, Repts from $50-$80) include utility
fees. 814-986-8121 or 814-986-8125. For Tom A-
dkins
You know, those great-looking apartmentites that
are traded out as our one-on-one ones are available for
rent. They don't have the same amenities.
Beautiful 2 bedroom dwelling at Minneapolis St. for
1800 square feet. C/A and new kitchen.
hallways: 424-022).
Malt sublubes unfurished 2 bedrooms Malt malt
413 - 811 ERC 97 567 person Call 811-645-
811 or 811-ERC 97 567 person
Number submitted: 2 bedrooms Applicant: Ap-
ply-1204226
Pacific 9226 Close to Campus
Pacific 9226
Summer Subdivision: Nice, two bedroom apartment,
fits for coups, water pool, AC call 855-241-9630.
Sublease 2 bedroom Mendaville apt. nctm-
$280 vice.month: 843-1644. 4-5
MUST intracap space 2 bedrooms tp for $m.
Near院客 Rent $85-$123. Call 64-
879-0444
Formal. Most community wanted to share hours
with the hospital staff. Work with children and
adults, provide medical care, help with
baby feeding and care, and assist in daily
work at home. Apply online at www.med-
icalcare.com.
THEFLE BEDROOM HOUSE first floor only $275
paint job, kitchen & bath suite. Arrives from Apple
colored pallet baskets & faucet. Arrives from Apple
family room, livelihoods, partly covered snorkel base,
sleeping area, fully equipped. Oversee Omaha
Hotel $255 call 442-712-0911 after 6:00 p.m.
Omaha Hotel $255 call 442-712-0911 after 6:00 p.m.
To inhabit one bedroom, new modern, furnished apartment starting May 20-option for 8-month rent.
JayhawkertOWERS 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
Summer sublease: one bedroom furnished South-
west apartment $100.00 Call 843-526-1199
6360
Sidney for dinner, one bedroom apt. antiquities
distance to campus. Price negotiable. Call 610-
753-2988. Price includes college distance to
campus. Price negotiable. Call 610-
753-2988. Price includes college distance to
campus. Price negotiable. Call 610-
753-2988. Price includes college distance to
Sure the samples from this house adhered to the instructions, and we were able to follow them. 1. Allow 2 hours at bottomwarehouse $9860. 2. Wait 4 hours at bottomwarehouse $9860. 3. Wait 4 hours at bottomwarehouse $9860. 4. Wait 4 hours at bottomwarehouse $9860. 5. Wait 4 hours at bottomwarehouse $9860. 6. Wait 4 hours at bottomwarehouse $9860. 7. Wait 4 hours at bottomwarehouse $9860. 8. Wait 4 hours at bottomwarehouse $9860. 9. Wait 4 hours at bottomwarehouse $9860. 10. Wait 4 hours at bottomwarehouse $9860.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make issue out of Western Civilization! Makes sure to include the basics of Western Civilization (2) and Western Civilization 3. For exam preparation. *New Anatomy of Western Civilization* available now at Town & Country.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialties:
MOTIVE BASE, 440-250 volts. 2000 w. 6 hrs.
MOTIVE BASE, 440-250 volts. 2000 w. 6 hrs.
662 Schoolers at Louise's every Friday from 1:
fill 5. 4-3
Ponder Sandal Mesh Guitar with strings, straps, and covers. Ponder sandal guitars speak the sounds and covers. Very good condition!
Sun-SunSees - Sun glass uses our our specialty. Non-
reasonable, reasonable, reasonableness.
3021 Massi M45-6770
100%
WHY REST? When you could own this beautiful kitchen, what would you do? A modern kitchen like this. Like new appliances, disposable central air conditioning, wall-mounted dishware and waverdrain areas. 5 smoke boxes. skirted and upholstered cabinets. storage units. storage building. rust baths. free laundry.
WATERED MATTRESSS $58.98, 3 year rur-
mance; WHITE LIGHT, 704 Main; 835-136, 116
BOKONOS IMPORTS LTD. Organic Substance
Products (OMP) target the highest infection
targets and their in the midseason
insects.
Watch for truck on Sunday selling product.
Watch Pohl, Bilt & Hildes. Also selling
crates.
One pair of Nordica skis, size 9 (1/2 m),
Used once. $729. Call 841-7912. 4-1-8
Continental Mark IV, 1755 $28, 3600 Call 811-249-7888 after 5 a.m.
For reservations call 811-249-7888 after 5 a.m.
Mercedes Benz 230, 190, 160 new tiers, 10,000 miles on new engine, 419,781-782. 5 p.m. (Monday) to (Sunday) 10 a.m.
1975 Vanishing 640h $3,900 price; www.lowestcondition.com
1975 Vanishing 640h $3,900 price; www.lowestcondition.com
1975 Vanishing 640h $3,900 price; www.lowestcondition.com
1975 Vanishing 640h $3,900 price; www.lowestcondition.com
1935 Tampa Gulf Coast LG Lifetime 3AM-AM-FM
1936 Tampa Gulf Coast LG Lifetime 2PM-AM-FM
1937 Continental Condition $200,841-841,401
1938 Continental Condition $220,841-841,401
1973 Vega GF good condition. New radial tive
vinyl road AM, FM FMS 662-8250 1-4-4
Exquisite antique trunk for sale. Beautifully restored.
Late 1800s 459. Call 641-8002 - 44
1. Mustang B 4, 4g2) 4 speed AC, executive
condition and Lowe Alpine backpack 842-6030
1. Mustang B 4, 4g2) 4 speed AC, executive
condition and Lowe Alpine backpack 842-6030
STAFFMFR SAILBOAT. Dueron sail and lines.
STAFFMFR SAILBOAT. Dueron sail and lines.
Excellent condition. B25 - 823 - 468 - F-1-
F-1
Fiber stereo镜头, tube-type, 202w, warm-
powerful, $150 w/case, 84-6129 Keep tyring
Power supply and Hardware Connection indicate and/or if Wireless Connection is required. Power Supply and Hardware Connection Required Use air conditioning unit, 80-250 watts, or 120 watts.
ITALIAN built car CLASSIC The Flat 174 Sport Coupe. This 1911 Flat offer more features than most sport coupes, including a wheel drive brakes, and more. Body is clean, and the interior is well maintained. Facility outside is reasonable. Call 841-701-3752.
74 "300" Dudler, 36,000 miles, new tires, excellent condition. Call 811-5431 after 5:30 p.m. on Tuesdays.
KU Nursing School 14.635 Brand new size
Uniforms 845-8823 4-4
Must Audio Reflex Turbine in mind must hold cleaning kit moving. must hold phone 864-294-5120
IMV AM FM Slater Receiver, 25 W, Ch. VIII,
FM
ENTERTAINMENT
BlackWoods, Martin need just two new keys!
BlackWoods, Martin need just two new keys!
Alex needs a power button and decorative power button. Alex
needs a power button and decorative power button.
Alex needs a power button and decorative power button. Alex
DAILY
Aztec Inn
LUNCHEON MENUS
American and Mexican Food
842-9455
GUIDE
73 Grand Prix in Good Condition, vinyl box.
AM FM stereo. Call evening 842-6728.
4-9
Y3. Yamaha DT23-50 Enthr. top condition--All
types. Andy. BH-804-988
4-6
Set of Keys, rarely. Probably last before snow.
Call 861-1908
TRI-6 Trough owyral Four near railway
banks. 20 km south of Roxburgh. 340 m.
410 m. 4.5 km Red Backbone. 3.4 m.
4.4 m.
75 Honda CVCC, 40,000 miles, A.C.F. FM, camera
68-142-8180, calls 312-924-1587,
848-142-8120, calls 852-1587 events.
Microseme. Antique brass 1923 Rush Bar & Lamore
Miller. Brass antique bar and lamp. Mint.
carrying载箱 after 1920. 811-4747.
Stainless Steel Closet/Used Custm $99.00 new; Marmor $125.00 new; PVC $46.00 new; 4-6
$125.00, RV Storage Unit, $39.00
One lance's Timex watch with gold band. Found in front of wrist's Infinity 'tailbone' on MK-1350.
Found a pair of gold rim nobile glasses in a brown rose. Near of Marburg at 38th on 45 C.
256 Yamaha runs good. Must sell for best offer.
Call 823-7491 after 5:00. 4-6
Three-inch laptop! Brand new 175-14, 150-13 & 75-12
cut to $19.99 each. Ray Bookstein Basketball
Mega
FOUND
HELP WANTED
Now taking applications for Fontanini & Griffin
Cabot, please visit www.fontanini.com.
Apply in person at West Bankstreet,
300 N. 17th Street, New York, NY 10024.
BIG K'S
Found brain twisted between from 4-6
Knottets) March 28. Located in UCR offer-
1-5
JOBS:
MEN WOMEN SALARIES!
CRUISE SHIPS! No experience. high pay! Go!
Caribbean, Hawaii, Europe, Worldwide Summer comp
carrier. Job offered by Daimler. Call 60129,
60129, Bermuda, Caraibe. C9560
4-24
MON-THURS 7-9:00
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7-9:00
50 Schoeners & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1-7:00
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
EXOTIC JOE; LAKE TAHOE, CALIFORNIA
Little expert oceans; $1200-$4800 anum-
tarium, racks; cruises; river rafts; & more.
Rainier, cruises; California; 5Q-24.
6229, Sarasota; California; 3050
Facilities open 2pm, A 2nd shift for waitresses and cooks, apply in person Country Kitchen
Research Assistant in Neuropsychiatry, U.S.
and Neuropsychology, Northwestern University.
A long stay away from school. $8,000-$12,000 per year
from March 20. 1979 through April 9. 1979. Started
working with students at the University of Kansas
in information science and Professor Robert
Kaufman's management and Technology University of Kansas.
In teaching psychology at the University of Kansas,
an equal Opportunity University.
BECOME A MONTSSONSCH TRAINER Classes
are available for $650-$895 by
contacting Montssonsch School Services.
Available online.
Part-Time or Full-Time ADC Architectural
Drafting 424-3580
4-5
KU Upward Sound Program has openings for positions in the Fall and Summer of June and July 2014, with $50 per month. Must be a U.S. citizen. Apply to KU by emailing upwardstudents@ku.edu or contacting KU at 800-673-9680. The program is commercially effective with nine core studies. Resumes should include a cover letter with minority status and student rank, like below. Backgrounds. Application deadline April 15th. Graduates should KU Faculty or high school faculty.
Help wander at Tavu Via, 1709 W 25th Street
Night shift from 6:00 p.m. - 11:00 a.m.
Applied to: BRIEFER LABORATORY
COLLEGE MEN. Research summer in Colombia or the US to develop an experience in children camp writing, hardcover books and more. Send resume to faculty development program. Write brief description of internship offered by Fortress, CO. Send resume. Oc contact person Fortress, CO. Send resume.
Pizza Pizzeria Everyone invited Agree to per-
fectly & Mr.斋菜 from Mali to 22nd and 43d
Sox Bowl
The University Information Center is now open. Contact me at the following address: beginning May 22 and August 19, 1979. Applications may be sent to the University Information Center, Fri., April 13, 1979. The University of Kansas is seeking an Opportunity/Affirmative Action advisor. Click on the link below.
A student assistant for Monday afternoon and Wednesday morning classes at Montgomery High School is studying student to own cars, helping students with driving and other vehicle needs or to sell BMW 4123 or BMW 4101 afternoons and evening. 9-9
Cook positions, opening very soon, for heat cooks and grill cooks. All around experience is required. Must be able to read and follow special recipes and have new ideas for special. Full andparticipation; personality may abbreviate must. Also needs to have an undergraduate degree from the University of the Sacramento G-30-00 for appointment. 4-11
ATTENTION SUN WORKSHIPES. Floating restaurant at Lake of the Oaks needs try cooks who can feel comfortable in good, good, what you feel comfortable in, good, heat, humidity. Call 214-368-7589 for Frank Carlyly anytime. 214-368-7589
OVERIASAN JOBB. Assurance plays vital European role in attracting businesses to Germany. In addition, job opportunities are available for BSc, MSc, BCom, BSc, BAc, BCom, Deloitte, DPM, Engg and related. Contact: info@overiasan.com
Need some queuing speed? Weekly > GLG Pizza
> Taco Bell > Smoothie Bar > Nest
> Angle between 2 and 1 (for 3) Morning =
> Afternoon > Evening > Night
P. G. Leadin is now taking applications for committee chair and support staff positions in the Apprentice Apprentice Award in person at Titli McLoughlin Centre, 215 High Street, Belfast.
COMPUTER PICTOGRAMMER. The Information and Research Department of the City of Kansas has a wide range of computer applications. This position requires a Bachelor's degree in computer programming in Cobol or Fortran Garrett or the latest in mini-computer technology. We are an environment where we process and compute graphics using ground units. We need a fieldwork, web/math/journal project and expand into other areas such as working at home, mobile business working atmosphere, and modern office environments. We are encouraged to send a resume by May 18th. 1879 graduates are encouraged to send a resume to Municipal Office Building, NW 127 South, Kansas City, KS 66101. An Equal Opportunity Employer.
The department of mathematics will have openings for undergraduate students. REQUIREMENTS: background in undergraduate mathematics, comprehensive study in mathematics or 3 or 30 days' DUTIES: required training (19:30 and/or 3:30 day) DUTIES: internship in emiling room. SALARY: $1,990-$2,560 per month. open experiences, for student monthly one-on-one private detail and application forms, see the office Hail. Deadline for applications is April 27, 1979. Opportunities are limited; opportunityAffirmative action, employee qualification and women of all races are encouraged.
Tetraal needed immediately 300 words per minute.
The word was 'beautiful' and they wanted to make it easy. Mint,
Mint, Mint, 18 and have a bounce home. I am willing to work on 2 weeks.
Call 415-6799 or Teaches us.
Call 415-6799 or Teaches us.
Can you can, who can work 2 hours per week, Manpower
Manpower
Founders & Grill personnel, Nose business,
and sales of Northwest Grill of Seattle.
W. 6th, L. 4th, C. 175
Sales clerk wanted - 20 to 25 hours week. Apply in person. Senior 'Gross' W. 22nd W. 23rd F.
LOST
Part of plastic adhesive patch, cream glaze dabs 120 ml
5438676414905. Part of plastic adhesive patch, cream glaze
dabs 120 ml 5438676414905. Part will be a container.
Louis West, 5.28 TD Court lease with KU, ID & A.
Oklahoma City, OK Court lease with KU, ID &
601-743-4550 Court lease with Murray, OK.
601-743-4550 Court lease with Murray, OK.
Lost a pair of gold from a glass case in quarry in Robinham Gym, Midway, NY. Found in the same quarry.
MISCELLANEOUS
FEDERAL RINGING - OVERVIEW The House of
Francis and Francis, the founders of the
band, bring together and enjoy singing. Let us
share with you the joy and gratitude of this
birthday season.
NOTICE
DEATH? WHY BOTHED?
LOCATION: National Center of Land Traffic 613-822-5422
Faculty & Staff Offer your child a supervise-
sum camp experience in the magnified
Minnesota North Woold Pack G. K. creat-
vate Camp 16, Camp Mitchells 14,
ACA Covered Camp 20.
French master in Literature. Devising national
schemes for French literature. Formalized and
pursued past research on German literature, pre-
ventive actions, and works of literary fiction.
Join an important external committee to
learn an important aspect of the Board's
work on the Board of Directors. Elect
the next Executive Director.
PERSONAL
GANX EXTRA DIGITAL XINN KINN KINN NURFLEN KINN
GANX EXTRA DIGITAL XINN KINN KINN NURFLEN KINN
PENTAX FILTERS INC. 2021 New Series
RHKS HIRE SHOP to name upon request 280 Balangrove
Rhks Hire Shop, New York, NY 10006, mail to:
regina.riess@rhks.hire.shop
V100-8314, VIRTUAL, RHKS 10006
FOX HILL, SHERIDY CITY. Monmouth NJ 07654
Telephone: (212) 359-8000 Fax: (212) 359-8010
www.foxhill.com 123-456-7890 www.foxhill.com
HARBOUR SPECIALS - 4-6 Mon. Tues. Fri. Sat.
MADOND OFFICIAL NIGHT - 5-10 Mon. Tues. Fri. Sat.
Gray Tierney Quinquefort, Tortoise new book
through RK LINC. May 26-30 or by Horizon Books
Midtown NY. (415) 788-7200
CON TITLE SURGERY CLINIC
Acute and chronic surgical procedures,
including laparotomy, incision,
incision repair, herniation
and reconstruction. M.D.
and B.S. degrees required. To be admitted
to this program, a medical license or
certification must be obtained by
the state board of medical examiners.
606 Schmidtmann and 418 Palmerine every Friday
from 12:55 to Lunar night. **4-3**
Boehringer Ingelheim, Bielefeld, Brandenburg, Düsseldorf, Dübendorf,
Düsseldorf, Eindhoven, Essen, Erlangen, Göttingen, Halle,
Hamburg, Heilbronn, Leipzig, Lübeck, Minden, Mülheim,
München, Nürnberg, Nuremberg, Stuttgart, Trier, Wien,
Woershein, Winterthur, Zurich.
Brush this all to Gigliasca, and create new
images of one of their fabrics. Hike 120'
Shopping Center.
Bring this ad to Gilberts and ped 501-alt. cover
corner of the office. In Thursday,
Hilton Shipping Ground.
Gilded flower base. Tumblers and Thinners 8.9
Glassware hot beverage mix and drink for two 8.9
4-piece set with ice cube tray and drink for three 8.9
ATTENTION JEWISH STUDENTS
Reservations needed for 2nd
night Passenger Seeder
Friday, April 7th, 5:30 p.m.
Kansas City, Kansas Lincoln
Garden Park, Kid
$4.00
Great Court in KU Office
811 414-6950
Students interested or
offering 11th night Seeder
with a family, Call
the office at 804-1968
or jane@kku.edu 1:44
warnings
Male teammate, skilled, summer, $25 monthly, with
flexibility; team leader, own kitchen, 800 sq. ft.
million dollar home, M11, $64,000
GREAT FOOD, GREAT SERVICE just like you do in Vienna Restaurant open Mon, Wed. to Sat. 10am-5pm. Call 212-493-6857.
Alan R. Dixon, out of touch with the Finance &
Marketing team, calls in with Leo to discuss
work on his laptop. Leo has a bored, flat
back.
MUSICIAN ANNOUNCED at K.C. Lawrence based
in New York, NY. Req's B.A. from U.S.
Associate Degree in Music or related field,
or 2 yrs of progressive music experience.
Req'd to work with clients in the
music industry.
Resume submitted, summaries: $5 monthly; ) full-time
resumes: 10/1/2021 - 12/31/2021;
mature resume: 01/17/2021 - 06/30/2021;
must have: M.S. in Business Administration or related.
CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT
*Design—design your 1980 Shi Shi front suit*
*Drawing—draw the front suit drawing. We will adapt to shirt. Win a scholarship for your plus size shirt you wear on APRIL 7. Bring your attire to the OCO office. April 8. Bring your attire to the OCO office. April 8. Bring your attire to the OCO office.
Anything good next year? S, Class Offers 4-6
Bruin, Dermotioe Welling, matrication, boxset
Pollack, Dermotioe P.O. Box 4083 ABB
N.M. M1859
Hey House Student…Mr. Magna, Gum Lamel,
Why don't you go down to theamentation at Watson
hospital and chomp and take the test reserve the
purpose of your being a patient? You feel so
get all well here. I mean it. 4-6
Attention all men! Youngest individual intelligent man, most gifted, most curious and most loved. He has twelve children, many and much more; he lives in a charming and smart house, with his wife, daughter-in-law and driving Police apprehension to be at least 21 years old. He is polite, friendly and always ready to assist you in your profession, and intelligence, if possible, to help you succeed in the job.
Attractive IntellJl Small Swing body size, 65 cm.
Elegant design. Full swings. Call: 443-871-9933
M11-MT11
Gibraltars Monday dinner beer (plus liquor pool). $^{1,2}$
Need help in math or CS2 GeG? g. future who can
calculate your credit or CR production?
Need help with math or CS2 GeG? g. future who can
calculate your credit or CR production?
Did you know that at the beginning of every Student-School meeting there is a 15-minute tic-tac-toe game that can not only express views on the issues but also get to know each other at 13:20 in the Rush-Hour, come talk to us. 4-8
OECD Accreditation for Governance, Dell Australia
and New Zealand and the Italian Government, and the
Australian Government, are due April 26.
Nickle, old car wash Saturday. April 7 at
Kristine's parking lot, 14th floor, only $29.00.
SERVICES OFFERED
Thompson ring, with weightband hand 1, tethered
to a Thompson ring, with weightband hand 2, tethered
to a Thompson ring, with weightband hand 3, tethered
to a Thompson ring, with weightband hand 4,
with weightband hand 5, with weightband hand 6,
with weightband hand 7, with weightband hand 8,
with weightband hand 9, with weightband hand 10,
with weightband hand 11, with weightband hand 12,
with weightband hand 13, with weightband hand 14,
with weightband hand 15, with weightband hand 16,
with weightband hand 17, with weightband hand 18,
with weightband hand 19, with weightband hand 20,
with weightband hand 21, with weightband hand 22,
with weightband hand 23, with weightband hand 24,
with weightband hand 25, with weightband hand 26,
with weightband hand 27, with weightband hand 28,
with weightband hand 29, with weightband hand 30,
with weightband hand 31, with weightband hand 32,
with weightband hand 33, with weightband hand 34,
with weightband hand 35, with weightband hand 36,
with weightband hand 37, with weightband hand 38,
with weightband hand 39, with weightband hand 40,
with weightband hand 41, with weightband hand 42,
with weightband hand 43, with weightband hand 44,
with weightband hand 45, with weightband hand 46,
with weightband hand 47, with weightband hand 48,
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with weightband hand 57, with weightband hand 58,
with weightband hand 59, with weightband hand 60,
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with weightband hand 65, with weightband hand 66,
with weightband hand 67, with weightband hand 68,
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with weightband hand 195, with weightband hand 196,
with weightband hand 197, with weightband hand 198,
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with weightband hand 1271, with weightband hand 1272,
with weightband hand 1273, with weightband hand 1274,
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8
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
University Daily Kansan
On Campus
TODAY: A PRO-PEACE RALLY will be in front of Strong Hall at noon. CLARENCE KELLEY, former FBIL director, will speak at 12:30 in 103 New Green Hall, sponsored by the Student Bar Association. The COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE is available from 6 to 8 in the legal aid office at New Green Hall, sponsored by the law student division of the American Bar Association. A FRENCH AND ITALIAN PROGRAM and dinner will be at 6:30 in the Big Eight Room of the University of Chicago. A DEFENSE CAMPUS JOURNALIST, Hassan Kashif, will speak in the Jayhawk Room of the Union at 7, sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students. The COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 in the Oread Room of the Union. THE ECOLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Union with guest speaker Bert Rieger, who will speak on the topic of Restoration Hall, LAMBRA SMA will meet at 9:15 in the International Room of the Union.
TOMORROW. The KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson. A TRANSCENDENTAL MEDICATION INTERACTIVE lecture sponsored by KU's Students International Meditation Society will be at b in Parlor A of the Union LEON FLESHER TO conduct a fine art masters seminar. TOMORROW. THE MEDICAL FITNESS and Living" at 11:46 a.m. at the EMC Center, 1204 Oread. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor B and C of the Union. The KU GO CLUB will meet in C of the Union 2 of the John David, trumpeter, will give a WATERCALL at 8 in Swarthout Rectal Hall, TROMORROW. SEGER will attend a University will lecture a conference by the Center for Horn Studies at 8 in the Room Forum.
Voters go to polls today
The polls opened at 7 this morning for Lawrence voters to decide who will fill three seats on the city commission and three seats on the board in Unified School District No. 497.
Polls will remain open until 7 tonight.
Pollls will remain open until 7 noon.
Five candidates are vying for three seats in
the House.
City commission candidates are Donald Bumps, 1842; E. Glenn Driver; Florence Bump, 1842; and Richard Francisco, 1946 Ohio St.; Jack Landrecht, 1709 St. Andrew Dr.; and Robert Schumm, 1709 St. Andrew Dr.
School board candidates are Jule Hack, 2216 Massachusetts St.; Martha Masinton, 709 Mississippi St.; Charles Oldfather, Route 5; Ronald Schmidt, 2414 Lazybrook Lane; and Mary Louise Wright, 1734 Illinois St.
The city and county did not hold a primary earlier because of the low number of candidates. A primary would have been held, but than six candidates had filed for each race.
Anyone who registered to vote in an earlier election and has not moved is免责。
By LESLIE GUILD Staff Reporter
5,000 students file for aid
About 5,000 KU students filed Family Financial Statements and have applied for financial aid for next year, Riley Rogers, director of Financial Aid, said yesterday.
Although the office of Financial Aid has received notification of only 4,700 processed applications, Rogers said he was proud that a number who applied would be about 5,000.
"Some students who did apply have not yet been totaled in the number of processed applications that have been reported to our office," Roers said.
Rogers speculated the delay was because some students' applications were not received at the processing center in Iowa City, Iowa, until after Feb. 27, when the numbers of KU students who had filed were totaled.
ROGERS SAID even though the office had received the comprehensive listings, financial awards to KU students would not be made until June.
"We have to get information from high school seniors and from transfer students before making awards," he said. "And for students returning to KU we have to get spring grades. So it's likely awards won't be the same as our spring semester grades are posted."
Rogers said students who filed applications were being sent their processed financial statement by mail. He said the student's profile was comprehensive list of the need analysis of KU students who filed financial applications, budget of aid available at KU to award.
Rogers said the length of time between receiving the financial statements and
"This year, through the office of admissions and records, we are able to list data about applicants on a word processor. Students in our department students available much more conveniently."
making awards was improving because of "automated help."
ROGERS AID the magnetic tape used in the word processor could condense student data, which could be "drawn out" by being seen by looking at each individual's file.
Rogers said a preliminary need analysis also was made by KU.
"There's a fantastic number of hours in background work that goes into making the awards," he said. "And part of that is each student's need, which is done by looking at his file and making a preliminary need analysis."
"We also have to code students by their high school, county and major because some awards have requirements such as a passing grade in a course from particular areas of the state."
Rogers said the student financial aid report was used by some students to find
Rogers said a student could file a corrected form for $3.
errors they might have made when originally completing it.
"This shows them the figures that were used to calculate their original financial need statement," he said. "By this a student can double check to see if any information supplied by him was misunderstood or misread."
KU recently has formulated a statement of "reasonable progress," to be used to determine re-awarding of federal financial aid. Mr. Zelman, director of financial aid, said yesterday.
Standard for aid strict
Although obtaining a financial award might seem like a big bussel, keeping it
"Most mistakes made concern tax information that was reported incorrectly," Rogers said.
Rogers said federal government regulation made a progress standard
The programs include National Direct Student Loans, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, College Work-Study, Health Professions Student Loans, Law Enforcement Educational Loans, Basic Education Loans and the Guaranteed Student Loan Programs.
"We actually established a standard last tail," he said. "And in order to keep our heads out of the way, we were."
ROGERS SAID the standard included both completing a minimum number of credits with a minimum grade point or complying with the number of semesters a student had completed.
For example, Rogers said, a student who wanted to keep a financial award for a second semester, after he had completed his first semester of college, would have to 24 credit hours with a grade point average of 1.30.
The minimum grade point average for award renewal was raised last fall one grade point from 1.0 to 2.0 over ten semesters.
"It isn't a hard standard to achieve," he said. "So very few students at KU aren't able to able by ft. And therefore, very few are capable on appeal."
Rogers said those students who have lost their awards could appeal in writing.
"WE HAVE A committee of three persons from this office who do check the appeals," he said. "And usually the only exceptions are for students who have qualified extremely extinguishing circumstances."
Rogers said although not many students lost awards because they could not obtain the standard, problems with students were common. Putting school for a semester had occurred.
-UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
"We're working on just how to handle the situation now," Rogers said. "It doesn't seem fair that one student who just sts the semester out can come back and get an award, when a student who might have received it from the university as a semester, because he had lost his award and not completed the standard, might not get an award."
Police Beat
BURGLARY
Lawrence police said $1,000 in cash was stolen from a locked safe at Bucky's Drive In, 2120 W. Ninth St., early Sunday.
The police said employees told them that the money had been placed in a locked safe about midnight Saturday.
The theft was discovered Sunday morning when the assistant manager arrived for work, the police said. The safe was locked but the money was gone, according to inquiries from the police.
The police said several employees knew the combination to the safe ATTEMBER.
The police said the car was taken between 2 and 3 p.m. Saturday.
Lawrence police said a 1977 Chrysler, valued at $8,300, was stolen Saturday from a parking lot at the Congo Bar, $20 N. Third St.
The ignition system was apparently tampered with while the car was left unlocked in a parking lot.
Harris statement is valid
James Paddock, Douglas County District Court judge, ruled yesterday that an alleged murder confession given to law enforcers, Dr. Michael Harris, 26, Denver will not be suppressed.
Harris is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the November 1977 slaying of Sam Norwood, former manager of W. Woolworth Co. store, 911 Massachusetts.
Harris' defense attorney, Dennis Prater, had filed a motion alleging that Harris was coerced into giving a confession to three law officers who were transported to Kansas from Denver.
Harris' trial is scheduled to begin April 9 in Douglas County District Court.
Paddock ruled that the confession was valid because no coercive action was taken against him. Amendment rights were not violated and because Harris knowingly waged his right to have a trial.
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Children's project to get priority
Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan. - KU's Juniper Gardens Children's Project will receive the gift of $100,000 from the Committee on Mental Retardation prepare its annual report for HEM secretary Joseph Levine.
By MARK W. GATES
Three committee members spent Wednesday, Thursday and Friday studying the
The committee is making a series of visits to what are considered to be exemplary projects aimed at prevention of retardation from air causes.
"Never have I seen a more impressive job of reducing and preventing mental retardation," Andy Pollard, committee member and community liaison officer from the Neuropsychiatric and Mental Retardation Center in Los Angeles, said Friday afternoon.
“This is a tremendous job of community organization,” he said. “The cohesiveness
on the part of the faculty and staff from KU and the community people is great. There is tremendous caring from the KU people joined with genuine community concern."
THE JUNIPER Gardens Children's Project was established in 1968 by members of KU's Bureau of Child Research, the departments of human development and family life and special education, and local life and civil leaders in Kansas City, Kan.
The project focuses on pre-school programs, public schools, achievement motivation and parent programs designed to develop effective methods of teaching. The project has served 2,463 children since 1965.
"We've been here for 15 years and we've stayed in there, doing applied research, helping kids academically and teaching them. Vance Hall, director of the project, said.
Hall said the project had received about $6 million in federal funds since its invention.
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Schumm for Lawrence
"Quality of Life For Lawrence"
VOTE TODAY
Vote Schumm City Commissioner-April 3 Pd. Pol. Adv. Pd. for by the Robert Schumm for City Commission Committee Steve Edmonds Trev. May 1984
"Our report going to Califano should give impetus to expanding the program here. We're going to tell Mr. Califano we need some money for this."
"RESEARCH PROJECTS are often very ivory-tower in their manner," said Ruth Diggs, committee member and specialist in intervention of childhood disabilities from Norfolk State College, Norfolk, Va. "They go into a community, do their research and teach children, and had their office in this community for 14 years and they feel the community pulse."
Hall said the project began when the Northeast Action Group, a collection of concerned community leaders, invited KU faculty to come into the community.
"The schools have cooperated," he said. "The churches have helped us. The University from the chancellor on down has given us support."
DIGGS SAID that some tours at similar program are worth $1,000 or more for the conference guests and the groups.
"This was not the case here," she said.
"The techniques using parents, grandparents and peers to tutute these children are not new. This is what this project's success all over the country."
The committee's report should be in the president's hands in eight or nine months, said Laverdy Taylor Roach, a mental health specialist with the President's committee.
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A LITTLE WARMER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
County working on reappraisal
Vol.89.No.124
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
See story page six
Tape policy is requested by Shankel
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday that he had asked the University Senate executive committee to send him a letter of recommendation at the University of Kansas.
The action came in response to controversy surrounding the videotape by KU
Shankel said he had met with several faculty members of SenEx yesterday morning to review plans that had been made to tape a rally on campus yesterday.
The rally was in support of the Egyptian-Israel peace treaty. KU police monitoring the rally had videotape equipment available to keep a record of the rally, peaceful, Mike HILI, KU chief of police, said.
Last week, KU police tapeed two protest marches against the signing of the peace treaty and a rally protesting South African leaders by the KU Endowment Association.
A KU student was arrested in one of the treaty murders, but KU police said the
Binns, Francisco, Schumm win
By SHIRLEY SHOUP and TAMMI HARBERT
Staff Reporters
In a close election that attracted few voters yesterday, Donald Binn, Maric Francisco and Robert Schumm won seats on the Lawrence City Commission.
Bimma, the only incumbent, won the most votes, 3,668. Francine came in second with 3,475. Amy Bimma came in third, 3,396. Jack Landreth received 3,172 votes and Florence "Danny" Drury received 3,163 to win.
Although poor weather might have kept some voters at home, Delbert Mathia, county clerk, said the absence of issues probably caused the low turnout.
This year's voter turnout was 6,450. There were 27,008 eligible voters in the city.
Four of the candidates congratulated or consoled one another at the Douglas event, where a couple came in. Bimsa was at the weekly city commission meeting as the totals were
BINNS AND Francisco will serve four
year terms and Schumim will serve a two-
year term.
Schumann said the redevelopment of the downtown business district was his highest priority.
THEERE WERE 224 votes separating Schumm and Landreth, the largest margin between any of the candidates. Landreth said he thought he lost votes because of his
refusal to take a stand concerning the shopping mall.
"My gut feeling is that this is a vote against the mail," he said. "I'm sure that hurt me in the neighborhoods downtown."
Drailed trailhread by nine votes. Despite her loss, she was pleased with one result of the election: Francisco's win.
"I'm pleased that Marcel got in," she said. "They are all good candidates. I think either way the voters couldn't have lost."
In the school board election for Unified School District 497, four candidates won four-year terms. The three highest vote得ters were incumbents.
Julie Hack led the race with 4,838 votes. Charles Oldfather was second with 4,772 and Martha Masuinton was third with 4,269.
The newcomer to the school board was Mary Lou Wright, who garnered 4,165 votes.
Ronald Schmidt lost with 3,972
AUTHORITY
Nancy Krew Lynn
the
kansas
collection
University Daily Kansan Spring Fashion Supplement
Staff photo by STEPHEN SPECTOR
Franice
ent on the Lawrence City Commission, Dionne Binns and Robert Schumm won the two contested seats on the five member commission.
hopeful's campaign
thic appearances and had no other uses, so the money was used for the ad * journal-World*.
SPOKESMAN IN the advertisement at the Journal-World said column inch of advertising space. The Roberts ad, 40 column inches,
Martin, assistant instructor of at kU and another Robbers supid, said, "Robbers is very concerned Lawrence He carels?"
e Nelson said in the ad, "I know
e and Emily (Martin's wife) are
need. They're active. They are a real
e Lawrence."
added in the ad were endorsements obets, a fictional person, by four is whose names correspond to 22 in the Lawrence area.
Robert Johnson said in the ad. "I know he'll promote Lawrence for us."
THERE ARE FOUR Dale Nelsons listed in the Lawrence phone book
The phone book lists six Robert Johnsons.
Paul Miller was more specific in his endorsement, "Martin is especially interested in good parks and recreation."
If Roberts had appealed to enough voters to win a seat on the commission, he would probably have had to decline. Miller would probably schedule prohibits him from being in town.
Five Paul Millers are listed in the phone book.
Georgia Barker said in the ad, "He's running because he wants to provide efficient government." The phone book lists seven different Barkers.
urn complexitiesive procedures
was exciting to breathe new life into
;." Draz said.
Drax said he was not happy about a annexation bill that Hein sponsored. Hein je sponsored the bill because his enemies strongly favored the death y, even though he was personally dto it.
'SEVEN OF his interns were against
the penalty and we couldn't believe
introduced the bill.' Draz said.
he is responsible both to his con'is and to himself. I can understand tion."
ch, Tozer's boss, also was involvedough issue.
he drew up the House Ap-
partment. He lived in a County area. House Republicans anged the map, which may deprive ep. Mike Glover, DLA of his, for a warrior.
vulnerity is that what the Republicans a perfectly legal even though they student vote. "Tozer said." But the Republicans have said it was political trade off," so it was political trade off."
INA MAHONEY, Overland Park park who forState Wheel Rep. William R-Topek, is doing a computer of another aspect of politics—
"We'll see if senators and representatives who represent the same areas vote the same," she said. "If they don't, we'll see if their vote was influenced by lobbyists."
"It's really weird the way lobbyies work," she said. "They'll go into a legislator's office and ask him if he supports liquor by the drink, for instance. If he says yes, they write him a check for $50 and leave.
"Some people could end up supporting it. Even though they're from conservative districts."
Mahoney said names of lobbying groups sometimes were misleading to voters.
"For example," she said, "'The Committee for Responsible Government' represents the Kansas Wine and Spirits Wholesalers Association.
"A lot of people vote the way the lobbyists want," she said.
Mahoney said she thought most legislators were hardworking and concerned.
Draz and Scott Richardson, a Wichita senior working for State Rep. Mike Meacham, R-Wichita, also said they were impressed with state legislators.
"All representatives do things to help their constituents and not just to get reelection."
8
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
University Dafly Kansan
On Campus
TODAY: A PRO-PEACE RALLY will be in front of Strong Hall at noon. CLARENCE KELLEY, former FBI Director, will speak at 12:30 in 108 New Green Hall, sponsored by the Student Bar Association. The COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE is available from 6 to 8 in the legal aid office at New Green Hall, sponsored by the law student division of the American Bar Association. A FRENCH AND ITALIAN PROGRAM and dinner will be at 6:30 in the Forum Room, sponsored by the Student Organization for the Forum Room. A PALESTINIAN JOANNEILIST, Hassan Kashif, will speak in the Jayhawk Room of the Union at 7, sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students. The COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 in the Oread Room of the Union. THE ECOLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Union with guest speaker Jill Mackenzie, a professor of Ecology and Biol. at Riverside College Recital Hall. LAMBIA SAGMA will meet at 9:12 in the International Room of the Union.
TOMORROW; The KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson. A TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION introductory lecture sponsored by KU's Students International Meditation Society will be at 8 p.m. in Parlor A of the LEON PLEISHER International Meditation Center. At 9 p.m., the Thomas will speak on "Physical Fitness and Living"; at 11:45 a.m. at the EMCC Center, 1204 Oread. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parloors B and C of the Union. The KU GO CLUB will meet in Cork 2 of the Union at 7 John David, trumpeter, will give a WORST CRITICAL at 8 in Swarfber Rectal Hall. THOMAS SEGERK from a WORST CRITICAL present a lecture sponsored by the Center for Human Studies at 8 in the Forum Room.
Voters go to polls today
The polls opened at 7 this morning for Lawrence voters to decide who will fill three seats on the city commission and three seats on the board in Unified School District No. 497.
Polls will remain open until 7 onight.
Five candidates are vying for three seats in
the district.
City commission candidates are Donald Bums, 1402 E. Glenn Drive; Florence “Penny” Johnson; Daniel Francisco, 1046 Ohio St.; Jack Landreth, 1709 St. Andrews and, Robert Schumann, 1503 St. Johns.
School board candidates are Jack Huey, 2216 Massachusetts St., Martha Madison, Montana; Katherine W. Sill, Route 5; Ronald Schmidt, 427 LazyBroom Lane; and Mary Louise Wright, 1734 Illinois
The city and county did not hold a primary earlier because of the low number of candidates. A primary would have been possible, but six candidates had filed for each race.
Anyone who registered to vote in an earlier election and has not moved is免责
5,000 students file for aid
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
About 5,000 KU students filed Family Financial Statements and have applied for financial aid for next year. Roger Jergers, director of Financial Aid, said yesterday.
Although the office of Financial Aid has received notification of only 4,700 processed applications, Rogers said he and his staff did not know who applied would be about 5,000.
"Some students who did apply have not yet been totaled in the number of processed applications that have been reported to our office." Roeters said.
Rogers speculated the delay was because some students' applications were not processed, but Iowa City, Iowa, until after Feb. 27, when the numbers of KU students who had filed
Rogers said students who filed applications were being sent their processed financial statement by mail. He said the goal of the task was to comprehensive list of the need analysis of KU students who filed financial applications with budget of aid available at KU to award.
"We have to get information from high school seniors and from transfer students before making awards," he said. "And for students returning to KU we have to get spring grades. So, it might awards won't be posted." The spring semester grades are posted."
ROGERS SAID even though the office had received the comprehensive listings, financial awards to KU students would not be made until June.
Rogers said the length of time between receiving the financial statements and
"This year, through the office or on missions and records, we are able to list data about applicants on a word processor. Students have also been the students available much more conveniently."
making awards was improving because of "automated help."
ROGERS SAID the magnetic tape used in the word processor could condense student data, which could be "drawn out" from them by looking at each individual's data.
Rogers said a preliminary need analysts also was made by KU.
"There's a fantastic number of hours in background work that goes into making the awards," he said. "And part of that is determining each student's need, which is done by looking at his file and making a preliminary need analysis.
"We also have to code students by their high school, county and major because some awards have requirements such as a Bachelor's degree or students from particular areas of the state."
Rogers said the student financial aid report was used by some students to find
Rogers said a student could file a corrected form for $3.
"This shows them the figures that were used to calculate their original financial need statement," he said. "By this a student can double check to see if any information supplied by him was misunderstood or misread."
errors they might have made when originally completing it.
Standard for aid strict
"Most mistakes made concern tax information that was reported incorrectly," persons said.
Although obtaining a financial award might seem like a big hassle, keeping it
KU recently has formulated a statement of "reasonable progress," to be used to determine re-awarding of federal financial aid, the director of financial aid, said yesterday.
Rogers said federal government regulations made a progress standard mandatory.
"We actually established a standard last fall," he said. "And in order to keep our funding we must abide by it in awarding."
The programs include National Direct Student Loans, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, College Work-Study, Health Professions Student Loans, Law Student Loans, Medical Education Educational Opportunity Grants and the Guaranteed Student Loan Programs.
ROGERS SAID the standard included both completing a minimum number of credits with a minimum grade point of 3.0 or greater, and a minimum number of semesters a student had completed.
For example, Rogers said, a student who wanted to keep a financial award for a senior in college would have his first semester of college, would have to have 24 credit hours with a grade point average.
The minimum grade point average for award renewal was raised last fall one grade point from 1.0 to 2.0 over ten semesters.
"It's not a hard standard to achieve," he said. "So very few students at KU aren't able to abide by it. And therefore, very few are considered on appeal."
Rogers said those students who have lost their awards could appeal in writing.
"WE HAVE A committee of three persons from this office who do check the appeals," he said. "And usually the only exceptions are for students who have qualified extremely extenuating circumstances."
Rogers said not many students lost awards because they could not obtain the standard, problems with students and teachers, in building school for a semester had occurred.
"We're working on just how to handle the situation now," Rogers said. "It doesn't seem fair that one student who just sits the semester out can come back and get an award, when a student who might have tried to finance his own way through the course he had lost his award and not completed the standard, might not get an award."
-UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Police Beat
RURGLARY
Lawrence police said $1,600 in cash was stolen from a locked safe at Bucky's Drive In 2120 W. Ninth St., early Sunday.
The police said employees told them that the money had been placed in a locked sat. about midnight Saturday.
The theft was discovered Sunday morning when the assistant manager arrived for work, the police said. The safe was locked but the money was gone, according to a report from the N.Y.C. police department.
The police said several employees knew the combination to the safe AUTO THEFT
The ignition system was apparently tampered with while the car was left unlocked in parking lot.
Lawrence police said a 1977 Chrysler, valued at $8,300, was stolen Saturday from parking lot at the Congo Bar, 520 N. Third St.
The police said the car was taken between 2 and 3 p.m. Saturday.
Harris statement is valid
Harris is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the November 1977 slaying of Sam Norwood, former manager of W. Loolworth Co. store, 911 Massachusetts.
James Paddock, Douglas County District Court judge, ruled yesterday that an alleged murder confession given to law enforcement, Harris, 38, Denver, will not be suppressed.
Paddock ruled that the confession valid because no coercive action taken in the car, because Harris' Amendment rights were not violated because Harris knowingly waived his to counsel when being questioned.
Harris' defense attorney, Dennis Prater, had filed a motion alleging that Harris was coerced into giving a confession to three law offices. He said he was being transported to Kansas from Denver.
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the
kansas
collection
spring fashion supplement to the University Daily Kansan April 3,1979
contents
spring sportswear p.3
startling swimwear p.6
dazzling disco p.8
tantalizing trendsetters p.10
flowing formalwear p.16
photography
barb kinney: p.4-b,c,d; p.5-b; p.15.
randy olson: p.1; p.2; pp-8,9.
stephen spector: p.7; p.11; p.12; p.16-a.
chris todd: p.4-a; p.5-a; p.16-b,c.
alan zlotky: p.7; p.13.
printed by telegraphics, inc., baldwin city, kansas
on the cover:
Like the spring sunshine, Celia O'Connell brightens the once-dead prairie and brings a new life to the weathered Clay County countryside. Celia is wearing a dress from the Orange Crate in Topeka. Photo by Randy Olson.
staff
editor barry massey
managing editor dirck steimel
special sections editor diane porter
campus editors: mary hoenk, pam manson,
carol hunter
copy chief paula southerland
staff artists: jan claterbos, jayne schell
photographers: peter bosch, bill frakes, barb
kinney, randy olson, stephen spector, chris
todd, alan zlotky.
business manager karen wenderott
retail sales manager ron altman
advertising make-up manager jeff kious
staff artist dalhia cavazos
staff photographer grant ringel
sales representatives: allen blair, paul knoll, jane
knnots, brenda paxton, cindy ray, allen reynolds,
joanne smutny
general managerrick musser
advertising adviser chuck chowins
Our special thanks to Britches Corner, Carousel, Clothes Encounter, Dustin's, Jay Shoppe, Sequoia Hot Tub Works and Bill Frakes.
A LITTLE WARNER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
Vol. 89, No. 124
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
County working on reappraisal
See story page six
Tape policy is requested by Shankel
Staff Reporter
By JOHN LOGAN
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said yesterday that he had asked the
University Senate executive committee to
meet with him to discuss demonstrations at the University of Kansas.
The action came in response to controversy surrounding the videotape by IU
Shankel said he had met with several faculty members of SenEx yesterday morning to review plans that had been made to tape a rally on campus yesterday.
The rally was in support of the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty. KU police monitoring the rally had videotaped equipment available to the officials involved, and peaceful, Mike Hill, KU chief of police, said.
Last week, KU police tapeed two protest marches against the signing of the peace treaty and a rally protesting South African independence by the KU Endowment Association.
A KU student was arrested in one of the treaty marches, but KU police said the
Binns, Francisco. Schumm win
By SHIRLEY SHOUP and TAMMI HARBERT
Staff Reporters
In a close election that attracted few voters today, Donald Binos, Marc Francisco and Robert Schumm won seats on the Lawrence City Commission.
Bimma, the only incumbent, won the most votes, 3,666. Francese came in second with 3,548. Baird was the third, 3,396. Jack Landreth received 3,172 votes and Florence "Danny" Drury had 3,163 to 2,962.
Although poor weather might have kept some voters at home, Delbert Mathina, county clerk, the absence of issues probably caused the low turnout.
This year's voter turnout was 6,450 There were 27,080 eligible voters in the city.
Four of the candidates congratulated or consoled one another at the Douglas County commission meeting, which came in. Bims was at the weekly city commission meeting as the totals were
BINNS AND Francisco will serve four year terms and Schumm will serve a two term
Schumm said the redevelopment of the downtown business district was his highest priority.
THEERE WERE 224 votes separating Schumm and Landreth, the largest margin between any of the candidates. Landreth said he thought he lost votes because of his
refusal to take a stand concerning the shopping mall.
"My gut feeling is that this is a vote against the mail," he said. "I'm sure that she's not going to vote." Drauma trailed Landfort by nine votes. Her loss, she was pleaded with one result before the vote.
"I'm pleased that Marci got in," she said. "They are all good candidates. I think either way the voters couldn't have lost."
In the school board election for Unified School District 497, four candidates won four-year terms. The three highest votegetters were incumbents.
Julie Hack led the race with 4,833 votes. Charles Oldhard was second with 4,772 and Martha Masinton was third with 4,269.
1970
The newcomer to the school board was Mary Lou Wright, who garnered 4,165 votes.
Ronald Schmidt lost with 3.972.
CAROL BEIER
Staff Reporter
Annie Hall is dead
Somewhere, in what must be a crowded graveyard filled with deceased clothing fads, the look that was made fashionable by Diane Keaton's movie character has been unceremoniously removed from the poodle skirts and polyester suit shoes.
spring's essential ingredients--skin
spring's essential ingredients--skim
indication. As a featherweight teryl cloth
top, Jim Schubert, manger of the Jay
Shoppe, 835 Massachusetts St., said,
"Look at that. You can't get much more
skin than without getting arrested."
Schubert said much of his mer-
bandise for "running and running" was
basked in.
Harms said bare tops sell well to her
Bright, tight look replaces 'Annie'
In the world of fashion, where kaleidoscopic change is mandatory, casual wear is trimming down and brightening up.
Not to worry, however. Garment manufacturers, buyers and retailers have several replacements for Annie and her drab-colored, loose-fitting wardrobe.
Bright may be an understatement. Not only are traditionally crisp reds, navys and whites making their annual appearances in sportswear, but shades of chiffon, chairteau and electric yellow also support for the shopper's consideration.
What's more, these attention-getting colors show up in styles that are attention-getting in their - own right. Plainwear also will feature another of
"Brights are really the fashion statement for spring," the Kathy Harms, area manager of Carousel, 711 W. Third Street, for our playwear for spring is bright.
Kansas customers.
"It makes sense here, where it's 105 in the shade," she said. "They are going to be his once you not girl to have a baby."
song, once we get girls to take down "The campus look is still tops and jeans."
And the tapered leg has made a decisive comeback in blue denim and its
"Pants are really changing." Harms said. "Slacks are tapered, mostly pattied."
Schubert, whose store carries two brands of jeans. Moody's Goose and Lafayette are the latest.
"The straight leg jean is about all the jean demand right now," he said. Dress slacks have followed the denim lead and are accented by more tailored blouses. An aura of sophistication is accompanying the pleated slacks, feminine, small-collared blouses and blazers with shoulder pads.
hemilines, are straight and slit. Laws will reappear for spring just as surely as the birds that flew south in October. The look is classic.
"We find that people are paying and looking for quality rather than the less expensive things." Schubert saus
His prices on an outfit of shacks, vest, blouse and blazer range from about $110 to $130.
Comparable pieces of another
grouping for sale at the Clothes
Encoucer, 2449 GH Iowa, cost between
$22 and $35 each.
Skirts, with the exception of a few patch-pocket plaids with ruffled
The return to sophistication also is evident in fashion for this spring. Pete Whiteburn, manager of the Town Shop, 839 Massachusetts St., says,
Whitenight said that the past five years had seen a strong revival in "fashion concepts." These concepts produce a
Contrary to the consensus of mangers of women's stores, Whitehent said the biggest fashion news for spring was sable color.
Whatever changes will be made, however, Whitentight favors a gradual transition.
Typical of that look are narrower lapels and ties, button-down collars on shirts and straight leg skulls slacks.
look for men's clothing that is reminiscent of the late 1950s.
Whitenight's complacency may seem incongruous against a backdrop of
[Cont. next page]
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Staff photo by STEPHEN SPECTOR
seat on the Lawrence City Commission, Donald Bims and Robert Schumm won the ter second contested seat on the five member commission.
hopeful's campaign
hilic appearances and had no other uses, so the money was used for the ad Journal-World.
er Martin, assistant instructor of h at KU and another Folsbari suid, said, "Roberts is very concerned Lawrence. He cares!"
added in the ad were endorsements
debt's, a fictional person, by four
is whose names correspond to 22
is in the lawrence area.
SPOKESMAN IN the advertising statement at the Journal-World said column inch of advertising space The Rodents ad, 40 column inches,
e Nelson said on the ad, "I know e Nelson and Emily (Martin's wife) are need. They're active. They are a real r Lawrence."
Robert Johnson said in the ad, "I know he'll promote Lawrence for us."
THERE ARE FOUR Dave Nelsons listed in the Lawrence phone book.
The phone book lists six Robert John sons.
Paul Miller was more specific in his endorsement, "Martin is especially interested in good parks and recreation."
Five Paul Millers are listed in the phone book.
Georga Barker said in the ad, "He's running because he wants to provide efficient government." The phone book lists seven different Barkers.
If Roberts had appealed to enough voters to win a seat on the commission, he would probably have had to decline. Miller was more likely to schedule prohibits from being in town
was exciting to breathe new life into ;" Draz said.
turn complexitiesive procedures
Draz said he was not happy about a sentinel bill that Heen sponsored. Heen jee sponsored the bill because his jees strongly favored the death y, even though he was personally d ito!
'.SEVEN OF his interns were against
penalty and we couldn't believe
introduced the bill.' Draz said.
he is responsible both to his con- and to himself. I can understand tion."
ch, Tozer's boss, also was involved rough issue.
ch drew up the House Apartment Committee's map for the a County area. House Republicans anged the map, which may deprive Mr. Glaveo, D-Lawrence, of his kU student support.
vittitude is that what the Republicans a perfectly legal even though they *student vote*. "Tozer said" "But the Republican is so it was a political tradeoff."
INA MAHONEY, Overland Park who works for State Rep. William R-Koppe, is doing a computer another aspect of politics—*
"We'll see if senators and representatives who represent the same areas vote the same," she said. "If they don't, we'll see if their vote was influenced by lobbyists."
"It's really weird the way lobbyists work," she said. "They'll go into a legislator's office and ask him if he supports liquor by the drink, for instance. If he says yes, they write him a check for $50 and leave."
"Some people could end up supporting it
even though they're from conservative
district."
Mahoney said names of lobbying groups sometimes were misleading to voters.
"For example," she said, "The Committee for Responsive Government" represents the Kansas Wine and Spirits Wholesalers Association.
"A lot of people vote the way the lobbyists want," she said.
Mahoney said she thought most legislators were hardworking and con-
Draz and Scott Richardson, a Wichita senior working for State Rep. Mike Meacham, R-Witchah, also said they were impressed with state legislators.
"All representatives do things to help their constituents and not just to get re-elected."
8
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
University Daily Kansan
On Campus
TODAY: A PRO-PEACE RALLY will be in front of Strong Hall at noon. CLARENCE KELLEY, former FBI director, will speak at 12:30 to 10 New Green Hall, sponsored by the Student Bank Association. THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE is available from 6 to 8 in the legal aid office at New Green Hall, sponsored by the law student division of the American Bar Association. A FRENCH AND ITALIAN PROGRAM and dinner will be at 6:30 in the Forum Room. A MASSIVE BOOK SHOW BY THE FORUM Room. A PALESTINIAN JOURNALIST, Hassan Kashef, will speak in the Jayhawk Room of the Union at 7, sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students. The COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 in the Oread Room of the Union. THE ECOLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Union with guest speaker MARY LEE BAKER, who will discuss the Reed Hall, LAMB SAHRA WEDDING will meet at 9:15 in the International Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: The KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson. A TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION lecture introduced by KU's Students International Meditation Society will be at 8 p.m. in Parlor A of the Union LEON FLEISHER HALL, TOM THOMAS will speak on "Physical Fitness and Living" at 11:48 a.m. at the EMC Center, 1204 Oread. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlors B and C of the Union. The KU GO CLUB will meet in Cork for 2 of the Union at 7 John David, trumpeter, will meet at 8 in Swarthworth Rectal Hall, TOM SESERI HALL, Indiana University will present a lecture sponsored by Noel Schwarz Honors Studies at 8 in the Room Forum.
Voters go to polls today
The polls opened at 7 this morning for Lawrence votes to decide who will fill three seats on the city commission and three seats on the school board in Unified School District.
Polls will remain open until 7 tonight.
Poll will remain open until 10:00 PM.
Five candidates are vying for three seats in
City commission, candidates are Donald Binns, 1402 E. Glenn Drive; Florence Hampshire, 1306 N. Lansing Ave.; Francisco, 1046 Ohio St.; Jack Landreth, 1709 Andrews Dr.; and Robert Schumm, 1506 New York St.
School board candidates are Jule Hack, 2216 Massachusetts St.; Martha Masinton, 709 Mississippi St.; Charles Oldfather, Route 5; Ronald Schmidt, 2414 Laybrock Lane; and Mary Louise Wright, 1734 Illinois St.
The city and county did not hold a primary earlier because of the low number of candidates. A primary would have been easier than six candidates had filed for each race.
Anyone who registered to vote in an earlier election and has not moved is免责。
By LESLIE GUILD Staff Reporting
5,000 students file for aid
Staff Reporter
About 5,000 KU students filed Family Financial Statements and have applied for financial aid for next year, Riley Rogers, director of Financial Aid, said yesterday.
Although the office of Financial Aid has received notification of only 4,700 processable applications, Rogers said he had heard that no number who applied would be about 5,000.
"Some students who did apply have not yet been totaled in the number of processed applications that have been reported to our office." Roers said.
Hogers speculated the delay was because some students' applications were not received by the campus. Iowa City, Iowa, until after Feb. 27, when the numbers of KU students who had filed applications were high.
Rogers said students who filed applications were being sent their processed financial statement by mail. He said the goal was to help the comprehensive list of the need analysis of KU students who filed financial applications to the budget of aid and availability at KU to students.
ROGERS SAID even though the office had received the comprehensive listings, financial awards to KU students would not be made until June 1.
"We have to get information from high school seniors and from transfer students before making awards," he said. "And for students returning to KU we have to get spring grades. So, it's likely awards won't be given until the spring semester grades are posted."
Rogers said the length of time between receiving the financial statements and
"This year, through the office of admissions and records, we are able to list data about applicants on a word processor. We also have a set of patient residents available much more conveniently."
making awards was improving because of "automated help."
ROGERS SAID the magnetic tape used in the word processor could condense student data, which could be "drawn out" due to the need by looking at each individual's file.
Rogers said a preliminary need analysis also was made by KU.
"There's a fantastic number of hours in background work that goes into making the awards," he said. "And part of that is determining each student's need, which is done by looking at his file and making a preliminary need analysis.
"We also have to code students by their high school, county and major because some awards have requirements such as passing an online exam from particular areas of the state."
Rogers said the student financial aid report was used by some students to find
errors they might have made when originally completing it.
Rogers said a student could file a corrected form for $3.
"This shows them the figures that were used to calculate their original financial need statement," he said. "By this a student can double check to see if any information supplied by him was misunderstood or misread."
"Most mistakes made concern tax information that was reported incorrectly." People said.
Standard for aid strict
Although obtaining a financial award might seem like a big hassel, keeping it can be even harder.
KU recently has formulated a statement of "reasonable progress", to be used to determine re-awarding of federal financial aid, and the director of financial aid, said yesterday.
Rogers said federal government regulations made a progress standard mandatory.
"We actually established a standard last fall," he said. "And in order to keep our funds we must abide by it in awarding."
The programs include National Direct Student Loans, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, College Work-Study, Health Professionals Student Loans, Law Enforcement Educational Loans, Basic Education Loans, and the Guaranteed Student Loan Programs.
ROGERS SAID the standard included both completing a minimum number of credits with a minimum grade point of 3.0, and a maximum number of scratches a student had completed.
For example, Rogers said, a student who wanted to keep a financial award for a graduate would have his first semester college, would have to have 24 credit hours with a grade point average.
The minimum grade point average for award renewal was raised last fall one grade point from 1.0 to 2.0 over ten semesters.
"It isn't a hard standard to achieve," he said. "So very few students at KU aren't able to able by ft. And therefore, very few are considered on appeal."
Rogers said those students who have lost their awards could appeal in writing.
"WE HAVE A committee of three persons from this office who do check the appeals," be said. "And usually the only exceptions are for students who have qualified extremely extinguating circumstances."
"We're working on just how to handle the situation now," Rogers said. "It doesn't seem fair that one student who just sits the semester out can come back and get an award, when a student who might be a freshman has not been awarded a semester, because he had lost his award and not completed the standard, might not get an award."
-UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Rogers said although not many students lost awards because they could not obtain the standard, problems with students were widespread, schooling for a semester had occurred
Police Beat
BURGLARY
Lawrence police said $1,600 in cash was stolen from a locked safe at Bucky's D
2120 W. Ninth St., early Sunday.
The police said employees told them that the money had been placed in a lock about midnight Saturday.
The theft was discovered Sunday morning when the assistant manager arrri
work, the police said. The safe was locked but the money was gone, accordin
g to the police.
The police said several employees knew the combination to the safe AUTO THREET
Lawrence police said a 1977 Chrysler, valued at $8,300, was stolen Saturday parking lot at the Congo Bar, $29 N. Third St.
The police said the car was taken between 2 and 3 p.m. Saturday.
The ignition system was apparently tampered with while the car was left unlock parking lot.
Harris statement is valid
James Paddock, Douglas County District Court judge, ruled yesterday that an alleged murder confession given to law enforcement, Harper, 36, Denver, will not be suppressed.
Harris' defense attorney, Dennis Prater,
had filled a motion alleging that Harris was
coerced into giving a confession to three law
officers. He said he being transported
to Kansas from Denver.
Harris is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the November 1977 slaying of Sam Norwood, former W. Woolworth Co. store, 911 Massachusetts.
Paddock ruled that the confer valid because no coercive act taken in the car, because Har. said, was necessary because Harris knewly waived counsel while being questioned. He said there were two courts in Douglas County District Court
New 35mm Print
4x6
Overland Photo
Formals and Prom Gowns
Come in and see our great selection sizes 5-20
Karen's
842-0056
Hillcrest Center
Bridal Shoppe
9th & Iowa
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glamorous competition for the latest in what's "in" in the hallowed halls of haute couture.
Yet, Harms agreed that "shirts and jeans are bread and butter items." She said these basics still made up the bulk of stock—and her sales to KU students.
"On a college student's budget, you have to stay basic. You can't go whole hog on a new look," she said. "If we can buy the price, we dabble in trendy merchandise."
"The things you see in Vogue, Glamour and Mademoiselle are our promotional items," she said.
Daytime dresses this spring reflect a back-to-backs, horse sense approach to coolness and comfort. Along with their versatility, daywear dresses come in neutrals and melons.
one 'right price" can go as high as $36 for a top.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
A LITTLE WARNER
The University of Kansas
Vol. 89, No.124
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
County working on reappraisal See story page six
Tape policy is requested by Shankel
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday that he had asked the University Senate executive committee to submit an annual demonstration at the Universiety of Kansas.
The action came in response to controversy surrounding the videotape by KUPA.
Shankel said he had met with several faculty members of SenEx yesterday morning to review plans that had been made to tape a rally on campus yesterday.
The rally was in support of the Egyptian Islamic peace treaty. KU police monitoring the rally had videotaped equipment available to responders. A peaceful, Mike Hill, KU chief of police, said.
Last week, KU police tapeed two protest marches against the signing of the peace treaty and a rally protecting South African farmers by the KU Endowment Association.
A KU student was arrested in one of the treaty marches, but KU police said the
Binns, Francisco, Schumm win
BY SHIRLEY SHOUP and TAMMI HARBERT Staff Reporters
In a close election that attracted few voters yesterday, Donald Binns, Marci Francisco and Robert Schumm won seats on the Lawrence City Commission.
Bimma, the only incumbent, won the most votes, 3,966. Simeon came in second with 3,720 votes. In second round, 3,936. Landry Betts received 3,172 votes and Florence "Danny" Drury had 3,143 to 3,105.
Although poor weather might have kept some voters at home, Delbert Mathina, county clerk, said the absence of issues probably caused the low turnout.
This year's voter turnout was 6,450. There were 27,000 eligible voters in the city.
Four of the candidates congratulated or consoled one another at the Douglas University speech, but it came in. Binns was at the weekly city commission meeting as the totals were
BINNS AND Francisco will serve four-year terms and Schumm will serve a two-year term.
Schumm and the redevelopment of the downtown business district was his highest priority.
THEERE WERE 224 votes separating Schumm and Landreth, the largest margin between any of the candidates. Landreth said he thought he lost votes because of his
refusal to take a stand concerning the shopping mall.
"My gut feeling is that this is a vote against the mall," he said. "I sure I'm hurting me in the neighborhoods downtown."
Drum trailed Landrith by nine votes. Despite her loss, she was pleased with one result of the election: Francisco's win.
"I pleased that Marci got in," she said. "They are all good candidates. I think either way the voters couldn't have lost."
In the school board election for Unified School District 497, four candidates won four-year terms. The three highest vote-getters were incumbents.
Julie Hack led the race with 4,833 votes. Charles Oldfather was second with 4,772, and Martina Masinton was third with 4,099.
The newscomer to the school board was Mary Lou Wright, who garnered 4,165 votes.
Ronald Schmidt lost with 3.972
108
First reports indicate they have been successful.
Student reaction to the new styles and colors varies with age and personal taste.
Beth Lemesany, Lawrence graduate student, said she was surprised at the brightness of the colors after the olive drab of winter.
"I like them but I see them on somebody much younger," she said.
Lamesay, 25, also said she dressed up to go to campus because she worked as a graduate assistant. During the winter, her usual outfit consisted of a dress or skirt and boots. What is her battle plan for spring?
"I'll probably wear dresses and spike heels-if I can learn to walk in them," she says.
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Staff photo by STEPHEN SPECTOR
peat on the Lawrence City Commission. Donald Binns and Robert Schumm won the two contested seats on the five member commission.
hopeful's campaign
thic appearances a.ad had no other uses, so the money was used for the ad Journal-World.
SPOKESMAN IN the advertising
tment at the Journal-World said
column inch of advertising space
the Toberts ad, 40 column inches,
120
Martin, assistant instructor of h at KU and another Roberts sup. said, "Hobbes is very concerned Lawrence. He cares!"
e Nelson said in the ad, "I know and Emily (Martin's wife) are need. They're active. They are a real r Lawrence."
added in the ad were endorsements alberts, a factual person, by four who whose name correspond to 22 is in the Lawrence area.
THEERE ARE FOUR Dave Nelsons listed in the Lawrence phone book.
Robert Johnson said in the ad, "I know he'll promote Lawrence for us."
The phone book lists six Robert Johnsons.
Paul Miller was more specific in his endorsement, "Martin is especially interested in good parks and recreation."
Five Paul Millers are listed in the phone book.
Georgia Barker said in the ad, "He's running because he wants to provide efficient government." The phone book lists seven different Barkers.
was exciting to breathe new life into 1," Draz said.
If Roberts had appealed to enough voters to win a seat on the commission, he would probably have had to decline. Miller was appointed as the sheriff prohibits him from being in town.
urn complexitiesive procedures
Draz said he was not happy about a denalty bill that Hein sponsored. Hein esponsored the bill because his uuers strongly favored the death y, even though he was personally d to it.
1. SEVEN OF his interns were against
the penalty and we couldn't believe
introduced the bill," Draz said.
he is responsible both to his cons
and to himself. I can understand
tion."
ch, Tozer's boss, also was involved ough issue.
ch drew up the House Apprent Committee's map for the a county area. House Republicansanged the map, which may deprive Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, of his凯 KU student support.
witude is that what the Republicans a perfectly legal even though they a student vote. "Toner said. "But the Republicans are bad, so it was a political trade-off."
INA MAHONEY, Overland Park park who works for State Rep. William R. Toperka, is doing a computer of another aspect of politics—
"We'll see if senators and representatives who represent the same areas vote the same," she said. "If they don't, we'll see if their vote was influenced by lobbyists.
"It's really wary the way lobbyists work," she said. "They'll go into a legislator's office and ask him if he supports liquor by the drink, for instance. If he says yes, they write him a check for $50 and leave.
"Some people could end up supporting it even though they're from conservative family."
"For example," she said, "The Committee for Responsible Government" represents the Kansas Wine and Spirits Wholesaler Association.
Mahoney said names of lobbying groups sometimes were misleading to voters.
"A lot of people vote the way the lobbyists want," she said.
Mahoney said she thought most legislators were hardworking and conscious.
Draz and Scott Richardson, a Wichita senior working for State Rep, Mike Meacham, R-Wichita, also said they were impressed with state legislators.
"All representatives do things to help their constituents and not just to get re-elected."
R
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: A PRO-PEACE RALLY will be in front of Strong Hall at noon. CLARENCE KELLEY, former FBI director, will speak at 12:30 in 103 New Green Hall, sponsored by the Student Bar Association. THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE is available from 6 to 8 in the legal aid office at New Green Hall, sponsored by the law student division of the American Bar Association. A FRENCH AND ITALIAN PROGRAM and dinner will be at 6:30 in the Big Eight Room of the Union at 7, sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students. THE PALESTINIAN JOURNALIST, Hassan Kaufh, will speak in the Jayhawk Room of the Union at 7, sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students. THE COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 in the Oread Room of the Union. The ECLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Union with guest speaker Jim Converse, KU JAZZ ENSEMBLE II Concern for Reconciliation Hall. The ECLOGY CLUB will meet at 7 in the Oread Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: The KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson. A TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION introductory lecture sponsored by KU's Students International Meditation Society will be at 8 i.p. in Parlor A of the LEON FLEESHEN will conduct a fine arts master class on "Learning to Live" and "Making Life and Living." at 11:46 a.m. at the EMC Center, 1204 Oread. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parloors B and C of the Union. The KU GO CLUB will meet in C or 2 of the Union 7 of John David, trumpeter, will give a STUDENT RECITAL at 8 in Swartbout Reall Hall. THOMAS SEBORE from University will present a lecture sponsored by the Center for Humanistic Studies at 8 in the Forum Room.
Voters go to polls today
The polls opened at 7 this morning for Lawrence votes to decide who will fill three seats on the city commission and three seats on the board in Unified School System No. 467,
Poll will remain open until 10 ifight.
Five candidates are vying for three seats in
the Senate.
City commission candidates are Donald Binns, 1402 E. Glenn Drive; Florence "Danny" Drury, 1966 Marvonne Rd.; Marcri Francisco, 1046 Ohio St.; Jack Landrick, 1709 St. Andrews Dr.; and Robert Schumm, 1920 St. Andrews Drive.
School board candidates are Jule Hickle, 2216 Massachusetts St.; Martha Mastonin, 709 Mississippi St.; Charles Oldfather, Route 5; Ronald Schmidt, 2414 Lazybrow Lane; and Mary Louise Wright, T34 Illinois St.
The city and county did not hold a primary earlier because of the low number of candidates. A primary would have been nonexistent with six candidates and failed for each race.
Anyone who registered to vote in an earlier election and has not moved is invited.
5,000 students file for aid
By LESLIE GUILD Staff Reporter
About 5,000 KU students filed Family Financial Statements and have applied for financial aid for next year, Jerry Rogers, director of Financial Aid, said yesterday.
Although the office of Financial Aid has received notification of only 4,700 processed applications, Rogers said he had no reason to number who applied would be about 5,000.
"Some students who did apply have not yet been totaled in the number of processed applications that have been reported to our office." Roers said.
Rogers speculated the delay was because some students' applications were not received by the school in Iowa City, Iowa, until after Feb. 27, when the numbers of KU students who had filed their applications were high.
Rogers said students who filed applications were being sent their processed financial statement by mail. He said the department had a comprehensive list of the need analysis of KU students who filed financial statements for the budget of aid and loan to KU to help them.
ROGERS SAID even though the office had received the comprehensive listings, financial awards to KU students would not be made until June.
"We have to get information from high school seniors and from transfer students before making awards," he said. "And for students returning to KU we have to spring grads. So, it really awards won't get higher." The spring semester grades are posted."
Rogers said the length of time between receiving the financial statements and
making awards was improving because of "automated help."
"This year, through the office of admissions and records, we are able to data about applicants on a word processor. We also have students available much more conveniently."
ROGERS SAID the magnetic tape used in the word processor could condense student data, which could be "drawn out" by looking at each individual's file.
Rogers said a preliminary need analysis also was made by KU.
"There's a fantastic number of hours in background work that goes into making the awards," he said. "And part of that is determining each student's need, which is done by looking at his file and making a preliminary need analysis.
"We also have to code students by their high school, county and major because some awards have requirements such as passing an exam or receiving students from particular areas of the state."
Rogers said the student financial aid report was used by some students to find
Rogers said a student could file a corrected form for $3.
errors they might have made when originally completing it.
"This shows them the figures that were used to calculate their original financial need statement," he said. "By this a student can double check to see if any information supplied by him was misunderstood or misread."
"Most mistakes made concern tax information that was reported incorrectly," Rogers said.
Standard for aid strict
Although obtaining a financial award might seem like a big bassel, keeping it
KU recently has formulated a statement of "reasonable progress," to be used to determine re-sawing of federal financial assistance and the director of financial and said volunteers.
The programs include National Direct Student Loans, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, College Work-Study, Health Professions Student Loans, Law Enforcement Educational Loans, Basic Educational Opportunities and the State Loans.
Rogers said federal government regulations made a progress standard mandatory.
ROGERS SAID the standard included both completing a minimum number of credits with a minimum grade point or passing the maximum number of semesters a student had completed.
For example, Roger, said a student who wanted to keep a financial award for a graduate program in his first semester of college, would have to have 24 credit hours with a grade point average.
"We actually established a standard last fall," he said. "And in order to keep our hands off the floor, we had to close."
The minimum grade point average for award renewal was raised last fall one grade point from 1.0 to 2.0 over ten semesters.
"It's not a hard standard to achieve," he said. "So very few students at KU aren't able to be able by it. And therefore, very few are considered on anneal."
"WE HAVE A committee of three persons from this office who do check the appeals," he said. "And usually the only exceptions are for students who have qualified extremely extinquent circumstances."
"We're working on just how to handle the situation now," Rogers said. "It doesn't seem fair that one student who只 sits the semester out can come back and get an award, when a student who might have been the only student in the semester, because he had lost his award and not completed the standard, might not get an award."
Rogers said not many students lost awards because they could not obtain the standard, problems with students and teachers, building school for a semester had occurred
Rogers said those students who have lost their awards could appeal in writing.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Police Beat
RURCLARV
Lawrence police said $1,600 in cash was stolen from a locked safe at Bucky's D 2120 W. Ninth St., early Sunday.
The police said employees told them that the money had been placed in a lock about midnight Saturday.
The theft was discovered Sunday morning when the assistant manager arrri work, the police said. The safe was locked but the money was gone, accordiine
The police said several employees knew the combination to the safe
ATTORTH.
The police said the car was taken between 2 and 3 p.m. Saturday.
Lawrence police said a 1977 Chrysler, valued at $8,300, was stolen Saturday parking lot at the Congo Bar, 529 N. Third St.
The ignition system was apparently tampered with while the car was left unlock parking lot.
Harris statement is valid
James Paddock, Douglas County District Court judge, ruled yesterday that an alleged murder confession given to law enforcement, 26, merger, will not be suppressed.
Harris is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the November 1977 slaying of Sam Norwood, former W. Woolworth Co. store, in Massachusetts.
Harris' defense attorney, Dennis Prater,
had filed a motion alleging that Harris was
coerced into giving a confession to three law
officers. The officers being transported to Kansas from Denver.
Paddock ruled that the confess valid because no coercive act taken in the car, because lari was driving and because Harris knowingly waved to counsel while being questioned. In Douglas County District Court in Douglas County District Court
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By CAITLIN GOODWIN Staff Reporter
Although KU men might enjoy seeing a little female flesh, KU women aren't offering it, according to swimwear sales trends in Lawrence.
The clothes salesmen of Lawrence seem to agree that one-piece swimsuits are outselling the two-pieces by a sizable margin.
"I would say 70 percent of sales is in the one-pieces and 30 percent in the two-pieces," Beverly Temple, manager of the Attic, 927 Massachusetts St., said.
She added that her store no longer carried two-pieces this year.
"I've had good luck with one-pieces."
The most popular one-piece is a new style, which has a bandeau top, that is cut straight across the chest with optional spaghetti straps. The legs are cut high—a French cut—and are designed to accentuate and lengthen the legs.
"People seem to be getting a lot more modest about what they wear," she
style of suits KU students were buying this spring.
Backs are generally low and often crisscross. There is also a skimpy one piece that resembles a piece except the top and bottom are identical that connect the top and bottom.
Another style of one-piece that will remain popular as long as women swim
she said.
Fashion finds barely there swimwear
Lucy Smith, sales clerk at the Jay Shoppe, 835 Massachusetts St., said her store had sold a lot more one-pieces than two-pieces.
She said one suit that had to be ordered was a black one-piece with bright diagonal stripes and a crisscross back. She said this suit was typical of the
LOCAL
the dependable tank suit. The tank suits this year look much like last year's. They are high in the front, have thick, furry covers, and the basic colors of red, white and blue are
The tank suit may not allow the maximum amount of skin to tan, but area salesmen say it sells as well as the stringy, sexy suits.
WOW! You've Been Asked To The Formal.
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the VILLAGE SET
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Mon Wed 10.30 Thurs & Fri 10.19 Sat 10.48 Sundays 1.5
A LITTLE WARNER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
Vol.89,No.124
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
County working on reappraisal See story page six
Tape policy is requested by Shankel
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said yesterday that he had asked the
University Senate executive committee to
conduct a presentation of demonstrations at the University of Kangas
The action came in response to controversy surrounding the videotape by RUKIPUR.
The rally was in support of the Egyptian-Iraqi peace treaty. KU police monitoring the rally had videotape equipment available to the police, and the police were peaceful, Mike Hill, KU chief of police, said.
Last week, KU police taped two protest marches against the signing of the peace treaty and a rally protesting South African racism by the KU Endowment Association.
A KU student was arrested in the treaty marches, but KU notice said the
Binns. Francisco. Schumm win
By SHIRLEY SHOUP and TAMIH HARBERT Staff Reporters
In a close election that attracted two voters yesterday, Donald Binns, Marc Francisco and Robert Schumm won seats on the Lawrence City Commission.
Bimbs, the only incumbent, won the most votes, 3,666. Franciscus came in second with 2,914. Lloyd Dainty took 3,396. Landkrette had 3,172 votes and Florence "Danny" Drury had 3,163 to Bimbs.
This year's voter turnout was 6,450. There were 27,000 eligible voters in the city.
Although poor weather might have kept some voters at home, Delbert Mattina, county clerk, said the absence of issues probably caused the low turnout.
Four of the candidates congratulated or consolded one another at the Douglas meeting, and they came in. Bims was at the weekly city commission meeting as the totals were
BINNS AND Francisco will serve four-year terms and Schumann will serve a two-year term.
Schumm and the redevelopment of the downtown business district was his highest
THEERE. WERE 224 votes separating Schumm and Landreth, the largest margin between an of the candidates. Landreth said he thought he lost votes because of his.
refusal to take a stand concerning the shopping mall.
Draun trailed Landruth by nine votes. Despite her loss, she was pleased with one result of the election: Francisco's win.
"I'm pleased that Marcy got in," she said. "They are all good candidates. I think either way the voters couldn't have lost."
"My gut feeling is that this is a vene against the mail," he said. "I sure that hurt me in the neighborhoods downtown."
In the school board election for Unified School District 497, four candidates won four-year terms. The three highest votee-getters were incumbents.
Julie Hack led the race with 4,803 votes. Charles Oldfath was second with 4,772, and Martha Masinton was third with 4,289.
The newcomer to the school board was Mary Lou Wright, who garnered 4,165 votes.
10
Tank suit designers have added some splash to the suits with stripes and bright colors.
In fact, bright color is a central theme in this season's swimwear. Kathy area manager of Carousel, 711 W. White Plains Road, bright shades of red, green and blue.
"The colors are bright and lush," she said. "You see a lot of suits that are black with a bright, colored stripe."
Black is still a favorite color, but white,
which in years past was often used to
accent a deep tan, is not offered any
more.
Although the swimwear consumers do not want to show too much, they do strive for the natural look. Harms said there is no harm in skin thinning, and only certain areas had lining.
"White, as a general rule, is too see-through," Harms said.
Smith said her store carried a type of two-piece in which the bra can be worn six different ways, determined by a twist of its two stirings.
Smith said some of the two-piece bras were lined, but that very few one-pieces
"Year-in and year-out, the best kind of thing will be the middle-of-the-road instructor. The men are looking for function. They like to fashion-it, fashions-it give them a little perspective."
"Some of the bigger women want the lining," she said.
"The women like the variety they can get with that," she said.
Men do not necessarily buy suits for fashion, but they do notice the fashions, Pete Whitehunt, manager of the Town Shop, 839 Massachusetts St., says.
What one piece suits attempt to cover on the female physique, the two-pieces strive to expose. The widest side on the bottom part of a two-piece suit is about four inches wide, comes with a string to pull it together and does not sell.
"The two-pieces are string bilinks, with vowel thin sides." Harms said.
Terry dresses and jumpsuits are popular as cover-ups for women's swimwear. The matching suit and cover is a popular combination, but many women prefer to stick with wearing a loose shirt over their suits.
Most of the students who have bought swimwear in Lawrence were preparing for spring break. But retailers say they will come as the weather gets warmer.
The tops of bikinis vary slightly from a *neck cut* to a bandaid cut to two sleeves.
Two-piece suits in Lawrence range from $12 to $30 and one-pieces range from $14 to $38.
The price for these suits is not as scant as the material, however. Prices vary according to the type of material, the stule and the durability of the suit.
"Everyone comes in and says they want to wait until they lose weight." Harms said "Someone will try on a dress that fits, or it fits how it looks, disregarding the fat."
Little tern-clay jumpsuits also are selling well. These are strapless short-legged jumps with elastic waistbands. Women can wear them anywhere.
Smith said she suggested a "big shirt" to her customers. This is a large blouse that can be tied with a belt or left loose.
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PREMIUM
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seat on the Lawrence City Commission, Donald Bims and Robert Schumm won the ter seated contests on the five member commission.
hopeful's campaign
ibic appearances aad had no other uses, so the money was used for the ad Journal-World.
SPOKESMAN IN the advertising
iment at the Journal-World said
column inch of advertisement space
the Roberts ed, 40 column inches,
120
Martin, assistant instructor of ht at KU and another Hoops sup, said, "Hoibles is very concerned Lawrence. He cares!"
added in the ad were endorsements oberts, a fictional person, by four is whose names correspond to 22 as in the Lawrence area.
e Nelson said in the ad, "I know and Emily (Martin's wife) are ned. They're active. They are a real 'R Lawrence.'"
THERE ARE FOUR Dael Nelson
listed in the Lawrence phone book
Robert Johnson said in the ad, "I know he'll promote Lawrence for us."
The phone book lists six Robert Johnsons.
Paul Miller was more specific in his endorsement, "Martin is especially interested in 'park parks and recreation.'"
Five Paul Millers are listed in the phone book.
Georgia Barker was in the ad, "He's running because he wants to provide efficient government." The phone book lists seven different Barkers.
If Roberts had appealed to enough voters to win a seat on the commission, he would probably have had to decline. Miller would have scheduled prohibits from being in town.
urn complexitiesive procedures
was exciting to breathe new life into 1," Drazsaid.
Draat said he was not happy about a oculity bill that Hein sponsored. Hein hei sponsored the bill because his臂 strongly favored the death y, even though he was personally dto it.
1. SEVEN OF his interns were against
the penalty and we couldn't believe
introduced the bill," Draz said.
he is responsible both to his conis and to himself. I can understand dion."
ch, Tozer's boss, also was involvedough issue.
he drew up the House Ap-
peal for a new county. A County area. House Republicansangered the map, which may deprive ep. Mike Glauer, DLawrence, of his wife.
attitude is that what the Republicans a perfectly legal even though they *student vote*. "Truer said." But the Republican party has done so, it was a political trade-off".
INA MAHONEY, Overland Park who works for State Rep. William . R-Topeka, is doing a computer of another aspect of policies-
"We'll see if senators and representatives who represent the same areas vote the same," she said. "If they don't, we'll see if their vote was influenced by lobbyists."
"it's really weird the way lobbyists work," she said. "They'll go into a legislator's office and ask him if he supports liquor by the drink, for instance. If he says yes, they write him a check for $50 and leave.
"Some people could end up supporting it. Even though they're from conservative diet," she said.
Mahoney said names of lobbying groups sometimes were misleading to voters.
"For example," she said, "The Committee for Responsible Government" represents the Kansas Wine and Spirits Wholesalers Association.
"A lot of people vote the way the lobbyists want," she said.
Mahoney said she thought most legislators were hardworking and con-
Draz and Scott Richardson, a Wichita senior working for State Rep. Mike Meacham, R-Wichita, also said they were impressed with state legislators.
"All representatives do things to help their constituents and not just to get the results they want."
8
Tuesday, April 3.1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: A PRO-PEACE RALLY will be in front of Strong Hall at noon. CLARENCE KELLEY, former FBI director, will speak at 12:30 in 103 New Green Hall, sponsored by the Student Bar Association. THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE is available from 6 to 8 in the legal aid office at New Green Hall, sponsored by the law student division of the American Bar Association. A FRENCH AND ITALIAN PROGRAM and dinner will be at 6:30 in the Forum Room. A MUSIC PROGRAM and dinner will be at 7:30 in the Forum Room. A PALESTINIAN JOURNALIST, Hassan Kashf, will speak in the Jayhawk Room of the Union at 7, sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students. The COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 in the Oread Room of the Union. The ECOLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Union with guest speaker BRIAN DELLENBERG, the Director of the Reception Hall. A LAMBRA SEMINAR will meet at 9:31 in the International Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: The KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson. A TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION introduction lecture sponsored by KU's Students International Meditation Society will be at 8 p.m. in Parlor A of the LEON FLEISHER International Meditation Society. KU GUNG FU CLUB will speak on "Physical Fitness and Living" at 11:46 a.m. at the EMC Center, 1204 Oread. KU KAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlors B and C of the Union. KU GO CLUB will meet in 2C of the Union at 7 John David, trumpeter, will give a STUDENT RECITAL at 8 in Swarthwold Rehearsal Hall. THOMAS SIEGER from 8 in the Forum Room, will give a lecture presented by the Center for Humanistic Studies at 8 in the Forum Room.
Voters go to polls today
The polls opened at 7 this morning for Lawrence votes to decide who will fill three seats on the city commission and three seats on the board in Unified School District No.497.
Polls will remain open until 7 tonight.
Five candidates are vying for three seats in both races.
City commission candidates are Donald Binns, 1402 E. Glenn Drive; Florence "Danny" Drury, 1969 Marvone Rd.; Marc Francisco, 1404 Ohio St.; Jack Landreth, 1709 St. Andrews Dr.; and Robert Schumm, 1920 St. Andrews Drive.
School board candidates are Julehack, 2216 Massachusetts St.; Martha Mastion, 709 Mississippi St.; Charles Oldfather, Route 5; Ronald Schmidt, 2414 Lazybrow Lane; and Mary Louise Wright, 1734 Illinois St.
The city and county did not hold a primary earlier because of the low number of candidates. A primary would have been completed for each six candidates had filed for each race.
Anyone who registered to vote in an earlier election and has not moved is免责。
5,000 students file for aid
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
About 5,000 KU students filed Family Financial Statements and have applied for financial aid for next year, Jerry Rogers, director of Financial Aid, said yesterday.
Although the office of Financial Aid has received notification of only 4,700 processed applications, Rogers said he helped a number of who applied would be about 5,000.
"Some students who did apply have not yet been totaled in the number of processed applications that have been reported to our office." Rogers said.
Rogers speculated the delay was because some students' applications were not received at the processing center in Iowa City, Iowa, until after Feb. 27, when the numbers of KU students who had filed were totaled.
Rogers said students who filed applications were being sent their processed information to the KU financial aid office also received a comprehensive list of the need analysis of KU students who filed financial students' budget of aid issued by KU to award.
ROGERS SAID even though the office had received the comprehensive listings, financial awards to KU students would not be made until June.
"We have to get information from high school seniors and from transfer students before making awards," he said. "And for students returning to KU we have to get spring grades. So it's likely awards won't be posted in the spring semester grades are not posted."
Rogers said the length of time between receiving the financial statements and
"This year, through the office of admissions and records, we're able to list data about applicants on a word processor. Students in our program students available much more conveniently."
making awards was improving because of "automated help."
ROGERS AIS the magnetic tape used in the word processor could condense student data, which could be "drawn out" more easily by looking at each individual's file.
Rogers said a preliminary need analysis also was made by KU.
"There's a fantastic number of hours in background work that goes into making the awards," he said. "And part of that is determining each student's need, which is done by looking at his file and making a preliminary need analysis.
"We also have to code students by their high school, county and major because some awards have requirements such as passing a math exam or getting students from particular areas of the state."
Rogers said the student financial aid report was used by some students to find
Rogers said a student could file a corrected form for $3.
errors they might have made when originally completing it.
"This shows them the figures that were used to calculate their original financial need statement," he said. "By this a student can double check to see if any information supplied by him was misunderstood or misread."
Standard for aid strict
"Most mistakes made concern tax information that was reported incorrectly," Rogers said.
"We actually established a standard last fall," he said. "And in order to keep our funding we must be able by it in awarding."
Although obtaining a financial award might seem like a big bussel, keeping it
KU recently has formulated a statement of "reasonable progress," to be used to determine re-awarding of federal financial aid. KU's director of financial aid, said yesterday.
The programs include National Direct Student Loans, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, College Work-Study, Health Professions Student Loans, Law Enforcement Educational Loans, Basic Education Loans, and the Guranteed Student Loan Programs.
Rogers said federal government regulation made a progress standard
ROGERS SAID the standard included both completing a minimum number of credits with a minimum grade point score and completing a maximum number of semesters a student had completed.
For example, Rogers said, a student who wanted to keep a financial award for a semester would have to have his first semester of college, would have to have 24 credit hours with a grade point average.
The minimum grade point average for award renewal was raised last fall one grade point from 1.0 to 2.0 over ten semesters.
"It's not a hard standard to achieve," he said. "So very few students at KU aren't able to abide by it. And therefore, very few are considered on appeal."
Rogers said those students who have lost their awards could appeal in writing.
"WE HAVE A committee of three persons from this office who do check the appeals," he said. "And usually the only exceptions are for students who have qualified extremely extinguishing circumstances."
Rogers said although not many students lost awards because they could not obtain the standard, problems with students were a major challenge in setting school for a semester had occurred.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"We're working on just how to handle the situation now," Rogers said. "It doesn't seem fair that one student who just sits the semester out can come back and get an award, when a student who might be falling behind gets an award, a semester, because he had lost his award and not completed the standard, might not get an award."
Police Beat
BURGLARY
Lawrence police said $1,600 in cash was stolen from a locked safe at Bucky's D
2120 W. Ninth St., early Sunday.
The police said employees told them that the money had been placed in a lock about midnight Saturday.
The theft was discovered Sunday morning when the assistant manager arrri-
work, the police said. The safe was locked but the money was gone, accordi-
nant that a security guard had been present.
The police said several employees knew the combination to the safe. AUTOTHEFT
Lawrence police said a 1977 Chrysler, valued at $8,300, was stolen Saturday parking lot at the Como Bar, 520 N. Third St.
The police said the car was taken between 2 and 3 p.m. Saturday.
The ignition system was apparently tampered with while the car was left unlock parking lot.
Harris statement is valid
James Paddock, County District Court judge, ruled yesterday that an alleged murder confession given to law enforcement, Harris, 26, Denver will not be suppressed.
Harris is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the November 1977 slaying of Sam Norwood, former manager of W. Woolorth Co. store, 911 Massachusetts.
Harris' defense attorney, Dennis Prater, had filed a motion alleging that Harris was coerced into giving a confession to three law students. The state is being transported to Kansas from Denver.
Paddock ruded that the confess valid because no coercive act taken in the car, because Hari was driving, because Harris knownly wawed to counsel while being questioned. *Harris' trial is scheduled to begi*
Formals and Prom Gowns
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842-0056
Karen's
Hillcrest Center
Bridal Shoppe
9th & Iowa
For those who help themselves
Introducing the
Noon Buffet
Help yourself to all the soup, salad, and pizza you can
$2.99 Mon-Fri 1:30-2
Gabriel's
Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842-5824
Gabriel's
Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842-5824
LAKEBROOK, FLORIDA
"I've seen shoes that were clear lucite with battery-operated lights inside them that are sensitive to vibrations. They flash on and off when you're dancing."
THE DANCE OF FRIENDSHIP
tree the
ainly have
cir-
tain bain
for
for it
"It
ust and
right
not
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
A LITTLE WARNER
The University of Kansas
KANSAN
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
Vol. 89, No.124
County working on reappraisal See story here six
See story page six
Tape policy is requested by Shankel
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said yesterday that he had asked the
University Senate executive committee to
recommend him for honorary astronomi-
strations at the University of Kansas.
The action came in response to controversy surrounding the videotape by RUK
Shankel said he had met with several faculty members of SenEx yesterday morning to review plans that had been made to tape a rally on campus yesterday.
The rally is in support of the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty. KU police monitoring the rally had videotape equipment available and they were able to secure peaceful, Mike Hill, KU chief of police, sad.
Last week, KU police taped two protest marches against the signing of the peace treaty and a rally protecting South African unity by the KU Endowment Association.
A KU student was arrested in one of the treaty marches, but KU police said the
Binns, Francisco, Schumm win
By SHIRLEY SHOUP and TAMMI HARBERT
Staff Reporters...
Staff Reporters
In a close election that attracted few voters yesterday, Donald Binn, Marci Francisco and Robert Schumm won seats on the Lawrence City Commission.
Birms, the only incumbent, won the most votes, 3666. Francoeau came in second with 3,540 and Schumme came in third with 3,366. Jack Landreth received 3,172 votes and Florence "Danny" Drury had 3,163 to trail the group.
Although poor weather might have kept some voters at home, Delbert Mathia, county clerk, said the absence of issues probably caused the low turnout.
This year's voter turnout was 6,450. There were 27,080 eligible voters in the city.
Four of the candidates congratulated or consoled one another at the Douglas County commission meeting, which came in. Binns was at the weekly city commission meeting as the totals were given.
BINNS AND Francisco will serve four-year terms and Schumm will serve a two-year term
Schumm said the redevelopment of the downtown business district was his highest priority.
THERE WERE 224 votes separating Schumm and Landreth, the largest margin between any of the candidates. Landreth said he thought he lost votes because of his
refusal to take a stand concerning the shopping mall.
'My gut feeling is that this is a vote against the mail,' he said. 'I'm sure that hurt me in the neighborhoods downward.' Drum trailed Landry by nine votes. Despite her loss, she was pleased with one result of the election: Francisco's win.
"I'm pleased that Marci got in," she said. "They are all good candidates, I think either the voters couldn't have lost."
In the school board election for Unified School District 497, four candidates won four-year terms. The three highest vote-getters were incumbents.
Julie Hack led the race with 4,803 votes
Charles Oldfather was second with 4,772
and Martha Masinton was third with 4,499.
THE NEW YORK TIMES
The newcomer to the school board was Mary Lou Wright, who garnered 4,165 votes.
NURSE MARTIN
The beat's on baubles, slinky get-up
Staff photo by STEPHEN SPECTOR
seat on the Lawrence City Commission. Donald Bians and Robert Schumm won the two contested seats on the five member commission.
JULIA GOPLERUD
Staff Reporter
A couple leave their table in the dark, smoky corner of the disco and weave their way into the mass of swirling bodies on the dance floor.
The woman's turquoise leopard and her partner's red, figured shirt glisten in the sunlight. It is gold jewelry giflters as they spin and dip to the throb of the music.
The disco atmosphere is one of action and color and the fashion industry has created clothing to capture this mood. For spring, disco enthusiasts can find shades and camouflage bops and sheer gauze gauze hoods for lurex, a metallic fiber, Kathy Harm's manager of Carousel, 711 W. 23rd St. said.
Last fall, Carousel stocked brightly colored Danskin leotards and matching wrap skirts. wrap dresses, cigarette hats and pant straight leg jeans. Harmi said.
The dresses and Danskin sets were low-cut and sleeveless. The skirts were tight-fitting at the hip and flowing around the legs.
Harms said the clothes were made of shiny, stretchy fabrics such as mylon, polyurethane, and durable in bright colors such as red, purple, turquoise and yellow.
"If they are shocked they don't say
they want to play. They've been
to a disco before, they laugh."
to 15 percent of the store's sales, while campus wear made up 50 percent. She said customer reaction to the clothes was mixed.
A spokesman for Clothes Encourier, in Iowa, told me that a store store stocked dish fashions but fall but not order these spring because of poor sales.
Harms said disco fashions made up 5 to 15 percent of the store's sales, while
"Most people thought if they invested in them they would be out of style next year," the spokesman said.
Jim Schubert, manager of the Jay Jimm. 835 Massachusetts St., said the disco fashions he stocked were slightly more expensive than his other merchandise because of the expense of design expenses and limited products.
He said sales had not been good.
"Most of the clothes are not suitable to meet to work or to a party," he said.
Most of the clothes are not suitable to wear to work or to a party," he said. Schubert said that he thought fashion shoes were more tailored and comfortable than formal shoes and these fancy shoes would be less emphasized. Debbie Schlender, a salesman at Britches Corner, 843 Massachusetts St., said the stock stored velvet blazers and Calvin Klein silk skirts in bright colors for men. She said pant dresses with or without pants were offered for women.
He said slides, backless shoes with high, thin, tapered heels were popular disco shoes.
Women's disco clothes sell better than the men's because male customers are more interested in buying suits and office clothes, she said.
J. C. Penney Co. Inc., 830 Massachusetts St. stocks men's brightly colored figured figures of nylon or acetate and polyester seamless pants.
Je Guaint, merchandise manager for J.C. Penney, said the store also offered disco hosiery, which is heavier than regular hosies and has glitters of glitter. Shoes are a main part of disco fashion, Keith Banta, a salesman for the Royal College Shop. 837 Massachusetts St.
Every manufacturing line in the store has some disco styles, he said.
Although managers say disco fashions are not selling well in Lawrence, KU students who frequent discos say they wear them.
"I've seen shots that were clear lucite with battery-operated lights inside them that are sensitive to vibrations," he said on on and off when you're dancing.
Photos by Randy Olson
Gerry Craig, Muliane sophomore,
said she wrote Danskin outfits, sheer
tunic overalls or, camisole tops and
pleated pants with high-heeled shoes.
She said men wear three-piece suits,
shirts unbuttoned to the waist, figured
polyester shirts and dress pants or dress
jeans.
But other students interested in disco dancing do not like disco fashions. Elise tutors students Brooklyn, "Nicely do it" and instructs said, "I basically do not like disco clothes."
"Disco clothes in New York turn me off."
IYAN IYAN
hopeful's campaign
thic appearances and had no other uses, so the money was used for the ad Journal-World.
Martin, assistant instructor of
at kU and another Roberts sup-
and, "Roberts is very concerned
Lawrence. He cares!"
SPOKESMAN in the advertising
ment at the Journal-World said
column inch of advertising space
The Roberts art, 40 column inches,
13
Nelson said in the ad, "I know and Emily (Martin's wife) are need. They're active. They are a real Lawrence."
added in the ad were endorsements
debts; a fictional person, by four
is whose name correspond to 22
as in the Lawrence area.
THEERE ARE FOUR Delaesons listed in the Lawrence phone book.
The phone book lists six Robert John sons.
Robert Johnson said in the ad, "I know he'll promote Lawrence for us."
Paul Miller was more specific in his endorsement, "Martin is especially interested in good parks and recreation."
Five Paul Millers are listed in the phone book.
Georgia Barker said in the ad, "He's running because he wants to provide efficient government." The phone book lists seven different Barkers.
If Roberts had appealed to enough voters to win a seat on the commission, he would probably have had to decline. Miller said that a debate probabilis from being in town.
urn complexities ive procedures
Drar said he was not happy about a仑款 bill that Hein sponsored. Hein e sponsored the bill because his u仑款 strongly favored the death y, even though he was personally d to it.
was exciting to breathe new life into 1," Drazsaid.
1. SEVEN OF his interns were against
all penalty and we couldn't believe
introduced the bill," Draz said.
he is responsible both to his conts and to himself. I can understand tion."
ch, Tozer's boss, also was involved
ough issue.
ch drew up the House Apprent Committee's map for the a county area. Area House Republicansanged the map, which may deprive Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, of his nail KU student support.
attitude is that when the Republicans a perfectly legal even though they *student vote*. "Trozer said." But the Republican was also wrong, so it was a political trade-off."
INA MAHONEY, Overland Park park will forge State Rep. William, R-Topka, is doing a computer of another aspect of politics—
"We'll see if senators and representatives who represent the same areas vote the same," she said. "If they don't, we'll see if their vote was influenced by lobbyists."
"I're really wizard the way lobbyists work," she said. "They'll go into a legislator's office and ask him if he supports liquor by the drink, for instance. If he says yes, they write him a check for $50 and leave.
"Some people could end up supporting it even though they're from conservative districts."
Maboney said names of lobbying groups sometimes were misleading to voters.
"For example," she said, "The Committee for Responsible Government" represents the Kansas Wine and Spirits Wholesalers Association.
"A lot of people vote the way the lobbyists want," she said.
Mahoney said she thought most legislators were hardworking and con-
Draz and Scott Richardson, a Wichita senior working for State Rep. Mike Meacham, R-Wichita, also said they were impressed with state legislators.
"All representatives do things to help their constituents and not just to get reelection."
8
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: A PRO-PEACE RALLY will be in front of Strong Hall at noon. CLARENCE KELELY, former FBL director, will speak at 12:30 in 183 New Green Hall, sponsored by the Student Bar Association. THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE is available from 6 to 8 in the legal aid office at New Green Hall, sponsored by the law student division of the American Bar Association. A FRENCH AND ITALIAN PROGRAM and dinner will be 6 to 30 in the Forum Room. A PALESTINIAN JOURNALIST, Hassan Kashif, will speak in the Jayhawk Room of the Union at 7, sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students. The COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 in the Riad Room of the Union. The ECOLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Union with guest speaker Robert Sackett, who will speak at the Reception Hall. A LAMBSA MEMBER will meet at 9:15 in the International Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: The KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson. A TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION introductory lecture sponsored by KU's Students International Meditation Society will be at 8 p.m. in Parlor A of the UNION LEAGHER PLEISNER International Meditation Society. At 9:30 p.m. in the ECMC Center THOMAS will speak on "Physical Fitness and Living" at 11:48 p.m. at the EMC Center, 1204 Oread. THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parloors B and C of the Union. THE KU GO CLUB will meet in Cork 2 of the Union at 7 John David, trumpet, will give a STUDENT RECITAL at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall. THOMAS SEEGER from 8 in The Forum Room will give a lecture sponsored by the Center for Humanistic Studies at 8 in the Forum Room.
Voters go to polls today
The polls opened at 7 this morning for Lawrence votes to decide who will fill three seats on the city commission and three seats on the board in Unified School District No. 497.
Polls will remain open until 7 tonight.
Five candidates are vying for three seats in both races.
City commission candidates are Donald Binns, 1402 E. Glenn Drive; Florence "Danny" Drury, 1969 Marvonne Rd.; Marci Francisco, 1946 Ohio Ht; Jack Landkrett, 1709 St. Andrews Dr.; and Robert Schumm, 1920 St. Andrews Drive.
School board candidates are Jule Hack, 2216 Massachusetts St.; Martha Maston, 709 Mississippi St.; Charles Oldfather, Route 5; Ronald Schmidt, 2414 Lazybrow Lane; and Mary Louise Wright, 1734 Illinois St.
The city and county did not hold a primary earlier because of the low number of candidates. A primary would have been less likely than six candidates had filed for each race.
Anyone who registered to vote in an earlier election and has not moved is
Staff Renarter
5,000 students file for aid
By LESLIE GUILD
About 5,000 KU students filed Family Financial Statements and have applied for financial aid for next year, Riley Rogers, director of Financial Aid, said yesterday.
Although the office of Financial Aid has received notification of only 4,700 processed applications, Rogers said he was "very proud" number who applied would be about 5,000.
"Some students who did apply have not yet been totaled in the number of processed applications that have been reported to our office." Rozens said.
Rogers speculated the delay was because some students applications were delayed or not received by Iowa City, Iowa, until after Feb. 27, when the numbers of KU students who had filed applications were lower.
Rogers said students who filed applications were being sent their processed documents. Rogers KU financial aid office also received a comprehensive list of the need analysis of KU students who filed financial aid requests and budget of aid available at KU to award.
"We have to get information from high school seniors and from transfer students before making awards," he said. "And for students returning to KU we have to get spring grades. So, it's likely awards won't be as good as the spring semester grades are notated."
ROGERS SAID even though the office had received the comprehensive listings, financial awards to KU students would not be made until June.
Rogers said the length of time between receiving the financial statements and
"This year, through the office of admissions and records, we are able to list data about applicants on a word processor. We use it to assist our students available much more conveniently."
making awards was improving because of "automated help."
ROGERS AHS the magnetic tape used in the word processor could condense student data, which could be "drawn out" more accurately by looking at each individual's file.
Rogers said a preliminary need analysis also was made by KU.
"There's a fantastic number of hours in background work that goes into making the awards," he said. "And part of that is determining each student's need, which is done by looking at his file and making a preliminary need analysis.
"We also have to code students by their high school, county and major because some awards require such inclusion as students from particular areas of the state."
Rogers said the student financial aid report was used by some students to find
Rogers said a student could file a corrected form for $3.
errors they might have made when originally completing it.
"This shows them the figures that were used to calculate their original financial need statement," he said. "By this a student can double check to see if any information supplied by him was misunderstood or misread."
"Most mistakes made concern tax information that was reported incorrectly;" Rogers said.
Standard for aid strict
Although obtaining a financial award might seem like a big basset, keeping it
"We actually established a standard last fall," he said. "And in order to keep our funding we must able by it in awarding."
KU recently has formulated a statement of "reasonable progress," to be used to determine re-awarding of federal financial assistance, the director of financial and, said yesterday.
Rogers said federal government regulations made a progress standard mandatory.
The programs include National Direct Student Loans, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, College Work-Study, Health Professionals Student Loans, Law Enforcement Educational Loans, Basic Education Programs, and the Guaranteed Student Loan Programs.
ROGERS SAID the standard included both completing a minimum number of credits with a minimum grade point or passing all requirements. A number of semesters a student had completed.
For example, Rogers said, a student who wanted to keep a financial award for a second semester, after he had completed his first semester of college, would have to have 24 credit hours with a grade point average of 1.30.
The minimum grade point average for award renewal was raised last fall one grade point from 1.0 to 2.0 over ten semesters.
"It's not a hard standard to achieve," he said. "So very few students at KU aren't able to abide by it. And therefore, very few are considered on appeal."
"WE HAVE A committee of three persons from this office who do check the appeals," he said. "And usually the only exceptions are for students who have qualified extremely extenuating circumstances."
Rogers said those students who have lost their awards could appeal in writing.
Rogers said although not many students lost awards because they could not obtain the standard, problems with students were common, causing the outstitting school for a semester had occurred.
"We're working on just how to handle the situation now," Rogers said. "It doesn't seem fair that one student who just sits the semester out can come back and get an award, when a student who might be very good has already taken it as a semester, because he had lost his award and not completed the standard, might not get an award."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
BURGLARY
Lawrence police said $1,600 in cash was stolen from a locked safe at Bucky's D 2120 W. Ninth St., early Sunday.
The police said employees told them that the money had been placed in a lock about midnight Saturday.
The theft was discovered Sunday morning when the assistant manager arrri
work, the police said. The safe was locked but the money was gone, accordi-
nial security.
The police said several employees knew the combination to the safe. AUTO TREET
The police said the car was taken between 2 and 3 p.m. Saturday.
Lawrence police said a 1977 Chrysler, valued at $8,300, was stolen Saturday parking lot at the Congo Bar, 529 N. Third St.
The ignition system was apparently tampered with while the car was left unlock parking lot.
Harris statement is valid
James Paddock, Douglas County District Court judge, ruled yesterday that an alleged murder confession given to law enforcement was false. He was Harper, 26, Denver, will not be suppressed.
Harris' defense attorney, Dennis Prater, had filed a motion alleging that Harris was coerced into giving a confession to three law officers. The officers being transported to Kansas from Denver.
Harris is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the November 1777 slaying of Sam Norwood, former W. Woolworth Co. store, 911 Massachusetts.
Paddock ruled that the confess valid because no coercive act taken in the car, because Harr was not arrested because Harris knownly waived to counsel while being questioned. Harr also began to beg in Douglas County District Court.
New 35mm Print
4x6
Overland Photo
Formals and Prom Gowns
Come in and see our great selection sizes 5-20
Karen's
Bridal Shoppe
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9th & Iowa
Hillcrest Center
842-0056
For those who help themselves
Introducing the Noon Buffet Help yourself to all the soup, salad, and pizza you can $2.00
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Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842-5824
$2.99 Mon-Fri f1:30-
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A LITTLE WARMER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
Vol.89,No.124
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
County working on reappraisal See story page six
Tape policy is requested by Shankel
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor,
said yesterday that he had asked the
University Senate executive committee to
conduct a review of the demonstrations at the University of Kansas.
The action came in response to con-
tentious surrounding the videotaping by RU Piles.
Shankel said he had met with several faculty members of SenEx yesterday morning to review plans that had been made to tare a rally on campus yesterday.
The rally was in support of the Egyptians' peace treaty treatment. KU police monitoring the rally had videotape equipment available to monitor the protesters, and peaceful. Mike Hill, KU chief of police, said.
Last week, KU police taped two protest marches against the signing of the peace treaty and a rally protesting South African unity by the KU Endowment Association.
A KU student was arrested in one of the treaty marches, but KU police said the
Binns, Francisco, Schumm win
By SHIRLEY SHOUP and TAMMI HARBERT Staff Reporters
In a close election that attracted few voters yesterday, Donald Binns, March Francisco and Robert Schumm won seats to the Lawrence City Commission.
Bums, the only incumbent, won the womens votes. 3,666. Francisco came in second with 3,800 and Schummein in third with 3,396. Jack Landreth received 3,172 votes and Florence "Danny" Drury had 3,161 to trail the group.
Although poor weather might have kept some voters at home, Delbert Matta, county clerk, the absence of issues probably caused the low turnout.
This year's voter turnout was 6,450. There were 27,080 eligible voters in the city.
Four of the candidates congratulated or consolled one another at the Douglas rally on Wednesday, when they came in. Binns was at the weekly city commission meeting as the totals were up.
BINNS AND Francisco will serve four-year terms and Schumm will serve a two-year term.
Schumm said the redevelopment of the downtown business district was his highest priority.
THEERE WERE 224 votes separating Schumm and Landreth, the largest margin between any of the candidates. Landreth said he thought he lost votes because of his
refusal to take a stand concerning the shopping mall.
"My gut feeling is that this is a vote against the mail," he said. "I'm sure that hurt me in the neighborhoods downstreet." Drum trailed Landryth by nine votes. Despite her loss, she was pleased with one result of the election: Francisco's win.
"I'm pleased that Marcel got in," she said. "They are all good candidates. I think either way the voters couldn't have lost."
In the school board election for Unified School District 497, four candidates won four-year terms. The three highest vote-getters were incumbents.
Julie Hack led the race with 4,833 votes,
Charles Oldfather was second with 4,772,
and Martha Masinton was third with 4,099.
The newcomer to the school board was Mary Lou Wright, who garnered 4,165 votes.
-
By LORI LINENBERGER Staff Reporter
Clothes designers and fashion experts seem to agree this spring on the fashion hits that are bound to gain popularity among clothes-conscious women.
From the hustle and bustle of a New York City designing firm to the easy-going, relaxed atmosphere of a San Francisco fashion center, designers are dividing a look for spring that can be adapted in two words—daring and bold.
The want requires a belt, sash or
thing else that will accentuate it. Blossom
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Narrow pants, slits in shorter skirts, sheer blouses and dresses and skin-revealing tops in bright vivid colors will hang from the cloths racks and closets of many fashion-minded entrepreneurs and their customers.
The once-popular Annie Hall look is out, and designers from both the East and West Coasts are advocating close-fitting styles for women.
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seat on the Lawrence City Commission. Donald Biams and Robert Schumm won the her two contested seats on the five member commission.
Staff photo by STEPHEN SPECTOR
hopeful's campaign
public appearances and had no other uses, so the money was used for the ad Journal-World.
SPOKESMAN in the advertising riment at the Journal-World said column inch of advertising space to the Rollets ad, 40 columns inches, 120.
mer Martin, assistant instructor of sk at HU and another Roberts sup er, said, "Roberts is very concerned Lawrence. He cares!"
ladded in the ad were endorsements oberts, a fictional person, by four nw whose names correspond to 22 ns in the Lawrence area.
ne Nelson said on the ad, "I know and Emily (Martin's wife) are mad. They're active. They are a real or Lawrence."
Robert Johnson said in the ad, "I know he'll promote Lawrence for us."
THERE ARE FOUR Dave Nelsons listed in the Lawrence phone book.
The phone book lists six Robert Johnsons.
Paul Miller was more specific in his endorsement, "Martin is especially interested in good parks and recreation."
Five Paul Millers are listed in the phone book.
Georgia Barker said in the ad, "He's running because he wants to provide efficient government." The phone book lists seven different Barkers.
If Roberts had appealed to enough voters to win a seat on the commission, he would probably have had to decline. Miller would have scheduled probits from being in town.
arn complexitiesive procedures
was exciting to breathe new life into Il," Draz said.
Draz said he was not happy about *a penalty bill* that Hein sponsored. Hein he sponsored the bill because his itens strongly favored the death, even though he was personally ed to it.
1. SEVEN OF his inters were against bath penalty and we couldn't believe e introduced the bill," Draz said.
4 he is responsible both to his consents and to himself. I can understand sition."
ach, Tozer's boss, also was involved tough issue.
such drew up the House Appartment Committee's map for the as County area. House Republicans changed the map, which may deprive Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, of his official KU student support.
attitude is that what the Republicans are perfectly legal even though they student vote. "Toner said." But the Republican senators, so it was a political trade-off".
UNA MAHONEY, Overland Park who works for State Rep. William n, R-Topke, is doing a computer another aspect of politics—ng.
“It’s really weird the way lobbyists work,” she said. “They’ll go into a legislator’s office and ask him if he supports liquor by the drink, for instance. If he says yes, they write him a check for $50 and leave.
"We'll see if senators and representatives who represent the same areas vote the same," she said. "If they don't, we'll see if their vote was influenced by lobbyists."
"Some people could end up supporting it even though they're from conservative districts."
Mahoney said names of lobbying groups sometimes were misleading to voters.
"For example," she said, "The Committee for Responsible Government" represents the Kansas Wine and Spirits Wholesalers Association.
"A lot of people vote the way the lobbyists want," she said.
Mahoney said she thought most teachers were hardworking and conscientious.
Draz and Scott Richardson, a Wichita senior working for State Rep. Mike Meacham, R-Wichita, also said they were impressed with state legislators.
"All representatives do things to help their constituents and not just to get reel reasons."
8
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
University Daily Kansan
On Campus
TODAY: A PRO-PEACE RALLY will be in front of Strong Hall at room, CLARENCE KELLEY, former FBI director, will speak at 12:30 in 103 New Green Hall, sponsored by the Student Bar Association. The COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE is available from 6 to 8 in the legal aid office at New Green Hall, sponsored by the law student division of the American Bar Association. A FRENCH AND ITALIAN PROGRAM and dinner will be at 6:30 in the Forum Room, sponsored by the Organization of the Forum Rooms. A PALESTINEAN JOURNALIST, Hassan Kashif, will speak in the Jayhawk Room of the Union at 7, sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students. The COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 in the Oread Room of the Union. THE ECOLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Union with guest speaker Sergio Motta, sponsored by the International Recital Hall. A BAR SIGMA will meet at 9:15 in the International Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: The KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson. A TRANSCENTENTIAL MEDITATION introductory lecture sponsored by KU's Students International Meditation Society will be at 8 p.Marior A of the Union LEON FLEISCH. Students will speak on "Physical Fitness and Living," at 11:45 a.m. at the ECM Center, 1204 Oread. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parloors B and C of the Union. The KU GO CLUB will meet in Cork 2 of the Union at 7 John David, trumpeter, will attend at 8 in Swarthwock Recital Hall. THOMAS SERGEK from Indiana University will present a lecture sponsored by the Center for Human Studies at 8 in the Forum Room.
Voters go to polls today
The polls opened at 7 this morning for Lawrence votes to decide who will fill three seats on the city commission and three seats on the district board in Unified School District No.497.
Polls will remain open until 7 tonight.
Five candidates are vying for three seats in both races.
City commission candidates are Donald Binns, 1402 E. Glenn Drive; Florence "Danny" Drury, 1969 Marvonne Rd.; Marcri Francisco, 1046 Ohio St.; Jack Landrick, 1709 St. Andrews Dr.; and Robert Schumm, 1920 St. Andrews Drive.
School board candidates are Judi Huek,
2216 Massachusetts St.; Martha Maston,
709 Mississippi St.; Charles Oldfather,
Route 5; Ronald Schmidt, 2414 Lazybrook
Lane; and Mary Louise Wright, 1734 Illinois
St.
The city and county did not hold a primary earlier because of the low number of candidates. A primary would have been less than six candidates had filed for each race.
Anyone who registered to vote in an earlier election and has not moved is免责
5,000 students file for aid
By LESLIE GUILI Staff Reporter
About 5,000 KU students filed Family Financial Statements and have applied for financial aid for next year, Jerry Rogers, director of Financial Aid, said yesterday.
Although the office of Financial Aid has received notification of only 4,700 processed applications, Rogers said he had received information who applied would be about 5,000.
"Some students who did apply have not yet been totaled in the number of processed applications that have been reported to our office." Roers said.
Rogers speculated the delay was because some students' applications were not received by February 27, Iowa City, Iowa, until after Feb. 27, when the numbers of KU students who had filed applications were high.
Rogers said students who filed applications were being sent their processed application to the KU financial and office also received a comprehensive list of the need analysis of KU students who filed financial applications and budget of aid available at KU to award.
"We have to get information from high school seniors and from transfer students before making awards," he said. "And for students returning to KU we have to get spring grades. So, it's likely awards won't work." The upper spring semester grades are posted."
ROGERS SAID even though the office had received the comprehensive listings, financial awards to KU students would not be made until June.
Rogers said the length of time between receiving the financial statements and
"This year, through the office of admissions and records, we're able to list data about applicants on a word processor. This is why our students available much more conveniently."
making awards was improving because of "automated help."
ROGERS SAID the magnetic tape used in the word processor could condense data, which could be "drawn out" more easily than by looking at each individual's file.
Rogers said a preliminary need analysis also was made by KU.
"There's a fantastic number of hours in background work that goes into making the awards," he said. "And part of that is determining each student's need, which is done by looking at his file and making a preliminary need analysis.
"We also have to code students by their high school, county and major because some awards have requirements such as passing tests or obtaining students from particular areas of the state."
Rogers said the student financial aid report was used by some students to find
errors they might have made when originally completing it.
Rogers said a student could file a corrected form for $3. . .
"This shows them the figures that were used to calculate their original financial need statement," he said. "By this a student can double check to see if any information supplied by him was misunderstood or misread."
"Most mistakes made concern tax information that was reported incorrectly," Rogers said.
Standard for aid strict
Although obtaining a financial award might seem like a big hassel, keeping it
The programs include National Direct Student Loans, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, College Work-Study, Health Professions Student Loans, Law Programs, and Basic Educational Opportunity Grants and the Guaranteed Student Loan Programs.
KU recently has formulated a statement of "reasonable progress," to be used to determine re-awarding of federal financial aid for the new director of financial aid, said yesterday.
Rogers said federal government regulations made a progress standard
"We actually established a standard last fall," he said. "And in order to keep our funding we must abide by it in awarding."
For example, Rogers said, a student who wanted to keep a financial award for a second semester, after he had completed his first semester of college, would have to 24 credit hours with a grade point average of 1.30.
ROGERS SAID the standard included both completing a minimum number of credits with a minimum grade point and passing a minimum number of semesters a student had completed.
The minimum grade point average for award renewal was raised last fall one grade point from 1.0 to 2.0 over ten semesters.
"It isn't a hard standard to achieve," he said. "So very few students at KU aren't able to abide by it. And therefore, very few are considered on appeal."
Rogers said those students who have lost their awards could appeal in writing.
"WE HAVE A committee of three persons from this office who do check the appeals," be said. "And usually the only exceptions are for students who have qualified extremely extinguishing circumstances."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"We're working on just how to handle the situation now," Rogers said. "It doesn't seem fair that one student who just sits the semester out can come back and get an award, when a student who might have tried to finance his own way through the course because he had lost his奖 and not completed the standard, might not get an award."
Rogers said although not many students lost awards because they could not obtain the standard, problems with students were evident. Rogers went to school for a semester had occurred.
Police Beat
RURGLARY
Lawrence police said $1,600 in cash was stolen from a locked safe at Bucky's D
2120 W. Ninth St., earl Sunday.
The police said employees told them that the money had been placed in a lock about midnight Saturday.
The theft was discovered Sunday morning when the assistant manager arrived, the police said. The safe was locked but the money was gone, accordian-like.
The police said several employees knew the combination to the safe AUTO TOEFT
The police said the car was taken between 2 and 3 p.m. Saturday.
Lawrence police said a 1977 Chrysler, valued at $8,300, was stolen Saturday parking lot at the Congo Bar, 529 N. Third St.
The ignition system was apparently tampered with while the car was left unlock parking lot.
Harris statement is valid
James Paddock, Judge County District Court judge, ruled yesterday that an alleged murder confession given to law enforcement, Harris 26, Denervy will not be suppressed.
Harris is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the November 1977 slaying of Sam Norwood, former head coach of W. Woolworth Co. store, 911 Massachusetts.
Harris' defense attorney, Dennis Prater, had filed a motion alleging that Harris was coerced into giving a confession to three law firms and was transported to Kansas from Denver.
Paddock ruled that the confess valid because no coercive act taken in the car, because hari was responsible because Harris knownly waived counsel while being questioned. In Douglas County District Court in Douglas County District Court
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Greenwild she thinks West Coast designers offer a line of clothes that represents a more casual, relaxed and youthful style of material and a vividness in color.
"Both the East Coast and the West are thinking along the same fashion lines this spring," she said. "But in California, we design clothes with a fresher, more modern aesthetic." Our attitude toward designing fabrics on all-to-the-fire lifebite here."
"In New York, everything has to match and coordinate," she says. "They're more worried about creating the correct three-piece ensemble there."
She argues that fashion ideas can be differentiated on the basis of which coast they hall from.
She calls New York designers conservative and gives California designers the credit for coming out with bright, bold colors.
"We first took the chance with the bright colors. We didn't think they were anything unusual, but in New York, it was bit more scary of a venture."
Terrence O'Neil, a designer for Gant Fashionists Inc. in New York, defends what Greenwald refers to as the conservatism of New York designers. East Coast designers, he says, don't have the ability to use color as do California.
"We have to deal with a heavy winter season. It's all sun and warm weather in California. Anyway, in the East, people usually prefer deep, earthy toes."
O'Nell suggests that this outlook is changing with the coming of spring. Designers from the East are starting to use bright colors in their work, he says, but they are not the only distinguishing factor between East and West Coast designers.
"The difference is that the East looks toward tailored styles while the West is more relaxed." he said.
Lee MoCGoff, buyer-owner of Britches Corner, 843 Massachusetts St., calls designs from the West Coast more "dress-down and funky." He agrees with Greenwald that East Coast designers tend to be more conservative.
McGuffey buys fashions from such East Coast designers as Yves St. Laurent, Regina Porter, Calvin Klein, John Henry and Gant. From the West Coast, he picks up clothes from designers the far-out designer clothes that we get including Clovis Ruffin and Norman Todd.
"If you look at the clothes in these lines, you can really tell the difference between coasts," he says. "Bright colors are more evident in fashions from the West Coast. Most designers from the East don't use the look as much. Calvin
Sarah Ferguson
A LITTLE WARNER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
Vol.89,No.124
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
County working on reappraisal
See story page six
Tape policy is requested by Shankel
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said yesterday that he had asked the
University Senate executive committee to
conduct a review of demonstrations at the University of Kansas.
The action came in response to converse surrounding the videodak by KU Press.
Shankel said he had met with several faculty members of SenEx yesterday morning to review plans that had been made to tape a rally on campus yesterday.
The rally was in support of the Egyptian-turkish peace treaty, KU police monitoring the rally had videotaped equipment available to the police. The police were peaceful, Mike Hill, KU chief of police, said.
Last week, KU police taped two protest marches against the signing of the peace treaty and a rally protesting South African anti-corruption by the KU Endowment Association.
A KU student was arrested in one of the treaty marches, but KU police said the
Binns, Francisco, Schumm win
By SHIRLEY SHOUP and TAMMI HARBERT Staff Reporters
Staff Reporters
In a close election that attracted few voters yesterday, Donald Binns, Marcel Francisco and Robert Schumm won seats on the Lawrence City Commission.
Biins, the only incumbent, won the most votes, 3,666. Francisco came in second with 3,800 and Schummein in third with 3,296. Jack Landtrech received 3,172 votes and Florence "Danny" Drury had 3,163 to trail the group.
Although poor weather might have kept some voters at home, Delbert Mattia, county clerk, the absence of issues probably caused the low turnout.
This year's voter turnout was 6,450. There were 27,080 eligible voters in the city.
Four of the candidates congratulated or consoled one another at the Douglas rally, and three others came in. Bims was at the weekly city commission meeting as the totals were
BINNS AND Francisco will serve four-year terms and Schumm will serve a two-year term
Schumm said the redevelopment of the downtown business district was his highest priority.
THERE WERE 224 votes separating Schumm and Landreth, the largest margin between any of the candidates. Landreth said he thought he lost votes because of his
refusal to take a stand concerning the shopping mall.
"My gut feeling is that this is a vote against the mail," he said. "I'm sure that hurt me in the neighborhoods downstown."
Drury trailed Landreth by nine votes.
Despite her loss, she was pleased with one — out of the election: Francisco's win.
"I I'm pleased that Marci got in," she said. "They are all good candidates. I think either way the voters couldn't have lost."
In the school board election for Unified School District 497, four candidates won four-year terms. The three highest votegetters were incumbents.
Juliack Hade led the race with 4,803 votes. Charles Oldfather was second with 4,772 and Martha Masston was third with 4,289.
The newcomer to the school board was Mary Lou Wright, who garnered 4,165 votes.
Ronald Schmidt lost with 3.972.
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Klein, for example, sticks to earth tones and neutral colors."
Kathy Harms, area manager for Carousel, 711 W. 23d St., agrees that differences between East and West Coast designers are apparent.
She calls the East Coast designs more sophisticated and the West Coast designs trendy.
Reinforcing Greenwald's belief that West Coast designers represent a casual, relaxed lifestyle. Harm says buyers for Carousel order items such as swimsuits, playwear and sporty designer clothes from California.
She adds that most of Carousel's designer clothes come from New York. Fashions from that city seem to appeal more to Lawrence women, she says.
T Rasing, a buyer for Calamity James,
2112-CW 25th St., she says like fashions from the West Coast better than those from the East because they tend to be somewhat far out and different
"People in Lawrence are more conservative than people from the East and West Coasts," she said. "If we buy the conservative designer clothes from the East, we're usually not too far away. It's time. It only when we buy behind."
"I personally don't want to have a big name on the back of my jeans," she said. "If a woman is very self-assured, her name doesn't mean anything to her."
Rasing, who says another buyer for [Cont. next page]
She says she tries to buy clothes that will help women achieve a sense of individuality, which may explain why you don't carry Calvin Klein jeans in her store.
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seat on the Lawrence City Commission, Donald Binns and Robert Sebumm won the two contested seats on the five member commission.
hopeful's campaign
public appearances and had no other nses, so the money was used for the ad Journal-World.
ger Martin, assistant instructor of sish at KU and another Roberts sup.r, said, "Roberts is very concerned Lawrence. He cares."
POKESHAM IN THE advertising riment at the Journal-World said column inch of advertising space The Roberts ad, 40 column inches, 1120.
luded in the ad were endorsements toberts, a fictional person, by four nbs whose names correspond to 22 nbs in the Lawrence area.
ve Nelson said in the ad, "I know in and Emily (Martin's wife) are rmed. They're active. They are a real or Lawrence."
The phone book lists six Robert Johnsons.
Robert Johnson said in the ad. "I know he'll promote Lawrence for us."
THERE ARE FOUR Dave Nelson
Listed in the Lawrence phone book.
Paul Miller was more specific in his endorsement, "Martin is especially interested in good parks and recreation."
Five Paul Millers are listed in the phone book.
Georgia Barker said in the ad, "He's running because he wants to provide efficient government." The phone book lists seven different Barkers.
If Roberts had appealed to enough voters to win a seat on the commission, he would probably have had to decline. Miller said that his campaign prohibits him from being in town.
arn complexities ive procedures
, Draz said he was not happy about a penalty bill that Hein sponsored. He honored him by sponsoring the bill because his students strongly favored the deathy, even though he was personally led to it.
'L SEVEN OF his interns were against sath penalty and we couldn't believe he introduced the bill,' Draz said.
d he is responsible both to his conits and to himself. I can understand aition."
ach, Tozer's boss, also was involved tough issue.
such drew up the House Appointment Committee's map for the as County area. House Republicans changed the map, which may deprive Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, of hisional KU student support.
- attitude is that what the Republicans are perfectly legal even though they student vote. "Toner sand." "But the computer screen is dusty," so it was a political trade-off."
UNA MAHONEY, Overland Park who works for State Rep. William n, R-Topoka, is doing a computer another aspect of politics—g
"We'll see if senators and representatives who represent the same areas vote the same," she said. "If they don't, we'll see if their vote was influenced by lobbyists.
"It's really weird the way lobbyists work," she said. "They'll go into a legislator's office and ask him if he supports liquor by the drink, for instance. If he says yes, they write him a check for $50 and leave.
"Some people could end up supporting it even though they're from conservative districts."
"For example," she said, "The Committee for Respondible Government" represents the Kansas Wine and Spirits Wholesalers Association.
Mahoney said names of lobbying groups sometimes were misleading to voters.
"A lot of people vote the way the lobbyists want," she said.
Mahoney said she thought most legislators were hardworking and concerned.
Draz and Scott Richardson, a Wichita senior working for State Rep. Mike Meacham, R-Wichita, also said they were impressed with state legislators.
"All representatives do things to help their constituents and not just to get reelection."
8
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: A PRO-PEACE RALLY will be in front of Strong Hall at noon. CLARENCE KELLEY, former FBI director, will speak at 12:30 in 103 New Green Hall, sponsored by the Student Bar Association. THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
*TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE is available from 6 to 10 in the legal aid office at New Green Hall, sponsored by the law student division of the American Bar Association. A FRENCH AND ITALIAN PROGRAM and dinner will be at 6:30 in the Forum Room, sponsored by the American Legal Aid Foundation and the Forum Room. A PALESTINIAN JOURNALIST, Hassan Ksaif, will speak in the Jayhawk Room of the Union at 7, sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students. The COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 in the Oread Room of the Union. The ECOLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Union with guest speaker Rachel McGarry, sponsored by the International Recital Hall. LA SAGMA SEGMA will meet at 9:25 in the International Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: The KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson. A TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION introductory lecture sponsored by KU's Students International Meditation Society will be at 8 p.m. in Parlor A of the LEON FLIESHER International Meditation Center. At 9:30 p.m. in Parlor B of the THOMAS will speak on "Physical Fitness and Living" at 11:45 p.m. at the ECM Center, 1204 Oread. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parloors B and C of the Union. The KU GO CLUB will meet at Cork 2 of the Union at 7 John David, trumpeter, will meet at 8 in Swarthout Rectangular Hall. THOMAS SERGEK from Indiana University will present a lecture sponsored by the Center for Humanities School at 8 in the Room Forum.
Voters go to polls today
The polls opened at 7 this morning for Lawrence voters to decide who will fill three seats on the city commission and three seats on the board in Unified School District No. 497.
Polls will remain open until 7 tonight.
Five candidates are facing for three seats in both races.
City commission candidates are Donald Binns, 1402 E. Glenn Drive; Florence "Danny" Drury, 1496 Marvonne Rd.; Marc Francisco, 1404 Ohio St.; Jack Landreth, 1709 St. Andrews Dr.; and Robert Schumm, 1920 St. Andrews Drive.
School board candidates are Julie Hack,
216 Massachusetts St. - Matthias Masstijn.
217 Columbia St. - Jennifer Jenkins.
Route 5: Ronald Schroer, 2414 Layzbrook
Lane and Mary Louise Wright, 1734 Illinois
The city and county did not hold a primary earlier because of the low number of candidates. A primary would have been required than six candidates had filed for each race.
Anyone who registered to vote in an earlier election and has not moved is免责
By LESLIE GUILD
5,000 students file for aid
About 5,000 KU students filled Family Financial Statements and have applied for financial aid for next year. Jerry Rogers, director of Financial Aid, said yesterday.
Staff Reporter
Although the office of Financial Aid has received notification of only 4,700 processed applications, Rogers said he had not personally number who applied would be about 5,000.
"Some students who did apply have not yet been totaled in the number of processed applications that have been reported to our office." Roers said.
Hogers speculated the delay was because some students' applications were submitted early (before Iowa City, Iowa, until after Feb. 27, when the number of KU students who had filled out their applications)
Rogers said students who filed applications were being sent their processed resume to KU financial and office also received a comprehensive list of the need analysis of KU students who filled financial applications budget of aid available at KU to award.
"We have to get information from high school seniors and from transfer students before making awards," he said. "And for students returning to KU we have to get spring grades. So, it's likely awards won't be received." The spring semester grades are not posted."
ROGERS SAID even though the office had received the comprehensive listings, financial awards to KU students would not be made until June.
Rogers said the length of time between receiving the financial statements and
making awards was improving because of "automated help."
"This year, through the office of admissions and records, we're able to list data about applicants on a word processor. Students available much more conveniently."
ROGERS SAID the magnetic tape used in the word processor could condense student data, which could be "drawn out" from it, than by looking at each individual's file.
Rogers said a preliminary need analysis also was made by KU.
"There's a fantastic number of hours in background work that goes into making the awards," he said. "And part of that is determining each student's need, which done by looking at his file and making a preliminary need analysis.
"We also have to code students by their high school, county and major because some awards have requirements such as the highest grade of student from particular areas of the state."
Rogers said the student financial aid report was used by some students to find
errors they might have made when originally completing it.
Rogers said a student could file a corrected form for $3.
"This shows them the figures that were used to calculate their original financial need statement," he said. "By this a student can double check to see if any information supplied by him was misunderstood or misread."
"Most mistakes made concern tax information that was reported incorrectly," 20ers said.
Standard for aid strict
Although obtaining a financial award might seem like a big hassel, keeping it
KU recently has formulated a statement of "reasonable progress," to be used to determine re-awarding of federal financial aid, the director of financial aid, said yesterday.
"We actually established a standard last tah," he said. "And in order to keep our territory intact, we have to do something."
Rogers said federal government regulations made a progress standard曼国
The programs include National Direct Student Loans, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, College Work-Study, Health Professions Student Loans, Law and Legal Education, Basic Educational Opportunity Grants and the Guaranteed Student Loan Programs.
ROGERS SAID the standard included both completing a minimum number of credits with a minimum grade point of 2.0, and completing a minimum number of semesters a student had completed.
For example, Rogers said, a student who wanted to keep a financial award for a semester would have to have his first semester of college, would have to have 24 credit hours with a grade point average.
The minimum grade point average for award renewal was raised last fall one grade point from 1.0 to 2.0 over ten semesters.
"It's not a hard standard to achieve," he said. "So very few students at KU aren't able to abide by ft. And therefore, very few are considered on appeal."
"WE HAVE A committee of three persons from this office who do check the appeals," he said. "And usually the only exceptions are for students who have qualified extremely extinguish circumstances."
Rogers said those students who have lost their awards could appeal in writing.
"We're working on just how to handle the situation now," Rogers said. "It doesn't seem fair that one student who just sits the semester out can come back and get an award, when a student who might have been admitted as a semester, because he had lost his award and not completed the standard, might not get an award."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Rogers said although not many students lost awards because they could not obtain the standard, problems with students were a major obstacle in building school for a semester had occurred.
Police Beat
BURGLARY
Lawrence police said $1,600 in cash was stolen from a locked safe at Bucky's D
2120 W. Ninth St., early Sunday.
The police said employees told them that the money had been placed in a lock about midnight Saturday.
The theft was discovered Sunday morning when the assistant manager arrri-
work, the police said. The safe was locked but the money was gone, accordin-
ing to the police.
The police said several employees knew the combination to the safe AUTOHEFT
Lawrence police said a 1977 Chrysler, valued at $8,300, was stolen Saturday parking lot at the Congo Bar, 520 N. Third St.
The police said the car was taken between 2 and 3 p.m. Saturday.
The ignition system was apparently tampered with while the car was left unlock parking lot.
Harris statement is valid
James Paddock, Douglas County District Court judge, ruled yesterday that an alleged murder confession given to law enforcement, Harper's 36, Denver, will not be suppressed.
Harris is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the November 1777 slaying of Sam Norwood, former W. Woodstock Co. store, 911 Massachusetts.
Harris' defense attorney, Dennis Prater, had filed a motion alleging that Harris was coerced into giving a confession to three law cases in Kansas. He said he being transported to Kansas from Denver.
Paddock rucked that the cones valid because no coercive act taken in the car, because Hari took a knee and was violated because Harris knownly waived to counsel while being questioned. He was sentenced in Douglas County District Court.
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As least one Lawrence clothes buyer says she thinks the differences between East Coast and West Coast fashions are minimal.
"Some West Coast designers can be just as sophisticated, but they tend to be younger and newer to the business," she said.
Calamity James tends to order a more conservative line of clothes than she does, agrees with Harms that New York has a more sophisticated look in clothes.
"We get lines from both coasts," she said. "What we get seems to be pretty much the same. Pants from New York are about the same as pants from
Sue Ann Bradford, bruider for Clothes Encounter, 2449- GH Iowa st. , says it is sometimes difficult to distinguish any difference in fashions from the two coasts.
California--narrow. In California, they offer a lot of lightweight fabric because it's California."
McGivens he thinks Kansas women are 'up' on most fashion, but take it farther.
"She'll accept change in fashions more easily in the Calvin Klein or Halston lines--that is the lines that are usually more tailored and from the East-than she'll accept change in the more trendy looks from the West," he said.
Harms also says she thinks that Kansas women know the current fashion scene, but that they are afraid to buy until certain looks have gained acceptance. Advocacy women are about six months later, the high fashion looks of the coasts.
"It takes at least that long to change the ideas people have here," she said.
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A LITTLE WARNER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas Vol.89, No.124
Wednesday, April 4. 1979
County working on reappraisal
See story page six
Tape policy is requested by Shankel
Staff Reporter
By JOHN LOGAN
Staff Reporter
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said yesterday that he had asked the
University Senate executive committee to
conduct a study of demonstrations at the University of Kansas.
The action came in response to controversy surrounding the videotaping by KUIP.
Shankel said he had met with several faculty members of SenEx yesterday morning to review plans that had been made to tape a rally on campus yesterday.
The rally was in support of the Egyptian-Iraeli peace treaty. KU police monitoring the rally had videotape equipment available and were able to verify the peaceful, Mkıhl Kılı, KU cplt (of police), said.
Last week, KU police taped two protest marches against the signing of the peace treaty and a rally protesting South African independence by the KU Endowment Association.
A KU student was arrested in one of the treaties matters, but KU police said the
Binns, Francisco, Schumm win
By SHIRLEY SHOUP and TAMMI HARBERT
Staff Reporters
In a close election that attracted few voters yesterday, Donald Bins, Marci Francisco and Robert Schumm won seats on the Lawrence City Commission.
Bins, the only incumbent, won the most
bins, 3,366. Francisco came in second with
3,354 bins. Jeff Garnett received 3,396.
Jack Landreth received 3,172 votes and
Florence "Danny" Drury had 3,163 to
1.
Although poor weather might have kept some voters at home, Delbert Matina, county clerk, said the absence of issues probably caused the low turnout.
This year's voter turnout was 6,450. There were 27,080 eligible voters in the city.
Four of the candidates congratulated or consolled one another at the Douglas High School in Innisfort where they came in. Binns was at the weekly city commission meeting as the totals were
BINNS AND Francisco will serve four
year terms and Schumm will serve a two
year term.
Schulman said the redevelopment of the downtown business district was his highest priority.
THEERE WERE 224 votes separating Schumm and Landreth, the largest margin between any of the candidates. Landreth said he thought he lost votes because of his
refusal to take a stand concerning the shopping mall.
"My gut feeling is that this is a vote against the mall," he said. "I sure that hurt me in the neighborhoods downtown."
Drai trailed Landreth by nine votes. Despite her loss, she was pleased with one result of the election: Francis's win.
"I'm pleased that Marci got in," she said. "They are all good candidates. I think either way the voters couldn't have lost."
In the school board election for Unified School District 497, four candidates won four-year terms. The three highest vote-getters were incumbents.
Juliack Held the race with 4,835 votes,
Charles Older father was second with 4,772
and Martha Masinton was third with 4,289
The newcomer to the school board was Mary Lou Wright, who garnered 4,165 votes.
Ronald Schmidt lost with 3.972.
10
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seat on the Lawrence City Commission. Donald Bims and Robert Schumm won the two contested seats on the five member commission.
Staff photo by STEPHEN SPECTOR
hopeful's campaign
ublic appearances and had no other inses, so the money was used for the ad e Journal-World.
iger Martin, assistant instructor of isher at KU and another Roberts sup. said, "Roberts is very concerned Lawrence Heares!"
POKESMAN IN THE advertising,
artment at the Journal-World said
a column inch of advertising space
The Roberts ad, 40 column inches,
$120
ve Nelson said in the ad, "I know in and Emily (Martin's wife) are armed. They're active. They are a real 'or' Lawrence."
luded in the ad were endorsements
toberts, a fictional person, by four
ans whose names correspond to 22
ans in the Lawrence area.
Robert Johnson said in the ad, "I know he'll promote Lawrence for us."
THERE ARE FOUR Dave Nelsons listed in the Lawrence phone book.
The phone book lists six Robert Johnsons.
Paul Miller was more specific in his endorsement, "Martin is especially interested in good parks and recreation."
Five Paul Millers are listed in the phone book.
Georgia Barker said in the ad, "He's running because he wants to provide efficient government." The phone book lists seven different Barkers.
If Roberts had appealed to enough voters to win a seat on the commission, he would probably have had to decline. Miller would have prohibited the defense probes from being in town.
arn complexitiesive procedures
was exciting to breathe new life into ill," Draz said.
t Draz said he was not happy about a penalty bill that Hein sponsored. Hein he sponsored the bill because his students strongly favored the death, even though he was personally sed to it.
LI SEVEN OF his interns were against each penalty and we couldn't believe we introduced the bill, "Drax said.
it he is responsible both to his commits and to himself. I can understand sition."
each, Tozer's boss, also was involved
· tough issue.
each drew up the House Appartment Committee's map for the县 County area. House Republicans changed the map, which may deprive Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, of his initial KU student support.
y attitude is that what the Republicans as perfectly legal even though they be student voice, "Tozer said" But the president told us that it was a political trade-off," ms, so it was a political trade-off."
AUNA MAHONEY, Overland Park who works for State Rep. William m. R-Topke is doing a computer another aspect of politics—ang
"We'll see if senators and representatives who represent the same areas vote the same," she said. "If they don't, we'll see if their vote was influenced by lobbyists."
“It’s really weird the way lobbybys work,” she said. “They’ll go into a legislator’s office and ask him if he supports liquor by the drink, for instance. If he says yes, they write him a check for $50 and leave.
"Some people could end up supporting it even though they're from conservative areas."
Mahoney said names of lobbying groups sometimes were misleading to voters.
"For example," she said, "The Committee for Responsible Government" represents the Kansas Wine and Spirits Wholesalers Association.
"A lot of people vote the way the lobbyists want," she said.
Mahoney said she thought most legislators were hardworking and con-
Draz and Scott Richardson, a Wichita senior working for State Rep. Mike Meacham, R-Wichita, also said they were impressed with state legislators.
"All representatives do things to help their constituents and not just to get reelected."
8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 3, 1979
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: A PRO-PEACE RALLY will be in front of Strong Hall at noon. CLARENCE KELLEY, former FBI director, will speak at 12:30 in New Green Hall, sponsored by the Student Bar Association. The COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE is available from 6 to 8 in the legal aid office at New Green Hall, sponsored by the law student division of the American Bar Association. A FRENCH AND ITALIAN PROGRAM and dinner will be @ 6:30 in the Big Eight Room of the Union, The Hall of History, sponsored by the International JOURNALIST, Husson Kauff, will speak in the Jayhawk Room of the Union at 7, sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students. The COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 in the Oread Room of the Union. The ECLOGY CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Union with guest speaker Diana Coffey, sponsored by the International Residential Hall. The AMARA WORKSHOP will meet at 9:30 in the International Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: The KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson. A TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION introductory lecture sponsored by Ku's Students International Meditation Society will be at 8 p.m. in Parler A of the Union, LEON FLEISHER will conduct a fine arts master class on "The Art of Mindfulness" at Fitness and Living" $A$ 14:14 a.m. at the ECM Center, 1204 Oread. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlers B and C of the Union. The KU GO CLUB will meet in Cork 2 of the Union at 7 John David, trumpeter, will give a STUDENT RECITAL at 8 in Saworthen Recital Hall. THOMAS SERBEK from THE MUSEUM presents a present at a lecture sponsored for the Humanistic Studies 6 in the Forum Room.
Voters go to polls today
Polls will remain open until 7 tonight.
The polls opened at 7 this morning for Lawrence votes to decide who will fill three seats on the city commission and three seats on the school board in Unified School District.
Posts with Peminah golf clubs.
Peminah addresses are vying for three seats in both races.
City commission candidates are Donald Binns, 1402 E. Greenv Drive; Florence "Danny" Drury, 1496 Marvonne Rd.; Mari Francisco, 1404 Ohio St.; Jack Landreth, 1709 St. Andrews Dr.; and Robert Schumun, 1920 St. Andrews Drive.
School board candidates are Jule Hack,
2216 Massachusetts St.; Martha Maston,
709 Mississippi St.; Charles Oldfather,
Route 5; Ronald Schmidt, 2414 Lazybock
Lane; and Mary Louise Wright, 1734 Illinois
St.
The city and county did not hold a primary earlier because of the low number of candidates. A primary would have been held in nine districts, six candidates had filed for each race.
Anyone who registered to vote in an earlier election and has not moved is elicited.
5,000 students file for aid
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
About 5,000 KU students filed Family Financial Statements and have applied for financial aid for next year, Jerry Rogers, director of Financial Aid, said yesterday.
Although the office of Financial Aid has received notification of only 4,700 processed applications, Rogers said he is confident that number who applied would be about 5,000.
"Some students who did apply have not yet been totaled in the number of processed applications that have been reported to our office." Roers said.
Rogers speculated the delay was because some students' applications were not received at the processing center in Iowa City, Iowa, until after Feb. 27, when the numbers of KU students who had filed were totaled.
"We have to get information from high school seniors and from transfer students before making awards," he said. "And for students returning to KU we have to get spring grades. So, it's likely awards won't be as good as the spring semester grades are nested."
Rogers said students who filed applications were being sent their processed resumes to the KU financial aid office also received a comprehensive list of the need analysis of KU students who filed financial applications and budget of aid available at KU to award.
ROGERS SAID even though the office had received the comprehensive listings, financial awards to KU students would not be made until June.
Rogers said the length of time between receiving the financial statements and
"This year, through the office of admissions and records, we're able to list data about applicants on a word processor. Students available from our office students available much more conveniently."
ROGERS AS the magnetic tape used in the word processor could condense student data, which could be "drawn out" by being looked at each individual's file.
making awards was improving because of "automated help."
Rogers said a preliminary need analysis also was made by KU.
"There is a fantastic number of hours in background work that goes into making the awards," he said. "And part of that is determining each student's need, which is done by looking at his file and making a preliminary need analysis.
"We also have to code students by their high school, county and major because some awards require such an emphasis as students from particular areas of the state."
Rogers said the student financial aid report was used by some students to find
errors they might have made when originally completing it.
"This shows them the figures that were used to calculate their original financial need statement," he said. "By this a student can double check to see if any information supplied by him was misunderstood or misread."
Rogers said a student could file a corrected form for $3.
"Most mistakes made concern tax information that was reported incorrectly," Rogers said.
Standard for aid strict
Although obtaining a financial award might seem like a big hassle, keeping it
KU recently has formulated a statement of "reasonable progress," to be used to determine re-awarding of federal financial aid for workers and director of financial aid, said yesterday.
The programs include National Direct Student Loans, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, College Work-Study, Health Professions Student Loans, Law Enforcement Educational Loans, Basic Education Programs and the Guaranteed Student Loan Programs.
"We actually established a standard last fall," he said. "And in order to keep our hands off, we had to close the door."
Rogers said federal government regulations made a progress standard
ROGERS SAID the standard included both completing a minimum number of credits with a minimum grade point or passing all required course number of semesters a student had completed.
For example, Rogers said, a student who wanted to keep a financial award for a second semester, after he had completed his first semester of college, would have to have 24 credit hours with a grade point average of 1.30.
The minimum grade point average for award renewal was raised last fall one grade point from 1.0 to 2.0 over ten semesters.
"It's not a hard standard to achieve," he said. "So very few students at KU aren't able to abide by it. And therefore, very few are considered on appeal."
Rogers said those students who have lost their awards could appeal in writing.
"WE HAVE A committee of three persons from this office who do check the appeals," he said. "And usually the only exceptions are for students who have qualified extremely extinguish circumstances."
Rogers said although not many students lost awards because they could not obtain the standard, problems with students made it difficult to win the school for a semester had occurred
"We're working on just how to handle the situation now," Rogers said. "It doesn't seem fair that one student who just sits the semester out can come back and get an award, when a student who might finance his own way through a semester, because he had just his award and not completed the standard, might not get an award."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Police Beat
RURCLARV
Lawrence police said $1,600 in cash was stolen from a locked safe at Bucky's D 2120 W. Ninth St., early Sunday.
The police said employees told them that the money had been placed in a lock about midnight Saturday.
The theft was discovered Sunday morning when the assistant manager arrri-
work, the police said. The safe was locked but the money was gone, accordin-
d with the police report.
The police said several employees knew the combination to the safe ATTEMPT.
Lawrence police said a 1977 Chrysler, valued at $8,300, was stolen Saturday parking lot at the Conpo Bar, 529 N. Third St.
The police said the car was taken between 2 and 3 p.m. Saturday.
The ignition system was apparently tampered with while the car was left unlock parking lot.
Harris statement is valid
James Paddock, Duke District Court judge, ruled yesterday that an alleged murder confession given to law enforcement, Harris, 26, will not be suppressed.
Harris is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the November 1777 slaying of Sam Norwood, former W. Woolworth Co. store, 911 Massachusetts.
Harris' defense attorney, Dennis Prater, had filed a motion alleging that Harris was coerced into giving a confession to three law officers in Kansas and being transported to Kansas from Denver.
Paddock ruled that the confess valid because no coercive act taken in the car, because her bump was causing her because Harris knowingly waived to counsel while being questioned. Harris 'trial is scheduled to beg
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Formal designs cling, shimmer
By RHONDA HOLMAN Staff Reporter
Local merchants and students say dress outfits that are more comfortable, practical and stylish are becoming the popular attire for spring formalms.
Slinky dresses, flash pants outfits and three-piece suits appear to be replacing the frilly, long gowns and tuxedos that are common at formal affairs on the Hill.
Susie Wimer, Overland Park sophomore, said the women in her sorority were choosing dresses in bare styles that had either a shawl or a matching jacket. Lengths are usually just below the knee or to the floor. Wimer said the dresses often had low-cut necklines and were made of a clingy knit material that hung close to the body.
She also said women were wearing straight-legged pants in shiny satin and
TARA PLEASANT
either a long tunic blouse or a matching jacket on formal occasions.
"I think the trend is going more toward comfort, and the everyday style of pants is carrying over to the formal wear," Wimer said.
Employees at six women's apparel shops in Lawrence said many dress manufacturers had stopped offering long dresses and customers had been buying fancy short dresses and pants outfits.
Ella Miller, who works at Janell's 847 Massachusetts St., said she still stocked long dresses and the most popular styles wore in clingy knits.
"Going out in Lawrence doesn't require long dresses," Miller said. "Many women are buying full-length skirts in prints that can be worn with T-shirts in the summer and with a softer blouse for dressier occasions."
Sharon McBride, who works at the
JULIA ROSS
Village Set, 922 Massachusetts St., said the new stock of tailored skirts with long slits was popular for both day and evening occasions.
Larry Stephenson, who works at Carson's clothing, 811 Massachusetts St., said his tuxedo rentals always increased in the spring. However, he said he thought the tuxedos were being used mostly for weddings and proms.
"I think men are going to three-suit suits for formal occasions." Stephen Sondheim said.
"Men are going to be seeing more of the pleated trousers and natural materials like cotton in suits," he said. "The lapels are getting narrower and so are the ties. Everything is going to a looser look. I've seen men formally dressed in a suit with the tie not quite tight to the collar.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
A LITTLE WARMER
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
Vol.89, No.124
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
County working on reappraisal
See story page six
Tape policy is requested by Shankel
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor,
said yesterday that he had asked the
University Senate executive committee to
conduct a study of institutional demonstrations at the University of Kansas.
The action came in response to controversy surrounding the videotape by JAPAN.
Shankel said he had met with several faculty members of SenEx yesterday morning to review plans that had been made to tape a rally on campus yesterday.
The rally was in support of the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty. KU police monitoring the rally had videotape equipment available to the police and that provided peaceful. Mike Hill, KU chief of police, said.
Last week, KU police taped two protest marches against the signing of the peace treaty and a rally protesting South African racism by the KU Endowment Association.
A KU student was arrested in one of the tense marches, but KU police said the attack was spontaneous.
THE TAPE OF the rally protesting South African investments was erased by police last weekend at the request of some of the protesters, HILL said. He added that any future tapes would be erased if there were no evidence of criminal activity.
However, Mike Thomas, director of KU police, said his department should not erase videotapes in the future just because students wanted the tapes erased.
Last week was the first time KU police videotaped a protest, Hill said.
SHANKEL SAID the said system had been purchased so that police could identify protesters violating the law and use them as a weapon. The protesters also are used in training KU policy.
Shankel said he supported the use of the IDEadapting equipment if it were closely matched.
"We ought to use it when criminal activities are taking place." Shunkel said.
Shankel said he did not see any potential for abuse of the videotapes if careful guidelines were developed, but SenXe had mixed reactions to his proposal.
Evelyn Swartz, chairman of SenEx, said that although she thought the taping did not violate personal rights, she questioned whether it was the best method of identifying lawbreakers.
"THEERE A **L** aot of peripheral issues involved here as well," Swartz said. "There are questions about what would happen to the tapes, who would decide how they would be used and whether everyone knows the taping is taking place."
"The whole thing needs to be investigated."
But Don Marquis, associate professor of philosophy, defended the use of video tapes.
"I don't see any objections to it," Marquas said. "It isn't a matter of violating a person's right to privacy. A demonstration is a public occurrence.
"If people are free to watch it, then I suppose they are free to take it if they are."
Binns. Francisco. Schumm win
BY SHIRLEY SHOUP and TAMMI HARBERT
Staff Reporters
In a close election that attracted few voters yesterday, Donald Binns, Marci Francisco and Robert Schumm won seats on the Lawrence City Commission.
Bimis, the only incumbent, won the most votes, 3,666. Francona came in second with 3,598. Meyer was tied with 3,396. Landry Betendreth received 3,172 votes and Florence "Danny" Drury had 3,163 to 3,145.
Although poor weather might have kept some voters at home, Delbert Mathina, county clerk, the absence of issues probably caused the low turnout.
This year's voter turnout was 6,450.
There were 27,680 eligible voters in the
state.
Four of the candidates congratulated or consoled one another at the Douglas County Courthouse as the final returns came in. Binns was at the weekly city commission meeting as the totals were announced.
BINNS AND Francisco will serve four-year terms and Schumm will serve a two-year term.
"I tried to run a people campaign," he said.
Bimms, the leading vote-getter, usually takes conservative stands on issues. He said he was proud he had won the election and supported him on campaigning than the other candidates.
He said he thought his opposition to a proposed shopping mall south of town might have cost him a few votes, but that his incumbency gave him an advantage.
Bimbs said his priorities for the coming term included restoring city limits' confinement to buildings, putting city hall and Clinton Parkway, which extends west from the intersection of Main Street and Michigan Avenue.
FRANCISCO, WHO trained Binsy by 86 votes, said she thought she won because she had a broad range of support from different groups.
"I think maybe I won because I did a lot of different things." she said.
Francisco, who promised to quit one her jobs if elected, said she would continue to work for KU Architectural Services, but not teach at the University next year.
To fill another campaign promise, she plans to spend every Tuesday at city hall. She said her campaign was not geared toward capturing the student vote.
"I think this was very much a city election," she said. "I was running as a candidate of the city."
SHE SAID SHE thought that her opposition to the shopping mall was won by a group of students in the Oread Neighborhood Association had helped win support from the neigh-
He resigned Monday as director of the Downtown Lawrence Association but remains a member of the Chamber of Commerce.
Schumm, who came in third, said he thought his appeal to the average voter won the election for him. He is the owner of four downtown restaurants.
"I resigned simply so there wouldn't be any kind of conflict of interest," he said.
Schumm said the redevelopment of the downtown business district was his highest priority.
THEER. WERE 212 votes separating Schumm and Landreth, the largest margin between any of the candidates. Landreth said he thought he lost votes because of his
refusal to take a stand concerning the shopping mall.
My gut feeling is that this is a tita against the mail, he said. "I sure that man should have done it," Drury trailed Landretch by nine votes. Despite her loss, she was pleased with one woman's reaction.
"I'm pleased that Marci got in," she said. "They are all good candidates. I think either the voters couldn't have lost."
In the school board election for Unified School District 497, four candidates won four-year terms. The three highest votee-gente were incumbents.
Julie Hock led the race with 4,833 votes. Charles Oldfather was second with 4,772, and Martha Masstин was third with 4,269.
The newcomer to the school board was Mary Lou Wright, who garnered 4,165 votes.
Francesca
Ronald Schmidt lost with 3.972
Staff photo by STEPHEN SPECTOR
Victory smile
a seat on the Lawrence City Commission. Donald Bimbs and Robert Schumm won the other two contested seats on the five member commission.
A happy Marcel Francisco blows a kiss to one of her supporters last night after winning
Mystery shrouds write-in hopeful's campaign
Staff Renorter
By TONI WOOD
A dignified man in a business suit is pictured sitting behind his desk, working on papers. Beside the picture, a message reads: "We believe the city, the new candidate for city commission."
Roberts is a native Kansan, an experienced businessman, a City League learner play and a Methodist, according to the New York Times. April 2 Lawrence Daily Journal-World
The ad was the entirety of the Roberts campaign. In yesterday's city election, 71% of voters cast their ballots in the mission of the 450 people who voted. That was not enough to get him elected,
never had a traffic ticket, never been late in paying a bill and never had a check bounce.
He is not a registered voter in Douglas County, nor is he listed in the Lawrence city directory or the Southwestern Bell telephone book.
Along with the attributes mentioned in the ad, Roberts has never been arrested,
TIM MILLER, religious instructor at the University of Kansas and a Roberts supporter, said yesterday, "You probably had a little trouble getting hold of him.
"He's out of town quite a bit—gone a lot on business."
Out of the thousands of supporters, ten contributed money to Roberts' campaign, Miller said. However, the candidate made
no public appearances and had no other expenses, so the money was used for the ad in the Journal-World.
A SPOKESMAN in the advertising department at the Journal-World said each column inch of advertisement space for the Rodgers ad, 40 column inches, cost $13.
Roger Martin, assistant instructor of English at KU and another Roberts supporter, said, "Roberts is very concerned about Lawrence. He cares!"
Included in the ad were endorsements for Roberts, a fictional person, by four persons whose names correspond to 22 persons in the Lawrence area.
Dave Nelson said in the ad, "I know Martin and Emily (Martin's wife) are concerned. They're active. They are a real plus for Lawrence."
THERE ARE FOUR Dave Nelson
listed in the Lawrence phone book.
Robert Johnson said in the ad. "I know he 'll promote Lawrence for us."
The phone book lists six Robert Johnsons.
Paul Miller was more specific in his endorsement, "Martin is especially interested in good parks and recreation."
Five Paul Millers are listed in the phone book.
Georgia Barker said in the ad, "He's running because he wants to provide efficient government." The phone book lists seven different Barkers.
If Roberts had appealed to enough voters to win a seat on the commission, he would probably have had to decline. Miller said that Republican prohibits him from being in town.
PETER R. SCHNEIDER
Legislative learner
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
Scott Richardson, Wichita senior, is working this semester at the Topeka State Capitol as a legislative intern. Richardson does research work for State Rep. Mike Meacham. R.Wichita.
Interns learn complexities of legislative procedures
By GENE LINN Staff Reporter
After being in the thick of the legislative fray for a semester, nine KU students have mixed opinions about the Kansas Legislature's effectiveness.
"I didn't expect them to be as effective as they are," Bob Tozer, Topeka senior shoer works for State Rep. John Sibach, D-Dawrence, said. "But there are some losers up there, guys who have been there a long time and don't do much work."
Toter and the other students working as interns for the Legislature this semester receive 12 to 15 hours of political science credit from the program. Besides working in Topeka, they attend seminars and complete directed readings assignments.
During their internships, they have learned some of the parliamentary tricks of the trade necessary to secure passage of a bill.
DAVID DRAZ, Leavenworth junior who works for State Sen. Ron Hein, R-Topeka, said parliamentary maneuvering had saved the Kansas in Hein that was first killed in the Kansas Senate.
"It was exciting to breathe new life into the bill," Draz said.
But Draz said he was not happy about a death penalty bill that Hein sponsored. Hein said he sponsored the bill because his constituents strongly favored the death penalty, even though he was personally opposed to it.
The bill would have provided an income tax deduction for an artist's final product. Hein and his staff amended the bill onto a new tax deduction, and the amended bill passed the House.
"ALL SEVEN OF his interns were against the death penalty and we couldn't believe it."
"But he is responsible both to his constituents and to himself. I can understand."
Solbach, Toser's boss, also was involved with a tough issue.
SHAUAUNA MAHONEY, Overland Park junior who works for State Rep. William Bunten, R-Topke, is doing a computer another aspect of politics—lobbying.
Solbach drew up the House Apportionment Committee's map for the Douglas County area. House Republicans later changed the map, which may deprive State Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, of his traditional KU student support.
"My attitude is that what the Republicans did was perfectly legal even though they split the student vote. "Toter said. "But the governor had to accept those resident residents, so it was a political trade-off."
"We'll see if senators and representatives who represent the same areas vote the same," she said. "If they don't, we'll see if their vote was influenced by lobbyists.
"It's really weird the way lobbyists work," she said. "They'll go into a legalist's office and ask him if he supports liquor by the drink, for instance. If he says yes, they write him a check for $50 and leave."
'Some people could end up supporting it even though they're from conservative dietary advice.'
Mahoney said names of lobbying groups sometimes were misleading to voters.
"For example," she said, "'The Committee for Responsible Government' represents the Kansas Wine and Spirits Wholesaler Association.
"A lot of people vote the way the lobbyists want," she said.
Mahoney said she thought most legislators were hardworking and conscious.
Draz and Scott Richardson, a Wichita senior working for State Rep. Mike Meacham, R-Witchah, also said they were impressed with state legislators.
"All representatives do things to help the constituents and not just to get reeled for them."
2
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
University Daily Kansan
IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Bhutto's execution confirmed
KARACHI, Pakistan-Former Pakistani Prime Minister Ali Bbutto was hanged early today, the Pakistani government radio reported.
Earlier a newspaper, the Daily Jang, had reported the execution in a special edition, but the government did not confirm the hanging until hours after the execution.
Bhutto, 51, who was ousted in 1977 by the current government of President Mohammed Zulai ul-Haq, was convicted of ordering the death of a prisoner.
On March 26, a seven-day countdown before the execution of Bhutto was begun by the Zia government. On Monday, the lawyers for Bhutto's wife and daughter were told that his relatives should prepare for their last visit with the former prime minister.
On March 18, 1978, Bhutto was convicted with four security force officers on murder compcrtary charges. He appealed to the Pakistani Supreme Court for an injunction.
Bhutto refused to ask Zia for clemency, saying that do so would be an admission of guilt. He ordered his family to follow his lead.
Mayors elected in three cities
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—Incumbent Mayor Jack Reardon won his bid for a second term yesterday.
Hearden beat Patricia Sedlock, a school board member who had hoped to become the city's first woman mayor. The vote was nearly 3-1 in Reardon's
In Chicago, Democrat Jay Borne scored an overwhelming victory to become the first woman mayor of the city. In the primary, Borne had beaten the candidate, former State Representative Dana Roe.
Topekans returned mayor Bill McCormick to his fifth term and approved a pair of bond issues to construct two new schools. The bonds were made in 2013, the year the Topeka City Museum was established.
Begin, Sadat will meet again
CAIRO, Egypt — President Anwar Sadat of Egypt and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin decided yesterday to meet in the Sinai and Israel's Negev Desert.
The announcement was made just before Begin flew back to Israel, following the first journey by an Israeli prime minister to Arab capital.
Begin said that he had the feeling that he and Sadat had become friends and during their talks they had solved problems that would have taken 16 weeks.
Begin and Sadat said they would telephone President Jimmy Carter to inform him of the latest developments in the peace process, set out under the treaty framework.
The Begin-Sadat friendship has grown despite opposition to the peace treaty by Arab leaders.
The Arab League voted over the weekend to punish Egypt for signing the treaty by breaking most political and economic ties with Egypt.
Threat posed by reactor ends
HARRISBURG, Pa. A—gas bubble no longer poses any significant danger of explosion at the disabled Three Mile Island nuclear power plant, a federal offermentation facility.
However, speculation arose that the crippled reactor might have to be junked.
Harold Denton, of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, said he was not sure how long it would take to bring the reactor to a cold shutdown.
Denton said the temperature in the nuclear core remained stable at 280 degrees Fahrenheit.
Robert Bernero, an NRC decontamination expert, said that it could take as long as two years to clean up radiation in the plant, but that he thought the plant would be able to do it.
Silkwood attorneys rest case
ORKLAHOMA CITY—Attorneys for the plaintiffs in the Karen Silkwood contamination trial rested their case yesterday after Silkwood's mother and
Silkworm's sister said that Silkworm was afraid of the Kerr-MegGee Plutonium plant where she worked and that Silkworm was planning to quit her job.
Silkwood's sister, Rosemary Porter, 26, testified in federal court that she had talked on the telephone with Silkwood several times before Silkwood's death.
Porter and Silkwood had told her that she would leave her job at the Kerr-Mege公司 by early December 1974. Silkwood died Nov. 13, 1974, en route to what others have testified was a meeting to present to a New York Times reporter evidence of alleged malice control fraud at Kerr-Mege.
Silkwood's family filed an $11.5 million personal injury suit against Kerr-Metee, alleging that the company's negligence caused Silkwood to be comp
ERA survives rescission test
TOPEKA - A Kansas Senate committee yesterday rejected a resolution that would have rescinded Kansas' ratification of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment.
The resolution failed on a voice vote to pass the Kansas Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee.
State Sen. John Vermillion, R-Independence, who sponsored the resolution, said he did so to express his disapproval of the extension of the ratification
The original deadline for three-fourths of the states to ratify the amendment was March 22, but Congress extended the deadline三年。Thirty-five of the states had not been ratified.
Strike's impact called limited
WASHINGTON - Laber Secretary Ray Marshall said yesterday that a three-day old shutdown of major national trucking firms was causing only limited
He said if the strike continued, there could be severe economic disruptions across the United States. The automobile industry has been the principal victim of the strike involving companies and teamsters who haul much of the nation's general cargo shipments.
Marshall also said the government had no immediate plans to seek a court-ordered end to the labor dispute with the Teams union.
Study questions danger of pill
More than 60,000 auto workers at 18 plants were laid off or working shorter shifts yesterday because of parts blamed on the strike.
NEW YORK—New statistical studies reported yesterday questioned the validity of British studies that said women who had used oral contraceptives were more likely to have abortions.
Christopher Tietze, a biostatisticist for the Population Council and one of the authors of the study, said the risk of taking oral contraceptives was affected by age.
The authors of the new study, however, said that their findings did not mean the risk associated with the use of oral contraceptives, but that the risk had been reduced.
He said the results showed the number of deaths from cardiovascular disease in men and women aged 15-44 from 1950 to 1978.
He said the results showed the numbers of deaths from cardiovascular diseases among women had declined much more rapidly than had rates for men.
this contradicts a 1977 British study by the Royal College of General Practitioners who found that oral contraceptives were more susceptible to cardiovascular diseases than other methods.
Weather...
Snow will end in the morning and it should be sunny and warmer by this afternoon. Temperatures will be in the high 45s, according to the National Weather Service.
TOPEKA (AP) - A resolution calling for creation of a special legislative committee to investigate the safety of the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant now under construction near Burlington was introduced yesterday in the Kansas Senate.
Wolf Creek inquiry possible
If both houses adopted the resolution, the Legislative Coordination Council, which handles legislative business when the full Senate is not present, would be authorized to appoint the commissioners.
However, the spokesman, Bob Rivers, did not rule out the possibility that the National Regulatory Commission might change its role to deal with the Three Mile Island plant's trouble.
A SPIKESMAN for KG&E, one of the companies building the plant, said
yesterday that nothing had occurred so far to cause the firms to alter construction
The resolution came out of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, which also plans to include a $50,000 appropriation so that experts can hire experts to assist in the inquiry.
THE RESOLUTION would charge the committee to study:
- The safety of nuclear powered electric generating plants generally.
The special committee would be asked to report its findings by Dec. 1.
- The effect of a nuclear accident in $^{47}$ annas on the state's citizens.
- The safety of the Wolf Creek raucy
specifically.
State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, a member of the Ways and Means Committee and once on the staff of the old Atomic Energy Commission, said the hired experts should take a "new approach" to nuclear safety being taken by the two utilities that are building Wolf Creek
BERMAN SAID they also could look into the feasibility of the utilities, plans for on-site construction and planning.
Gov. John Carlin also has assigned Joseph
Execution appeal denied
Mrs. Evans' petition challenged the constitutionality of Alibaba's death penalty law and alleged that Evans was obliged to deal rationally" with his legal problems.
State attorneys argued that a psychiatrist's opinion cited in the petition was based on "scant information and secondhand knowledge."
MORILE, Ala. (AIP)—A federal judge refused last night to block the Friday electrocution of condemned murderer John Watson after his parents' mother did not have standing to appeal.
Evans has refused to appeal his case. There are reports that Evans has agreed to pay damages after the attack.
Bely Evans, of Beaumont, Texas, filed an appeal on her son's behalf on Monday, despite his repeated insistence that he did no further legal efforts made on his behalf.
U. S. District Judge W.B. Hand's decision followed Gob. Fob James' earlier refusal to see a delegation from Armenia In the Iraq war that also was seeking to stop the execution.
Hand agreed, saying the report was not sufficient to stay the execution pending a settlement.
King, state energy director, the leader of monitoring safety aspects of the Wolf Creek
Last week, the Alabama Supreme Court rejected an appeal by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which alleged an error in Evans's trial.
The sentence was upheld first by the
Carlin has conceded that the state had little authority over the Wolf Creek facility unless it could be proved that it posed a safety hazard to Kansas residents.
THE NRC; not the state, licenses nuclear plants.
No such hazard can exist, presumably, until the plant eyes into operation in 1983.
Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals and by the state Supreme Court.
Berman said if the Legislature were convinced that there were problems with the Wolf Creek facility and if the utilities declined to hold up construction until the problems were solved, the Legislature still declined to abate a 1976 contract under which the state sold the utilities water from John Redmond Reservoir for use in the plant.
--both actions undoubtedly would precipitate lawsuits, with the courts决定
In addition, Berman said, the Legislature could order the Kansas Corporation Commission not to include the Wolf Creek facility in the utilities' rate bases.
If no court intervenes, Evans will be the first inmate executed in the United States since Jan. 17, 1977, when Gary Gilmore died before a Uttah firing squad.
He is to be electrocuted at 12.01 a.m.
Friday at Holmman prison near Aitheor for
the execution of Mr. Shadwick.
Evans, 29, has said repeatedly that he wants to die rather than be imprisoned for
DANCE
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"The risk of a nuclear accident is not at a bureaucrat's desk," he said, "it is at the nuclear site. It only makes sense to have field inspectors on the front line."
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
APRIL4,1979
Budget merits approval
The Kansas Legislature has the opportunity this session to advance higher education in the state.
This week the Kansas Senate will consider a budget bill that would give the University of Kansas more than $109 million, which is about $500,000 more than the House-approved budget.
If the Senate approves the budget bill, it will be sent to a conference committee of both houses for a compromise. It is here that advances can be made.
THE EXTRA MONEY from the Senate version would allow for 11 additional teaching and civil service jobs. It also would provide $95,703 to buy instructional equipment and $40,000 to hire more student help at Watson Library—both of which are badly needed.
The Senate bill also would give KU slightly more than $4.5 million during the next two years for the renovation of Lindley and Marvin halls.
One of the most important and
perhaps most controversial aspects of the budget is a proposed faculty salary increase. While there is no argument about the need for an increase, the House budget bill calls for a 6 percent increase and the Senate version would provide for a 7 percent increase.
IT SHOULD BE clear, considering the effects of inflation on the buying power of a dollar, that faculty members must have the 7 percent increase. Do to do something would be an insult to students and to citizens of the state.
Although legislators may be tempted to attack higher education budgets with a frenzy brought on by Proposition 13, they must resist.
At a time when enrollments are expected to begin to decline, it is all the more important for universities to develop programs that ensure quality of their educational programs.
The Legislature must realize that this will be possible only through increases in state funding. With such an awareness it is hoped legislators act accordingly.
Diet of coach not safe for any period of time
To the editor:
As a nutrition teacher at KU, I am concerned about some information put forth in the article, "Coach Pumps Iron, Weight Train" in the March 26 issue of the Kansas.
Obviously, from the photo, our new coach is in fine shape and I am sure he knows his weaknesses. We should meet them. However, I am concerned that a weight-lifting reader who decides to start a weight-lifting program might use this diet expecting it to give the nutrient support that he or she need.
The reported diet is not a safe and ef- fect dietary additive or any other activity for any period of time.
It is a false belief that athletes need a lot of protein. They have more muscle tissue to support their physical activity, so increased need for protein is in the magnitude of an extra one to three ounces of protein.
The athlete's real need is for more energy-supplying nutrients plus the vitamins and minerals to release this energy. The use of these nutrients is physiologically inefficient and expensive and puts a strain on organs such as the kidneys, must dispose of the nitrogen waste products.
A much better way to go is to get vitamins and minerals from foods which also provide the carbohydrates, fats and proteins for the vitamins and minerals to work with and
Taking vitamin and mineral pills is of no use unless the other nutrients with which they must functionly interact are present, and there is no evidence that article does not provide these other nutrients.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USPS 580-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August 19th May and June; July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday. Kansas 6645 Subscriptions by mail are MUCKSBURG County and $18 for six months in Douglas County and $18 for six months in the county Subject subscriptions are $2 a month. Very busy time. Send change of address to the University Daily Kansas Klan! Fax Kansas Klan! Lawyer, KKB 6640.
Keith
Berry Massy
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David Klein
Editorial Editor
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KANSAN letters
Eighty afailla pills a day over even a short period of time will probably produce carotenemia, visible as an orange-yellow skin color. It is not a desired condition.
thus have a more efficient system without any dangers of nutrient imbalance or ealth.
For the athlete, either of the full time or weekend variety, I recommend the book "Nutrition for Athletes-Handbook for Coaches," published by the American Alliance for Health, Physical Exercise and Recreation in association with the American Dietetics Association and the Nutrition Foundation.
Associate professor of human development
KU should not aid human exploitation To the editor.
The Endowment Association, alumni, students and faculty at the University of Kansas must make certain its investments in U.S. corporations are not being used to pay for university programs in South Africa, Chile, Nicaragua, Iran, Vietnam; in the past we called the people of these nations backward, underdeveloped, less developed. Today, we use a term such as Third World. What does this transition in the global economy mean to every human being in the world must be taught?
In practical terms, the business manager no longer has the sole right and peregative power just what kind of corporate behavior he must also actively participate. Thus, the KU Endowment Association as a stockholder may influence the effect of its investments upon the lives of people.
What are the proper roles of businesses, public interest groups, universities and the government in defining the social conduct of unions and social priorities in general?
Environmental protection, opportunities for minority group members, participation in community affairs, foreign investments—the preoccupation with social issues by U.S. corporations has become a large topic of the community at large.
The Republic of South Africa is a legally enforced segregated, racist society that explodes blacks; the Endowment Association should provide no support of such operations should provide no support of such
Edward P. Dutton
Associate professor of social welfare
Laws won't slow teen-age alcoholism
The Massachusetts Legislature last month moved to raise the legal drinking age from 18 to 19, and there are indications that it may soon raise the age limit to 21. The Massachusetts is the state since 1976 to change mind about lowering the drinking age to 18.
And they probably won't be the last to do so, because 11 other state legislatures are considering raising the age to 19, 20, 21 and even higher.
The reaction on college campuses in those states is as would be expected—strong jobs.
Older teens in the early 1970s had campaigned to be treated as adults if they were to be expected to fight in wars like adults. Indeed, those teens not only got the right to vote, but they also succeeded in lowering the legal drinking age to 18 in many states.
Now the trend is in the other direction, and a startling set of statistics is the im-
**PAGE 147**
Since 1972, the number of 16- to 18-year-old drinking drivers involved in fatal accidents has tripled. Also, the Department of Health, with its new teenage health program, teenage "problem drinkers" at 3.5 million,
Mary
Ernst
nearly one in five—and the number is growing. Alcohol is as much a threat as American teenage sex.
Many opponents of the lower drinking age say that raising the drinking age will cut off "the connection" between 18-year-olds and younger teenagers they supply with alcohol.
Indeed, the connection will likely be slowed but it will never be severed completely. Many people have realized that the base is more than 18-year-old drinking.
The problem is a society, and especially an advertising industry, which glamorizes alcohol. The ultimate conclusion of such glamorization is alcoholism.
Slick liquor advertisements help convince teens that drinking will make them more likely to drink.
excess, show the teen that consumption of alcohol is all right, if not socially necessary. Television programs show that guzzling the one real joy to be gotten out of college.
These and other hype jobs on liquor only serve to increase the peer pressure to drink alcohol. And a large part of the problem is that we have to have just a drink or two, but to get drunk
Tom Wurster, a college student in Michigan, which recently changed its legal drinking age to 21, is one of many who think that by taking away the opportunity for the single drinker to buy liquor by the single drink, states are encouraging teams to drink in quantity.
"You buy it," he said. "What are you going to do with it? You can't bring it into your house."
There is a good deal of sense in that argument. There also is a good deal of sense in the fact that people considered old enough to die in combat like adults then they also must be considered old enough to die in combat.
But "the connection" with the younger teens is what worries legislators most.
There is, however, a way to treat 18-years-old adults and to cut off part of the brain.
Kansas, despite its archaic laws for 21-year-olds, has established a system in which the 18-year-old may drink by the single bottle, but the 20-year-old and other 21 states have similar laws permitting the sale and consumption of beer or wine by the several of all 11 states are considering binge drinking.
Just blocking the sale of ice to 18-year-olds will not stop the teenage alcohol problem. Neither will the sale of only 3.2 beer to 18-year-olds solve the problem. The Bureau of Tobacco, Alcohol and Firearms is developing a program to help educate the about the dangers of alcohol abuse. That is not likely to solve the problem, either.
But after acknowledging that 18-year-olds are expected to be adults, both by voting and being eligible for combat duty, state governments should accept the fact that 18-year-olds are in fact, adults. They should understand their own plans to examine more closely their plans to put a new prohibition on the books this time only for 18-19 and 20-year-olds.
—AND, IT SAVS HERE, PRIOR TO THE AGE OF NUCLEAR ENERGY MAN ACTUALLY LIVED ON THE SURFACE OF EARTH!
Nuclear accident stirs memories
By L.M. JENDRZEJCZYB
N. Y. Times Feature
NYACK, N.Y.—As I read of the accident at a nuclear power plant that sent radiation into the central Pennsylvania countryside, I recalled a factory tour on the outskirts of Denver in 1978.
But things are different now, one public relations man said. The old plutonium fabrication plant had been rebuilt and Building 707 contains the most modern radiation-monitoring and fire-fighting equipment. Still, he ad-hocly invented it inevitably continue to happen, exposing workers to plutonium and killing them. Through mishaps and what are called "routine
The complex of more than 90 buildings there was established in secrecy by the Atomic Energy Commission in 1952. At one structure, known as Building 707, my group worked with skimming ants and elastically-taped boots to wear on our shoes.
Respirators were placed around our necks. Our hosts, employees of Rockwell International, manager of the Rocky Flats plant under contract with the government, told us what to do if an alarm sounded while we were walking through the pressure-sealed corridors and air locks.
We were immediately to bring the respirators up over our faces to prevent inhalation of plutonium. A particle the size of a grain of pollen, inhaled or otherwise taken into the body can cause lung or cancer leukemia or genetic defects.
Enough plutonium to build 77 Nagasaki-sized bombs was destroyed, at a cost to taxpayers of $80 million. An unknown amount of plutonium leaked into the atmosphere.
Before we moved down the corridor to view selected portions of the "component manufacturing facility" we were checked for radiation. I recalled that in 1969 some plutonium chips had spontaneously ignited, setting off the worst of more than 200 fires that have occurred at Rocky Flats.
emissions*, *plutonium* and other radioactive elements get into their bodies and into the air and water outside.
It was the view through that window I will never forget.
Along the wall on one side of a corridor were windows; I stopped at one, transfixed. Between two layers of clear plexiglass more than six inches thick was an insulated space filled with water. I stared into a large, brightly illuminated room through which a mechanical arm moved, operated by a man standing behind a similar window on the opposite wall, between us, in rows of canisters, were tons of platinum awaiting fabrication to "trigger" for nuclear warheads.
The United States currently has approximately 9,000 strategic nuclear warheads in its arsenal, plus some 20,000 tactical weapons. The plutonium in these weapons is periodically removed and recycled. Though plutonium remains radioactive for thousands of years, the bomb parts must be rejuvenated if they are to be potent enough.
Plutonium is potentially the most lethal substance in the world. A pound of it, carefully distributed around the country, would be more than enough to give everyone lung cancer.
A few minutes later, I stood beside a lead-lined, protective-glove box and watched a piece of plutonium move down a conveyer belt. Only about 10 pounds of plutonium fell onto the floor. The piece must have weighed at least that much. Plutonium is also one of the most expensive materials in the world. This material must be manufactured as a man-made substance, produced in fission reactors.
I never completed the tour. After the view through that window, I had seen enough. The public tours of Rocky Flats were begun by Rockwell International as a way to help visitors see the mountains to clear up the mystery about the work done at the plant.
Though the tours continue, the public no longer is in building 707. The public relations people don't say why.
to trigger a thermonuclear explosion. But it seems that there is a platinum shortage.
The warheads for the new generation of weapons systems need even more plutonium than those in the stockpile. The government says that if America is to go ahead with plans to manufacture thousands of more powerful warheads like the Mark 12-A, we will need more bomb-bgrade plutonium.
Later this spring, Congress will vote on the Department of Energy budget authorization for nuclear weapons for fiscal year 1980. The proposed budget increases funding for nuclear weapons activity and "special nuclear materials,""plutonium-production by 12 percent to more than $2 billion.
The most important discussions and decisions regarding warfare production, research and development go
Most of the hearings are held in executive session to protect classified information. They are conducted in a lead-lined room in the Capitol. Not even congressional staff and with security excepted, are allowed in. A security guard is required at all times. (Do not print)
Of course I'm aware of the reasons given to explain why the hearings must be in secret. I've also heard the Pence tell us that Mr. Trump's new, more sophisticated nuclear weapons to keep up with the Soviet Union—even if the SALT II agreement is overdue.
I'm concerned about more plutonium and more bombs being produced in a world that is already so dangerous, I'm concerned about the possibility of further radioactive production, and research, production and testing at places like Rockets Flats.
And I think again for that window through which we are now forbidden to peer.
L. M. Jendrieczky is co-director of the nuclear weapons facilities, project a joint undertaking of the Fellowship of Reconcilation, an inter-religious pacifist organization, and the American Friends Service Committee.
STATE U.
ARE YOU A DEMOCRAT OR A REPUBLICAN?
NEITHER. I'M AN APATHETIC.
OH? CONSERVATIVE OR LIBERAL?
MIDDLE OF THE ROAD
BY T. M. ASLA
No glory in Rock Chalk
To the editor:
Jeff Mount felt betrayed by the Kansan because of poor Rock Chalk coverage. His complaint is valid, but his argument is futile. There simply is no glory in the performing arts. The only thanks come from others in the show (most important) and from an audience. Usually applause is given to journalists who change. newspapers merely serve history by noting participants and plots; it's a pity that few papers can manage thgt.
This is the crux of the matter: What
obstructs me most is that Michael
wrote "you can't write to" in his
KANSAN letters
Robert F. Heschmeyer
Prairie Village freshman
Shouldn't KU students concern themselves with more pressing issues?
As a lighting technician for the show, I must say that the entire endeavor is a force—a frivolous waste of time and money. But . . . That's Entertainment.
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affirmed by the university, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
a-year of the for 21-which single eleven twelve line by as are a-year of year ally $2.50 The arm the arming and state to the arms to the arms new ameat hat 18-what hat 18-what ameat jus.ive life are ones of ion. an.er.ed id and af.erd and m.fit
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
5
Blood is The Lifeline For A Lifetime
Wouldn't you do just about anything to save a dying friend's life? Well, do something today to insure free blood for you and your family and friends. Donate your blood now for the future-it's for a lifetime!!
BLOODMOBILE ON CAMPUS April 4 11:30 am-4:30 pm Union Ballroom
If You Won't Donate Blood, Who Will?
Sigma Phi Epsilon Chi Omega
Alpha Phi Alpha Kappa Sigma Alpha Phi
Phi Kappa Theta Phi Kappa Psi Pi Kappa Alpha
Tau Kappa Epsilon Phi Kappa Sigma Sigma Alpha Epsilon
6
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
University Daily Kansan
(1)
The sting
Staff photo by TRiSH LEWIS
Mary Neiner, Chesterfield, Mo., senior, willingly underwent the minor pains of giving
blood yesterday. The American Red Cross set up operation in the Union Ball Room, collecting blood donations from KU students and Lawrence residents.
Blood donor turnout increases
The turnout of students today for this semester's KU blood drive was nearly double that of Monday, but a spring snowstorm may have kept many students away. Jonelle Birney, chairman of the drive, said yesterday.
"The Red Cross people told us that if the weather was really bad or if it was really good, we wouldn't get too many people," she said.
Birney said 171 people gave full pints of blood yesterday and six others gave partial pints. Eighteen persons were not allowed to give blood for medical reasons.
Yesterday's results brought the total for the two-day-old drive to 264 pints, six partial pints and 32 deferrals.
Panhellenic Association and the interfraternity Council.
Burney said the totals were considerably less than the goal of 500 points for the first two days set by the drive's sponsors, the
"They told us to set the goal high rather than low," she said. "The reason they told us was that it was better to set a high goal than not, so we reach it, then to set a low goal and beat it."
Although the number of donors has been low, the number of volunteers helping with donations has grown.
"There's been no problem getting
volunteers," Birney said. "We've had approximately six per house."
Birney said the amount of time most people took to give blood was 30 to 35 minutes.
The final day of the drive is today, from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union
The total goal for this year's drive,
"Blood is the Lifeline for a Lifetime," is
750 pints.
Therapy center machine installed
Staff Reporter
By PATRICIA MANSON Staff Reporter
Workers installed a $1.5 million radiation therapy machine at the University of Kansas Medical Center yesterday, but it only worked for three months before the machine is used.
A 24-foot tube, the part of the machine that
carries X-rays, was placed in the wall of a therapy room. The rest of the machine was assembled in the room, which is in the Med Center, a center, a five-story underground building.
Carl Mansfield, the center's director, said that although the machine had been installed, it would take three months to adjust its parts.
"Once it's installed and calibrated, we have to get it working." Mansfield said.
He said the crew finished installing the machine just a few hours before it started to snow. Snow twice had forced delays in installing the machine.
THE MACHINE originally was scheduled
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The radiation center was scheduled to open in February, but two cement shortages and the January snowfall caused Med器 officials to delay the opening until Mavr.
to be installed in January, but heavy snowfall halted work on the radiation center's roof. Snowfall last week made the machine too damp for the machine to be installed.
jayhawker towers apartments 1603 w. fifteenth
A crew from a Kansas City Mo., moving company installed the machine. The crew was supervised by an official from CGR, the French company that manufactures the steam turbine from Atomic Energy of Canada, which markets the machine in the United States.
THE MACHINE arrived from Paris in late December and was stored in downtown Kansas City, Mo., until it was installed yesterday.
The machine, a 40-million electron volt accelerator, can treat patients with the deep-seated tumors. It is the fifth of its kind in the United States.
A second therapy machine is scheduled to arrive at the Med Center today.
Mansfield said it would take two months to adjust the parts of the second machine, a
A six-million electron volt accelerator and a Cobalt 6 machine, already owned by the Med Center, will be moved into the radiation center this month.
The Med Center bought the second machine for $728,000 from Varian Medical Center.
County to go ahead with reappraisal plan
By BRUCE THOMAS
Staff Reporter
Douglas County is moving ahead with its own program to reappraise property in the county even though a reappraisal bill failed in the county last year. In Gordon, county appraiser, said yesterday.
Gov. John Carlin had threatened to veto the bill, which would have raised taxes for the military.
One supporter of the bill, State Rep. James Braden, R-Wakefield, called Carlin's move "politically motivated" because the governor with many property owners in the state.
Braden said many of the representatives did not vote for the bill because they knew it would be weak.
"Heapparcell is always politically unimpressed," she said. "Our representatives were saying Monday, 'What's the use of getting all bloodied over something that is not going to pass'."
*APRAISAIL IN KANSAS is a shambles. We have property that has not been reaparished, but we are in need of new houses that pay twice and three times as much property taxes as owners of older homes.*
The last reappraisal of property in Douglas County was in 1964.
Gordon said that when newer houses were built they were assessed at 30 percent of their saleable value, as required by state law. A property assessment is used to determine how much the owner will pay in property taxes.
But because of inflation, houses assessed in 1964 may be worth twice as much now, even though their assessment has not changed. Gordon said that had caused a situation in which two owners could have property of the same value, but the owner of one house might be paying twice as much in taxes as the owner of the older house.
DOUGLAS COUNTY'S plan to correct this system of taxing is called equalization. It will have the same effect as reappraisal because had if the bill had been signed into law,
Despite the mandatory 30 percent assessment of new property, Gordon said, the average assessment in Douglas County for urban, single-family dwellings is 11
percent, multi-family units, 15 percent,
commercial property, 11 percent; vacant
In the equalization plan, the county commissioners will "qualify" all property that would not be represented at that although all of the data have not been collected, property probability would be collected.
CONSEQUENTLY, THE property owners that will be the hardest hit by the equalization plan will be the farmers and owners of vacant lots.
Owners of apartment buildings and other multi-family units will receive a cut in their taxes. Gordon said, but he said he did not know if the would be passed on to apartment renters.
The reappraisal bill would have required that an appraiser be hired for each 6,000 parcels of land, and that the state reimburse the counties for the new appraisers' pay.
The equalization plan, which began when Gordon became appraser in April 1977, should take four more years to complete, he said.
Douglas County is going ahead with plans to hire new appraisers to implement the equalization plan, although the county will not receive any state funds.
Gordon said it would cost the county more than $70,000 in salaries for the new appraisers, who would keep property assets on hand after the equalization plan was completed.
Because the reappraisal bill was sent back to committee, it will go before the House next year. Braden said One way or another the reappraisal will be implemented in the state.
GORDON SAID the cost for the equalization plan would be between $75,000 and $100,000. It is worth implementing it. That is roughly equivalent to the amount of money needed to fund Gor
"There is no question it will go through; it's just a matter of when. If the governor or the Legislature don't have the guts to do it, the courts will," he said.
If the Kansas Supreme Court mandates reappraisal as the Missouri Supreme Court has, Briden said, it would cost nearly twice as much as it would have to be done by private appraisers.
Members of the Women's Coalition, a student organization for women, tentatively decided last night to sponsor a rally early next month.
Group tentatively decides to sponsor rally on rape
The University Events Committee must approve the May 2 rally before it can be held.
A member of the coalition, Jana Svoboda, said last night that she probably would present the proposal to the committee by next week.
The group tentatively decided the rally would focus on rape. Speakers on the radio were the main participants.
and other topics are being scheduled,
Svoboda said.
The free speech rally a few weeks ago helped to inspire the women's rally, Svoboda said. People seem more willing to come out and show their support, she said.
"The rally wouldn't be a feminist rally or a radical activist rally, but just a chance for women's groups to come together," she said. "We have unhesitable众爱 among the women on campus."
"All the small minorities on campus are speaking out," she said, "but the largest minority on campus, women, are doing nothing."
Hiring of secretary, office opening delayed
Steve Ruddick, KU's legal services attorney, doesn't want to open his office without a secretary, but he can't get a copy until some red tape is cut in Topkea.
Carl Dell, personnel technician for the state personnel division, said this week that the application for the new secretary would include the Carlin's guidelines for hiring were official.
Dell said Carlin's guidelines would describe the types of positions that could be filled. He said they would apply only to new positions.
"The governor said that we were to hold up any action to the agencies that applied after the first of April," Dell said. "Since the legal application was kind on the edge, it
would probably be a couple of days before we talk to the personnel office in Lawrence.
The KU personnel office signed the application on March 28 and the office in
Ruddick said he did not know what he would do without a secretary.
"I'll pick two law students this week to work, so maybe I can hire a few more to answer the phone," he said. "Maybe I can hire somebody on an emergency basis.
"I don't see how the law students, who come in a couple of days a week, can help
Ruddick said that he had planned to open his office at the end of this week, but that the delay in hiring a secretary probably would delay the office's opening.
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17
7
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
University Daily Kansan
7
Staff Photo by ALAN ZLOTKY
No nukes
overly Holt-Miller, 25, delivers her anti-nuclear power message in swifter, show yesterday outside the Federal Building in Washington. He said his message is "protecting us."
marched around the building, chanting demands that all nuclear power plants be shut down. The demonstration attracted little attention from the government employees, most of whom had left for the afternoon.
By JAKE THOMPSON
Staff Reporter
A regional shopping mall would destroy the lifeblood of downtown Lawrence, Maurice Johnson, a redevelopment consultant, said yesterday.
Mall threatens downtown success, city development consultant warns
*Attractions away from downtown pull the blood right out and one cancerous growth pops up after another.* Johnson told about 100 merchants, city officials and city commission candidates at a breakfast at the Downtown Lawrence Association.
"It deserves a very, very intense effort," he said. "Your reputation, the reputation of the city, is on the line and the future is at stake."
MERCHANTS SHOULD raise about $150,000 to attract a developeer to their company, downsweep "personality," Johnson said. One aspect of redevelopment would include a large number of new staff.
Johnson, a former Louisville, Ky. banker nicknamed "Mr. Downtown," advised Lawrence merchants to "romance" a bank that revitalize the downtown business district.
Drawing a good developer would not be easy. Johnson said, because they are in great demand and prefer the ease of manual coding, but the edge of town to downtown redevelopment.
But, he said, if merchants and influential
people in the city presented an appealing package, including money and a guarantee of land acquisition through the city's use of domain powers, a developer would respond.
THE DEVELOPER also should own some part of the area under redevelopment so he would have a nested interest in its success, Johnson said.
"There is a mix in downtowns you don't and at a shopping center," he said. "People are out there."
Johnson, who led a redevelopment effort in Louisville, said merchants in that city had solicited the support of government officials for their plan. A successful effort needs support from those groups and from the public, according to Johnson, to "make competitive with the exotic shopping centers that are going up around the country."
Johnson said he had visited many cities that had been devastated by suburban shopping malls, and named Tem, Penn, and Frankfort, Ky., as examples.
"A CITY of Lawrence's size, I suppose, is more vulnerable than large cities because it can support only one great shopping area," he said.
The downtown merchants sponsored
He said Kingsport's downtown was neoquelized when a shopping mail wall was installed.
Commission defers action on plan to improve Oread neighborhood
The Lawrence City Commission last night deferred action on the proposed Oread neighborhood Plam after an hour-and-a-half from those attending the meeting.
The commission sent the plan to the city's planning office fur further study.
The plan is a project to improve the Oread neighborhood, which extends from Ninth Street to 17th Street and from from Kensas Street to the University of Kansas.
The plan, which includes proposals for sidewalk and street improvements and land-use changes, was opposed by several Oread landlords at the meeting.
Downzoning changes the zoning laws to cut the population density of an area.
If implemented, the plan land-use proposals would hurt the landlords by downzoning the area, some of the landlords said.
The Oread neighborhood is a naturally
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Glen McGiancie, on Oread landd, said.
Blane's Salon on the Mall REDKEN 11 W. 23rd 842-11
"That area has consistently provided students with comfortable, low-cost accommodations."
Several residents of the Oread neighborhood said they supported the plan because it would encourage property owners to maintain their buildings.
Under a downzizing plan, existing rental properties could still be rented, but if a
structure were torn down, the size of a replacement building could be limited.
"If the property owner was aware that he could not tear down his old house and replace it with a four-plex, that gives a true value," Cognts said. "The property, George Cognts, 1437 Ohio St., said."
After hearing statements from the public, the commission asked that the planning office study the plan and explore alternatives to downzoning.
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25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE"
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
THE CLASH
GIVE 'EM ENOUGH ROPE
Guide On The Road List: Giving in Town
At The Young Pope (Hare Braces And Confidence)
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Columbia
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THE
DOWNTOWN RECORD
STORE
BETTER
DAYS
Steve Forbert
Alive On
Arrival
including:
Graham Down to Lismore
Brad Clyffe
Elroy Lovelace
Ben Duffy
Steve Forbert's
Mothman Band
North Twickenham
Twickenham
THE CLASH
GIVE EM ENOUGH ROPE
Guys On The Road Let Guys Go To Town
All The Living Dust New World Ain't Complicated
Nice European Home Tourism Gum
THE DOWNTOWN RECORD STORE BETTER DAYS 724 Mass.
BETTER DAYS
724 Mass.
104 JEAN*
A LEVIS"
April
| S | M | T | W | I | F | K |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
| 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 |
| 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 |
| 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 |
| 29 | 30 | | | | | |
A LEV'S
April
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30
"Don't call my pokey patrol pet"
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Johnson's visit to hear of a potential way to compete with the proposed southwest mall project is being tested.
The mall, proposed by a Cleveland developing firm, Jacob, Viscospin and Jacob Co., would include three large department stores and 80 smaller shops.
Jack Arensberg, director of the downtown association, would not say whether the mechants would follow Johnson's recommendations.
"It's a little premature to talk about anything like that," he said.
Nevertheless, Johnson, who said he did not want to sound like a prophet of doom, told the press that he had been shot.
films sua
"If something is not done, atrophy will probably set in," he said. "But I want to command you for trying to take action before something happens."
Wednesdav. April 4
LA GRANDE ILLUSION
Wednesday, April 4 Renoir's Classic:
Dire Jean Renoir; with Jean Bash
Pierre Lesson, Erich von Stroheim,
Marcel Dalto. This anti-world film is a
challenge of world cinema. France
subtitles
Thursday, April 5
THE TEACHER
Dir. Octio Cortazar, set in 1961, in Cuba's "Year of Education" when over 100,000 youngsters volunteered to join the Literary Brigade to teach literature pleasants how to read and write. PLUS — The History Book, v.7.7
Friday & Saturday April 6 & 7
1900 (1873)
Dir Bernardo Berlucolux, with Robert Dir尼罗, Gerard Deopard, Donald Sutherland, Domique Sanda, Burt Lancaster, Shelley Hayden.
Midnight Movie
OUTRAGEOUS
(1977)
Wednesday, April 11
SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT
Dir. Richard Benner, with Craig Russell, Hollis McLaren. PLUS: "Bambi Meets Godzilla" 12:15 a.m.
Dir. Ingmar Bergman, with Ulla Kariet and Anna Kristen Anderson. A sophisticated comedy that won the Cannes Film Festival's Grand Prize for Best Comedy.
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. $15.00 admission.
An Open Secret
JOHN R. GARDNER
For the longest time I had resisted the sweet in his happiness. It was no own happiness I particularly consumed about, and it was a sweet I never knew before he could have been able to tell what would work. It would take him education, but I thought it would be worth it. He said he wanted to know if he could be a good father.
The man was choked out. Our companion also another attacker. Flooded with a book to marmor my mouth and compartmenting. I had no answer, and it all became a mess of blood and vomit. We tried to be calm, but the attacker never ceased to bite us. He woke up from his sleep, came to our room, and screamed. Freundin was awake, fed back information. Nobody took food. We think there were several people inside.
Three years ago, I gave my lawyer. It was a mammalian decision for me. I explained that she didn't give me up with me nor getting away with it. She had the potential to do anything she wanted to do and would desire me. I assumed that my mind must be the cause of the murder. I called her, I said I could, and then I could see what she was going to do.
Jesus Christ declared that assumption, before it could deviate me. I carefully examined the words and life of Jesus. I discovered a blasphemy for that happiness that worked in my life. Here is what I found.
HE, NOT I, THE CENTER OF MY WORLD
"God made us, and he loved us." I believe that hearing bad, had I cared about what it meant when for the first time an adult asked. I am not a Christian; I comment on it myself. I will hear that He知道了 me in my心田 and told me my own story. I have heard Him
AN OBSTACLE
But I was still required. Saddah called in me, and it was deep down. In heart moments I admitted that to imply, but with God as the passport, my son is going to be acquainted with the sentiments of my son. I can believe my life on my own will be to inject God as the Ruler of heaven, including his. My son had contented in my living means to please him in disguise in my Creator, and in my replying and challenging the standards he imposed, be joining with him. You should love the Lord your God with all your heart and heartiness.
BEARING CONSEQUENCES
No matter how you participate in a small community simply for being caring, NO could God not respond to my request or good behavior, withkindness and love. I should never forget that I care deeply about others. But if someone else could take care of me by beating them, And Jesus had, As God had, cared for me.
SAYING "YES" TO HIS LOVE
I love church. I loved when what he had done for me, and was always vigilant when he was absent. The beautiful were made into a beautiful church with statues, pillars, stained glass windows and benches, and gave him a place to rest, on an altar, and commitment to Him. He would be reserved to His place at the center of the church.
Three months ago I issued *I, You to Heaven*. In His God’s very words, the Bible, I found the secret I’d been stranding to an open air sanctuary not intended for all men. In and responding to it, I became one among a crowd of EU have found a deeply sane solution.
Another Life changed by Jesus Christ
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ANOTHER LIFE CHANGED BY JESUS CHRIST—YOURS?
Your life can be changed by Jesus Christ. Here is a simple statement which it spells out in one sentence: "You are the Savior of all men, and wants to save them." Believers who believe that Jesus died for them, and wants to save them come to Jesus, I call him Lord, and by my Savior and Lord, Thank God.
Here is God's promise: "If you contend with your mouth Jesus as Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you shall be saved."
John Vanderhorst
Assistant Instructor, English
8
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
University Daily Kansan
The LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE PRESENTS
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Thur. 12: KEURG!!!
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April 11th
Wednesday, April 4. 1979
9
KUAC questions role in merger
By BARBARA JENSEN Staff Reporter
Members of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board expressed concern in yesterday's meeting about the impact of the women's athletic programs on the men's and women's athletic programs.
Under the merger, which Chancellor Archie D. Rykes said probably would be approved within a week, the board would be reduced from 21 to 15 members.
Elizabeth Banks, KUAC board member,
said the by-laws of the corporation stated
that the board was policy-making and
not just an advisory board.
"I almost feel like something is trying to be slipped in on someone," she said.
At a March 5 meeting of the women's advisory board, Dykes had emphasized that the new KUAC board would be strictly advisory.
"THE BOARD HAS always been advisory," Dykes, who has ultimate authority over KUAC board decisions, told members of the board yesterday. "It is more of an issue now because under Title 10, University is mandated to do certain things. The RUAC board exists because the University permits it to exist."
Title IX states that equitable athletic opportunity must be provided to members of both sexes. An institution risks losing funding if it does not comply with Title IX.
Dykes said the KUAC board had no legal
authority, and for that reason it was necessary for it to remain advisory. If a suit was brought against the University because of TITLE IX, the chancellor, not KUAC, would be legally responsible, Dykes said.
"THERE'S REALLY no need for much change," Dykes said, "except for the ambiguity in the language of the by-laws."
"It is not required that the women's advisory board be consulted." Shankel said. "After theATER, their board goes into existence and this one is restructured."
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said the women's advisory board was an ad
hoc board that had never been officially
recognized by the chancellor.
Bob Marcum, director of men's athletics, said he had suggested the reduction in board members as part of the restructuring of the board. He said one reason he suggested the reduction was that Big Eight schools had smaller boards.
But Gerhard Zuther, KUAC board man, disagreed with Marcu's rumors.
"TD LIE TO be shown that there is something cumbersome in the number of members on the board," he said. "Saying that other schools had problems with such a large board is not a good enough reason to reduce this one."
In other discussion, Dykes said even though he would probably approve the
"We're going to make a commitment to proceed with the merger," he said, "but we need to talk about it."
merger within the next week, detaux would be worked out later.
Mike Harper, former student body president and KUAC board member, asked Shankel if dissatisfaction about the merger expressed by staff members of the women's athletic department had been settled.
SHANKEL SAID not all the problems had been settled, but that "progress was good."
"We're hoping that the word will give us additional funding," he said. "But salaries will not be equal nor based solely on merit." He added that the program enables us to make continued progress.
Banks said she was concerned that there had not been meetings between the men's and women's departments when budgets were determined for fiscal 1979-40.
"The only thing I care about is that things be equitable," she said, "but the men are not equal."
Shankel said he had advised Marcum not to combine men's and women's athletic budgets until he had control over both departments because there could be some differences. But the merger, Marcum will be director of men's and women's intercollegiate athletics.
BOARD MEMBERS approved a
$3,840,610 KLIA budget for fiscal 1979-80.
BOARD ASSOCIATION
scholarships from the Williams Educational Fund.
Under a five-year William's Fund program, women's athletics are to receive $100,000 in scholarship funds for 1979-80 and $130,000 the following year.
Banks moved to increase that amount to $278,130, which is the full amount allowed under guidelines of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women. The schools are provided for one-half of the scholarships for out-of-state tuition and the remaining in state.
"The men's athletics have been highly subsidized by students," Banks said, and "women have contributed to that in past years. I also like to point out that the team has allowed to raise funds on a large scale and on the Williams Fund for scholarships."
"WE'RE SERVING men's athletics right now, not the women," Sam Evans, a board member, said. "If I serve on the board after the merger, I will support 100 percent. But I think this is an irresponsible motion."
But board members voted to table the motion.
Dykes said that under Title IX, KU would be required to fund university's athletics at the full AIAW scholarship level.
"I haven't the slightest notion where the money will come from," he said, "but it will have to come from somewhere else we have $3 million in federal funds."
Bee abode converted to storage
By DAVID SIMPSON
Staff Reporter
After 17 years of bees and waipes, the old schoolhouse on the corner of waipes and 22rd streets will be getting some new occupants soon.
The schoolhouse has been used by the entomology department for experiments and research. As the last insects are moved out to a new location, building will be taken over by Recreation Services to use for storage, Tom Wilkerson, of Recreation Services, said Monday.
Wilkerson said that although there were no concrete plans for using the space for anything but storage, Recreation Services would look into other uses for the building.
"We'll be looking into using the building for possibly a locker room area for visiting soccer, rugby and cricket teams." Wilkerson said. "Other uses might be a service area, with restroom available, or a concession area."
"It would take quite a bit of work to clean up the building but it is structurally sound." Perkins said. "The roof is only three to four meters old and the upper level floor is 'sound.'"
Funds for preparing the building for Recreation Services will come from the Recreation Services capital improvements Fund Student Senate funds Recreation Services.
Richard Perkins, director of plant maintenance, said that much special lighting and air conditioning work for the entomology department's experiments had been done a few years ago, but that it would not be difficult to change the systems.
Rodger Oroke, director of Facilities Operations, said he questioned the use of the
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"The building's pretty much a mess," Oroke said. "The appearance, especially the exterior wood trim, needs a lot of work." Oroke also said that if interior remodeling were needed, he did not know when it could be done.
"We couldn't have any remodeling work done out there by next fall because our crews are so snowed under now," Oroke said.
Charles Micheen, professor of entomology, said his department had moved out of the building because the University made two trailer buildings available for the department's use near the Botany Research Center on the West Campus.
"We're very happy we're moving"
Michele said. We had two floors in the
building.
Michener said most bee and wasp experiments were conducted in the spring and summer. Each spring he and his students go to the field to catch new species for experiments, he said.
Michener said entomology department students and faculty had removed all of the bees from the building and there would be no more bees to the remaining wasps in the next few weeks.
"The wasps are in cardboard boxes with transparent windows," he said. "There is only one room in the building where wasps are good, big ones, and will be easy to catch."
usable. The new buildings are are conditioned and we're not by the dusty streets."
"There are 20,000 kinds of bees and we is always trying to catch new species," he said. "We learn most by comparing different species."
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Michener said there was little chance of getting stung on the bee huns because the bees caught were not colonial and lived in small groups.
"The honey and humble bees are aggressive because they have honey and it must be defended," Michener said. Most other species of bees have no honey reserves and have not developed aggressiveness because there is nothing to protect, he said.
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KANSAS UNION
APRIL 5
Arson suspected in fires
Arson is suspected in two fires that caused a total of $600 damage early yesterday to Stephenph Schoolship Hall, 1441 Alumni University and Kappa Alpha fraternity, 2000 Stewart Ave.
According to Jim West, Stephenson proctor, a rolled-up newspaper was placed between a screen door and a solid wood door on a screen. He said the fire occurred about 3 a.m.
KU police and Lawrence fire officials are investigating the incident.
The screen door was destroyed and the wood door was badly damaged, West said. KU Police Chief Mike Hill said there were no suspects.
The second fire occurred at the Pt Kappa Alpha fraternity at 3:30 a.m. yesterday.
Brian Greenlee, a house officer, said a 1932 model fire truck owned by the fraternity was set on fire. He said fire officials told him that the fire was extinguished. Greenlee estimated the damage at $500.
Debaters go to nationals
Armed with 20 briefcases of evidence, two debate teams from the University of Kansas will travel April 20-23 to the University of Louisville to compete in the quinte at the National Debate Tournament.
Only 16 of the approximately 1,400 teams in the nation were invited on this basis.
The other KU team of Tim Dollar, Raytown, Mo., sophomore, and Paul Johnson, Denver sophomore, qualified for the tournament at a district meet in Emporia.
Stevie Griffin, Lawrence senior, and Kevin Fowler, Leavenworth senior, were invited to the national tournament because of their debate record for the year.
Sixty teams will compete at the nation's tournament. The topic this year is Resolved to provide federal government opportunities to all U.S. citizens in the labor force.
KU history students print first edition of magazine
A semiannual magazine about history, which includes work by KU students, published its first issue at the University of Kansas last week.
Historicus: A Journal of History is the result of five months of labor by doctoral students in KU's department of history. The editorial board is composed of KU students.
The magazine is an attempt to bridge the gap between professional, scholarly journals and student magazines. Raymond J. Reynolds is a graduate student and editor of the magazine, good for students.
He said it often was difficult for students to get their work published in professional
journals because those journals preferred the work of established scholars.
Historicus solicited the work of doctoral students from 30 colleges and universities across the United States for its first issue of *The Doctoral Review*, from any doctoral student for additional issues.
The magazine, which cost $430 to start, is funded by the Graduate Student Council, the Graduate Association for Studies of History grant from the KU department of history.
Raymond said he also hoped to fund the magazine through subscriptions, which are $10 for institutions and libraries, $6 for individuals and $4 for students.
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10 Wednesday, April 4, 1979
University Daily Kansan
We are changed lives...
WEST CAMPUS
Rita Duwe
SPACE TECH
Ron Crawford
Van and Penny Birrer
Jim Crumb
CHI OMEGA
Nancy Kelpe
Jeri Morrison
Teresa Hundley
ALPHA DELTA PI
Becky Reddick
Katte Rhoads
ALPHA PHI
Alecia Toner
Laurie Pugh
Leslie Koch
WESCOE
Sara Townsend
Dana Price
Lucinda Linan
Molli Brand
Jay Smith
John Vanderhorst
Dotty Vanderhorst
Linda Shifflett
Becky Schonberg
Nance Hickam
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Willy Peterson
Kate O'Neill
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Tom Tehan
VISUAL ARTS BUILDING
Kay Rother
Tammy Stubbs
Marianne Denton
LINDLEY
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McCOLLUM
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John Kerstetter
Maggie Brecheisen
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Kelly Wiess
Karen Jay
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TEMPLIN
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Clay Turner
Rich Miller
David Goering
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Jim Lessley
Gary Wirsig
Tim Bailey
Rufus St. Clair
MURPHY
Russell Garr
Vicki Burkhard
Claudia Lai
Beth Jacobson
Jennie Hahn
Eudon Ashcraft
Meg Plunkett
Arnold Stricker
OLIVER
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Malt Carpenter
Doug Stevens
Bill Rader
Jerry Taussig
Kelly Zelner
Roland Hecht
Debbie Petscher
Tonya Boone
NAISMITH
Doug Harwood
Jeff Sheet
David Morrow
Donna Hoopes
Sue Gilmore
WATKINS
Betty Lanteigne
SUMMERFIELD
Tom Albers
Steve Laffe
ROBINSON
Julie Albers
HAWORTE
Priscilla Dawes
Dean Davenport
Leigh A. Marshall
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BAILEY
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COMP CENTER
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WATKINS SCHOL HALL
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PEARSON SCHOL HALL
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GRACE PEARSON SCHOL HALL
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...thru Jesus Christ.
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
90 treaty supporters assemble at Strong Hall for peaceful rally
11
By LAURIE WOLKEY
Staff Reporter
University Daily Kansan
Marchers shouting chants of, "All we are saying is give peace a chance" in support of the Egyptian-Iraeli peace treaty at a rally yesterday attended by about 90 people
Carrying signs of "World Peace" and "We support peace," the demonstrators marched around the planter in front of Strong Hall.
According to leaflets distributed by the demonstrators, "Americans should take pride in President Jimmy Carter's role in restoring peace and promoting a treaty. Much remains to be done, and only with the support of peace-loving people in the world will peace be achieved."
The peace treaty calls for Israel withdrawn from the Sinai peninsula within three years and Egypt's formal recognition as a member of the community of nations.
DURING TWO demonstrations last week, which protested the treaty, several bystanders who favored the peace treaty harassed demonstrators.
The hour-long rally, unlike a demonstration Wednesday, remained peaceful and unoccupied.
Kent Gilmore, Lawrence special student,
told the crowd, "This is a peaceful demonstration and the buses will run on time during our demonstration."
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor,
said, "We don't really anticipate any trouble. The organizers came by yesterday to visit us."
Several KU administrators also said they had expected the rally to be peaceful.
chancellor for student affairs; and Mike Thomas, director of KU police, Hill said.
Mike Hill, KU police chief, said he met with two students Monday to discuss the issues of admissions at the meeting were Shankel; Rodger; and other facilities operations; David Ambler, vice
AMBLER, who was watching the rally, said, "I don't anticipate any trouble. The organizers of the rally worked well with the police."
After the rally Hill said, "We monitored the rally and had the videotapes available."
However, Hill said, the rally was not taped because it was peaceful.
Last week, the KU police department used videotaped surveillance during the two demonstrations on campus. Hill then said that videotapes were used for training officers and for cases in which the demonstrations became disruptive.
Hill said six plainclothed KU police officers were monitoring yesterday's rally. Darrell Stephens, assistant chief of Lawrence police, and Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, also watched the rally.
Dovish demonstrators
Leslie Miles, Dallas freshman, and Jim Todd, Lawrene
Graft photo by STEPHEN SPECTOR
sophomore lead demonstrators in front of Strong Hall yesterday during a peace rally supporting the Middle East peace treaty.
PETER GIBBONS
George Brown
George Brown, featured dancer, dies at age 83
Besides dancing for the Count Basse Band and other jazz groups, Brown played semi-professional baseball and assisted in the construction of Lone Star Lake.
George Brown, B3, died March 25 at Mercy Hospital in Independence, Kan., of heart disease. Brown was the subject of a U.S. Daily Kansan Weekday page March 23.
Before he died, Brown shined shoes at his shop, George's Parlor, on Main Street in downtown Independence. The shop was owned by a woman who had the oldest business on his block of Main Street.
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Grad council funding cut
The Student Senate Academic Affairs Committee decided last night to cut $12,000 from the Graduate Student Council's fund. The committee also voted to reduce $23,455. According to the Senate Revenue Code, council may be allocated $15,018. The budget and is taken from the student activity fee.
The Finance and Auditing Committee will discuss what to do about the additional $10 million.
At its last budget hearing Thursday, the Academic Affairs Committee decided to hold a joint meeting with Finance and Administration Council's allocations. However, Tim Trump, Academic Affairs committee chairman, told Academic Affairs members last night that it was up to them to decide whether the council was justified in making its request.
PART OF THE council's funding will be reallocated to graduate organizations. Academic Affairs cut the council's request for the reallocations from $7,500 to $7,000.
Mark Mikkelsen, executive coordinator for the council, told the committee Thursday that this was the council's most important organization in 23 organizations they would put these funds.
The committee also cut SORMEBRE's request to $2,825 from $4,500. Trump said the money could not come from the committee's funds and SORMEBRE turned in its funding request late.
Also at tonight's meeting, the Finance and Auditing Committee will rule on a duplicity question raised by Keith Maib, Senate treasurer.
ACORDING TO SENATE rules and regulations, the purpose of the rights committee was to establish student rights and privileges. Maid said however, that past rights committees had been formed.
The Academic Freedom Coalition has
opposed the regulation of literature distribution on campus and organized a literary symposium.
The rules and regulations state: "No funds shall be allocated for projects, services or materials which are duplicated functions or services of the Student Senate."
"The ends of the groups are a dilution, but the means are clearly different." Math
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5
12
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Home pregnancy test is popular but officials question its accuracy
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
Rabbits are losing their jobs as the use of 0s+1-yourself pregnancy kits increases.
Roger Barker, pharmacist at Super-X Drugs, 105 W. 32nd St., said yesterday that sales had increased from about six a month last year to 48 months now.
But despite increasing popularity, area health care professionals question the acceptance.
The in-home kits can determine pregnancy nine days after a missed period. The test results are obtained by mixing the human hormone chorionic gonadotropin, sterile water and human urine. Mixing tubes and the hormone are provided in the
Raymond Schwegler, Watkins Hospital gynecologist, said he thought the kits were not accurate.
"I'm inclined to distract the results of the kit because the actual specimens could be collected inaccurately," he said. "Individuals who are not trained to practice medicine should not. Rather, the tests were done by actual trained personnel."
AMONG THE FOUR brands of kits sold at Super-X, Barker said, the most accurate is the EUP-T test kit, manufactured by Nintendo. The EUP-T has a percent accuracy rating if the test results
are positive and an @ 80 percent accuracy if the results are negative. Costs range from $1,500 to $2,000.
Typical laboratory tests are considered almost 100 percent accurate. Laboratory equipment is more sensitive in determining the correct interaction between the HCG.
Pharmacists maintain that the kits give sufficiently accurate results.
"There's no reason, with as high of accuracy rating as the tests have, that they should not be considered reliable." R.H. Store, Plaza Drive. Plaza Drug Store, 1800 Massachusetts said.
BARKER SAID he thought the kits sold well because some women wanted to know whether they were pregnant as soon as possible.
"The kits are a relatively safe way to diagnose pregnancy early," he said. "And that's a major reason for the increase in their nonplurality."
However, Kay Kent, Douglas County health administrator, said the county family planning clinic did not suggest using the kits.
"We've never seen proof of their safety," Kent said. "And our laboratory tests, which are available for only $2, are much more accurate."
Schweiger had pregnancy tests were available at Walkins without charge to
"A AS PART of my job I should be waiting out for the students' health and their progress," Ms. Mills said in her student pay $10 for a kit when she can have the test done for free by medically trained staff.
Schweigter also said he thought the kits caused problems because of incorrect
Schweger said that because free tests were available at Watkins, the kits were not used.
"Someone who depends on the test as the only proof of whether she is pregnant, sometimes ends up later with an unwanted pregnancy," he said.
Schweiger said some of his patients had told him they had used the kits.
Kent also said that problems occurred when women relied on test results that were not accurate.
"THESE ARE THE students who have second tests to verify the kit's findings," he said. "Several times results were incorrect, and the kit was usually a waste to them," he said.
"This can lead to an unwanted pregnancy going unknown for sometime." she said.
One student said that although she had never used a home kit, she would consider using it.
"I'm the type of person who would want to know right away," she said. "So I would buy a kit and use it. And then, depending on the results, I'd see a doctor."
Ad doesn't ensure profit
Stuffing envelopes may seem to be an easy way to earn a few extra bucks, but the Consumer Affairs Association, 819 Vermont St., warned students recently that envelope-stuffing operations advertised in Lawrence do not guarantee a profit.
Susie Hannah, campus representative of Consumer Affairs, said at least 10 students had made inquiries last week about stuffing operations.
"The inquiries occurred because such businesses are currently advertising in the Lawrence area," she said. "And to persons who need extra income, have borne
mittents on their time where they cannot work regular hours, stuffing looks like the room.
Hanna said the ads instructed people to send for more information. That information tells them to send a check for $16.50 or a kit to begin their business.
"The KIT includes necessary supplies and gives the individual a list of types of services needed. In addition, staffing费s," she said. "But it does not guarantee any actual sales of such services."
Although some Lawrence residents have
sent for the information packet, she said,
she knows of no one so far who has sent in
"These types of operations are very common across the country," she said, and "I've never seen any prof accrual from these companies. I could be considered bogos and misleading."
Hanna also said the U.S. Postal Inspector recently had testified that the average profit an individual gained from stuffing envelopes was 45 cents a week.
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"THE AIDS USALLY say an individual can earn up to $00 a week," she said. "So you could summarize that in reality very if, any, profit ever comes from such jobs."
She said the ads also told how individuals could be a startling mail order business of
"That's what I consider the worst part of being a teacher. It's that they make you think you're going to make money. But then they instruct you on how to carry on the chain of seemingly innocuous tasks."
Hanna said no formal complaints had been filed with her office.
attacking
will disinherent
what kind of
policy involved
proach of court
Farkas
Adm's (heirs)
Torch
lills Act
ect Gor
erty
New
Sp
Econo
Econo
Staff photo by CHRIS TODD
Speaking about his experience in government service, Clarence Kelley, former director of the FBL, asks for questions
from the Noon Forum group of students in new Green Hall yesterday.
FBI trial could have bad effect
By GENE BROWNING
Staff Renorter
Prosecution of FBI agents for abuse of citizens' rights has made agents understand that "you don't take matters into your own hands." The former director of the FBI, said yesterday.
Kelley, who was FBI director from 1972 to 1978, spoke to about 100 people in new Green Hall at Noon Forum, a program sponsored by the Student Bar Association. He said the prosecution of three FBI agents in connection with the might have a negative effect on FBI agent.
"There are fears that agents may not take the proper course when faced with a crisis because of the prosecution," he said. "I don't think their prosecution was right."
THREE FORMER FBI officials, included L. Patrick Gray, acting director of the FBI under President Nixon, were charged with violating citizens' rights by authorizing break-in breaks, telephone wiretaps and mail openings when the FBI was trying to locate members of the radical, underground Weathermen group
Kelley said, "First people hammered at the FBI saying, 'Why don't you catch those Weathermen people?'
"They thought it was such a horrible emergency that they thought something should be done."
Kelley said that after the prosecution the agents thought they had been let down by the public.
"BUT NOW they know better," he said.
"They are governed by new law."
Kelley, who was chief of police in Kansas City, Mole, from 1961 to 1972, said at times law enforcement was restricted by public protest.
He said that the FBI was learning to work under these conditions, but that it would need help if there were a major threat as widespread terrorism by a large group.
"It would be a real chore," he said. "The terrorists might have some equipment that only the military would have equipment to detect."
For example, the terrorists might have equipment to launch attacks on airplanes.
He said terroristic groups such as the Weatherhead and the Symbionese Liberation Army were being contained by the FBI.
ALTHOUGH THE HEART case, 'kind of crept up on us,' he said, the FBI caught five members of the Weathermen group a year and a half ago.
Patty Hearst was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army in 1974. Later, she was convicted for willingly robbing with the group in several robberies.
Kelley said he was optimistic about the future of law enforcement and the nation
The country's system of government will continue to 'grind out acceptable solutions' to the issue.
"I have been on the inside and seen it all.
At times there have been many corruptive practices that arise and sicken you.
Master's in geophysics planned
The geology department at the University of Kansas may have a geophysics master's degree program as early as next year, Don Steeple, chairman of a committee in charge of designing the program, said recently.
"KU has the potential of having a really fine geophysics master's program," he said. It would be the first such program in Kansas and one of about a hundred in the
However, a doctorate program is not being planned.
nation. Steppes said about a dozen students were expected to enroll in the first year.
"At this point I think a geophysics doctorate program could only be mediocre, and there are enough of those already." Steeples said.
Although the master's program is still in the planning stage, a plan to revise
requirements for a bachelor's degree in geophysics has already been approved by the departments involved, George Rothe, assistant professor of geology, said.
Geophysics students are required to take 21 hours of math, 17-18 physics hours and at least 6 hours of computer science.
Rothe said the new program called for requirements of 27 math hours, 24 physics hours and 38 computer science hours.
100
Recreation Release
Intramural Indoor Track Meet
ENTRY FORMS AVAILABLE IN RM. 208 ROBINSON
preliminaries: Friday, April 6th, from 7:00 to 10:00 p.m.
Finals: Saturday, April 7th, from 3:00 to 10:00 p.m.
1. 60 yd. dash
2. 60 yd. hurdles
3. 440 yd. dash
— ORDER OF EVENTS —
4. 880 yd. run
5. 220 yd. dash
6. Mile Run
7. High Jump
8. Shot Put
9. Long Jump
Events will take place in Allen Field House. The deadline for entering this event is Thursday, April 6th at 3:30 p.m. A schedule of practice time trials are available in Rm. 280 Robinson Center, Recreation Services. THERE IS NO ENTRY FEE. THIS EVENT OWES TO CURRENT STUDENTS, FACULTY & STAFF.
208 Robinson * Univ. of Ks. * Lawrence, Ks. 66045 * Phone 864-3546 or 864-3556
R
HARDCORE
Eat 7/30 & 8/30
ENDS THURSDAY
Varsity
R
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Eve 7:30 & 9:30
ENDS THURSDAY
Just Once
winner:
PG
DARE to be SCARED!
P
"TAKE DOWN"
Eve 7:20 & 9:25
ENDS THURS
Hillcrest
HALLOWEEN"
Eve 7:40 & 9:40
5.5 Mat 2:00
Hillcrest
MOMENT BY
MOMENT"
Eve 7:20 & 9:25
ENDS THURS
Hillcrest
ENDS THURSDAY
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
PG
Tonight at 7:35 & 9:40
Cinema Twin
STARTS
JON VOIGHT FAYE DUNAWAY A FRANCOZZEFIRELLI FILM
FRI
at the
Cinema Twin
THE CHAMP
PG
Eve at 7:35 & 9:40 SEAN
Sat-Sun Mat 2:40 CONNERY
NOW!
DONALD
Cinema Twin SUTHERLAND
THE GREAT TRAIN
ROBBERY PG
IT'S BACK:
“ANIMAL HOUSE” & “F.M.”
Friday thru Tues. at the
Sunset Drive-in
Showtime is dusk
ALL DRESSED
IN RUBBER
with no place to go!
LAUGH WITH THE ZARK MUSIC THAT ENDS
ROCK BACK TO THE STORED AGEST
LATE SHOWS
FRI & SAT NIGHTS!
Box opens 11:40
Showtime is Midnight
Hillcrest
THE
ROCKY HORROR
PICTURE SNOW
STARTS JON VOIGHT FAYE DUNAWAY A FRANCO ZEFFIRELIL FILM
FRI at the Cinema Twin
THE CHAMP PG
Eve at 7:35 & 9:40 SEAN
Sat-Sun Mat 2:40 CONNERY
NOW!
DONALD
Cinema Twin SUTHERLAND
THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY PG
IT'S BACK:
“ANIMAL HOUSE” & “F.M.”
Friday thru Tues. at the Sunset Drive in Showtime is dawn!
ALL DRESSED IN RUBBER with no place to go!
LAUGH WITH THE ARMY MUSIC THAT ZENOS ROCK BACK TO THE STORied Age!
LATE SHOWS FRI & SAT NIGHTS! Box opens 11:40 Showtime is Midnight Hillcrest
THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW
Saturday, April 7th
with Arnie Johnson's River City Country Band
presents
Country Music Night
SHENANIGANS
Doors Open at 7 p.m. Admission 2.50 (returning April 13 & 14)
AURH Student Positions
Information: List of intern responsibilities and applications at resident hall desks, Office of Residential Programs. AURH office
Requirements: Must be returning resident, enrolled in no more than 4 summer school hours
Compensation: Room and board at JRP and a stipend of $960
Term: May 30 through July 28
AURH Summer Intern Program '79
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
New 35mm Prints
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- Applications are now being accepted for Committee Chairpersons of:
Political Action Women & the Arts Human Sexuality
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Women & Intl' Affairs
- Applications for Executive Board officers are presently being accepted.
Further information and applications available at 218 Strong-
Emily Taylor Res. Center, Due Wed., April 11th.
HERBIE HERBIE
MANN MANN
in concert in concert
HERBIE HERBIE
HEM
MA
HER
MA
HER
With The KC. 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.
Presented by SUA and The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra.
SUA
NN
cert
BIE
NN
cert
BIE
NN
cert
in concert in concert
HERBIE HERBIE
MANN MANN
in concert
in concert
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
University Daily Kansan
13
Snow stymies sports Robinson still leaking
A spring rain that turned to snow forced the cancellation of at least three athletic activities yesterday on campus.
Kansas" double-header with Missouri Southern State College, scheduled for yesterday afternoon, was rescheduled Thursday, because of wet grounds.
The Jayhawks will play Baker University at 2:00 this afternoon at Quizlev Field.
Coach Floyd Temple said yesterday that he would give most of his pitching staff some time on the ground today, with the exception of Matt McConkey. Worley scheduled to pitch the first game of the double-header. Mike Watt, Clayton Williams and Kristen Wisslansen will throw in the second game.
KU opens its Big Eight conference season Saturday afternoon with a double-header against Colorado. Hawks will then travel Monday to Boulder, Colo. for a double-headed with
KU's football game with Central Missouri State University also was postponed yesterday. KU coach Bob Stanciflask said the game, one of only three scheduled home contests, may not be rescheduled.
The game would have been played at the Holcom Sports Complex.
The women's intramural basketball Hill Championship game was rained out last night.
"Right now we don't have a tentative date." "Stanciff said, 'The schedule is pretty full and so is ours, so we might never get to reschedule the game.'"
It was the second time this week the game, which was to be played in Robinson Gymnasium, had to be canceled because of a leaky roof that left all courts hurt until unplayable. The game was reckened for 3:30 p.m. tomorrow.
The men's intramural Hill Championship game is scheduled for 7 p.m. tonight, but it may be moved to Allen County basketball 'noble court' are still wet.
Facilities operations workers were using buckets to catch water that was drapping from the ceiling throughout the gymnasium. All four basketball courts, as a dance room and some other rooms were wet from the draining water.
Construction on the new addition to Robinson Gymnasium continued.
Bird swapped to Phillies, Rovals make squad limit
FORT MYERS, Fla. (UPI)—Irene Kansas City Royals reached the 25-player opening day limit yesterday when they traded relief pitcher Doug Bird to the team, allowing two players on disables lists and sent lists to Pitchchall to the team's Omaha farm club.
Bird, a 29-year-old righthander, was sent to Philadelphia in exchange for rookie shortstop Todd Cruz, 23, who will be assigned to the Royals Triple A club at Omaha
Bird posted a 3-1 record with 14 saves and a 1.65 ERA in the final two months of the 1977 season to finish the year with an 11-4 record, 14 saves and a 3.88 ERA.
But he slipped to 6-4 last year with only one save and a 5.29 ERA. His low point came in the pivotal third game of the American League playoffs when he gave up a two-run homer to Thurman Munson in the eighth inning that carried New York to a 6-5 win.
"I THINK HE lost confidence in himself
"i last year, his teammates lost confidence in
him and maybe I did," manager Whitey
That "it's not a good situation for anybody.
"He's got a good arm. There's no reason
why he shouldn't come back. Relievers have a history of being up and down. They have a good year, then a bad one and then bounce back."
Cruz hit .261 with 11 homers and 69 RBI for the Philips Triple A team in Oklahoma City last season. He had made the Philadelphia roster this spring but was scheduled to fill a reserve role behind All-Star shortstop Larry Bowa.
"All our reports say the guy should be playing in the major leagues now and would be if the Philies didn't have Bowa," Herzog said.
KANSAS CITY placed pitcher Marty Pattin on the 21-day dislabeled list because of an injured ankle. Utility infielder Jerry Terrell, who has been slow to recover from a broken ankle suffered last season, was placed on the 15-day dislabeled list.
The acquisition of Cruz cast some doubts on the future of regular shortstop Fred Patek, who has been suffering from shoulder and back injuries this spring. Herzog said, however, that the 34-year-old Patek would open the season at shortstop tomorrow night with U.L. Washington filling the reserve role.
Texas relay title elusive for men
The men's track team hopes its start on the Midwest relays circuit this weekend is better than in past years when KU competes at the Texas Relays.
Sports Writer
KANSAN Sports
Not since 1976 has KU captured a relay title on the Texas-Baasa-Drone circuit, and it never did.
But KU has a good chance this weekend to contend for relay crowns and qualifying marks for the NCAA Outdoor Championships at the 52nd annual Texas affair in Austin, according to head coach Bob Timmons.
"I think we'll be fired up. We haven't performed well on the circuit the last few years and I hope we can get off to a good start this year," he said.
"WE'RE OUT to get our individuals qualified and our relay teams. We were awfully close last week in the 400-meter relay, but we are still not qualified." "We're going to do anything good and run among the leaders, we'll qualify this week."
Already, Lester Mickens and Jeff Buckingham have qualified with solid performances in the 400-meter and pole vault last week at the Arkansas Relays.
KU, which has won 103陪葬 titles over the years in the Midwestern triptych crown of titans.
will field teams in four relay events—the
400, 800, 1000 and sprint medley.
In the 400-meter relay, Mickens will lead off and Anthony Coleman, Kennewell and David Blutcher will follow. Coleman, Newell, Blutcher and Billy Washington ran a 40.2 at Arkansas, just three-tenths of a second short of the NCAA record.
MICKENS, TIM JONES, Blutcher and Newell are scheduled for the 800, and Newell, Tommy McCall, Stan Whitaker and Mickens are on tap for the 1,600.
In the spring midley, Jones and Butcher will run the opening 200-meter legs. Whitaker will do the 400 and McCall will anchor with the last 800 meters.
Timmons is concentrating on the shorter relays, a strategy he plans for the entire relay network.
"That's our strength and it has been for the last couple of years," he said. "For whatever reason -missed handouts or injuries -we haven't done well on the circuit, but some of the same people who haven't performed well early in the season have come back for us and done well at nationals."
"I just hope that our performance last
moons we’re going to hit a strike little
early," he said.
Besides the relay entries, KU athletes wint
compete in 12 individual events. The closest
to qualifying for the NCAA Outdoor in this
group are Newell, two-tenths of a second off
foot, and four-thirds of a second foot,
one-half inch short in the triple jump, and
Mike Stankle, nine feet shy in the javelin.
Injuries send track team to Nebraska meet
Sports Writer
Instead of the Texas sun, the women's track team will compete in the Nebraska wind Saturday at the Nebraska Invitational in Lincoln, Neb.
The track team was originally scheduled to compete in the Texas Relays this weekend but because of injuries it was not able that it would instead compete in Lincoln.
KU women's track coach Teri Anderson
kul that after injuries to sprinters Sheila
Amy Miles, Amy Miles and distance runner Jo McMil-
lain. He will be in the team's best interest to go to Texas.
"We wouldn't have sent a complete team to Texas." Anderson said. "By going to Lincoln there are more events to compete in and we'll have an opportunity to experience our first Big Eight competition of the season."
KANSAS, NEBRASKA, Missouri, and Kearney State are expected to battle for the team title. Nebraska's strength is in the middle distance events and the high jump, but Kansas is in long distance events and sprints. Kearney State is strongest in the field events.
weekend in Memphis," Anderson said. "I want a balanced team performance and I want to continue to improve on our times. We want to set a pattern that will continue for the rest of the season."
"I want to continue what we started last
KU's only healthy spinner is Lori Green. Green is entered in the 100- and 200-meter runs. Lior Lowry and Gwen Poss will compete in the 100-meter hurdles and Lowrey, Poss and Claire Overstake in the 400-meter hurdles.
LOWREY WILL Join Green, Poss and Overstake on the Jayhawks' 440-relay team. She is filling in for the injured Calmese.
Vicki Simpson, Denise Homa and Marianne
McCowen will connect in the 4th@runder.rum.
The only Kansas winner in last weekend's meet was Maureen Finholm in the 3,000. She'll be trying to repeat the victory along with other KU entrants Karen Fitz and Louise Murphy. Fitz also will compete in the 5,000.
Four Jayhawks -Michelle Brew, Deb Hertzog, Wendy Warner and Finholm—will run in the 1,500. In the 10,000, Jane Brock and Tasha Zoller are entered.
Tammi Rose and Debby Douglass will be double duty for KU in both the shot and the javelin events. Shawn Corwin will compete in the high jump.
Fairbanks' CU deal draws governor's blast
DENVER (UIP) - The University of Colorado yesterday announced details of a $100,000 agreement that will bring Chuck McNamara and his coaching job with the New England Patriots.
A CU spokesman said the school would pay the Patrons $200,000—in two equal installments due April 25 and June 15—and the University will pay $165,000 in compensation from New England.
The disclosure apparently was in response to a heated demand by Colorado Gov. Richard D. Lamm, issued earlier in the day, that CU dispel the secrecy negotiations involving Fairbanks and complained that CU and the Patriots had treated the public "like mushrooms—kept in the and a bunch of manure spread on us.
"THIS IS public business," Larm said.
"It should be conducted in the sunlight."
CU President Ireland Rautenfurt said paid payments to the Patriots would be made by the U.S. Military, not by CU.
gift money restricted for athletic department purposes. No tax dollars would be
"These funds are not funds available for any other use within the university," he
Rautenstraut said the settlement, ending four months of legal bickering and recrimination, also stipulated that the Patriots consent to the dissolution of an injunction preventing CU from attempting to hire Banks.
Fairbanks will receive a $4,800 salary at Colorado plus extras which will boost his job in a company.
THERE HAD BEEN reports that CU would pay the Patrons 200,000 to obtain Fairbanks' release. But CU Athletic Director Eddie Crowder, a former CU football coach, termed that figure "ridiculous."
"There was some compensation and an exchange of considerations. The final details are a kind of legal matter. The bits I said I'm not free at this point to reveal."
Sources had said part or all of the money might come from Denver oilman Jack Vickers, former owner of the Colorado Oilfield. The Vickers are president of the Flatirons Club.
"That statement out of Boston that $100,000 is involved is highly inaccurate.
By the Associated Press
Even with snow, baseball begins
Hoping to duplicate last year's success story when a record of more than 40 million fans jammed ball parks in the United States, the Miami Heat league baseball opens its 1979 season today.
There is one game scheduled in each of the two lengues. More than 52,000 fans are expected at Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati to watch the Reds face the San Francisco Giants. The openers and 35,000 are expected in Seattle's Kingdom for the Mariners' American
League opener against the California Angels.
Tom Seaver will open for the Reds against the Giants' Vida Blue in a duel of two of the NL's top pitchers. Seaver posted a 16-14 record with a 2.87 earned run average for the Reds last season white Blue was 18-10 for the Giants with a 2.97 ERA in 1978.
FOR THE REDS, it will be the start of a new era as John McNamara replaces popular Sparky Anderson as manager of the team and Pete Rose, a Cincinnati star for 16 seasons, moves on to Philadelphia via the free-agent route.
BROADWAY FORD SAYS- YOU DESERVE SOME CREDIT .. YOU'VE EARNED IT.
Once you've earned a college degree, Ford Motor Credit Company thinks you've earned the opportunity to have credit too. That's why we developed a finance plan that gives special consideration to college graduates and seniors within four months of graduating.
If you presently have a job or can supply proof of future employment, you may be eligible for immediate financing on any new Ford. This financing can be
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If you don't have a job lined up just yet, keep Ford Credit in mind, because you can still take advantage of this special plan for up to one year after you graduate.
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14
Wednesday, April 4, 1975
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
Events
**TODAY:** LEON FLEISHER will conduct a arts master class at 9:30 a.m. a.m. and p. in swarthout Recital Hall. LARRY JONES from the University of Illinois will speak on 'Multi-dimensional Models of Inter-Person Cognition and Preference' at 10:30 a.m. a.m. and p. in swarthout Recital Hall. LARRY JONES will speak on 'Physical Fitness and Living' at 11:45 a.m. at the ECM Center, 1204 Orad.
TONIGHT: The American Bar Association/Law Student Division will sponsor VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE at 6 in the legal aid office at the new Green Hall. KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 in Pardors B and C of the Kansas University. The KU GO CLUB will meet in Coord 2 of the University at 7 KU GUNG FUCLUB will meet at 7:30 in 173 Johnson. SIGMA DELTA CHI will meet at 7:30 in 206 Flint. TRANSCENDENTAL MEATSTATION introductory lecture sponsored by KU's Student Intermediation Society will be at 8 in Parlor A of the Union. John Davis, trumpeter, will give a MEDIA INTRODUCTION lecture at 8 in Swarthout Reach Hall. THOMAS SEBOK from Indiana University will present a lecture sponsored by the Center for the Forum Room of the University. German theologian DOROTHEE SOLEL will speak at 9 in the Smith Lecture Hall.
TOMORROW: KANSAS HOME ECONOMICS ASSOCIATION ANNUAL PLANNING SESSION will meet all day at the厅. LEON FLEISHER will conduct a fine arts master class at 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m in Swarthout Recital Hall. The KANSAS ASSOCIATION OF CHILD CARE AGENCIES will meet at 10 a.m. in the Council Room of the Union. THE UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB SPRING LUNCHCORE will be at 12:30 p.m. in the Walkins Room of the Union. There will be a UNIVERSITY COUNCIL CLUB SPRING LUNCHCORE from 11 a.m. to 12 noon. The group will be at 6 in the Centennial Room of the Union. "The Future of Urban Transportation Planning" will be the lecture of PETER STOPHER of Northwestern University at 7 in 2002 Learned Hall. SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 in the Oread Room of the Union. SUA BRIDGE will meet at 7 in Pilar家 A of the Union. A NEW ENSTUDENT GROUP will begin organization at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. The group's purpose will be a student help organization and it will provide entertainment activities. Students will learn about the history of Arizona from the University of Arizona will teach us the Ideas of the Obese. "at 8 in the Union. Alice Tonia will give a STUDENT RECITAL at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall. PIERRE ROSENBERG of the Louvre will speak at 8 in Spencer Museum Audition.
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Recreation Release Upcoming Recreational Events
A
The Intramural Home Run Derby will take place on Saturday, April 7th at 11:00 a.m. in Quigley Field. Participants may enter this event up until the start of this tournament.
The Intramural Handball Tournament Deadline has been extended to Friday, April 6th at 5:00 p.m.
The Dam Run Co—— sponsored by Recreation Services will take place on Saturday, April 7th at 10:00 a.m. This event is open to all runners. There is an entry fee for the event.
Recreational Water Polo takes place every Sunday from
6-7:30 p.m. in Robinson Pool. Additional information and entry forms may be
obtained in room 208 Robinson Center, Recreation Services.
208 Robinson University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 66045 (913)864-3546
Rec-Info Line 864-3456
99
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Music takes students to jail
By RHONDA HOLMAN
Staff Reporter
LEAVENWORTH--Their only audience is a uniformed guard and their rehearsal room has bars on the window, but their music is performed and is performed on the outside.
Between 20 and 30 inmates at the U.S.
Penitentiary meet every Wednesday night with three KU music education and therapy students to make music and share ideas.
The students, Chuck Simpson, Lawrence senior; Gerald Rothschild, Mission senior; and Steven Glick, Song senior, teach the inmates new songs and playing techniques.
The inmates have split into a country and western band, two jazz groups and an
The students said recently that the number of men who show up on Wednesday is less than 10%.
"It depends on what the movie is that night and who's got a hot bat at the pool."
The students said they had felt apprehensive about working in a prison, but it was their place.
"I WAS PRETTY anxious the first day. I think the ideas of gates closing behind me were terrifying."
"I's kept on a professional level," he said. "I've never had anybody talk to me about what he did to get in or when he's going to be fired." He then—a structured time sort of thine—
you find out they're just people," Simpson said.
Rothschild said the inmates were interested in discussing only music.
On a recent Wednesday night, Glick and Simpson went into separate rooms to exchange songs and ideas about guitar playing with two inmates.
AKERS JOKED about wanting to be on the cover of Rolling Stone Magazine. Elliott said his new interest in music was expanding.
"I didn't get into guitar until I got here," I
Ellott said. "I actually play bass, not rock, not
guitar."
Down the hall, six American Indians sat around a bass drum, banging a frantic rhythm with plumed beaters and singing a traditional Indian melody in union.
seen somebody dance for 13 or 14 years, except on TV."
IN AN OTHER OF the six practice rooms, trumpeter William Hamilton and saxophonist James Meredith went over a new jazz number Hamilton had just written. He played for three hours a day because playing had become a habit and they wanted to improve.
Akers, who has been playing bass guitar for six years, agreed.
"It gets to be a habit after awhile," he
you "don't feel right if you don't pick it
up early."
The Wednesday night program is an extension of a General Music Clinic being held on Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons this spring by Simpson and George Heller, assistant professor of music education. The class is one of 10 courses the University of Kansas is offering at the program.
HELLER SAID about 25 inmates were enrolled in the 300 level class, which covers music history, theory and popular styles. He said, the neo-pentagonal, for the
4x6 Overland Photo
New 35mm Prints
No immediate plans were announced to seek Dickinson's successor.
Martin B. Dickinson, dean of the KU School of Law, will resign his position as dean, effective June 30, 1980. Denaill Tacha, associate dean of law, said yesterday.
Dickinson sent a letter to Ron Calgaua, vice chancellor for academic affairs, saying that he had achieved many of his goals as a teacher and would return to full-time teaching and research.
Dickinson plans resignation as law school dean
The Douglas County Emergency Service Council presents Benefit Basketball Sunday, April 8
1:30 PM/Allen Field House
tuition for students and provided the instruments and amplifiers.
The men in the class are at all musical levels, but their recesses for taking the piano are at least one hour.
4x6
Dickinson, 40, began teaching at KU in 1967. He was appointed dean of the School of Law at the University of Oklahoma.
10
PAUL MOKESKI, BRAD SANDERS, V. C. SANDERS, ADRIAN MITCHELL, KAREN BANDERSON, KEN KOENGENS AND DONNIE MOORE PLAYING THE RIVERCITY ALL-STARS
"I think their basic goal is to kill some in a constructive way," he said.
HIGH
SCHOOL
& UNDEF
$1.50
ADULTS
$3.00
TONIGHT IS Pitcher Night AT THE HAWK
FREE Airform!
with every Haircut at
SHEAR DIMENSIONS
coffee
PTEROACTACTY'S EGG on sale in the fiction section of the Bookstore. Thursday, April 5, Wed, April 1 in front of the do or on broch. *in* the Union
partially funded by Student Senate
Sun.-Thur. 11 a.m.-midnight
Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-1 a.m.
RELIGIOUS FAITH IN A POLITICAL WORLD
Taco Via'
Some would
2 Taco Burgers for $1.00
Others would
deny any connection between religion and politics; Others would
good April 2-8
involve religion with politics; and still Others would
23rd & Ousdahl
reinterpret religious values as political values.
841-4848 carry out
Come and hear
Wednesday, April 4, 1979, 9:00 P.M.
Prof. DOROTHY SOLLE
of Union Seminary and Germany
speak at
Smith Hall, Lecture Room
1970
The University of Kansas Concert Series Presents
Topic:
Carmen Balthrop. Soprano
A Rising Young Star with the Metropolitan Opera
Sunday, April 8 8:00 p.m.
University Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office.
All seats reserved for $4. $4.3.50 or $3
KU students admitted FREE WITH ID
Call 913/864-3982 for reservations
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization! Make sense to use from the Book! 31 for case preparation. "New Analysis of the Civilization of China" by Topo Critz, Mala Bookseller, & Oroud Bookseller.
Alcatel, starters and generators. Specialists
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-890-2800, 2800 W, 4th
street.
Faint!) Mossing fine fuzz with strings, cords,
clocks and curved edges. Very good condition.
cords and cords, very good condition.
Sandpiper. Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription can be purchased, reasonably priced. M-817-5700
WATERED MATTERSSS $39.98 2 year guarantee
WHITE LIGHT 701 Mass. 136-1380 16pc
Watch for truck on Sundaes selling produce,
Foods Foods 30, & Illinois Also woods
eating.
1978 Tray, College City Lift Fitch, 5-amp. AM-FSM
1978 Tray, College City Lift Fitch, 5-amp. AM-FSM
1978 Tray, College City Lift Fitch, 5-amp. AM-FSM
Floor condition, 32700, $841.00
Floor condition, 32700, $841.00
Equisite and intricate trunk for sale. Beautifully
designed. $219,000. (3) 518-724-6388.
1747 Mustang II 4 v.4, 1.4x7, acrylic, ACG resin.
One pair of Nordic ski boots, size 9 L/2 uphol-
made. Use one. $25.00. Call 841-7012. 4-8
1973 Vega GT, good condition. New radial tires.
vinyl roof. AMP Fm Sterre, 8240-2. 1-4
74 "600" Duster, 36,000 miles, new tire, excellent call: 841-5411 for 3:44 p.m. - 4:14 p.m.
1874 Mustang II 4 eyelight 4 speed AC, excellent
and Love Lowe alpine backpack 824-6050
STARFISH SAILBOAT. Dacron sail and lines.
Stainless steel deck or other appropriate
Excellent condition $232, 842-4600
Fibersteer mirror 150 reel, tube-type, 200 watt, very powerful 150 w o case 864-1035 Keep trying
SAVE ON EXCEPTIONAL ALTERNATE STEREO EQUIP-
MENT. ATTACH THIS TURBOCHARGED DYNAMO ACAPA
120W TURBO CHARGER TO YOUR MONITOR.
Waste less of Preference today and to Human
Society. Purchase prefects now for a guaranteed
limited time. Used air conditioners $82-$160,
refrigerators $37-$54, etc.
ITALIAN used car CLASSIC. The Flat 124 Saftor Course. This 1911 Flat off vehicle features Boston Customs, BMW, Mitsubishi, the Swiss white dye brakes, and more. Body is clean, and the interior is well maintained. Pitted extend-64 reasonable. Call 811-807-31.
Must sell Audio Reflex & Tarantula in minût
capacity 844-2916 kit. Missing. Minût capacity
644-2916
Microsover Antique brass 1913 Brass & Loonch
Antique brass 1913 Brass & Loonch
out carrying cart. After 40% (819-417-425
out carrying cart. After 40% (819-417-425
KU Nursing School Uniform Brand new size
14. KU 833-8223
4-4
Blackhawk, Moorhead, must train 2 year olds to 1.8
years of age. Must have a valid driver's license and
holding ID and a driving license current. All
patients must be screened for HIV and hepatitis C.
250 Yanaua rugo run. Must call for best offer.
Call 813-7699 after 5:20. 4-6
This classroom brand new 754-18-16-725-725-
cash to $10.50 each. Ray Stoneback Mast
$35.95
Shrink Chocolate* Used Cups $9.00 new Mug
$15.00 36 oz Coffee Mugs & 24 oz
Bottles $19.00 Stockings $19.00
- 10 Hills. CVCCC 49,000 miles, A C. P. Cassini;
Cal Mtl. 628-4125 842-1385 842-5007 evening
Y2 Yamaha DT3-750 Endore Top condition—All
clean gear. Buy: A83-949-884
4-6
73 Grand Prix in Good Condition, vip) top.
AM FM stereo. Call eventines 812-6720. 4-9
Fantastic Starret Stree System includes receiver, speakers in deck and new kiturnable. N
Must sell cut, older models home. 2 bedrooms.
Possible lease extension. 4 bedroom furnished
murphy room. Murphy room for sale at $7390. Will consider
a short term lease.
End of season bargain Olm Nick II series to
season. Call Mike at 483-265 mornings &
events.
AM-FM "store with turbidity; 30 gallon aquarium
30.93 g/chg. 38-0819
4-6
107N 400 m spathte occidental beschrifted大连 Yamagata
city, Japan. Telephone number: 823-567-0000 only; 823-567-0008 between 5 and
9; 823-567-0015 between 6 and 7.
Pav sale 380 • dial port Ottobrunner house
carpet • car park east for 221 small bed
bath • 842-165-105
1973 Morte Carla Saufreau AM-MF radio (Sale)
alongside other radios. Best offer: cell 841-354-1245
at 4-6 PM on Friday.
For Sale—1732 Chevy Cuvette 2 dr. auto, automatic window, clears windows, silver steering wheel, vr-82-1024
vr-82-1024
Hangdale 1- 18: Standard Black Hawk, excellent cond. rainfall rate, can handle winds up to 35 mph.
Rainforest 820- 1820.
1966 GMC Vauxuallized interior—must use to
anneerceiling lamps, and room good- $8900-$10400
for roof.
FOUND
Found 3 piece suit. 841-2154. 4-6
Found - Calculator in Learned Hall. Identify and
claim: 102 Learned
Found a pair of bald men's gloves in a glass case, North of Murphy Hall on 328 G Street #506 - 506
Dog-positive ringerjacket -Male 19.1" x 16"
Dog-positive ringerjacket -Male 19.1" x 16"
Camel Calf Injured by dog Sue Sum.
Calf Injured by dog Sue Sum.
Found brass trimmed glasses between Teen. & Kentucky March 26 Located in UDK offer 15% off.
LOST
Pair of plastic roddish pink frame glases lighter than standard glass. Will be a reward 16-1845. Lost will be a reward 4-5.
Lost, a pair of gold wire frame glass at the
Museum of Art, Washington D.C., at
March 3. S. Confirmati 811-2651. Reward.
Female:丹 y 1 year old-Gold Lab mnt 35 hs
Male:陈 x 1 year old-Vetty lab vtiety Lab
Lawrence, 80347-4932 after 8:15 AM
MISCELLANEOUS
THENIS BINDING COPYING - The House of
thens binds copies and copies of
themselves, including 842-3610.
NOTICE
DEATH WHY BOTH? ECKANARK,
Admission Seeling of Soul Travel 862-5422
MRS. JEFFERSON
VETS-Av- you, getting your benefit? Maybe
Chick campus VETS-11 B Uber 864-1747
or click on the blue button.
If you would like to earn a-tra money, Reception Services needs people to help with the Intramural Home Run Derby and Intramural Basketball-it interested me 464-354 and 464-
Faculty & Staff. Offer your child a supervisei summer camp experience in the magnificent Minnesota North Woods. Gall K. C. Heyat in Minnesota will lead Camp Mismatch-14A ACAE授教 Camp.
Enhanced now! In Lawyers Driving School now,
it is required that new drivers have a valid
driver's license, transportation provided, driver's
license, or other documentation.
Join an important student service! Community
members are invited to join us on the Board of Directors. Exec
vice president, Paul Schmidt, will be presenting.
www.quinnan.edu
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 4.1979
15
KANSAN WANT ADS
AssmannstüHLs, goods services, and employment
insurance. Resumes should be submitted to the following address or email: ASSMANSTUHL@INC.COM OR BRING
insurance.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
five three four three four
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ERRORS
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.
time times times times times
15 words or
word
$2.00 $2.35 $2.30 $7.35 $3.00
Each additional
word
.01 .02 .01 .02 .01
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 add can be placed in person or taken to the UDR campus office at 864-4558
864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
DEFEND YOUR INALIENABLE RIGHTS to life, health and freedom from the oppressive stress of students for a Liberation Society in the fight against tyranny.
Spring Festival Book Sale April 1-15 10% off
Spencer Art Museum Book Shop
GREAT FOOD. GREAT SERVICE just like you do.
Midnight 11 a.m. Sunday till midnight
11 a.m. Sunday till midnight
Alis is coming! Alis is coming! Saturday, April 4th. Towers 409- A
Employment Opportunities
Students majoring in business, pre-med, pre-law,
pre-communications, pre-research make $297 per month. For interview applications, visit www.saas.edu.
ENTERTAINMENT
Enter international cuisine? Come to Small
East International catering! Get tickets to
11-2-2 at First Presbyterian Church. Get tickets to
10-3-2 at First Presbyterian Church.
FOR RENT
Still looking for a place to call home? Nathaniel will be staying at the residence of the year. Stay by and look on over his book, $850 and we will be glad to give you all the books in the Nathaniel Mismith Hall, 1800 Nathaniel Hall, 843-555-6393.
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW NEW 21stFloor, in the heart of downtown, unfurished from $179. Two laundry rooms, large wet bar, kitchen and bath. On KU this house INDOOR HEATED POOL
Apartment and rooms furnished, parking, most rooms furnished, Kid and near town. Phone. 843-767-5671
Jayhawk Tower 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
Female or Male roommate wanted to share beautiful 75 yr. old country home located on 4 acres of sprawling land. Complete with harm, laundry, kitchen, dogs, baths and 85+ care utilities. Call after 6:00 8:34-307.
Christian Houngie Now and Summer. Close to
Nashville, NC, phone 842-6250; between 2:30-
6:00. Keep trying.
Mark 1 & 11 Apartments now renting for summer vacations. Parking is free. Room, luxury housing安排, 7 min walk to campus, 1 car to balconies off street parking, dishwasher available. Off-street parking, May for additions. 105 Mls Ap. #3, 823-8035
5 bedroom house for rent during the summer.
Partially furnished. Call 842-3036
4-4
Spending the summer in Lawnware? Do yourself a favor and call ONC care. Call us in my apartment! Call 812-2597 or put in my apartment! Call 812-2597
You know these, great looking,iquity theatres. We've been building them since 1957, as great贸品 as out and one is available for sale now. Theaters are $300-$400 a seat.
Must sublease unfurished 2 bedroom Multi apt in June 16, 197.客座 Call 841-841 or 841-848.
Summer sublease 2 bedroom Appleworks Ap-
t. 100' Swimming Pool, Close to Campus &
Campus #145.
Sublease 2 bedroom Meadowbrook apt for summer-
$200 + else/month-842-1644 4-5
Summer Sublease. Nice, two bedrooms apartment.
Close to campus pay water, paid AC, call 610-392-8544.
MUST sublease space 2 bedroom apt. for stm.
Near campus. Rent $55-$63. Call 6-45
1147
LIVE IN LUNARY need to auditor beautifying 3
homes in Bloomington, IN. Call Catherine or William
Call, Catherine & William. 212-856-9000
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE first floor only $275
second floor only $249 kitchen & bath suite from Amsterdam from Old Montreal family room, breathtaking partly covered some foyer space, bedrooms partly covered some foyer space, call 412-261-0020 or mail $275 412-261-0020 at 6:30 pm
To inhabit one bedroom, new modern, furnished and enriched starting May 20, option-3.
Summer sublease one bedroom furnished South-
Fork apartment $500.00 call 817-264-2395
call 817-264-2395
Bachlebe for summer, give bedrooms apt. interior decorating & landscaping, storage & discounts to campus. Price negotiable. Call MIC 800-256-3041.
Now the案由 from this house adapted to
the new layout. The building is a two-story,
Alley A, a state-owned downtown townhouse $200,000
and $100,000.
Most substitute my 1 bedroom apartment from
My account. I $152 a month. Call imadele@n
841-0838
Murti sublease 18. Br. Sondance. Apt. 842-7257 4-6
6 p.m. Negotiable
**4-6**
LUNARY 3-bedroom, 3-bath. Twowayhouse. One bedroom. Clubhouse. Free wifi. Clubhouse. and more. Available in May.
Clubhouse. and more. Available in May.
Apt. 2 HR and efficiency. Clea to campus. Utilized clean, quiet, and comfortable. 843-790-1530.
COOPERATIVE LIVING - an established student cooperative located within easy walking distance of the KU campus and downtown Lawrence. Students utilize utilities. Bidings 814-4014 or 814-3125. 4-10
Duplex to be subtitled for June 1 Aug. 15, Close to
Wednesday. Duplex may be rented at $16 per month,
CALM Mark of Dave off during
$16 per month.
MARK K & I II Apartments now renting for summer 2018.
MARK K II, 175 W. Briar St. (R) ON, 609-744-1300.
Travels with Tara. With her as your companion, carving, balancing, of the art and conditioning, carrying, balances, of the art and conditioning, carv
Now taking applications for Fountainb & Grill
Bakery, apply at Fountainb or via the Restaurant.
Apply in person at Viney Restaurant.
HELP WANTED
EXOTIC JOBS: LAKE TAHOE, CALIFORNIA
484 students, 400 summer
overage. Over 55,000 people needed in
tamaranus, ranchers, crushers, river rafts, & more.
6291. Sacramento, California. 59560.
4-24
6292. Sacramento, California. 59560.
JOBS .. MEN .. WOMEN SAILBOATS
CRUISE SHIPS: No experience. High pay! New Caribbean, Hawaii, Europe, World Summer舱客.
Crew: 11 (8-9), 7 (6-7), 4 (3-5)
Box 60129, Boxship, Caamr. 55800
4-26
Research Assistant in Neuropsychiatry (bachelor's degree) from the University of Kansas, $8,600-$12,600 per year. Send resume to Research Assistant, $8,600-$12,600 per year. From March 20, 1970 through April 9, 1970. Stuart B. Fowler, PhD, associate professor of neuropsychiatry (two further information please contact Professor Fowler for details). University of Kansas; neurology and Tooleksonism; University of Kansas; neurology and Tooleksonism; University of Kansas is an equal Opportunity University.
A student assistant for female quadriplectic Student needed for Monday afternoon and Wednesday morning classes. A student taught a learning student to this own vans; helping students with their transportation or senior Call 812-4532 or 812-1011.
DAILY
Get down at The Rock
At The Rock
Ladies 12.00 Guys $3.00
Wednesday
Hillcrest Shopping Center 842-5765
FREE BEER
WEDNESDAY
for all the beer you can drink
GIBRALTARS
RESTAURANT & PRIVATE CLUB
LAWRENCE'S 'BIG-
CITY' NIGHT CLUB
Memberships Available
The Bridge House
HAPPY HOUR
4:30--6:30
1/2 PRICE SET-UPS
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Wed.Sot.
Tomorrow Night
SHOWCASE
KEGGER NITE!
means
FREE BEER!!
Mid-Missouri Hall Band
Ladies $2.00 Guys $3.00
Doors open at 8:00
Friday April 6th
Gary Burton Quartet
$4.00 Ads. $5.00 Show day
The
Lawrence Opera House
7th & Mask
PRIVATE CLUBS
DINING
--great looking ladies
W. 23rd
Available round back
BECOME A MONSTERSTAR TEACHER! Classes
are offered in grades 7-12 by
adults or by minors. Microsoft Plus School.
Please visit www.monsterstar.com for more
information.
The University Information Center is now open. Applications for the position begin May 7 and August 19, 2018. Applications should be received by April 13, 2019. Fax: April 13, 2019 13797. Opportunity-Affirmative Action Employer.
BEER GARDEN
Weekly Private tournament
Bud. Pabst & Natural Int'l Taps
151 Pichlers
Budd, Ann, Jenn
KU University Bound Program has openings for
teacher positions in English, Mathematics,
June and July; 3 hours a week $60 per month. Mum,
English, and communicate effectively with junior
students. Apply online at kuwait.edu/undergrads.
Work with mindfulness and creativity necessary to
work with students in background. Applications
available at 299 Campus Drive, KU Faculty or high-
school teachers practice. KU Faculty or high-
Memberships Wed.-Sat. Available
MON-THURS 7:900
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7:900
.50' Schooners & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1:700
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
Shenanigan's Disco Friday, April 6th
Memberships Avail.
MUSIC
Cooka positions opening very soon for four
weeks and cook girl all around experience.
All cooks will be trained. Must be able to read and follow special
regulations for ideas for specials. Full and part-time
employment opportunities. Speciality personality are absolute must. Also need to have knowledge of the kitchen at the Sanctuary, 842-6340 for appointment. 4-11
Center
a cover charge
Present this ad, for 50* OFF regular admission price.
Always
COLLEGE MEN - Recruiting summer in Colorado
and throughout the United States, work with children in group settings, back home and outside to help them develop valuable adult-male/mother programs. Write new inclusions for Youth Programs. Coach Youth Programs. County Prismart. Co. birth. Contact Phil Cline, PhD (phil.cline@collegeofcolorado.edu)
Never
ATTENTION SUN WORKSHIPPERS Fishing restaurant at Lake of the Desk drinks free try meals and wine. What you need to feel comfortable in this house, what you need to see, now call Frank 4-356-718-2980 Calvine aviary 314-363-7880
Qx
OVERSEA JOBS - Summer year round, Europe,
N. America, Australia, Asia, Etc. All Field $369,
$150 monthly expenses paid Sight seeing Free.
Financial Services, B2-24, CA, Denver CO,
CA 8252
--additional words
BIGK
Tina Pughson *Experience helpful August in per-
formance and Me from across 2nd ed.* 22d St.
New York
MONDAY: 25° Draws
$1.25 Pitchers
701 Mass.
PartTime, or Full-Time ADC Architectural Drafting 458,385 4-5
TUES: ___15' Draws
Coors on Tap. Most bottle & Can Beer- $ 5 5^{\circ} $
THUR: ___ Same as Wed.
Need some spooling money? GOLF (Golf Association)
Need some spooling money? Weds. 6th, 7pm.
Apply between 9 and 10am through
Wednesday. Call 800-254-3300.
$1.25 Pitchers
Monday we start all over again.
WED: ___ Same as Mon.
NEW Same as Wed.
EBI: Same as Thur.
This ad worth one free draw Limit one per person.
SAT: ___ Same as Fri
THE OTHER PLACE
G. P. Lovell is now taking qualification for work with the University of North Carolina to apply. Please apply in person at M.I.T. Law School.
BEER/AMUSEMENTS
Fountain A Grill personal. Been hours and
Mountain A 刺客 injen at Vita Beach Fun.
W 6th 4-17
COMPUTER PROGRAMMER. The Information and Research Department of the City of Kansas is one of the largest wide range of computer applications. This position requires a Bachelor's degree or equivalent in computer programmer in Cobol or Fortran. Our curriculum includes both an IBM mainframe and a personal computer. We recognize national leaders in geographic data management and governmental units. We need a flexible, well-organized team to develop projects and expand into other areas. We require a bachelor's degree plus 150 hours of freelance working atmosphere, and modern office equipment including persons included Spring, 1979 graduation and persons included Spring, 1979 graduation. To Ken M. Information and Research Department, 348 S. Washington Street, Kansas City, KS 6610. An Equal Opportunity Employer.
Sales clerks wanted - 20 to 52 hours; week. Apply in person. Genuine Liquor W 22d, W 23rd
Winter in summer homebrew area. Suburban
earnings possible. Foreside areas, many units
available. Mold LA LA-NW JOURNALs. Call集
Sea Mold. Mn-362772-III. Interviews needed.
4-6
The department of mathematics will have operating underwater education consultants for the Fall 1979 semester. The background in undergraduate mathematics, computer science or physics is required (10 reqs and 0 or 3.20 sec.) *DUTES:* required training (10 reqs) and 0 or 3.20 sec. *DUTES:* required training (10 reqs) and 0 or 3.20 sec. *DUTES:* required training (10 reqs) and 0 or 3.20 sec.
*COMMUNITING COORDINATOR* SALARY; $1,000 $1,050 depend on experience, four tertium period, one year
Research Assistant, Pharmaceutical Chemistry (3.4 to 1.4 hour) Minimum requirement of B.S. in Pharmacy or related field. Should have prior research laboratory experience and be proficient in instrumentation, experiments and instrumentation. Experienced with B.S. required Position available immediately for application. Perform six per month daytime open excursions and qualify as a Contact Dr. Thomas F. Palton (911) 842-6800 or Affirmative Action Employer. 4-10
K.C. Star newspaper is leading for qualified writers who can draw on the folk rock blues genre. The book includes a collection and sample of concert reviews to Shustra State, 1729 Grand, K.C. M. 64108. 4-10
paper, 1729 Grand, K.C. M. 64108.
SUMMER JOB 2018s - Local agent for nationwide van hire. Driver has driver helper position available to start her/her job in the job market or be businesses. Need individuals who are not afraid of high traffic and are willing to work anywhere up to 14 hours. Applies at 12 N. Iowa, St. Louis, MO.
PERSONAL
EASY EXTRA INCOME $200 $1999 Staffing Effort
$35,000 per year ($20,000 for staffing)
OPEN ENTERPRISES, 300 Street Flat
400 Lexington Ave, NY 10026
REKS BIRE SMOET is now open, 290 Railway,
New York. Reks BIRE SMOET is based on
perf. quick repair 1053 Vermont, MK46-67
and 884 Vermont, MK46-68.
HILL HALL SURGERY CLINIC. Abortion up to
17 week. Frequency tests, Birth Control, Counselling. Trial Tubal Ligation. For appointment call 978-234-5620, 409-1088, Overland Park, Ks
HARRIGUER SPECIALS • 4-6 Mon. Tues. Wed. and 2-4 Sun.
BLOOMINGTON SPECIALS • 5-10 Mon. Tues. Wed. and 2-4 Sun.
MAIRDS HARRIGUER NIGHT • WED. $19 per room.
Gay-Ledley counseling referral now handed
through KU Info. 864-256 or headquarters 841-
376.
Gibraltar's Monday dinner beer (plat liquor pool).
4.6
FOX HILL MURDER CLINIC. Alberni on lp, 1200 N. 36th St., FOXHILL, NY 10504. Telephone (618) 279-3130. Contents: Trial Documentation; DNA Analysis; Agnosticism; Evaluations; Evidence of Abortion.
Pete Burke, Bob Bremner, Brian D'Arcy, D.J. Gorman,
Marcus Hauger, Chris Lippman, Brian Mackey, Brian
School and School, being each part of the
school's core curriculum.
Bring this ad to Gibraltar and receive two
new tickets at the price of one Gibraltar
Holiday Carrier ticket.
Behind this ad is巡礼馆 and get 50% off cover
charge. Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday.
Receive a free estimate in the same day.
Attention all men! Young, beautiful intelligent people have handsome eyes, memories and much more looks like brothers. They have keen memory and dining. Prefer applicants to be at least 25 years old, nationality, and if possible, new to the country. Please send resume to Attn: HR, University of California, Berkeley.
Require Dynamics - Writing instruction, booklet
Req 304.1 Write a box Pack 644 A6
qamer, NM R7189
Hwy. Houston, Staunton Mt. Morgan Co. Humphrey,
Missouri 63045.
Fax (817) 292-7200. Send resume to Humphrey,
Missouri 63045. Mail resume to Humphrey,
Missouri 63045. Send
OIDC - Amalgamations for Organize, Dalton, Kearney,
Gilbert, and Tuscaloosa.
Httst and the Allies Office are at the Airport.
Gibberson foxes hour and Thursday @ 3pm, Landa mornst and drink for free. @ 6pm, Laura midst and drink for free.
Male resume wanted, summer, $5 monthly,
utilities. Close to home, own bedroom, pet
home.
Wanted: Female date for concerts, discos. 843-
8518 after 5 p.m.
4-5
ATTENTION JEWISH STUDENTS
Reservations needed for 2nd
night Passage/Sunset
Friday, April 17, 2014 at 5:30 pm
Kansas City North Kansas Lions
Wednesday, April 18, 2014
$4.00
Ticket price: $49.00 (willing to pay
$11.11 W/L Lions)
Students interested in
attending 1st night Bedee
with a family, with
the coupon #B421-6488
on june 842-5144
arriving
MUSICIAN/STUDIO- established by R.C. Lawrence based in Brooklyn, NY with three years of experience and nine engagements (add 98th). Send resume to R.C. Lawrence, 107 Lexington Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11204.
CONTENT CONTEST CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT
Design—design your year's 1998 SB, Skill, Friend,
Sport and yellow Paintbrush drawing. We will be
class membership for next year plus see your
work for next year. Please email April 6 Bring your entries to the COFO offer,
or call Nate Warner on museum later.
Anyone can submit. Winners announced last
morning.
Blaire B. Don't touch us of your Finance &
Education catch up with you. Let me have a beet
and eat it.
Did you know that at the beginning of every Student Senate meeting there is a 15 minute session so that anyone can express views they might have on campus? Students at 12:30 in the 8th floor, come to talk to 4-8.
GREAT FOOD, GREAT SERVICE, and like you
are the best Mom on Moni! Dad,
sat a 1/4 hour on Sunday, 1 a.m.
on Monday.
give a damn
Albina ear car wash, Saturday april 10
King's park drive lot 19, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Only $14
$14
Diamond with weight, band 1. 9 g
Diamond with weight, band 2. 7 g
will sell for $1,600. "You have looked very well!"
will sell for $1,800. "You have looked very well!"
Attractive young man, bring of April Fool's Day greetings. Call 1-800-533-6291 or visit www.adult-fools.com. The key points are no more calls needed.
Terry, Happy Birthday to my main subject,
the College life; Very very, very much.
Arava
Be alive! he be full of energy, he be happy we are the body's medicine to this new generation in the NMH team; he be healthy herbs; and HI-PROTEN—healthy愈合 C Call Bob at 812-8425 between 2 and 4 p.m.
DEAR HONNIE MOUTH1 I love you and you
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LOVE-MUSIC LUNGINBACKER 4-5
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---
SELL IT!
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
If you've got it, Kansan
If you've got it, Kanna.
Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint
figure costs. Now you've got it!
Telling Power!
AD DEADLINE
to run
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Thursday 5 pm
Friday 5 pm
Monday 5 pm
Tuesday 5 pm
Wednesday 5 pm
RATES:
15 words or less
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write ad here:
2
times
$2.25
02
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch- $3.50
DATES TO RUN:
3 times
$2.50
03
NAME: ___
ADDRESS: ___
PHONE: ___
KANSAM CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
16
Wednesday, April 4, 1979
University Daily Kansan
STEREO SALE ELIMINATION
BRAND NAME
STEREO
REDUCTIONS
THRU-OUT
OUR
STORE
$75,000 STOCK REDUCTION
STUDIO LAB SPEAKER SYSTEMS
S
SPEAKL
40%
OFF
You owe it to yourself to listen to these superb speakers
A*SL-110 3 WAY 4 SPEAKER SYSTEM ... Reg. $300.00/pair
B*SL-120 3 WAY 4 SPEAKER SYSTEM ... Reg. $380.00/pair
C*SL-150 4 WAY 5 SPEAKER TOWER
SPEAKER SYSTEM Reg. $600.00/pair
---
KOSS
SPEAKER SYSTEM . . . Reg. $600.00/pair
HEADPHONES
KOSS K6A
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Built In Equalizers ... $80.00
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$140.00
HAS PUT TOGETHER ALL THE COMPONENTS OF GREAT SOUND.
A Sony HST-49 FM/AM Stereo receiver and cassette deck. PS-212 direct drive semi-automatic turntable and two SS-440 2-way speakers. The HST-49 has our unique Program Sensor Tuning system that lets you set your 10 favorite stations at optimum positions for perfect tuning in the future, built-in AFC for drift-free FM reception and lots more. While the PS-212 features a direct drive servo controlled motor for low, wow and flutter and the speakers have special passive radiators for full rich sound. All at another important component of great sound. An affordable price.
"IT'S ASONY."
ONLY $540.00
Technics
SA-500
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
55 WATT RECEIVER
50 WAIT RECEIVER
SA- 200 Technic
maximum RMS, both channels driven, at 8 ohms from 20-20000 Hz, with no more than 0.04% total harmonic distortion.
$340.00 Reg. 430.00
ROTEL® RX-503
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RAD
35 WATT RECEIVER
ROTEL RX-503
35 watts per channel, minimum RMS, both channels driven, at 6 ohms from 20,000 kHz, with no more than 10 ohms.
$210.00
PIONEER
DIRECT DRIVE TURNTABLE SPECIALS
Reg. 340.00
DENON
Sale Reg.
PL-518 Direct Drive... $139.95 $199.95
PL-540 Quartz Direct Drive.. $179.95 249.95
ROTEL
SUPER CASSETTE DECK
A high-performance front loading deck of superb quality. In addition to peak LED level meters and Dolby, there's a host of features here every enthusiast will appreciate and want.
$279.95
Reg. 440.00
TDK tape
SAC 90 Cassette
SUPER AVILYN
Case of 10 C-90
$19.95
Reg. 57.00
Technics
D SERIES
Case of 10 C:90
$19.95
Reg. 29.95
Technics RS-616 Cassette Deck
D. 60 Cassette
Technics
Front-loading with vertical tape transport, Dolly, LH recordplayback head for durability and exertion, lateral tape motor, separate 3-position bismuth and equalization torps for use with ferril, CrO₂ and FcC tapes, soft tape for use with ferril, CrO₂ and FcC tapes.
45 Watt Integrated Amplifier
$179.95 Reg. 210.00
AUX INPUT
CH1 CH2 CH3
CH4 CH5 CH6
CH7 CH8 CH9
CH10 CH11 CH12
CH13 CH14 CH15
CH16 CH17 CH18
CH19 CH20 CH21 CH22
CH23 CH24 CH25 CH26
CH27 CH28 CH29 CH30
CH31 CH32 CH33 CH34
CH35 CH36 CH37 CH38
CH39 CH40 CH41 CH42
CH43 CH44 CH45 CH46
CH47 CH48 CH49 CH50
CH51 CH52 CH53 CH54
CH55 CH56 CH57 CH58
CH59 CH60 CH61 CH62
CH63 CH64 CH65 CH66
CH67 CH68 CH69 CH70
CH71 CH72 CH73 CH74
CH75 CH76 CH77 CH78
CH79 CH80 CH81 CH82
CH83 CH84 CH85 CH86
CH87 CH88 CH89 CH90
CH91 CH92 CH93 CH94
CH95 CH96 CH97 CH98
CH99 CH100 CH101 CH102
CH103 CH104 CH105 CH106
CH107 CH108 CH109 CH110
CH111 CH112 CH113 CH114
CH115 CH116 CH117 CH118
CH119 CH120 CH121 CH122
CH123 CH124 CH125 CH126
CH127 CH128 CH129 CH130
CH131 CH132 CH133 CH134
CH135 CH136 CH137 CH138
CH139 CH140 CH141 CH142
CH143 CH144 CH145 CH146
CH147 CH148 CH149 CH150
CH151 CH152 CH153 CH154
CH155 CH156 CH157 CH158
CH159 CH160 CH161 CH162
CH163 CH164 CH165 CH166
CH167 CH168 CH169 CH170
CH171 CH172 CH173 CH174
CH175 CH176 CH177 CH178
CH179 CH180 CH181 CH182
CH183 CH184 CH185 CH186
CH187 CH188 CH189 CH190
CH191 CH192 CH193 CH194
CH195 CH196 CH197 CH198
CH199 CH200 CH201 CH202
CH203 CH204 CH205 CH206
CH207 CH208 CH209 CH210
CH211 CH212 CH213 CH214
CH215 CH216 CH217 CH218
CH219 CH220 CH221 CH222
CH223 CH224 CH225 CH226
CH227 CH228 CH229 CH230
CH231 CH232 CH233 CH234
CH235 CH236 CH237 CH238
CH239 CH240 CH241 CH242
CH243 CH244 CH245 CH246
CH247 CH248 CH249 CH250
CH251 CH252 CH253 CH254
CH255 CH256 CH257 CH258
CH259 CH260 CH261 CH262
CH263 CH264 CH265 CH266
CH267 CH268 CH269 CH270
CH271 CH272 CH273 CH274
CH275 CH276 CH277 CH278
CH279 CH280 CH281 CH282
CH283 CH284 CH285 CH286
CH287 CH288 CH289 CH290
CH291 CH292 CH293 CH294
CH295 CH296 CH297 CH298
CH299 CH300 CH301 CH302
CH303 CH304 CH305 CH306
CH307 CH308 CH309 CH310
CH311 CH312 CH313 CH314
CH315 CH316 CH317 CH318
CH319 CH320 CH321 CH322
CH323 CH324 CH325 CH326
CH327 CH328 CH329 CH330
CH331 CH332 CH333 CH334
CH335 CH336 CH337 CH338
CH339 CH340 CH341 CH342
CH343 CH344 CH345 CH346
CH347 CH348 CH349 CH350
CH351 CH352 CH353 CH354
CH355 CH356 CH357 CH358
CH359 CH360 CH361 CH362
CH363 CH364 CH365 CH366
CH367 CH368 CH369 CH370
CH371 CH372 CH373 CH374
CH375 CH376 CH377 CH378
CH379 CH380 CH381 CH382
CH383 CH384 CH385 CH386
CH387 CH388 CH389 CH390
CH391 CH392 CH393 CH394
CH395 CH396 CH397 CH398
CH399 CH400 CH401 CH402
CH403 CH404 CH405 CH406
CH407 CH408 CH409 CH410
CH411 CH412 CH413 CH414
CH415 CH416 CH417 CH418
CH419 CH420 CH421 CH422
CH423 CH424 CH425 CH426
CH427 CH428 CH429 CH430
CH431 CH432 CH433 CH434
CH435 CH436 CH437 CH438
CH439 CH440 CH441 CH442
CH443 CH444 CH445 CH446
CH447 CH448 CH449 CH450
CH451 CH452 CH453 CH454
CH455 CH456 CH457 CH458
CH459 CH460 CH461 CH462
CH463 CH464 CH465 CH466
CH467 CH468 CH469 CH470
CH471 CH472 CH473 CH474
CH475 CH476 CH477 CH478
CH479 CH480 CH481 CH482
CH483 CH484 CH485 CH486
CH487 CH488 CH489 CH490
CH491 CH492 CH493 CH494
CH495 CH496 CH497 CH498
CH499 CH500 CH501 CH502
CH503 CH504 CH505 CH506
CH507 CH508 CH509 CH510
CH511 CH512 CH513 CH514
CH515 CH516 CH517 CH518
CH519 CH520 CH521 CH522
CH523 CH524 CH525 CH526
CH527 CH528 CH529 CH530
CH531 CH532 CH533 CH534
CH535 CH536 CH537 CH538
CH539 CH540 CH541 CH542
CH543 CH544 CH545 CH546
CH547 CH548 CH549 CH550
CH551 CH552 CH553 CH554
CH555 CH556 CH557 CH558
CH559 CH560 CH561 CH562
CH563 CH564 CH565 CH566
CH567 CH568 CH569 CH570
CH571 CH572 CH573 CH574
CH575 CH576 CH577 CH578
CH579 CH580 CH581 CH582
CH583 CH584 CH585 CH586
CH587 CH588 CH589 CH590
CH591 CH592 CH593 CH594
CH595 CH596 CH597 CH598
CH599 CH600 CH601 CH602
CH603 CH604 CH605 CH606
CH607 CH608 CH609 CH610
CH611 CH612 CH613 CH614
CH615 CH616 CH617 CH618
CH619 CH620 CH621 CH622
CH623 CH624 CH625 CH626
CH627 CH628 CH629 CH630
CH631 CH632 CH633 CH634
CH635 CH636 CH637 CH638
CH639 CH640 CH641 CH642
CH643 CH644 CH645 CH646
CH647 CH648 CH649 CH650
CH651 CH652 CH653 CH654
CH655 CH656 CH657 CH658
CH659 CH660 CH661 CH662
CH663 CH664 CH665 CH666
CH667 CH668 CH669 CH670
CH671 CH672 CH673 CH674
CH675 CH676 CH677 CH678
CH679 CH680 CH681 CH682
CH683 CH684 CH685 CH686
CH687 CH688 CH689 CH690
CH691 CH692 CH693 CH694
CH695 CH696 CH697 CH698
CH699 CH700 CH701 CH702
CH703 CH704 CH705 CH706
CH707 CH708 CH709 CH710
CH711 CH712 CH713 CH714
CH715 CH716 CH717 CH718
CH719 CH720 CH721 CH722
CH723 CH724 CH725 CH726
CH727 CH728 CH729 CH730
CH731 CH732 CH733 CH734
CH735 CH736 CH737 CH738
CH739 CH740 CH741 CH742
CH743 CH744 CH745 CH746
CH747 CH748 CH749 CH750
CH751 CH752 CH753 CH754
CH755 CH756 CH757 CH758
CH759 CH760 CH761 CH762
CH763 CH764 CH765 CH766
CH767 CH768 CH769 CH770
CH771 CH772 CH773 CH774
CH775 CH776 CH777 CH778
CH779 CH780 CH781 CH782
CH783 CH784 CH785 CH786
CH787 CH788 CH789 CH790
CH791 CH792 CH793 CH794
CH795 CH796 CH797 CH798
CH799 CH800 CH801 CH802
CH803 CH804 CH805 CH806
CH807 CH808 CH809 CH810
CH811 CH812 CH813 CH814
CH815 CH816 CH817 CH818
CH819 CH820 CH821 CH822
CH823 CH824 CH825 CH826
CH827 CH828 CH829 CH830
CH831 CH832 CH833 CH834
CH835 CH836 CH837 CH838
CH839 CH840 CH841 CH842
CH843 CH844 CH845 CH846
CH847 CH848 CH849 CH850
CH851 CH852 CH853 CH854
CH855 CH856 CH857 CH858
CH859 CH860 CH861 CH862
CH863 CH864 CH865 CH866
CH867 CH868 CH869 CH870
CH871 CH872 CH873 CH874
CH875 CH876 CH877 CH878
CH879 CH880 CH881 CH882
CH883 CH884 CH885 CH886
CH887 CH888 CH889 CH890
CH891 CH892 CH893 CH894
CH895 CH896 CH897 CH898
CH899 CH900 CH901 CH902
CH903 CH904 CH905 CH906
CH907 CH908 CH909 CH910
CH911 CH912 CH913 CH914
CH915 CH916 CH917 CH918
CH919 CH920 CH921 CH922
CH923 CH924 CH925 CH926
CH927 CH928 CH929 CH930
CH931 CH932 CH933 CH934
CH935 CH936 CH937 CH938
CH939 CH940 CH941 CH942
CH943 CH944 CH945 CH946
CH947 CH948 CH949 CH950
CH951 CH952 CH953 CH954
CH955 CH956 CH957 CH958
CH959 CH960 CH961 CH962
CH963 CH964 CH965 CH966
CH967 CH968 CH969 CH970
CH971 CH972 CH973 CH974
CH975 CH976 CH977 CH978
CH979 CH980 CH981 CH982
CH983 CH984 CH985 CH986
CH987 CH988 CH989 CH990
CH991 CH992 CH993 CH994
CH995 CH996 CH997 CH998
CH999 CH1000 CH1001 CH1002
CH1003 CH1004 CH1005 CH1006
CH1007 CH1008 CH1009 CH1010
CH1011 CH1012 CH1013 CH1014
CH1015 CH1016 CH1017 CH1018
CH1019 CH1020 CH1021 CH1022
CH1023 CH1024 CH1025 CH1026
CH1027 CH1028 CH1029 CH1030
CH1031 CH1032 CH1033 CH1034
CH1035 CH1036 CH1037 CH1038
CH1039 CH1040 CH1041 CH1042
CH1043 CH1044 CH1045 CH1046
CH1047 CH1048 CH1049 CH1050
CH1051 CH1052 CH1053 CH1054
CH1055 CH1056 CH1057 CH1058
CH1059 CH1060 CH1061 CH1062
CH1063 CH1064 CH1065 CH1066
CH1067 CH1068 CH1069 CH1070
CH1071 CH1072 CH1073 CH1074
CH1075 CH1076 CH1077 CH1078
CH1079 CH1080 CH1081 CH1082
CH1083 CH1084 CH1085 CH1086
CH1087 CH1088 CH1089 CH1090
CH1091 CH1092 CH1093 CH1094
CH1095 CH1096 CH1097 CH1098
CH1099 CH1100 CH1101 CH1102
CH1103 CH1104 CH1105 CH1106
CH1107 CH1108 CH1109 CH1110
CH1111 CH1112 CH1113 CH1114
CH1115 CH1116 CH1117 CH1118
CH1119 CH1120 CH1121 CH1122
CH1123 CH1124 CH1125 CH1126
CH1127 CH1128 CH1129 CH1130
CH1131 CH1132 CH1133 CH1134
CH1135 CH1136 CH1137 CH1138
CH1139 CH1140 CH1141 CH1142
CH1143 CH1144 CH1145 CH1146
CH1147 CH1148 CH1149 CH1150
CH1151 CH1152 CH1153 CH1154
CH1155 CH1156 CH1157 CH1158
CH1159 CH1160 CH1161 CH1162
CH1163 CH1164 CH1165 CH1166
CH1167 CH1168 CH1169 CH1170
CH1171 CH1172 CH1173 CH1174
CH1175 CH1176 CH1177 CH1178
CH1179 CH1180 CH1181 CH1182
CH1183 CH1184 CH1185 CH1186
CH1187 CH1188 CH1189 CH1190
CH1191 CH1192 CH1193 CH1194
CH1195 CH1196 CH1197 CH1198
CH1199 CH1200 CH1201 CH1202
CH1203 CH1204 CH1205 CH1206
CH1207 CH1208 CH1209 CH1210
CH1211 CH1212 CH1213 CH1214
CH1215 CH1216 CH1217 CH1218
CH1219 CH1220 CH1221 CH1222
CH1223 CH1224 CH1225 CH1226
CH1227 CH1228 CH1229 CH1230
CH1231 CH1232 CH1233 CH1234
CH1235 CH1236 CH1237 CH1238
CH1239 CH1240 CH1241 CH1242
CH1243 CH1244 CH1245 CH1246
CH1247 CH1248 CH1249 CH1250
CH1251 CH1252 CH1253 CH1254
CH1255 CH1256 CH1257 CH1258
CH1259 CH1260 CH1261 CH1262
CH1263 CH1264 CH1265 CH1266
CH1267 CH1268 CH1269 CH1270
CH1271 CH1272 CH1273 CH1274
CH1275 CH1276 CH1277 CH1278
CH1279 CH1280 CH1281 CH1282
CH1283 CH1284 CH1285 CH1286
CH1287 CH1288 CH1289 CH1290
CH1291 CH1292 CH1293 CH1294
CH1295 CH1296 CH1297 CH1298
CH1299 CH1300 CH1301 CH1302
CH1303 CH1304 CH1305 CH1306
CH1307 CH1308 CH1309 CH1310
CH1311 CH1312 CH1313 CH1314
CH1315 CH1316 CH1317 CH1318
CH1319 CH1320 CH1321 CH1322
CH1323 CH1324 CH1325 CH1326
CH1327 CH1328 CH1329 CH1330
CH1331 CH1332 CH1333 CH1334
CH1335 CH1336 CH1337 CH1338
CH1339 CH1340 CH1341 CH1342
CH1343 CH1344 CH1345 CH1346
CH1347 CH1348 CH1349 CH1350
CH1351 CH1352 CH1353 CH1354
CH1355 CH1356 CH1357 CH1358
CH1359 CH1360 CH1361 CH1362
CH1363 CH1364 CH1365 CH1366
CH1367 CH1368 CH1369 CH1370
CH1371 CH1372 CH1373 CH1374
CH1375 CH1376 CH1377 CH1378
CH1379 CH1380 CH1381 CH1382
CH1383 CH1384 CH1385 CH1386
CH1387 CH1388 CH1389 CH1390
CH1391 CH1392 CH1393 CH1394
CH1395 CH1396 CH1397 CH1398
CH1399 CH1400 CH1401 CH1402
CH1403 CH1404 CH1405 CH1406
CH1407 CH1408 CH1409 CH1410
CH1411 CH1412 CH1413 CH1414
CH1415 CH1416 CH1417 CH1418
CH1419 CH1420 CH1421 CH1422
CH1423 CH1424 CH1425 CH1426
CH1427 CH1428 CH1429 CH1430
CH1431 CH1432 CH1433 CH1434
CH1435 CH1436 CH1437 CH1438
CH1439 CH1440 CH1441 CH1442
CH1443 CH1444 CH1445 CH1446
CH1447 CH1448 CH1449 CH1450
CH1451 CH1452 CH1453 CH1454
CH1455 CH1456 CH1457 CH1458
CH1459 CH1460 CH1461 CH1462
CH1463 CH1464 CH1465 CH1466
CH1467 CH1468 CH1469 CH1470
CH1471 CH1472 CH1473 CH1474
CH1475 CH1476 CH1477 CH1478
CH1479 CH1480 CH1481 CH1482
CH1483 CH1484 CH1485 CH1486
CH1487 CH1488 CH1489 CH1490
CH1491 CH1492 CH1493 CH1494
CH1495 CH1496 CH1497 CH1498
CH1499 CH1500 CH1501 CH1502
CH1503 CH1504 CH1505 CH1506
CH1507 CH1508 CH1509 CH1510
CH1511 CH1512 CH1513 CH1514
CH1515 CH1516 CH1517 CH1518
CH1519 CH1520 CH1521 CH1522
CH1523 CH1524 CH1525 CH1526
CH1527 CH1528 CH1529 CH1530
CH1531 CH1532 CH1533 CH1534
CH1535 CH1536 CH1537 CH1538
CH1539 CH1540 CH1541 CH1542
CH1543 CH1544 CH1545 CH1546
CH1547 CH1548 CH1549 CH1550
CH1551 CH1552 CH1553 CH1554
CH1555 CH1556 CH1557 CH1558
CH1559 CH1560 CH1561 CH1562
CH1563 CH1564 CH1565 CH1566
CH1567 CH1568 CH1569 CH1570
CH1571 CH1572 CH1573 CH1574
CH1575 CH1576 CH1577 CH1578
CH1579 CH1580 CH1581 CH1582
CH1583 CH1584 CH1585 CH1586
CH1587 CH1588 CH1589 CH1590
CH1591 CH1592 CH1593 CH1594
CH1595 CH1596 CH1597 CH1598
CH1599 CH1600 CH1601 CH1602
CH1603 CH1604 CH1605 CH1606
CH1607 CH1608 CH1609 CH1610
CH1611 CH1612 CH1613 CH1614
CH1615 CH1616 CH1617 CH1618
CH1619 CH1620 CH1621 CH1622
CH1623 CH1624 CH1625 CH1626
CH1627 CH1628 CH1629 CH1630
CH1631 CH1632 CH1633 CH1634
CH1635 CH1636 CH1637 CH1638
CH1639 CH1640 CH1641 CH1642
CH1643 CH1644 CH1645 CH1646
CH1647 CH1648 CH1649 CH1650
CH1651 CH1652 CH1653 CH1654
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
Vol.89, No.125
Council allocation to remain same See story page six
Thursday, April 5, 1979
(1)
BURSTER STORE
Staff photo by CHRIS TODD
Damp dancers
Dancers in the second floor studio in Robinson Gymnastics concentrate on routines despite numerous buckets and plastic
tarps, hanging from the ceiling, that are filling with water from leaks in the roof of the building.
Leaky roof hinders gym users
By NANCY DRESSLER
Sports Editor
Intramural basketball was rained out this week when the roof of Robinson Gymnasium did not keep rain and snow from finding its floor.
The raindots made the recurring problem of Robinson's leaky roof visible again.
The men's Hill championship was delayed once and was played last night in Robinson. The women's game for the Hill championship was postponed twice and has been rescheduled for 5:30 tonight in Robinson.
Wayne Ossney, chairman of the department of health, physical education and recreation, said yesterday that leaking into classrooms, offices and gymnasiums on the building's second floor occurred since he became head of the department six years ago.
A FORMER instructs of dance, Willie Lenoir, said he thought the building's roof had leaked into the second floor dance studio. He also said the dance floor was broken.
In addition to the cancellation of intramural games, all dance classes yesterday in the second floor studio were canceled.
Tuesday night, Lenior led a Tau神舞 dance group through a session in the studio, despite 16 buckets and at least two taut arms.
But the buckets and tarps might not have to be used much anger if plum to put a new roof on the building progress as expected.
Osmess said a $353,000 appropriation from the 1978 Kansas Legislature for Robinson would be used for the new roof. Concerns over the cost of the roof have been raised.
GENE SANNEMAN, of the state architect's office in Topeka,
said birds for the project could go out this week and actual con-
trol would be possible.
Lenoir said the dance studio's floor had warped from weekend rains that leaked into the studio's southeast corner. The floor also
But until a new roof can be put on the building, indoor recreation and classes will continue to be affected every time it is built.
The roof over the studio was repaired in March 1977 by Facilities Workers operations in an effort to stop the leaking.
From the room's ceiling, large, white pieces of tarp hang full of yellow water that has come through the soggy roof. Dancers in the room sometimes wondered when the tarps would give way, Lenoir said.
Tom Wilkerson,馆员 of recreation services, has been with HPER since 1975. He said that this year, about a dozen intramural events, in volleyball and basketball, had been canceled because of the leaks and wet floors.
BEFORE THOSE repairs, 12 intramural basketball games had been canceled because of wet floors.
"We can't allow students to play on the courts if there's a possibility of injury and us being held for contributory
Students can use the courts to shoot baskets. However, games
that use the full court cannot be used because of buckets and tarps set out to catch water.
As long as the leaks stay either in the middle of the floor or between the two courts in each gym, the gyms will stay open for
"BUT if it gets too severe, if it looks underneath the basket, we can't use it," he said. "We can take a chance on someone slip
About 10,000 students took part in volleyball and basketball intramurals this year. But students are not the only ones to feel stressed.
"You should see my office. I just moved out of it." Wilkerson said, "There's not a room upstairs in Robinson that doesn't have a window."
"Facilities Operations is doing everything they can to stop the leaks but they're not roofers."
Rodger Oke, director of facilities operations, said in the three years he had been at KU, Robinson's roof had been a problem.
"Our people have spent considerable hours on it," he said.
"Late last fall and winter, with the snow, we had an awful lot of work."
Facilities Operations is not the only group battling the problem. Joan Sloss, acting assistant professor of health, physical education and recreation, said money had been taken from her school for a semester break to repair the rain-warned dance studio's floor.
"WHAT WE'RE anxious for is the replacement roof."
"We had a New York artist in residence in February. For two days, the water ran terribly, off the lights. That when they put it on," she said.
HOWEVER, the plastic has already collapsed in one of the second floor rooms. Sloss said.
Sissal said several incidents of students and instructors slipping on the wet floor had occurred but that there had not been any injury.
"It took a lot of sanding, a lot of work." Sloss said. "Now the work is ruined. The floor is hardly warned."
"It's not real dangerous," Sloss said. "When water's on the floor, that has been a problem."
The building's flat, dead-level roof will be replaced eventually by a sloping roof, with a one-inch size slope for each foot of roof.
Sannerman said patching no longer would stop the drips because the roof on Robinson had outdated its usefulness. Manufacturers of roofs such as the one on the building do not give a guarantee for much more than from 5 to 10 years, he said.
Until the new roof is completed, though, it probably will continue to rain into Robinson. But at least one instructor has found
Keith Lawton, director of facilities planning, said a similar roof would be put on the Robinson addition, which is scheduled for next year.
Gov. John Carlin incarceration a death penalty bill yesterday, killing the efforts of the bill's supporters to remand a capital punishment prisoner.
"It was difficult to teach this winter," Sloss said. "I had to shout over water drinking."
"The only thing that relieved it was making jokes about it. One time, I choreographed my dance class around the buckets."
Carlin vetoes death bill
The death penalty bill had been to pass both houses of the Kansas Legislature since a 1972 U.S. Supreme Court decision struck out the possibility that a life sentence could be
From Staff and Wire Reports
In his veto message, Carlin said he was philosophically opposed to the taking of human life.
"I am an optimist," Carlin said. "I believe that society can find a way to deal with violence without using violence. I am confident the state of Kansas can protect its citizens without taking the lives of its criminals."
State Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, a death penalty supporter, said there was "no chance" that the House and Senate would move to abolish the death penalty.
A TWO-THIRD majority in each house would be needed to override the veto. The House passed the bill Monday with a 78-47 vote. However, the bill barely passed the Senate last week with a 21-19 vote.
Carlin's veto was criticized by former Gov. Robert F. Bennett, who said Carlin had broken a campaign promise to not vota any constitutional death penalty bill that the Legislature sent to him.
Carlin's veto message did not mention any constitutional or legal flaws in the death penalty bill.
Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, said Carlin's decision to veto the bill on moral citizens "is a clear example of his callous disregard for Kansas citizens and their expectations."
"it two-faced, to say the least, and unforgivable as far as *...* concerned," Rem垦 said. "A far more fortifying position would have been to declare his moral conviction against the death penalty and say he couldn't support it under any circumstances."
POLLS HAVE indicated that a substantial majority of Kansans favor reinvesting the death penalty in some form.
Bill Hoeh, Carlis's press secretary, referred to comment on the reasons for the veto, but said, "I'm certain the people of kansas will be very concerned."
Hoch's sentiments were echoed by Karl Menninger, co-founder of the Topeka Menninger Foundation and a long-time opponent of the death penalty. Menniger said the veto was "a great act of courage, made by an honest, intelligent and Christian man."
State Rep. Thee Cribbes, D-Wichita, also supported Carlin's vet, saying, "I'm just so glad. I think that we, as a society, have passed the cowboy and Indian stage where we take an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth."
The state's corrections secretary, Patrick McMannus, agreed with Cribe, saying the death penalty as a solution to crime was "unfair."
McManus' remarks supported Carlin's contention that the death penalty did not deter crime.
M. EMANUS, WHO has said he would resign rather than carry out a death sentence, said, "My position has been all along that the death penalty is really not a correction issue because there's no wrong way to do it." The question is anything other than just simply taking the life of an individual.
"I believe that in a civilized society, penalties applied by the state against those who break the law can only be justified for their rehabilitative, punitive or deterrent value." Carlin's vet message finds that capital punishment falls all of these three standards.
Nuclear issue gets action
By MELISSATHOMPSON
By MELISSA THOMPSON Special to the Kansan
WASHINGTON—Some U.S. Congressmen from Kansas are beginning to join the score of other public officials who are reacting to the recent accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant near Harrisburg, Pa.
Rep. Bob Whittaker, a Republican who represents the 5th District, said yesterday that he had written a letter to Joseph Hendrie, chairman of the Nuclear Safety Council, asking for an evaluation of the chance for a similar accident could occur at other plants.
Whittaker's district includes the Wolf Creek nuclear plant near Burington. The nuclear plant is being built by the same company that built the Three Mile Island structure and it is not known where it was located.
One other knee congressman has taken action on the subject. Rep. Dan Glickman, a
In the letter Whittaker said he knew it would take time to discover all the details of the accident at Three Mile Island, but he was confident that it is expeditioned in handling the investigation.
Democrat from the 4th District, send a letter yesterday to President Carter, asking him to see that NICA on-site inspectors be persecuted and that they whether under construction or in operation.
Glickman had said on the floor of the House Tuesday that the NRC's inspection and enforcement staff had 715 employees, but that only 20 percent of them were involved in the investigation. Other plants are reviewed by traveling field inspectors about once or twice a month.
According to Lew Ketcham, Glickman's press secretary, the NRC has the staff and the authorization by law to install such systems at his facility, and assuring giving the NRC that authority, he said.
Ketaham said he knew that there was extensive training involved and that the delays in sending inspectors to all plants resulted in the result of a slow training schedule.
However, he said he did not know what percentage of the NRC's inspection and enforcement agencies were involved.
Jerry Woolff, press secretary to Rep. Jim Jeffries, a Republican from the 2nd
District, said any lack of response or action should not be taken as a lack of concern
He said Jeffries wanted to wait before making any sort of statement to see what the results of the investigation at Three Mile Island would be.
However, he said that Jeffries would be participating in hearings on the subject that will be held by the House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs in early May.
The committee, which is led by Rep. Morris Udall, D-Arizona, is expected to begin the hearing shortly after Congress returns from Easter recess. Kansas Governor Kelsey Husson, a Republican representing the 1st District, also is a member of that committee.
In the Kansas Legislature, a resolution urging creation of a legislative committee to investigate the safety of the Wolf Creek plant will not be debated this session.
Senate Majority Leader Norman Gaar said an investigation could be initiated without taking time to debate the issue in committee. He had first adjournment at the end of this week.
By DAVID EDDS
Harris pleads guilty in shooting
Staff Reporter
Lee Harris, of Denver, pleaded guilty yesterday to a charge of first-degree murder in the slaying of Norworn Wood, of Brook, Douglas County District Court judge
Harris, 26, had been charged with first-degree murder in connection with the November 1977 shooting death of Norwood, a woman named N. Woolworth Co., 911 Massachusetts St.
Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said, "The plea is the culmination of a lot of hard police work. One reason the case was worked so well by the police."
Harris was being held in the Douglas
County jail awaiting a jury trial that was to begin April 9. He was extradited to Kansas in December 1978 from Colorado, where he was arrested in December 1977
A second person charged with the shooting death of Norwood, Charles Moore, 25, of Denver, is fighting extrication to a hearing scheduled for Monday in Dyer.
"We got exactly what we were aiming for in a jury trial—conviction for first-degree murder."
Dennis Prater, Harringr' court-appointed attorney, said Harris had reached the settlement with her lawyers.
"I'd rather not just say why Mr. Harris needed to plead guilty," Prater said. "I am sorry."
"Harris and I had discussed his pleading guilty for sometime."
Malone said he had been surprised when Prater contacted him yesterday telling him that Harris was willing to plead guilty to the charge of first-degree murder.
Harris also pleaded guilty to charges of kidnapping of and of the aggravated robbery.
He said Harris would be sentenced at 4:30 p.m., April 25, in Douglas County district court.
"Harris will be sentenced to life imprisonment," Malone said, "I have offered evidence that the murder was committed with a firearm. If the court finds that a firearm was used, it has no option but to sentence Harris to life in prison."
Committee denies allocation change
By CAROL BEIER
Staff Reporter
The Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee closed one door for additional meetings that could be made night when it recommended that no permanent change be made in the council's line
According to the Senate revenue code, the council receives 41 cents a student for each academic year based on projected next year's line allocation will be $15.08
However, the council requested $35,465.
That request was cut to $23,465 in Tuesday night's Academic Affairs Committee meeting.
After tonight's meeting, Tim Trump, Academic Affairs chairman, said an amendment would be attached to his committee's budget bill that would provide the $4,477 increase be supplied by sources other than a revenue code increase.
TRUMP SAID $2,752 could come from money not allocated by the Academic Affairs Committee. The amendment would override a provision of $2,753 from the Senate unapplicable account.
"It appears no one made much of an effort to get in touch with me," he said.
"I sat in budget hearings for four nights, and when it came to the one that really needed it, I went through them in—they took away my right to speak on the matter and vote on it through a secretarial system."
Ron McDowell, graduate student senator and member of the Academic Affairs Committee, said he was not surprised at the Finance and Auditing ruling and that he was more upset that he had not been notified of the committee meeting Tuesday night.
TRUMP SAID that the graduate students were not excluded purposely.
Neither McDowell nor any of the three other graduate students on the Academic Affairs committee or the Academic Affairs meeting at which Graduate Student Council fund request was made.
"I sent out notification of the meeting on Friday," Prum said.
McDowell also said that Mark Mikkelsen, executive director of the council, was "not invited" to last night's Finance and Auditing meeting.
"I didn't say inappropriate. I said any graduate student was welcome." Davis
However, Davis, Finance and Auditing chairman, denied that he had said Mikkelsen's attendance would be "inappropriate."
"I asked Matt Davis tonight if Mark Mikelsen should speak at tonight's meeting," McDowell said. "He told me, 'No.' He inappropriately and probably out of order."
said, "I said there was no need since it was already recommended that they be fun activities."
IN OTHER business, the Finance and Auditing Committee ruled that the Academic Freedom Action Coalition duplicated the services of the Student Senate Rights Committee and therefore would not be funded for fiscal 1980.
Some Finance and Auditing committee members suggested that the members of the Academic Freedom Action Coalition join the Student Rights Committee.
Ron Kuby, president of the coalition, said, "We will not join the Student Rights Committee. The committee has a very inflated opinion that that's unfortunate for the student body."
"If people want to sit around in Student Senate Rights Committee meetings, that's fine."
Finance and Auditing also voted to recommend continued membership in the Associated Students of Kansas lobby organization.
KU joined ASK last fall under a provisional one-year membership for $2,500. Next year, KU would pay $9,150 in ASK dues.
2
Thursday, April 5, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Servers
Nuclear reactor may be shut
HARBURSHI, Pa. — Radiation is divided neatly around the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant yesterday, and federal officials said they were ready to begin work.
The plant would be in cold shutdown after the fuel core temperature was towered from the current 280 degrees Fahrenheit to between 100 and 150 degrees Fahrenheit.
Although officials are concerned about the durability of vital instruments inside the reactor, conditions at the plant remain stable, according to Harold
Denton confirmed that human error had contributed to the reactor accident. In Washington, NRC officials described three separate errors that contributed
The first error was that valves on an emergency pumping system—part of the reactor's cooling system—were closed when they should have been left open. Later, an operator turned off the plant's main emergency core cooling system at the wrong time.
Finally, four auxiliary water pumps were disengaged when there was no apparent reason for them not to be working.
Liquor-bill tax cut proposed
The bill would repeal laws requiring the nearly 1,000 private clubs in Kansas to operate liquor pools.
The Kansan Senate passed the bill without including a special tax on mixed drinks sold in clubs, but the House amended it to require a 10 percent tax on alcohol.
Five of the six conference committee members agreed to lower the tax, but they have not yet signed a report to send the measure back to the two houses for approval.
If the hill is approved, the revenue from the five percent tax and an existing gallionate tax on liquor would go back to city and county governments for future use.
Bhutto's death brinas violence
RAWALPINDI, Pakistan—Housing and demonstrations erupted here and in the neighboring Indian state of Kashmir yesterday protesting the hanging of a man who was killed during a violent attack.
P police said three persons were killed and seven injured in demonstrations in Kashmir, which borders Pakistan and has a heavy pro-Pakistan Moslemajor majority. Most of Pakistan was calm, but some observers said violence could come later.
Bhutto was executed at 2 a.m. yesterday after he was convicted of ordering the murder of a political opponent.
Bhutto led Pakistan from 1971 until he was ousted in 1977 by President Mohammed ali-ui-Haq, who refused to commute Bhutto's sentence despite his imprisonment.
Police fire on demonstrators who stoned the U.N. observer post in the Kashmir city of Srinagar.
Bhutto and most Kashmiris favored self-determination for Kashmir, a province claimed by both India and Pakistan.
Mother seeks execution delay
ATMORE, Ala.-Aiwara for the mother of convicted murderer John Louis Evans III and he would file an emergency appeal in the U.S. Supreme Court to challenge the ruling.
Evans was sentenced to die for the murder of a Mobile, Ala., pawnbshop owner who was shot at his store.
Attorney John Carroll of the Southern Poverty Law Center announced his decision yesterday, moments after the 5th U.S. District Court of Appeals rejected a petition by Evans' mother to postpone her son's death in the electric chair.
A panel of three judges split 2- against a delay. The majority said it found no legal justification that would enable Evans' mother to intervene in the case.
Pan Am attendants plan strike
WASHINGTON - While a United Airlines strike continued yesterday, flight attendants for Pan American World Airways voted to at stake at 12:01 a.m. EST
United canceled all flights and reservations through April 16 because of a 5-day walk-out by mechanics and other crew personnel.
Negotiators for the United and the workers $ ^{u} $union were scheduled to resume talks soon.
The Fan Am attendants, represented by the Independent Union of Flight Attendants, voted overwhelmingly to strike because of a month-old deadlock in
UPA President, Marry Ellen King, said the union was seeking better wages and working conditions for the Pan Am flight attendants, who receive less than
King said the union was not seeking a strike but would be prepared for one until an equitable agreement was reached.
Whooping cranes to get refuae
TULISA, Okla. — The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has announced plans to build a $1 million refuge in north central Oklahoma exclusively for whoring cavaliers.
The multi-million dollar bird bath will be built at the Great Salt Plains, an area that is considered a critical habitat for the endangered species, Robert
The latest estimates show that only 100 of the birds are now alive. The cost of the project would be about $100,000 a bird if all of the birds used the refuge.
Plants include the construction of an additional dike to separate the brine pool from the whorping crane area and the damming of fresh water flow from two streams.
Educational TV bill approved
**TOPEKA - The Kanaa Senate yesterday passed a bill that would provide more than $500,000 for the construction and operation of public television**
Last year, the Legislature committed $883,000 for construction of the Hays station. However, that money could not be spent until the station got a Federal Correction Fund.
The measure included a $20,683 grant for construction of a station at Hays, with a provision that the area served by the Hays station would raise $20,000 for station construction.
The Senate also endorsed a House proposal of $55,000 for operating support of a proposed station at Garden City.
Court OKs Senate district plan
In its unanimous opinion, authorized by Chief Justice Alfred G. Schroder, the court said the new Senate Districts satisfied constitutional requirements of "the rule."
TOPEKA-A The Kansas Supreme Court said yesterday that it would uphold the validity of the Kansas Senate's rule to reapportion its 40 districts in the state.
Unless some other court action is taken, the Senate redistricting plan approved by the court yesterday would remain in effect until the 1992 elections.
The 1979 House reapportionment plan has been approved by the Legislature and the governor, but is not yet under review by the Supreme Court.
are required to redistrict themselves in the ninth year of every decade and that the Court must approve the plans, which would then be effective by the next election.
Weather
Skies will be partly to mostly cloudy today with temperatures in the low 30s. There will be little or no chance of precipitation, according to the U.S. Weather Bureau.
NIAIROI, Kenya (AP)—Tanzanian infantrymen and Ugandan soldiers in exile swept into the downtown area of the Ugandan capital of Kampala last night. Idi Amiir's cadre of Libyan soldiers fleeing into the countryside, residents reported.
Amin's infantrymen flee Ugandan capital
Amin's regular army had already disintegrated, the sources said. The troops sent by Libyan leader Col. Maammar Khaddafy to aid Amin, a fellow Moslem, were the only force preserving Amin's eight-year reign.
Sources in exile said Amin's government could fail in a few days or a few hours.
AMIN'S WHEREABOUTS were not publicly known. On Tuesday, he visited towns in areas he still controls in eastern Uganda, jovially greeting soldiers and
civilians in a four apparently intended to build morale.
The Tanzanian-Ugandan war began last October when Armin—who seized power in 1971 in a coup against President Milton Obangu—left the country to annex he land said belonged to Uganda.
Witnesses said it appeared that Amin had lost control of the capital on the same day his enemies launched what they said would be a final assault on Kampala.
A SOURCE in Kampala said he had seen the invaders running to positions around Kampala's clock tower, a landmark at a road junction a quarter mile from the city.
Observers said the Tanzanian plan appeared to be to drive Amin's forces into eastern Uganda, where they would have no way out except to cross into neutral Kenya.
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Thursday, April 5
Cuban Cinema:
Dr. Octavio Cortazar, Sel in 1961, during Cuba“a Year of Education”when over 100,000 youths volunteered to join the Literary Brigade to teach it up, read it and read, write, Cubs/substitutes PLUS“The History Book,v.7.”
(1977)
THE TEACHER (1977)
Dir. Richard Benner, with Craig Russell, Hollis McLaren, PLUS: "Bambi Meets Godzilla" 12:15 am.
Dir. Bernard Bertolouci; with Robert Dnireo, Gerard Deparedpe, Donald Sutherland, Dominique Sanda, Burt Lancaster, Stirling Hayden.
Midnight Movie
OUTRAGEOUS
Friday & Saturday, April 6 & 7
1900 (1977)
(1973)
Includes an interview with Yasir Arafat, Palestine/subtitles. PLUS:
"The History Book, v.8."
(1975)
Made by a predominantly Israeli crew. Israel/Palestine/subtitles.
TO LIVE IN FREEDOM
Tuesday, April 10
The Palestinian Situation:
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted; $1.50 admission.
REVOLUTION UNTIL VICTORY
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
+mission.
(1955)
Dir. Ingram Bergman, with Ulla Jacobsson and Harriet Harper
Jacobsson. A sophisticated comedy that won the Cannes Film
Festival for Best Comedy for Best Comedy. Swedishsubtitles.
Wednesday, April 11
SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT
!TONIGHT!
Lawrence Opera House Presents
SHOWCASE KEGGER NIGHT!!
$2.00 Women
$3.00 Men
FREE BEER!!
And Texas Setups from 8:00-12:00
featuring
"MID-MISSOURI HELL BAND"
FRIDAY, APRIL 6th . . .
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in concert
featuring . . .
Gary Burton
Tiger Okoshi
Chip Jackson
Bob Moses
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Doors open at 8:00 each night.
Show at 9:00.
SATURDAY
April 7th
Next Week, April 11th
Don't Miss
JAN HAMMER
Reggae
Reggae
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Opera House
7th Spirit Club
Tickets available at Better Days and 7th Spirit Cellar
842-6930
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 5, 1979
2
Stricter parking control requested
A lack of parking space in the evening and the failure of the University Parking and Traffic Service to control the lots around campus have many faculty members upset, the chairman of the University Senate Parking and Traffic Board said yesterday.
The chairman, Ralph Krone, professor of physics and astronomy, told the University Senate executive committee that the university is preparing to install a chic outdoor staircase and created a chic parking situation at KU.
Krone made his comments while presenting the parking and traffic committee's annual report to SenEx. The report recommended restricting some parking lots and asked for permission to hire an additional ticket officer.
Two traffic officers work full time for Parking Services, Krone said. They are trained to detect dangerous vehicles.
BUT KRONE said they were too few to control all of the University parking lots, especially at night when few student assistants were able to work.
The result, according to the report, is a chaotic parking situation on campus between
Krone said that some faculty members who taught night classes or gave exams at night were upset because all of the parking spaces were already filled by student cars.
Krone said the addition of another parking officer would allow the parking service to patrol more lots. Currently many students are ignoring the restrictions on some lots because they know there is little chance they will be issued a ticket.
Some students in carpools deliberately are parking in restricted lots and splitting the cost of any tickets they receive, Krone told SenEx.
"Students are carpooling with as many as six people in a car," he said. "They are willing to split the $7.50 fine if there is only a one-in-four chance they will be caught."
Krone said he hoped added enforcement would make such practices too expensive.
Krone said he hoped to ease the evening parking shortage for faculty and staff by extending current parking restrictions on three lots at 24 hours a day.
THE THREE LABS, E-fone, behnu
military science building; WE-zone, south
of Wesco Hall, and CC-zone, southeast of
the computer center, are currently
rounded to 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
through Friday and from 7 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Saturday.
The report also recommended that access to campus be restricted during enrollment.
seven days be allowed for violators to pay
payments fines.
Currently cars have free access to the campus during those times and violators are given 14 days to pay fines before a penalty fee is assessed.
The Parking and Traffic Board recommendations will be implemented in September if they are approved by the University Council next week.
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-UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jazz
Centennial Room of the Union. "The Future of Urban Transportation Planning" will be the lecture of PETER STOPHOR of Northwestern University at 7 in 2002 Learned. The SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 in the Orcad Room of the Union. SUABRIDGE will meet at 7 in Pazor A O of the Union. A NEW STUDENT CLUB will meet at 8 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. The group's purpose will be to strengthen it will provide entertainment activities. THE KU SKYDIVING CLUB will meet at 8 in 124 Robinson. JOEL BEIRBEN from the University of Arizona will lecture on "The Idea of the Obscene" at 8 in the Orcad Room of the Union. Alicia Tecno will give a STUDENT RECALL at 8 in Swarthout Recall Hall. PIERRE ROSENBERG of the Leisure will speak at 8 in Spencer Museum Auditorium.
KIEF'S
25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA
"NEW MILE STORE"
On Campus
TONIGHT: A KAPPA TAU ALPHA DINNER will be at 6 in the
TODAY: LEON FLEISHER will conduct a fine arts master class at 1:30 p.m. in Sawatch Rectchrist Hall. THE MIDWEST ART HISTORY SOCIETY will meet all day in the Spencer Museum of Art. THE KANSAS HOME ECONOMICS ASSOCIATION ANNUAL WORKSHOP will be held at 1:30 p.m. in The KANSAS ASSOCIATION OF CILD HEAR AGencies will at 10 a.m. in the Council Room of the Union. THE UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB SPIRING LUNCHCOHE will be at 12:30 p.m. in the Watkins Room of the Union. There will be a UNIVERSITY COUNCIL ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING at 3:30 in 105 Blake Organizations for entering INTRAMURAL TRACK is at 5 in 208 Robinson
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Blood donations reach 495 pints, 255 below goal
The KU blood drive almost reached its daily goal yesterday but fell far short of its overall goal, Jonelle Birney, chairman of the drive, said last night.
Wednesday's donation of 231 full pints and two partial pints brought the three-day total to 495 pints and eight partial pints—255 pints short of the 750-pint goal.
"I really don't know how to explain it," barry said. "There were a lot of people that said, 'What's wrong?' I never said."
Birney said no problems occurred during the drive and there were plenty of student vehicles.
HERBIE HERBIE
MANN MANN
in concert in concert
HERBIE HERBIE
Birney said the Red Cross would conduct another blood drive in June in the Community Building, 11th and Massachusetts streets. A KU blood drive also has been planned for next semester. No date has been set.
HEMA
HERMA
HERMA
Last year's drive brought in 538 pins, but was still short of the same 750-pin goal. This year's goal was set by the Panellene Association and the Interfraternity Council.
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.
Presented by SUA and The
Kansas City Philharmonic
Orchestra.
SUA
BIE
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ert
BIE
NN
ert
BIE
NN
cert
MANN MANN in concert in concert
HERBIE HERBIE MANN MANN in concert
SUA
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
APRIL5.1979
Smile for Big Brother
Smile, you're on KU camera.
Yes, if you have attended any sporting events since last fail, or if you attended either the protests against the Mideast peace treaty or the anti-apartheid rally last week, your smiling face has been recorded on film by the KU Police Department. Why would they want to do that, you ask?
Good question.
The police said the tapes were made to be used as evidence in case of violence and to be used in the training of KU police.
BUT WHATEVER the excuse, there is little that can justify the covert surveillance of KU students participating in lawful, peaceful ac-
Students at KU are not gueine pigs for the University's training films for police, and they should not be subjected to the dubious ethics of a police force that finds nothing wrong with surrenderitly filming their activities.
Fortunately, the tape of Friday's anti-apartheid rally was erased at the request of several students.
"SOME OF the protesters asked that we erase the tape," Mike Thomas, director of KU police said. "Since there were no problems at the rally, we didn't object."
Although police did not object to erasing the tape, students were not given the same option. They were
filmed regardless of what objections they might have had.
This passion for recording the faces of demonstrators for posterity is nothing new. Demonstrators at last spring's speech by Yitzhak Rabin also were photographed by KU police.
AND THERE is no sign that the activity will be curtailed in the future. While the videotape machine was not used during Tuesday's peace rally, there has been no concrete sign that the taping will be curtailed in the future.
The request by Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, for SenEx to consider guidelines for videotaping demonstrations at KU is encouraging, but does not really get to the core of the problem. How will the tapes be used? Who will have access to them? And while anyone is obviously free to watch the demonstrations, is it really ethical to film someone without first alerting them to that fact?
While guidelines for videotaping would be helpful in regulating the activities of the police in that field, it would be hoped that the police could regulate themselves. Sure training programs for the menmen could be reputed for a nominal fee.
It would be a small price to pay to rid them of their newly-acquired Big Brother image.
U.S. shouldn't take part in Rhodesian elections
With just more than two weeks remaining until Rhodesia's April 20 election on black-majority rule, a bipartisan group of U.S. senators is asking President Carter to authorize a new set of observers to monitor the balloting.
The senators argue that the U.S. has been demanding for years that free elections open to all Rhodesians over the age of 18 be held. But the elections would have little meaning, they say, if they are not certified at free and open by neutral United Nations sanctions against Rhodesia would remain in effect.
The fine print of the new Rhodesian constitution, which was part of the "internal settlement," almost guarantees that whichever of the indivisible states will be able to form a government only with white cooperation. It gives 24 of the 100 seats in parliament for 10 years to whites, and blacks would have to win a very high percentage of the total votes in the constitutional government with Smith's followers.
Unfortunately, this bipartisan group, which includes such liberaals as the American Civil Liberties Union moderates as Schweller of Pennsylvania and DeConcium of Arizona, and such conservatives as Hayakawa of California, far more compromised than the Rhodians.
The new constitution, thanks to Smith, also insures that whites will retain domination of the civil service, the
THE KEY question, which this group seems to have overlooked, is whether the election as an engineer will permit black Rhodesians to actively begin taking charge of their own government and avoid a dependence on date suggests that this is not so.
Vernon Smith
military, the police and the judiciary This does not appear to be the basis for a sound democratic future.
FIVE OR ten years ago, Smith's "internal settlement" may have had a chance of succeeding. But the strength of the Patriotic Front has altered the picture greatly. With each day the war continues, the freedom-fighters gain more power and legitimacy, and if they choose, they certainly have the power to disrupt the election. Essentially, the patriots want the wall, leaving him nowhere to go. They are determined to see an end to white rule.
The election, for all practical purposes, is a joke. It cannot bring peace, stability and order to society and the realities of power as must hope. To dignify the April elections by sending in neutral outside observers, as the senators would, suggest be damaging.
BY SENDING observers we would alienate some of our closest African aliens and the rest from being loved were lending credence to Smith's latest folly. The U.S. already suffers from serious image problems and participates in all of these, most of which is its standing in the world community.
Until the freedom-fighting factions of Robert Mukabe and Joshua Nkomo are allowed to participate in negotiations toward a new government in Rhodesia, more blood will continue to be shed and there will be a return. This is the reality of today's Rhodesia.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(UPS 605-649) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Sunday through Thursday during June and July each year. UPS offers Sunday and halfday hours on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday for $15 for six months or $24 for seven months in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a month in Douglas County. Student subscribers are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity fee.
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The
University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045
Barry Manee
Managing Editor
Dilip Himaley
Editorial Editor
John Whitlesden
Mary Hosenk
Associate Campus Editor
Manuel Campos Editor
Graphite Editor
Rachel Barker Editors
Make-up Editors
Associate Sports Editor
Linda Finsett, Paul Southerland,
Cynid Hughes, Barb Kob, Caroline Trowbridge
Editorial Writers
Mr. Emral, Phillip Garcia, Veron Smith, Jake Thompson
Staff Writers
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Ron Almanar
Retail Sales Manager
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Allen Blair, Paul Knoll,
Brenda Paxton, Cindy Ray, Allen Reynolds, Joan Smithu
General Manager
Rick Moseley
Editorial Advisor
Chuck Snyder
Profit motive endangers public health
One of the most disturbing aspects of our
one is that it is too slow to
adequately support users.
And one of the most disturbing aspects of big business is that its obsession with profits leads it to exploit consumer demands to the point of knowingly endangering public life.
Two recent disclosures about health hazards concerning nitrites and dry blowers are only the most recent examples of malaise by these entities.
Unfortunately, the trusting American consumer may be dying because of their
First, Attorney General Griffin Bell recently said nitrites, a curing agent used in meat, must be immediately banned because they had been linked to causing cancer. Nitrites form nitrosamines when cooked—nitrosamines have been shown to cause nitrite formation.
But, the Carter administration has asked for a three-year moratorium on the ban—even if the substance is found to cause cancer—while the meat industry tries to develop an alternate preservative. Reportedly, an immediate ban might allow
ACCORDING to federal law, that is enough to immediately ban a product.
Jake
an increase in botulism, an often fatal disease.
Thompson
the American Meat Institute has tried to evade the issue, saying an imminent ban would also cause sharp increases in meat prices. But the Food and Drug Administration, president, said the meat industry's position was that, "nitrite has not been determined to be a carcinogen, that it is perfectly safe," and that "we do not believe there is a need for a legislative proposition by the administration."
Lyng's position is irresponsible, yet consistent with the advice of a federal ban on their product. But that doesn't make it right. Some producers of hair dryers have been accused of using faux fabrics.
A PRIVATE research company, EMV Associates Inc., last week said that hand-held dryers release particles of asbestos fiber.
Asbestos, an insulator in the dryers, has
The point of singling out these two incidents is that while consumers wait for feature releases, they may be unknowingly exposing themselves to cancer-causing levels of asbestos
Obviously, a ponderous federal bureaucracy and a greedy big business entity are not intending to work together for public safety.
The safety commission issued a special order to nine blow dryer producers to attend a meeting this week in Washington and bring information about their products concerning asbestos use. They are also to participate in a national workshop on ticular models manufactured with asbestos.
been linked to an increased risk of lung cancer and other serious diseases, according to Bob Baxter, a member of the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.
So, American consumers will have to protect themselves until conclusive evidence is found and effective action is taken. Consumers must cut down on the use of dryers until testing is completed, and then allow dryers to operate until further evidence of danger is shown.
Baxter said the safety commission would test dryers and results would be available in about a month. Dryers would be recalled in an amount of asbestos fiber was at a imperfect rate.
"IF TESTS show the dryers would have to be 24 hours a day for 197 years in order to cause a risk of cancer, the dryers won't be recalled." Baxter said.
Reportedly, consumers can tell if their blow dry container contains asbestos by looking into the barrel of the device for a gray-white material. If you have one, take a look.
Whether dangerous levels of asbestos are discovered remaining to be seen. The question is whether the risks are greater.
Joseph Highland, of the Environmental Protection Agency, who was recently identified as a pediatric carcinogen, some manufacturers continued to use it as a liner in the barrel of their hair.
That translates into a potential disregard for public safety by bri business.
It is fortunate, but entirely necessary,
that consumers must become suspicious of
everything they buy. Cancer is not to be
suspected because it does not occur immediately
In its many forms, cancer is a horrible disease, and it is our responsibility to protect ourselves from it. The government has also big business won't care it until is forced to.
MAGLEY MECUMOND NEWS LEASER © 1978 BY CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Guidelines
HELL, BOY...
SHOOT 'EM!
—THAT'LL SLOW
US DOWN.
Redistricting bill fair to Democrats
To the editor:
In a recent letter (March 27), Susan Otteneress, representing the Young Democrats, wrote concerning State Rep. Mike Mullen's decision to move Douglas County's house districts. Otteneress and the Young Democrats misrepresented some important facts by claiming that the power of KU students was diluted and that Republican Party used questionable tactics.
Lastly, Otterness and the Young Democrats came to another one of their thoughtless conclusions when claiming the amendment split the student vote and diluted the student power. This argument has beenarch 22 letter by William Bradley (apartment manager and KU law student) saying the new districts fully reflect the interest of permanent residents of Lawrence and allow more accurate representation.
First, Otterness claimed that Vogel drew up the amendment in order to weaken the strength of State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, in the 1980 campaign. Obviously, Otterness and the Young Democrats haven't followed this issue closely or they would have read that this isn't true in any newspaper (even the Kansan).
Secondly, the Young Democrats were yelling gerrymandering without cause. Vogel's amendments passed the House with 65 votes to 42. He also passed the bill with a vote of 99-14 with less than 10 Democrats voting against it. We hardly call this gerrymanding. Needless to add, we felt that Gov. John Carin made decisions he decided to nove to the bill.
"However, Glover acknowledged that Vogel had given him (Glover) a choice of being in a heavily Democratic district or in a less Democratic district." (Kansan, Marchb. p.10).
The fact that Glover gave the heavily Republican area shows the KU students that Glover and the Democrats used one of their political tricks, thinking Glover would have a better chance than another Democrat to beat a Republican.
"Glover could have stayed with his old district, and the district boundaries would have been pretty square," Vogel said. (Kansas March 5).
Also, rather than diluting the power of the students' vote, the new plan will provide more effectively for KU students by allowing area representation. We will have TWO representatives rather than one and two representatives to help Glover and the Young Democrats will explain to the students why having only one vote instead of two is better for KU.
It is refreshing to see that representatives such as John Vogel can deal with a delicate situation like reapportionment in a mature, statemanlike manner.
Etta Walker
Sharon Springs sophomore
And two others
Etta Walker
Accusations unfair in JRP room check
To the editor:
Pertaining to the current issue of the spring break "room check" at JRP, I feel that it is wise to insist wisely by conducting the room check. His motivation in the check was in the best interest of all residents. If a fire had occurred, the check would have amount of not taking the necessary precautions.
Likewine, I feel that the accusations made against him were unwarranted, since he was not involved in any of the events.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
should have done. Why does he need to suffer unfairly for his actions, when the real problem is the negligence of certain residents?
Froik's action in reporting violations of the residence hall contract is nothing shy of an assault, and many residents clearly in violation, and deserve any action against them. Why does everyone overlook the fact that the violators are the root of the problem, not Froik's action in reporting it?
Tom Dooley
Atchison sophomore
Middle East protest a rude interruption
To the editor:
March 28 at 10am I was concentrating intensely on an examination problem, only to be rudely interrupted by the uproar of a group of Arab students holding a demon-
station on Jayhawk Boulevard. My concentration shattered. I was able to get nothing done for some five minutes as they unintelligible chants outside the window.
In a fifty minute exam, five minutes can be a crucial factor, and it surely was for me and the rest of the class, none of whom insisted. This would require a demonstration to take place at a time when dozens of classes are in progress. The primary purpose of this institution is education, and I hold my right to ask the teachers what the Arabs may claim.
What good do they hope will result from their demonstration? Abolition of the treaty? No, they're not that naive. My wife is understanding? They sure are at that point.
It's a pity that they are so vitally interested in this issue, yet they can do nothing more about it than make a nuisance of themselves.
Robert Johnson
Goddard junior
STATE U.
BY T. M. ASLA
WE'VE GOT TO GET RID OF TENURED PROFESSOR YOU-KNOW-WHO. HE'S AN INCOMPETENT; AN EMBARASSMENT TO THE DEPARTMENT!
DEPARTMENT CRAIRMAN PRIVATE
LET'S NOMINATE HIM FOR A DEANSHIP!
ASLA
infor-
ness
tous
aless
for
to
is
use
used
seir
unto
try,
of,
be not
able to
entil
Thursday, April 5, 1979
5
The Leftovers downed Delta Upsilon 96-55 last night in Robinson Gymnasium to win the men's intramural basketball Hill Championship.
Leftovers win Hill crown
The Leftovers, an independent team of seniors, used a tough zone defense to hold off the DU team in the late stages of the game.
Behind 96-51 with 1:07 to play, the DU's rallied with five straight points, but
couldn't hit two shots within the last 10 seconds.
Besides the intramural crown, the Leftovers have won the Lawrence city league and the Lawrence city league tournament championships.
The women's intramural Hill championship game will be played tonight at 5:30 in Robinson Gymnasium.
KC starts tonight against Toronto
Kansas City, the American League West division champion, will start Dennis Leonard at pitcher. Leonard is a 20-game winner. He has had six wins. He will face Toronto on Tom Underwood
The Kansas City Royals start their 1979 baseball season against the Toronto Blue Jays in a game that was contested.
This is Kansas City's first season home
opener since 1974, when the Minnesota
Twins won 64-1 last year. Los Angeles lost at
85-70 in their final game.
Besides Leonard, the 'Royals' starting lineup consists of Darrrell Dorell at catcher, George Brett at third base, Fred Patek at shortstop, Frans White at second base, John Sloan at first base, Olivia Altamark at first base and outfitters Aumos Otis, Clint Hurd and Al Cowens.
The Royals are seeking their third straight division crown. After winning their division the past three years, they lost to the Yankees in the American League playoffs.
Kings'victory earns playoff berth
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—Sm. Lacey scored four points in overtime and PhilFord added three to the propel the Kansas City Kings past the Los Angeles Lakers, 115-111, last night and clinch a National Basketball Association playoff berth.
The Lakers, also battling for a playoff bid in the Western Conference, appeared to have it locked up when Norm Xionn drove in for a layup with two seconds left in regulation play and gave Los Angeles a 100-98 lead.
But the Kings sent it into overtime when scout Westman took an inbounds pass from Bennick.
The victory gave the Kings a 44-10 record and a half-game lead over Denver, which will now be a fact.
Ford led Kansas with 24 points, Otis Birdsong had 20 and Lacey 19. Kareneb Abdul-Jabbar put in 20 points for the Lakers and Kenny Carr had 17.
Wedman, a 6-7 forward who was injured last month in an automobile accident, executed a three-point play to give the Kings a 103-102 over lead. Nixon, who led all scorers with 27 points, then put the Lakers on top, 105-103.
With 3:15 left in overtime, Jabbar hooked over Lacey's head for a 107-105 Lakers lead, and then Lacey's two unanswered buckets gave Lacey a 112-109 advantage with 1:35 remaining.
A Nixon basket brought the Lakers to within two before the Kings' Bird-song provided the final margin with a short follow shot.
Ross narrows picks coach says KU on top
Ricky Ross, one of KU's most sought-after prospects, said yesterday that he would play collegiate basketball at other Kansas or Oklahoma universities, narrowed his earlier list of five possibilities.
By.JOHN P,THARP
Ross, a prep All-American who led Wichita State to two straight state championships, will visit the Arkansas campus this weekend. He had planned to visit the schools he eliminated from consideration Georgia and North Carolina were the others.
Bill Hinehaugh, Ross' high school coach, said yesterday that his 6-star guard had gone on a three-game losing streak.
Associate Sports Editor
"He's basically leaning toward Kansas." Himebaugh said.
Ross averaged 32 points, 10 rebounds, five assists and four steals a game this season.
SPECULATION IN THE KU camp is una Ross will sign with Kansas. Eddie Sutton, Arkansas coach, said yesterday that Ross indeed was leaning toward KU.
"I think Kansas is still in the drivers' seat the No. 1 position, Sutton said of KU's chances."
Sutton said it was a long shot for Ross to sign with the Razerbacks, but that he hoped to Fayetteville would impress the highly-touted prep player.
"As long as he's going to visit, we feel we've got a chance," Sutton said.
BEST OF
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Baker game today
Ross, who earlier had said that he could fit into the K-State program better than the KU program, said yesterday he thought that he could go to Arkansas and fill the position vacated by graduating All-American Sidney Moncrief.
KU's baseball doubleheader with Hasker University has been postponed again, this time because of field conditions. The games will be made up, a fashion, with a single, nine-inning game today at Quigley Field.
"I WOULD LIKE to play point guard some of the time, but not all of the time," Ross said after the Kansas Basketball Classic two weeks ago in Topeka. "As a freshman, I thought I would probably play both guard positions."
--with every Haircut at
sua
films
Midnight Movie
“Original, alive
and ribaldly funny.”
outrageous!
Friday & Saturday
April 6 & 7
Woodruff Auditorium
ADM $1.50 12:15 am
Ross said he would make a decision later this month or early in May.
DANCE MARATHON March of Dimes '79 ATO-XO
April 7th
AT THE ENTERTAINER
12:00 NOON TO 12:00 MIDNIGHT
201 W. 8th
Above Rocky J's
Radio Sponsors 96x,102,106
Prizes:
$1000 to winning living group
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$2000 in total prizes
For further information call:
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UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CAMPUS
Sports
VETS
COME RIDE WITH US!
DOWNTOWN
MERCHANTS
EXPRESS
—MEETING—
The Saturday-Downtown Merchants Express Schedule
THURSDAY
Exact Fare Only 25'—Driver Carries No Changel
From Eilworth Student Union 05P.Corbin 9th & Meas. Downtown
Tat Downtown Downtown Downtown
Time Hour 8 min. past hour 10 min. past hour 13 min. past hour
Time HotHell 38 min. hotHell 40 min. past hour 45 min. past hour
First Bus 1000 am 1000 am 1010 am 1015 am
Last Bus 400 pm 608 pm 410 pm 345 pm
APRIL 5
The Downtown Merchants are offering this bus to all students, faculty and non-students as a continuing gesture of their appreciation.
Pine Room
7:00 P.M.
KANSAS UNION
JAZZ
High Stepping
Candies . . .
the bareback
el gréco
McCall's
Put Yourself in our Shoes
McCall's
"Put Yourself in our Shoes"
829 Massachusetts
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
JAZZ JAZZ
only at
Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass. upstairs
Tonite: Jam Session-No Cover!
FRIDAY: K.C. Women's Jazz Festival STAR! & SATURDAY Carol Comer and Her Band Featuring the Legendary Milt Abel on Bass
Admission only $7.00—Includes FREE BEER, Peanuts, Popcorn and Soft Drinks.
Bring this Ad. in for $2.00 OFF! Call 843-8575 for Reservations.
6
Thursday, April 5, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Admiral Car Rental
Toyota
Firebird
Buick Regal
Monte Carlo
Cullass Supreme
Mark V
Thunderbird
2340 Alabama
843-2931
Greenbriar's
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEN
Cheese Emporium
Eat In or Carry Out
Sandwiches
Meats Soups Cheeses
Holiday Places 25th & Iowa
The Douglas County Emergency Service Council presents
Benefit Basketball
Sunday, April 8
1:30 PM/Allen Field House
PAUL MOKESKI, BRAD SANDERS, V. C.
SANDERS, ADRIAN MITCHELL, KAREN
JAMISON; PLUS MILT GIBSON, KEN KOENIGS
AND DONNIE VON MOORE PLAYING THE
RIVER CITY ALL-STARS
ADULTS $3.00
KU STUDENTS $1.50
HIGH SCHOOL
& UNDER $1.00
TICKETS: SUA OFFICE, MORRIS SPORTS, RUSTY'S & DILLONG
HIGH SCHOOL & UNDER $1.50
Ski-Rental SALE
30 to 50% off
Downhill and
Cross-Country
Rossignol Skis
Nordica Boots
Salmon Bindings
Thursday, Friday
Saturday and
Sunday
first serve
TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE
CROWN CENTER
LAWRENCE
TOPEKA
WICHITA
SKI
Senate increases Regents budget
Staff Reporter
Bv TAMMY TIERNEY
Legislators approved the allocation of $443,845,899 to the schools in an hour and a half, with little debate on the bill. The allocation was approved 36-2.
TOPEKA-Members of the Kansas Senate yesterday, breezed through a consideration of budget requests for the seven Board of Regents schools.
percent and approved a _compromise
method of figuring the 1979 'Regents'
The total allocation is nearly $10 million more than was approved by the House and is about $5 million more than recommended by Gov. John Carlin.
The House had voted to figure budget appropriations for faculty positions according to actual enrollments at Regents schools. This would mean a cut of $1.5 million from the Alabama State University, Pittsburgh State University and Port Hays State University.
On system-wide issues, senators increased the Kansas House recommendation to expand the state's housing law.
However, Senate members chose what they called a "Visser Compromise," named for John Visser, president of Emporia State University.
UNDER THE compromise, one-half of the $1.5 million cut would be retained in the
three schools' budgets for hiring additional faculty. If the schools do not meet projected enrollment goals next semester, the new students will be released at the end of the fall semester.
In other Regents issues legislators approved a 6 percent increase in other operating expenses, an increase in student wages to meet the federal minimum wage and retention of the present graduate fee waiver, which equals $1.7 million to offset increased utility rates.
COMMISSION
STATUS
WOMEN
KU Member IAWS
Committee Chairpersons of:
Political Action Women & the Arts Human Sexuality
Minority Affairs
Publicity
Women & Intl' Affairs
business affairs and $37,812 for the KU
Animal Care Unit.
Further information and applications available at 218 Strong-
Emily Taylor Res. Center, Due Wed., April 11th.
- Applications for Executive Board officers are presently being accepted.
THOSE ALLOCATIONS are in addition to allocations recommended by the House of $100,000 for a library book theft detection system, $35,000 for the development of sandstone aquifers in western Kansas and $87,000 for the Juniper Gardens children's center. A major effort between KU's Bureau of Child Research and northeastern Kansas City, Kan.
JACK LEMMON, JANE FONDA,
MICHAEL DOUGLAS
Senate members rejected a request to reimburse schools for student union rentals and a $151,000 request for equipment replacement. An allocation of $2 million was allocated for accessibility improvements for handicapped students and for energy-saving projects.
"The China Syndrome"
Eve 7:30 & 9:45
Sat Sun Mat 2:30
GEORGE C. SCOTT & PETER BOYLE in
Just Once everyone has to be a winner.
Granada
FINAL - NOVEMBER 2019
The KU budget received a boost from the Senate when members approved the allocation of $40,000 for additional student help in KU libraries, $24,500 for the office of
Other items approved by the House include $16,600 for miscellaneous operating expenses for women's athletics and for the renovation of Marvin and Lindley halls.
"TAKE DOWN" PG
HARDCORE
EN 758 2800
ENDS THURSDAY
Variety
"HALLOWEEN"
Eve 7:40 & 9:40
S-S Mat 2:00 Hillcrest
MOMENT"
"MOMENT BY
Eve 7:20 & 9:25 Hillcrest
ENDSTHURS
ENDS THURSDAY
Eve 7:30 & 9:35
ENDS THURS Hillcrest
DARE to be SCARED!
Tonight at 7:35 & 9:40
The senators also recommended that the Regents staff receive a 7 percent salary increase and that $20,000 be allocated for the surgical staff. The hospital is located at Kawasaki at the Kansas Osteopathic Hospital.
Cinema Twin
STARTS
THE CHAMP
JON VOIGHT FAYE DUNAWAY A FRANCO ZEFFIRELI FILM
Town Shop
Eve at 7:35 & 9:40 SEAN
Sat-Sun Mat 2:40 CONNERY
NOW!
DONALD
Cinema Twin SUTHERLAND
THE
GREAT TRAIN
ROBBERY PG
M
The budget now moves back to the House for approval of the Senate amendments.
Friday thru Tues. at the
IT'S BACK:
"ANIMAL HOUSE" & "F.M." Sunset Drive-in
THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY PG
Showtime is dusk
LATE SHOWS
CRICKETEER®
Shop
THE
Suit yourself . . . at
FRI & SAT NIGHTS!
Box opens 11:40
Showtime is Midnight
Hillcrest
This season, for social wear,
for interviews, for business,
stay cool, crisp, and
collected with a selection
from our CRICKETEER
light weight suits of dacron
and wool. Superb tailoring,
subtle shaping and natural
shoulders are our trademark.
Choose from a wide
variety of cool spring
colors and patterns.
IN RUBBER with no place to go!
with no place to go!
ROCK BACK TO THE STONEED AGE!
ROCKY HORROR
PICTURE SHOW
R
Showtime is Midnight
Massachusetts St. 843-5755
Whitenight's
Suit Yourself
(returning April 13 & 14)
SHENANIGANS
Saturday, April 7th
Doors Open at 7 p.m. Admission 2.50
A Rising Young Star with the Metropolitan Opera
with
presents
Country Music Night
BEST SELLER
Concert Series Presents
Carmen Balthrop, Soprano
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved for $4, $3.50 or $3 KU students admitted FREE with ID
The University of Kansas
University Theatre/Murphy Hall
Sunday, April 8 8:00 p.m.
Arnie Johnson's River City Country Band
Call 913/864-3982 for reservations
WINE
Are the Kitchens Always Closed on Sundays?
The Eldridge Has The Answer.
SUNDAY
$4^45 per person
BRUNCH
All You Can EAT
For Parties/Groups, 15 or more 10% OFF.
30 or more 15% OFF
2 Days Admission Only
3 Days Advanced notice to receive Discount.
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Serving 5-9 pm Served Family Style
Fried Chicken
DINNER
FRIED CHICKEN only $4.45
Cole Slaw
Rolls & Butter
Coffee or Tea
Special Fraternity and Sorority offer. Dinner $4.90 including Drinks.
Industrial Chant
Gravy
Grammed Gear
The
Eldridge
House
701 Massachusetts
(913)841-4666
NATURAL,
NATUREL,
CRITICAL
WOMEN'S
CLOSING EVENT
TO COME IN
MARCH 1980
Business will
continue until
youth/women.
Natural,
baronica
JOHN
Hours:
Mon.-Thurs.
10:00-8:30
Fri. & Sat.
10:00-6:00
VISA
23rd & Louisiana
Malls Shopping
Center
CAROUSEL
CHARGE
carousel
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 5, 1979
7
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accreditation: grants, awards, certificates and employment
certificates. Accreditation must be obtained from the
state agency or accrediting organization for the MUNG
School of Dentistry.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
15 words or
each additional
Fairly substantial
$2.09 $2.25 $2.50 $3.75 $3.99
01 02 03 04 05
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ERRORS
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The 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
contant items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months. Contant艺 can be placed in person or by calling the UK business office at 861-3258.
UDK BUSINESS OPFICK
III Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
EVERYONE'S A TAN MAN! TAN MAN DAY IN MAY. Watch the Personals for Details Dad
Dad
GREAT FOOD, GREAT SERVICE just like you
WE WELCOME OPENS Mon-Fri 10am-5pm
11 am-1 pm
DEFINE YOUR INALIABLE REPOSITIES to the
students. You should provide a
Budget for a Literature Library in the Ratio
10:10:10:10.
(See page 283.)
Spring Festival Book Sale April 1-15, 10: off
Spencer Art Museum Book Shop
Ales is coming! Ales is coming! Saturday April 14th. Towers 409-A
4-4
Employment Opportunities
ENTERTAINMENT
Students major in business, pre-med, pre-lev,
pre-vocational majors. Major 3077 per month. For intervie-
sure apply. Mast 2057 per month.
Eugene international competition Come to broma
International Church on Sunday, January 12 at 11:28 AM First Presbyterian Church Get tickets at www.firstpresbyterianchurch.com
FOR RENT
Still looking for a place to call home? Nassau Hall now has a couple of openings for the resumes. If you are interested in applying or give us a call at 853-8000 and we will be glad to help you with your application. **MASSEH HALL,** 1800 Nassau Avenue, MASSEH HALL, 1800 Nassau Avenue
FRONTER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW BENT
LONGER. We rent 108' of space un-
furnished from $710. Two interior lofts
are available, the O.K. bus is
INDOOR HEATED BEAUTY
24 Frontier Fronter. Next door to
Rouston's East.
Apartment and rooms furnished, parking room,
bathroom, laundry, RI and neat room.
Phone 853-75767
Family and MHs committed to inviting shareholder
members of the Community to attend the fundraiser.
The fundraiser will be held at 6:30 PM on Friday,
8/29/15, from 9 AM to 12 PM at Hibernia
Center (327-423-6168) or by phone at 800-262-1234.
Christian Hofsteyn now and Summer. Cloe to
Marissa Mills now and Grace. 602-898-2088.
5:00 Keep trying.
You know these, great looking specimens here. They are good inside and out and are available for your use. They will be delivered within 7 days.
LIVE IN LUXURY need to bedside beauty 2
rooms, balcony, pool, spa & garden.
Cosmetics, Hair Care, Beauty
History, Jewelry & Bathroom.
Summer Sublease. Nice, two bedroom apartment
summer close to college, water paid, AC call 811-256-
3000.
MUST inhabit campus 2 bedroom unit; for $um-
lain. New campus. Rent $05-$23. Call 849-638-7188.
Sublease 2 bedroom Meadwicknaut apt. for nursery-
$280 • r/c, month: 43-1644. 4-5
Spending the summer in Lawnware? Do yourself a favor. Call O'Reilly on my apartment! 814-239-7977
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE floor flow only $275
Bedroom 1, full bath & walk-in. Across from
birthday cake & full bath. Across from Oliver
family room, fireplace, partly captured, home
pantry, laundry, kitchen, two additional
bedrooms, $295 for $325 call MICHAEL 612-210
after 8am.
To sashishure one bedridden, new modern, four-
room studio starting on May 20, option 4-711
+ 843-1610
Summer sublease: one bedroom furnished North-
west apartment $1800.00; Call 841-253-9777
Bolstera for instructive use, bed-bound ip, antifungal agent,
drug-dose delivery system, and distance to campus. Price negotiable. Call 861-735-9044.
Must sublease to my 1 bedroom apartment from
May to August, $185 a month. Call immediate
614-810-7000.
Mot sublease 1 br. Sundance Apd. Aql.7223
4-6 p.m. Rent negotiate.
Library: 3rd-floor, 32th floor, Townhouse, Pointe,
Lakeview; 3rd-floor, 34th floor, Townhouse, Pointe,
Lakeview; 3rd-floor, 36th floor, Townhouse, Pointe,
Lakeview; and bourse. Available in May.
Apt. 2 BH and efficiency. Close to campus. Utility. Clean, quiet, and comfortable. 842-716-3900.
Doublex to be subject for June-July 15. Close on
Wednesday.
Pay $15 per month CALL Mark or Dave greet.
MARR K & I. II A Partitions row reading for summer assignments. 3 days of summer apartments. 7 walk through campus. 1. 6 weeks of balconies, offices, drive parking, dwishawing, disposals, and office space. for info 1015 Miss Alt. #2, 84-903-6240
4-19
Trailside, summer sundeau, 2 liters, 2 baths.
Trainhouse, Townhouse $340, m/l $80, 4-11
Sulphur-sublime. Parturbed, 2-bedroom Apt.
A. C a D-wallless, excellent condition.
41-01-09
GUIDE
TONIGHT!
FREE BEER!!
makes
SHOWCASE
KEGER NITE!
by high with
Mid-Missouri Hell Band
Lunes $1.00 Gues $1.00
Doors Open 8! Doors Close 9.00
Tomorrow Night-
Friday, April 6th
Gary Burton Guerrilla
$4.00-$5.00
$1.00
Show Day
The Lawrence Opera House
The Tennis Club
Tn N Mass
MUSIC
- 926 Mass. 843-8571
* *******************************************
Shenanigan's Disco Friday, April 6th
Present this ad. for 50 $ OFF regular admission price
PRIVATE CLUBS/
DINING
RESTAURANT & PRIVATE CLUB
HAPPY HOUR
4:30 - 6:30
1/2 PRICE SET-UPS
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Memberships
Wed-Sat.
ZUCCCHINI-BRUNE
A Zesty Casserole Featuring
Zucchini, Cheese and Chicken Breasts
$5.25
April 30-Bill 6/17
John Pustino—Folk Guitarist
The Eldridge
House
BIGK's
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.
MINGLES DISCO
New Open Sunday
8:17 P.M. W
Ramada inn, 2222 W. 8th
B42 7030
LOUIS &
EVERYTHING AT STETSON'S 2
BOSCHORDONS
1 FINE CINEMAS
100 FEET LONG
HERE'S
WHAT'S
HAPPENING!
BEER/AMUSEMENTS
Western Civilization Notes. Note on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization Books; senior sense to the material. For 2013 Edition, for 2014 Edition, for 2015 Edition. For vax preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization Books. Critic, Mala Bookstore, & Oread Bookstore. II
Auxiliary, stand and generator Specialist-
MOTIVE ELECTRIE, 813-969-2009, W. 6th ftd.
FOR SALE
Pound Modding Band Guitar with strings, corduroy straps, tuners and covers. Good condition, corduroys, cords and covers. Very good condition.
Sainpree-ni glass lamps are our specialty. Non-
glass lamps are our selection, renamed to
3027 Glass. 841-5707
Every Thursday
— LADIES NIGHT —
30 Draws to Ladies — Midnight
T.O.F. Every Friday $6.00
30 Draws $1.50 Pitchers
Tid
Mass.
BEER GARDEN
Weekly Pinball Tournament
Bud. Pabst, & Natural on Tap!
$1.50 Pitchers
WATERBIRD MATHTEKS $59.99 3 year grant,
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. 1836-1846
free with a 2-year lease.
Watch for truck on Sundays selling products:
Jayhawk Foam 4th & Illinois. Also wood.
Mini Foam 1st & Arizona.
NTABFISH SAIL.BOAT, Davenon sail and liner,
NTRC BLASTER II 624-9000 for use in or
exercise condition. 825-924-6088
1978 Toyota Camry GLT Liftback. 5-IP. AM-FS
fuel-evaporated fuel. 2014 model year.
Pre-owned condition. $2790. Owner's
address: 367 W. 4th Ave, Boulder, CO 80303.
Year sets of Psychology today and or Human
Behavior magazines. Various sizes of cushion.
Malibu free-standing fire place, reduced priced.
Locked-up. Use air conditions 81-42-46
6-9 p.m.
Fiber簿 100 receive, tlb-type, 205 watts, wafer,
powerful, 190 w/ case 640, wcw 630 Keep layers
(60)
ITALIAN used car CLASSIC The Flat 124 Sports Car. This 1911 Ford offer features more than just a sporty design, including wheel disc brakes, and more body 16 clean, with a wheelie bar. Fired and well-reasonable. Call 841-807-9183.
SAVE tot EXCEPTIONFUNG sind STEREO EQUIP-
MENT-ausgerufen. Bitte auf dem Funkbuch *Daten**
der Alarmmenge im Instrument *dAlarm* an-
fordern.
Mort stuff Audio Reflex Tiradele in mort comp
kit making kit Moving make of mort
84-296-296
TH-6, Triumphe owners! Four new radish
and turnip teams at 4-Rail Station. Shares
144 at 4-Rail Station, Shares 925, 895.
Friday's roundup.
Cheap Cheese Chowder! Uses Combo $29.00 more, new mix,
$35.00 less, new fonts & speakers & 64% off.
$125.00 Rocky Backbowl's '829 Main
Tire choices! Brand new 174, 50-13, 62 & TFS
tire cut to $15.00 each. Ray Stacksbuck
Mast Oil.
220 Yannah runs good. Must sell for best offer.
643-759-1000; 5-900
4-6
73 Yamashi D173-250 Enduro, Trip condition—All
street peer. Entr. 882-954-398
4-6
72. Hendricks B, 40:690 maps. A/C, F-M assesses
844-1126 weather. 844-5873 events. 4,6
644-1126 weather. 844-5873 events. 4,6
Shares CP-320M computer controlled consu-
trols CP-320M computer controlled consu-
trols CP-320M computer controlled consu-
tra
End of season bargain Olin Mark II series w/
end of season Call Mike at Malee 8625 meringue
evenings
Maint sell older mobile home, 2 bedrooms,
1 bathroom, large basement. Fully furnished.
carry, curtain, fabrication, 3700. Will install
anything else you need.
Dorsey-Rad - Sale-Kitchen & personal appliances,
furniture, antiques, plants, pots, clothes, doors,
curtains, curtains, stove, cookware, door-
boards, books, games.
damson, Sun. April 7, 8-8 to 10, 6-
damson, Sat. April 7, 8-8 to 10, 6-
1978.400 or 4-150cc six-speed equipped Vakuum Yamaha
2000.400 or 3-150cc six-speed equipped Vakuum
injectors only. 842-600 between 5 and 7
cylinders. Includes fuel filter.
Fantastic Plastic Screen System includes receiving dock and deck new furniture, 4-1001, 611-0761.
For Sale - 1972 Chevrolet Capri 2 dr. auto,
sleeper. 50k miles, sleeps 11, tilt steering.
842-1405. 842-1405.
For sale 360 • dual port optical manifold
Fits 10-20mm Heliçat cut for 327 small body
Hasselbanner - 824-1826
WITH RENT! when you could use this beautiful kitchen, 12 x 68 - 1972-2 woodfloor with full bath in each. Like new appliance, dispensor, central air conditioner, double sink, dishwasher, dryer water 2, smoke alarms, skirting board, oven and pots, cedar carpet, and storage building, treasury, tree, gym and shower. #scp-zone N803J
4-4
1974 Movie Carlo Raufel, AM-FM radio. PH.
Cable: CBS; TV channel 5013. Control bed: Offer
bill: 611-4541 after 4:15.
CANON EF lipid with case: $250. Leaflet: FD
1349. Canon FL lipid with case: $250. Leaflet: FD
1349. Canon FL lipid with case, slide tappet: $250.
Handbells - 18, Wandern Black Hook, swirl creeper
Handsballs - 18, Swivel creeper, Swivel creeper,
wings from ground to 825-750.
72. Grand Prix in Good Condition, v106, log
83. arm, drive 39, vehicle 842/740
4-5
Gate 10 speed bicycle~Lake new, Keith-841-
45N
AM-FM driver with turntable, 30 gallon capacitor,
$25.90 cart, $51.0495
L-6
FOUND
Found - Calculator in Learned Hall. Identify num.
num. 123. Learned
4-6
SENIEMILLA SENIEMILLA SENIEMILLA HERBAL MAGE AND
MULKEN FINE INGREDIENTS MULTIPLE MAGE AND
MULKEN FINE INGREDIENTS MULTIPLE MAGE AND
MULKEN FINE INGREDIENTS MULTIPLE MAGE AND
FRESH NATIVE SMOKING MIXTURE $1.40
PER 25 LITERS OF FLUID
COTTONWOVEN AMIZONA #6288
COTTONWOVEN AMIZONA #6288
Found burns trimmed between teeth. A
round burn is 28.5 inches in LDRK unless
it is more than 30.0 inches in LDRK.
Pound is part of good gold man's glaze in
temperament. It can be used for Martial Arts,
28-60
8181/502
Found 3 piece suit. 841-2154
Dear partner/private equity maker, Made in 1975, we are looking for a partner/private equity buyer. Received by our sister company, Sotheby's International, delivered to our site, owned by Solange Kwong.
HELP WANTED
Now taking applications for Posthumus & taxa
on the island of Hebrida, please send your
apply to person at Ville Humaitaille, 1209,
Rue du Château.
EXOTIC JOBS: LIFT TAJOH, CALIFORNIA
Little expense, landlord fee $1700-$4000毫
money per year. Travel in resorts,
ranchers, rattles, river rafts, & more.
Salary $26k-$35k, Q4, IQR $18k-$22k.
Oklahoma, California $500k-$650k
JOHS MEN ... WOMEN NAMIBIVAS
CUSHI SHIPWANT ... experience. High pay! Guest
Room! Business ... Room! Business
Room! Borrow $35 for info to 132AW4LHV
Box 6029, Sacramento, CA. 65060
4-24
Research Assistant in Nephrology Pharmacology (B.S. in Chemistry) at the University of Arizona, AZ. Provide direct medical support to $89,000-$127,000 per year for research projects from March 20, 1975 through April 9, 1976. Stock options are available. Further information please contact Professor Robert D. Cline, Ph.D., Director of Technology and Engineering, University of Kansas, Kansas City, KS 64113. E-mail: robert.cline@uak.edu. Fax: 619-272-2911. Email Opportunity: Affirmative Action Employees
A student assistant for female quintaprofessional. Student needed for Midday afternoon and Wednesday morning. Student needed to help a student to their own desk, helping students with homework or other tasks. 842-432 or 842-1011; afternoon and evening, 9-11.
Pizza People | Television host, Apple TV+
Pizza People, Apple TV+. Movies Marla Stahl on 2nd ed.
Susie Harb
Part-Time or Full-Time ADC* Architectural Drafting 842-2586 4-5
Cookin positions opening very soon for cooks, grill cooks and grill guests. All around experience required. Must be able to read and follow special recipes. Employer must provide full and part-time employment available. Special personality are absolutely needed. Also needs to have a clean kitchen. Applicants to the San Bernardino 432-650 for appointment. 4-11
The University Information Center is now open for business Monday, May 22 and Aug. 19, 1999. Applications must be received by May 22. The director will visit the office on Friday, April 13, 1999. The Department of Electronics and Computer Science (Affirmative Action) Faculty.
COLLEGE MEN. Best networking partner in Colorado. Req. Bachelor's degree in psychology, social work or community health with children in range of ages and backgrounds. Send resumes to College Men's Outreach, 230 S. 18th St., Denver, CO 80209. Only women permitted. Write your resume to College Men's Outreach, 230 S. 18th St., Denver, CO 80209. For questions contact Paula McKenzie, Co. Suite 400, Contact Paula McKenzie, Co. Suite 400, Phone 608-758-1000.
ATTENTION SIN WORKSHOPS Friendly restaurant at lake of the Orcadas tries dry crab cocktail. You can drink what you feel comfortable in, good bites, hummus and sweet potato fries. Frank Cahy restaurant 314-265-7988
OVERSEAS 2018, Summer year, seasoned
N. America, Australia, Asia, Fri All Weeks, $269-
N. America, Australia, Asia, Fri All Weeks, $269-
Expenses paid, bird sighting Free
info-Why, Box-1, Day 3-April, Day 4,
Cars 8225
Cars 8225
63. P. Larkins to move various qualifications for the post-
doc, to be held at the University of Oxford in London.
89. A person by personal M.O. (Mortgage Oversee) to
be given a position in the Treasury.
Need some spending money? Wendy 12/5th, Holly 4/3rd,
Lisa 9/10th, Kate 6/8th, Jessica 2/7th and C. Birchwood 1/5th.
Maggie 2/2nd, Jessica 2/7th and C. Birchwood 1/5th.
COMPUTER PROGRAMMER - The Information and Research Department of the City of Kansas wide range of computer applications. This position requires a Master's degree in computer programming in Colorado or Fort Wayne, or equivalent experience with the latest in data computer technology. We are an independent, research-based, responsible, well-motivated professional in processing and编译 graphics arrays using modernized programming to construct web pages. We mobilize personnel to contribute new areas of computing. The City offers an attractive new area of work: working at home, and modern office facilities. 1924 graduates are encouraged to send a resume to Kansas State University, Kansas City, Missouri Office Building, 101 N. Westerville Avenue, Kansas City, MO 63105. An Equal Opportunity Employer.
4-6
Opening for part-time evening and weekend nurses and for female quadriplegic in nursing care (14) at 325-700 (trail Provide two transplants; M22 (322 p.9) and 811-D4 after 3 p.m.) for Christ Aikle (416
Pontiac & Gail personnel Noon booster
Pontiac & Gail personnel Vita Healthcare
W. 60, A. 423
Work in international homeowner area. Balanced earnings possible. Five-hour area, many tasks openings. HGLI ACAI JOURNAL. Call subject to availability. Mobile: 321-72719. Journal of Home Improvement 4-6
Research Assistant- Pharmaceutical. Chemistry is a full time job. Minimum requirements of 15.0 equiv. must be achieved. Must have prior research laboratory experience and a degree in healthcare science and implementation. Experience with either eK or required. Position available immediately for qualified candidates who may month deputed upon experience and qualification. Contact Dr. Thomas F. Patton (913) 648-8288 or Martin K. Johnson (913) 648-8288. Alternative Action Employer
K.C. Star newspaper is looking for qualified
media reviewers on the screen of folk, rock, blues
and jazz films. Send resumes to K.C. Star
and sample of content reviews to Kratica Star.
papers, 1729 Grand, K.C. 64108. 4-10
1234567890
Position Announced: Curriculum and instruction for Survey in Storm Hall Rotation. Apr. 25 - May 14. Position requires a master's degree or equivalent, be rolled as a student and also currently enrolled in a student course offered by the Office of Institutional Resources at Baylor Hall. Office of Institutional Resources at Baylor Hall.
SUMMER JOBS - Local assistant for nationwide van driver driver below position available to start in May. Work with individual individuals who are not afraid of hard work and work with individuals who are not afraid of hard work. Resumes will be mailed to: Job #1501, Ward K. Lawrence, Kea Formal University Engineering Law.
HELP WANTED FULL TIME. Some mechanical
engineering or related job with deep
departmental experience. Applicants
at A&M Hospital 2100 Hawk
Sales clocks wanted...20 to 25 weeks; week. Apply
in person, private. Lapis 9, W 23rd, W 24th
LOST
Pair of plastic reddish pink frame almost 18"
601-104-202. There will be a reward.
4-5
Lost, KU ID, and loss pass. April 2, possibly in Storme, Phone please. Soul 801, 764-1880, Reward 4.9
MISCELLANEOUS
TIPSIPS BINDING COPYING The House of Uber's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for those browsing and enjoying in Lawrences. Let us contact you at 800 MHz or phone 926-3810. Thank you.
NOTICE
DEATHE WHY BOTHER? BECKANAR
Schemes Seine of Soul Travel 842-342-8121
www.deathewhybothers.com
VFTS. Are you getting your hostfile? Maybe not.
Check checksum (15 IU Rium, 804-647-498).
Batteries
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free battens!
As low as
with $24.30
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
THE BATTERY SHOP
842-2922
Thursday 40 N. Lawrence
Address from Jubilee
Batteries 30l
Kentish motto is 'In Lawsure. Treating death as a
past event.' The Kensington Gardens park was
built partly by construction personnel during the
war.
If you have wound the skin of your penny there is a
small hole in it. If you touch the hole, it will crack.
If you touch the hole and it cracks, Aesthetic
Assistant will repair it and seal it with adhesive.
Jahn, an imported student in California,
is charged with assault by the Department of
Education on the Board of Education. He is
charged with felony assault and battery on the
Board of Education.
PERSONAL
RIKS BIRE SHOE店 to new mall 298 Rielleau
Riks Bire SHOE店 to new mall 149 Rielleau
port quirk (quirk) 932 Vermont, RIKS 41
Riks Bire SHOE店 to new mall 298 Rielleau
EAVY EXTRA FUND $200 $500 Savings Funding
FUND $500 $1000 INDEX FUNDING 300 Norris Tailor
INDEX FUNDING 300 Norris Tailor
FOX HILL, SURGERY CLINIC. Aberrations up to 12
weeks: pregnancy tests, Birth Control Com-
promise. Equip with a graduated scale; 9
am to 5 p.m. (932) 642-7208, 490-1098 for
Overland Park, Ks
HAROOD HIRE 301975ALS, 4-80 Mon, Tues, and
Wed. 10am to 6pm. $1,000 per hour.
MADIS DAILY SLEEPT WEEKLY $1,000 per week.
Call 516-258-8000 for details.
Gax-1) Lid connection; referral, new handbed-
work; ICU hits: 841, 266, 306 or Headpump, 918, 325
HILL HILLE SURGERY CINIC Abortions, up to 12 weeks. Pregnancy Testing, Birth Control. Total Ligation. For appointment call 3-800-452-3006, 491-700-8522. S.O. Everett Park, KS.
Ben Keys, Ruby Bala, Centauri, D.G. Lee,
Kevin Kavanaugh, Andrew Miles, J.P. Morgan
David Beine, and Sonny for being the perfect
four to win.
Bring this ad to Globals and receive two tickets for one of our Globals; Hilfengooping Ming Cave.
OTHER. Application for Announcement of Della King's
death, May 21, 2016, at 10 a.m., at the Hall and the Altar of the Office, and see the Announcement.
*
ATTENTION JEWISH STUDENTS
Reservations needed for 2nd
night Passover Seder.
Hourly Apr. 14-17, 10 am
Karissa Kamen, Karen Simon
Deephart April 16
8:30
Since closes at 9:00 PM
10:17 AM
Students interested in
attending the night Seder
with a family, call
the office at 866-7348
or play at 866-5164
wintertime
Bring this ad to Gluhmanz and get 20% off cover
purchase. Visit Wednesday or Thursday
at 10am for the best shopping prices.
Discount Shipping Code: DD2678
Wanted: Female date for concerts, discos. 843-
8718 by 5 p.m.
4-5
**Record Dramaine - Writing instruction book**
**Box 808, Abbey Lake**
**NME NM 97180**
Male routinenii waited, amermer, $83 meals, new-
bought, new bed, new overhead, new
bed, new chair, new mattress, new
amermer, 91-4251
Girlfriend tuesdays host: Tuesday and Thursday 8-5pm
Girlfriend tuesdays host: Wednesday and drink for free 9-5pm
Girlfriend tuesdays host: Friday in input point
Gibraltar. Monday dine beer (plus liquor pool).
4-6
Hey Humer Student…Mr. Moyna Cum Lande, Why don't you go down to the basement at Watson Library and check out the test reserve file in the library? Wait, the 'j' is a short 'J'. The 'a' is a short 'A'. The 'e' is a short 'E'. The 'g' is a short 'G'. The 'h' is a short 'H'. The 'i' is a short 'I'. The 'o' is a short 'O'. The 'r' is a short 'R'. The 's' is a short 'S'. The 't' is a short 'T'. The 'u' is a short 'U'. The 'v' is a short 'V'. The 'w' is a short 'W'. The 'x' is a short 'X'. The 'y' is a short 'Y'. The 'z' is a short 'Z'.
CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT CONTENT-Design them your 1980's NBU Shr. Stair- design them your 1980's NBU Stair- drawing them We will adapt to shirts. Winn a membership for next year plus see your shirt for next year. Will have an Airtit! & Hiring your entries to the BOCO office.
MUSKLAND C - co-founder N.C. Lawrence based
Muskland and DNA biotechnologies co-founder Jeff
Garcia, co-founder of the Muskland and DNA
biotechnologies co-founder Jeff Garcia, co-founder of the Muskland and DNA
Alphia phi car wash: Saturday, April 7
Knoxville parking lot: 10 a.m.-3 p.m. $1.00
$1.50
Diamondland will with wedding hand, 1 eld trunk,
and all other items sold to the couple will sell for $1,000. If you haven't booking your
shoe(s) yet, call Diamondland at (866) 347-2454.
GREAT FOOD, GREAT SERVICE just like you like in Vienna Restaurant open Mon Sun Tues Wed Thurs Fri Sat Sun
(213) 756-0188
Attending young man, dinging of April Fools
day. They ask for a call to a dentist.
The key they have no more calls at. 415-762-9800.
be alive. You need all of the energy, be it carbohydrates, protein, fat, or vitamins and minerals the nutrition it needs. SINU45NUT provides nutrients, herbs, and H3PROTIN9—a healthy company. Call Bob at 842-3422 between 7 and 8 p.m.
April Food DAN WITNER I know who you
real are Call me LR ME 4-6
DEAR MONI, MOFTT-4 love you and you know it. Won't you leave back? You don't forget to remember me when you get back to love you. Remember me when you get back to love you. MUSSY LINDBACKER
SERVICES OFFERED
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can
help you with math or CS problem. Who can
help you with math or CS problem?
811-437-2767
MATH TUTOR M.A. in math, patience, three years professional experience. 832-541-3947.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Ulder/Uolfer Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Friday, 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 8:38 AM.
BROWNING EDITING. Your manuscript, thesis or former paper collated into an effective, grammatical document. This includes writing with preface and smoothness. Outlines, tables and articles also available. Exhibits 82-131
EXPERT TUTORIALS: MAY 9001 1273, cell 845-5772,
cell 845-6783, COMPUTER SCIENCE 1000, cell
843-8001, COMPUTER SCIENCE 1000, cell
843-8001, COMPUTER SCIENCE 1000,
TUTORIALS, cell 843-9001, QUALIFICATIONS, B.S.
& M.A. programs for computer programming. For general problem
solving.
Beetlewood. Wheat Weaving. offered En-
gineered Arts. Drawing, Articrafts. 108 New
Hampshire, MA 7255.
Male model Arts & Design, Group Rates. Eyes:
Monday, Thurs., Fri., P.O. Box 1025
4-10
**THE TOWER**
Trial of levelling yourself? Naimah Hall is on tiring for the first time over a boarding plan. You are now ready to try the hard work can be enjoyable if you choose this plan. Shop Naimah HALL 1690, Dunn Ave. 843-8528. NASIMH HALL 1690, Dunn Ave. 843-8528.
TYPEWITHER, TUNE-UP. Have for SCM Elem-
poration posted clocked air for those year-end
time on Ström's Office System 1400 Vermont.
Don't risk a breakout at a time of
time.
Enrollment is more limited linked to Wood Carvings,
Mixed Media, and Modern/Contemporary Classes at Donna's Art
School. Decorative Arts, Design & Fashion
Department.
Lawrence, Open School. Exciting programs, practical courses, hands-on instruction. Study and teach, few art classes, organic gardening, study and teach, many art classes. Private classes in LangUAGE Arts, Math, and Religion. Available at 705-281-3800, www.languagearts.org, available 7:30-9:30, click waitee slide. Call now.
Academic Affairs The Lawrence Open School
Multimedia and Interactive Reading Call new: 814-1600
Multimedia and Interactive Reading Call new: 814-1600
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Preggy, 842-4476.
Trip/Edit/Deliver HIM PIM Elite: Employee welcome work
requests. brief description, quality feedback
A45-19227
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980, tf
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Master's degree in Law, term papers, term books.
Wald, WJ21.
Experienced Typed-term papers, thesis, mhse.
Experienced Typed-term PowerPoint, spelling corrections
83-5224 83-5226
Experimented. Ayat-theory, disentails, term-
nology. *Nature* 86 (1942): 307.
Selective electrocautery, *Electrochemie*:
84-131 (1951): 822-8210.
Quality typing guaranteed- IBM Solicite Terminology Sheets, dissertations, in Carole McNabb
Now accepting term papers for quality typing.
Lymn, 841-266 after 5.30
ff
Taping on Bite Electronic Typewriter by experi-
nence of Prompt service. Proofreading M.
842-1137. 841-1137
TYPING on the 20,000 pages arrived. Quality work.
A quality test is done by Linden or Linden
812-959. We tape it all for you.
Thank you.
Accurate, expedited legal -term papers. Deaths,
wishers and obituaries. Private research
service reqs 72 per page. 823-7544. DMA.
1. do direct dressing type. Under 20 papers, 30-45 minutes.
2. dressing type 40-50 minutes. 45-60 minutes after 5-8 p.m. and weekend only.
3. dressing type 60-70 minutes after 8-10 p.m.
Rapist typing all kinds, over night service unreachable, editing available. Battery 411-8721 evening: 5-11
Vehicle Call: 415-825-6092 after 8 p.m. to
347-825-6091
Transportation Services, Third Street, New York, NY
914-825-6091
Transportation Services, Third Street, New York, NY
914-825-6091
WANTED
MORGANICLAB-established K.C. Lawrence based
mortgage and loan company. Have
marital and have engagements Call 247-691-
5680 or visit www.morganiclab.com
Female for 3 bedroom townhouses at Trailridge
For Fall: for information call 841-6286
4-6
Female nominees needed to bed 3 bedroom
next hall B161.9m I161.8m K42-8220 No peri-
dium
Female resource for Jasperwalker Townswers partners
with the National Science Foundation to support
student learning administration. Will accept
submitings by email, phone or fax.
8
Thursday, April 5, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Law school applications increase
Despite a trend toward a decreasing number of applications to Midwestern law schools, the number of applications for admission to the KU School of Law has increased over last year's figure. Lilian S. director of admissions at the School of Law.
Six said Tuesday that 699 students had applied when the statistics were compiled Sunday. Compared with 642 applications received in ear, applications increased 8.9 percent.
"Why don't we just flatter ourselves and say the increase is because of the excellent job we're doing?"
Six said it was difficult to determine why the KU School of Law would have an increase while other schools received a decreasing number of applications.
the incoming class, Six said. She said that the School of Law had accepted 386 of the applications, but that only 190 students would be in the entering class. She said more applications were accepted because there were fewer students to be assessed, three more students applied to more than one school.
Six said the school had increased its recruiting efforts.
Other law schools in the Midwest had 12 to 18 percent decreases in the number of applications they received. The University of Colorado School of Law received 1,300 applications last year, but the number decreased 15.4 percent this year to 1,100.
The number of applications that a law school receives does not influence the size of
missions at the University of Colorado, said that she was unaware why CU had received
"There may be a general decline in interest in the field of law," she said. "Other areas may be not as tight as the law job market. Perhaps there is a scare of the job market for graduating students. How real that is, we really don't know."
The Washington University School of Law received 743 applications in the year and 800 were accepted.
The University of Oklahoma School of Law experienced a 10.6 percent decrease, and t
Taco Via'
2 Taco Burgers for $1.00
good April 2-8
B
And the University of Iowa School of Law had an 18.5 percent decrease, from 989 applications last year to 806 applications this year.
Sun.-Thur. 11 a.m.-midnight 841-4949
Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-1 a.m. 23rd & Ouedahl carry out
Greenbriar's
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEM
Cheese Emporium
HOLIDAY PLAZA-2419 IOWA
Greenbriar's
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEN
Cheese Emporium
HOLIDAY PLAZA—2419 IOWA
841-8271
SOMETHING NEW!
we now have ...
LOX, SMOKED SALMON &
BAGELS, BAGELS, BAGELS
Pumpkinickle Poppy Seed
Onion Plain
Sesame Deluxe
Herb Blueberry
... also Pitta Bread
SUN-THURS 11-9 FRI-SAT 11-10
NEW GRADUATE R.N.'S
10
Specialty Nursing
Figures from the Law Admittance Council support the decreasing number of applications. According to the Council's figures, the number of students who have filed for data reports needed for application has decreased 10 percent nationwide.
TRINITY LUTHERAN HOSPITAL,
a 360-bed, acute care hospital specializing in:
- cardiovascular
- oncology
- psychiatric
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
But directors of admissions at the various schools had differing theories for the problem.
- medical-surgical
- pediatric
James Aharnes, director of admissions at the Washburn University School of Law, said yesterday that the decrease was due to a large number of lawyers in the field.
- intensive care
- EFNT
nursing care
Become a Nursing Specialist a Trinity Lutheran Hospital
VIRGINIA STATE UNIVERSITY
WESTLAKE
31st and Wyandotte Kansas City, MO 64108
Dense Bath, R.N.
Nurse Recruitment
816 753-4600, ext. 256
Hi there
by
FAMOLARE
Fresh, exciting, Hi-rise sandals
look great with everything
you wear!
Arensberg's
= Shoes
819 Mass.
Hi there by FAMOLARE
Pearl Colvin, assistant dean for law ad-
The Astronomy Associates of Lawrence Invites the public to our weekly
OPEN HOUSE April 6-7:30 pm
426 Lindley Hall
Film will be "The Starry Messenger" by Jacob Brongowski
If clear, there will be an observing session at 8:30 with the largest telescope in Kansas. Objects of interest will be Jupiter, Saturn, and the Great Nebula in Orion.
Partially funded by Student Senate
$14700* mexicana
KANSAS CITY — MEXICO CITY
ROUND TRIP
Beginning April 24th, Mexicoana Airlines will offer substantial discounts for travel to Mexico City. Their airfare can save you up to $134.00 off the normal roundtrip fare (Acapulco can be added to each $84.00 additional). To qualify for this special fare you must remain in Mexico for at least five days and book your hotel on our low cost tours and sightseeing packages. We have prepared a colorful brochure as fully describe this fare and our low cost tour programs.
Travel Coordinators and Mexicana are also offering 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, Falkon History, Dance of Mexico, Inter-Artistic Groups, Latin American Politics and Economics, Mexican Educational System, Psychology, Sociology, Spanish Language and Literature, and Theatre.
We will also be happy to send you information on these schools.
*Subject to government approval Monday Friday travel
Please send me your brochure describing this fantastic 8147 00 fare to Mexico and/or information on the Student Study Programs.
School ___
My Travel Agent is
□ Send information on discount airfare, hotel, and sightseeing program
□ Send information on the Student Study Program
sua films
sua films presents
JONALD SUTHERLAND
MIRIE LANCASTER
GERARD DEFENDREU
DOMINICLE SANCLA
KONBERT DE NIEB
STRANDA SANCROFT
1900
A JILIMBU
BERNARDO
BERTOLUCI
RONALD LUTHERKING
BURT LANCASTER
GEORGE WILSON
DOHNICLE
ARLERT
STEILAWA
Friday & Saturday
April 6 & 7
Woodruff Auditorium
ADM $1.50 3:00 & 7:40
COME RIDE WITH US!
DOWNTOWN MERCHANTS EXPRESS
The Saturday-Downtown Merchants Express Schedule
Exact Fare Only 25"—Driver Carries No Change!
From: Ellsworth Student Union GSCP Carlin *911 & Mass. Downtown*
Tar: Downtown Downtown Downtown Residential Halls
Timer Hour.Hour.Hour 8 min.past hour 10 min.past hour 18 min.past hour
Timer Hour.Hour.Hour 28 min.past hour 40 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
The Downtown Merchants are offering this bus to all students, faculty, and non-students as a continuing gesture of their appreciation
--at
As Welcome
As Spring Are The Fresh, New Faskions
Cheryl's
Free Gift Wrapping!
Reduced Prices!
Adorable Easter Bunnies 20% Off Retail!
Layaway
Master Charge
Cheryl's
626 E. 4k
Tongqianxie, Kouwsu
913-845-368
9.30-5.30
Monday-Saturday
Cheryl Quisenberry—Owner
BEND OVER PANT
A LEVI'S
April
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30
Nair I have a "Snapdragon clothing
Whisk you the dress you want to wear
Knit your flannel shirt and tie
Dress in casual Western dresses
Already
A comfortable clothes on board
Will allow you to find and
and soon, throw away pieces
The look is very elegant
Try On A Coordinating Top.
LEVI'S
WOMENWEAR
QUALITY NEVER GOES OUT OF STYLE
LTWIN'S
831 Mass.
where clothes are for
Open
tn 9 pm
Open Sunday 1-5
LEVI'S
WORKWEAR
QUALITY MEMBER GOES OUT OF STYLE
LTWIN'S 831 Mass.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 89, No.126
The Univarsity of Kannada-Lawrence, Kannada
The University of Kannada
Friday, April 6. 1979
Stephan suspects gerrymandering
BvGENELINN
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-Kansas Attorney General Robert T. Stephan sent the Kansas House reapportionment bill to the state Supreme Court yesterday with the comment that Douglas would adopt of six counties that possibly was gerrymandered.
Stephan's report stated that Districts 44 and 46 in Doughes county allowed 'possible' gyrermanding 'because of their location'[1].
"Strange house district shapes do not per se violate one-man-one-vote principles." the report said.
The one-man-one-vote principle, which requires that one person's vote count the same as any other person's, must be fulfilled by the reapportionment bill before the Court can approve it.
Democrats in Douglas County have claimed that the redistricting of the county diluted the KU student vote, which traditionally has gone to State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence.
The House reapportionment plan, which already has passed the Kansas House and the Kansas Senate and has been signed by Gov. John Carlin, moved Glover's 40th district to the west of the KU campus and the Oread neighborhood.
THE NEW 44TH District in East Lawrence extends
across Massachusetts Street to pick up the campus and the Oread neighborhood.
Glover and fellow Democrat, State Rep John Solbach,
DLawrence, dubbed this part of the 4th District "A cree-
mance."
Sobach said he was considering against the recompposition plan when the Court issued oral arguments
Some KU student members of Associated Students of Kansas might also speak against the plan, Steve Young.
Solbach also said he expected the Douglas County Democratic organization to come out against the plan before elections.
However, Bruce Miller, deputy attorney general in the litigation department, said certain districts might have odd shapes because the House was not allowed to split precincts in its reapportionment.
"SOMETIMES THEY had to move a precedent into another district, and that meant that they had to shift other departments."
A special report of the Apportionment Committee also stated that District 41"is as compact as possible . . . and has a community of interests associated with the University area of the city of Lawrence."
The committee report said District 46 "is easily identifiable and understandable by the voters since it lies
generally to the east of Massachusetts Street."
But Miller said that if the Court ruled that distract lines had been shifted to manipulate the number of voters for a particular party, the reapportionment plan would be thrown out.
Some Douglas County Democrats and KU students have eliminated the plot must be struck down because it split the city.
"No group has any given right to representation as a
group, at least not in any case law I can find." he said.
Miller said Stephan's staff was more worried about gerrymandering in the House plan than it had been about the Senate reapportionment bill, which was approved by the Court yesterday.
Miller also said there were districts in Sedewich and Johnson counties that looked stronger than the Douglas County district.
STEPHAN'S REPORT also said there was possible gerrymandering in Wyndamie, Reno and Swain County.
The Senate completed reapportionment of its districts several weeks ago.
Miller said some political maneuvering was to be expected in legislative reoapportionment.
The Court must decide the case by its May 5 deadline
Committee urges halt to JRP action
By LAURASTEVENS
Staff Reporter
The Housing Services committee or true Association of University Residence Houses recommend that all disciplinary cases be residents of Joseph R. Pearson Hall found with marijuana plants in their room during a spring break safety
The eight-page report was submitted in three parts at an AURB Executive Board meeting Chris Cline, housing services committee chairman, said.
"The first six pages of the report are a survey of events that led to the conflict at JRP," Cline said.
The final part of the report is a recommendation for policies to be devised for notifying residents of room checks. Cline said the policy could be
Cline said she had contacted Frokl, who said the only violations found were theft and drinking. The earlier had said that liquor and street signs also were found. Frokl could not be held liable.
Cline's committee investigated policies on entry of student rooms after a spring break by Richard Foulk, rspd director, and Boh Nugent, assistant manager.
The second part is a brief survey of procedures used at other halls for notifying residents of room checks. McCollum Hall is not in the survey because the committee was unable to contact officials there, she said.
approved at an AURH assembly meeting Monday.
According to Jay Smith, AUHF president, a subcommittee of the residential programs advisory board is working on policy recommendations.
The conclusion of the report stated.
"It is the recommendation of the Housing Services committee of AUHR that all disciplinary action against those residents fond possession marijuana plants be dropped and that all written warnings be removed from the resident's file prior to the end of the spring semester, 1979.
"The committee in no way comments on the fact that an illegal substance was found in certain residents' rooms, but the consequent disciplinary measures are due to the result of the apparent lack of regard for an individual's right to privacy by certain staff members of the Joseph B. Pearson Residence Hall, in Richard Froik, resident director, and Nigel Nugent, assistant director."
Athletic board wants job search reopened
CLINE SAID she met Monday with Fred McElhenie, director of the office of residential programs. In that meeting, she said, McElhenie indicated that the office would be willing to discuss any recommendations by AURH.
She said there were three areas of concern in making policies for room entry and notification: residents' needs, residents' ideas and expectations on the part of the staff and the residential programs office.
By BARBARA JENSEN
Staff Reporter
Members of the Advisory Board on Women's Intercollegiate Athletics voted yesterday to request that an assistant coach be removed in men's athletics be readvertised.
Tracy Spellman, a member of the board, said yesterday that the position would include responsibilities to women's athletics and sports management, merged and that duty was advertised.
"Not mentioning in the job description that the job will include working with women, athletes after the merger or the relocation will apply for the position," Spelman said.
Jerry Waugh resigned March 15 as an assistant athletic director. He now is managing recreation facilities for Alvamar Corporation in Lawrence.
THE BOARD MADE the recommendation to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor. Shankel said he would need to investigate the status of the hiring procedures.
Bob Marcum, director of men's athletics, was unavailable for comment last night. But Marcum said Wednesday that applications had been accepted for the position and that he would probably interview candidates next week.
Board members also expressed concern about the merger, which Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said would be approved sometime next week.
"I'm not convinced the merger is the best thing to do," Mike Harper, a member of the board and former student body president, said. "All the eggs are in one basket."
Under the merger, Marcum would be director of men's and women's athletics. He would be directly responsible for football, men's and women's basketball, the business office, sports information, the Williams Educational Fund and special projects
Marian Washington, women's athletic director, will be the associate director in charge of a sports medicine program and non-revenue-producing sports.
Harper said he was disappointed in the response he had received from the chan-
"OUR INTELLIGENCE has been in
sulted, "he said. "We send in letters and we get back a computer punch-out response
"All we've been doing is paying lip service to allow this board to have input about the merger. We may as well talk to a wall and get the same response."
Harper called the merger an *acquisition* and Anne Levinson, also a *businessman*, said.
But Charles Oldfather, chairman of the board, disagreed.
"I will say it once again," Oldfather said. "Historically, the problem has been that the athletic director has not had direct responsibility for women's athletics. He has had to go to the chancellor regarding concerns with women's athletics."
Women's athletics are now regulated by the University administration. The men's program functions as a separate, non-profit corporation.
Under the merger proposal, the women's advisory board and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board would combine.
The women's advisory board now has 16 members and KUAC has 21 members. Under the proposal the new board would have members, three of whom would be students.
Oldfather said he; Del Brunkman, chairman of KUAC; and Mike Davis, University general counsel, had been appointed by the chancellor to make technical changes in the KUAC by-laws to accommodate the merger.
HE SAID THE by-laws did not specify whether they pertained to men's or women's athletics and it would not be necessary to reincorporate after the merger.
Oldfather said he would recommend to the chancellor that the faculty representative to the Big Eight athletic conference and the faculty representative to the Association for Athletics for Women alternate years as chairman of the KUAC board.
The faculty representative to the Big Eight now serves as chairman of KUAC.
Elizabeth Banks, a member of both athletic boards, said she thought the new
See ADVISORY back page
THE DANCERS
Clowning and crying
After walking around campus and entertaining passers-by, Sara Hendrick, Lawrence junior, left, Jody Tatum, Atlanta junior, returned with their pantomime class to Hoech
Staff Photo by ALANZLOTKY
ASK's role evaluated
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Auditorium, where the class discussed its experiences. The class is preparing for its spring final, which involves performing a skit.
With budget hearings drawing to a close, the question of whether KU should move to Washington is decided. Students of Kansas, a statewide student lobbying group, is once more before the hearing.
Staff Reporter
The allocation would not result in a decrease. Tempelman said, because 10 cents of the Senate operating budget and 15 cents would come from the Senate's
Members of the Senate last month approved a provision in the revenue code that would allocate 25 cents from each student activity fee to ASK.
According to Craig Templeton, Student Senate administrative assistant, preparations already have been made to renew the membership.
Although KU was granted a provisional membership in ASK last year for $2,900, a full membership for next year would cost $9,150.
The final vote on renewing the membership will probably be Sunday, he said. If senators vote not to rejoin, the 25 members would continue to its original places in the revenue code.
ACCORDING TO Hannes Zacharias, ASK's executive director, the organization's budget is too tight to do more than bare bones lobbying. So tight, in fact, that he said he might not be able to continue as director.
"It really cuts down on an organization's effectiveness when you don't have the same person there year after year," he said. "You need to establish a personality that legislators can rely on."
"I just can't afford it," he said. "I make about $2.30 an hour. That's barely enough to live on."
Zacharias a turnover in directors would have a crippling effect on the group because it would lose its continuity with legislators.
"KU's membership gives us the potential to give the director a salary increase and to attract better staff as well," he said.
However, the answer to ASK's money problems could lie in KU's renewed membership, Zacharias said.
"WITHOUT KU, though, we're looking at a whole different ballgame."
One legislator who shares Zacharias' views is State Sen. Ron Hein. R-Topena
the founder of ASK and it's first executive director.
"They're about as effective as they can for the budget they have." He said. Their tight budget restricts them from really being an excellent group. You have to make that most lobbyists earn $2,000-$3,000 or more. You get what you pay for."
"That's the reason larger groups are more effective," he said. "Why do you know someone's scared to death of Hew Taylor? You know that if they don't go along with him on a certain issue, he has the power and money to put out mailings to churches all over the country."
Hein said ASK would become much more effective when students put more money into the group.
The Rev. Richard Taylor is director of another lobby organization, Kansans for Life at Its Best.
Despite its lack of money, Hein said, he thinks ASK performs an important function in the Legislature.
"T DAY 99 percent of the legislators know who ASK is and know that it represents students. I think it does a good job of making certain legislators bear
See ASK back page
Easy credit available to students
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
College students are getting a lot of credit. Some national oil companies and insurance firms are liberally extending credit to students through direct mailings.
Among those mailing applications for credit is Mobil Oil Company, Gordon Cathray, manager of the Kansas City, Mo., Mobil Oil Credit Card Center, said yester-year. Mobil gave credit to anyone who "simply fill out the application form completely."
"We don't usually screen the college seniors and graduate students that we mail applications to," he said. "We just look to us, because we are signed and then we issue a credit card."
Cathryn said Mohal's application asked for the name, address and signature of the BAI.
Mobil Oil does check the addresses to be sure the applicant is a bona fide individual,
"WE ARENT in the business of rejecting credit," he said. "And we recognize that a student straight out of school won't have established credit. So we usually just issue a
See related story page 11
Cattray said Mobile mailed "tenes of thousands" of applications to students each year. He said credit was much easier to get as a student than at a later age.
"If an individual turns down the carapace given to him in college, it's much harder for them to ever get credit from us later," he said. "As an adult wanting credit we have more stricter standards in our education and income, than we ever do as a student."
A Consumer Affairs representative in Lawrence, Joanne Hancock, said she suggested that seniors and other students accept credit card applications.
"I'd say get the cards now," she said. "Jobs aren't so stable at this age so credit is needed. And with most companies it's much easier to get a job now, than time, rather than to wait until a later date."
Cattray said there were few negative responses to Mobile's offer of credit.
Joe Armstrong of Standard Oil's application and accounts division, said credit was offered to juniors, seniors, and graduate students.
"ANY FORM returned is processed and
"an credit is extended, unless we find some
reason to do it," he said. "We also extend credit to juniors
in college because we feel that they are
responsible at that age and need the chance
to have credit when they aren't employed."
"About one fourth of one percent of the mail we send brings us a letter of response," he said. "Of those, only half are negative, saying they don't want 'junk mail.' The majority actually fill out the application and ask for a credit card."
SEARS, MASTERCHARGE and Visa said they had no college credit recruitment programs, but extended credit only on referral from another card holder.
Two insurance companies, Old American Insurance Company in Kansas City, Mo., and Travelers Insurance Company, with headquarters in Hartford, Conn., said that they had programs to extend insurance benefits to college seniors.
Mint Barre, an agent of Old American Insurance, said that although Old American offered most policies to older citizens, some college recruitment occurred.
“Our recruitment of seniors is actually all done through the mail,” he said. “We do complete an investigation of each app which includes a personal interview.”
Alan Fletcher, a Travelers Insurance spokesman, said the company mailed applications to college seniors because seniors were in the market for insurance.
"We know as students begin to get jobs and establish households they will need insurance of all types," Fotherd said. "And via it sometimes is the best way to grab them."
2
Friday, April 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
VERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Vetoes upheld in Leaislature
TOPEKA—The Kansas House and Senate sustained two of Gov. John Carlin's veto issues, including Wednesday's veto of a bill to reinstate capital
The House officially sustained Carlin's veto of the death penalty bill when Speaker Wendell Lady, K-Overland Park, formally invited motions to override the death penalty.
The Senate sustained Cardin's veto of a bill that would have given the Legislature greater power over regulations developed by state agencies.
Carlin came under attack Wednesday when he vetoed the capital punishment bill, after he had promised to sign such a bill in his campaign. It was the first such bill to reach a Kansas governor's desk since the state's capital punishment law was struck down in 1972.
The governor's veto message Wednesday made no mention of constitutional or drafting problems with the bill, but outlined his philosophical opposition to it.
Bhutto hanaina brinas violence
WAIPAWPNDL. Pakistan—Police fired tear gas and arrested hundreds of rock-throwing demonstrators yesterday as prayers meetings for executed Nazca500s.
Similar outbreaks occurred in Lahore and Karachi, but few injuries were reported. Protesters shouted slogans against President Mohammad Zul-uHaq, who ousted Bhutto 21 months ago and refused to commute his death sentence
Butto, who was convicted of ordering the murder of a political opponent, was hanged Wednesday.
Police said they expected more demonstrations today, the Moslem Sabbath, despite Pakistan's martial law.
Palestinian cooperation urged
CAHQ, Egypt - terrorists waging an underground war against the Egyptian peace treaty pinned a bus stop in the Arab side of Jerusalem and struck a bus driver.
In Cairo, President Anwar Sadat told the Palestinians that bombs would not build a homeland and he appealed to them to join in the peace process.
Egypt and Israel continued moving toward normal relations, despite the bombings.
In the Sinai Peninsula, Egyptian civilians were allowed for the first time since the 1967 Middle East War to come and go as they pleased.
Sale of the 100 million War Lord coin and gold piece by Israeli Prime Minister Menachem带旅行到 the Israel settlement of
Jerusalem.
Israel Prime Minister曼森 began traview to the Israeli settlement on the Golan Heights, and drew from the peninsula. Began appoled to resentient to accept the situation in the region.
U. S. officials in Washington said Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance would join Satad and Begin in a meeting at the Sinai capital of El Arish on May 27. At that meeting, the two Middle East leaders will formally open the border between their two nations.
Oil prices rising, Carter says
WASHINGTON—President Carter told the American people last night that they would have to use less oil and pay more for it.
Carter, in a televised statement from the Oval Office, said he was asking Congress to impose a tax that would take half the revenue that oil companies would get from higher prices if they were decontrolled or from price increases by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Administration officials said that the gradual oil decontrol proposal would add 4 to 5 cents a gallon to the price of gasoline and home heating oil by September 1981. Others have estimated that the price could increase 15 cents a gallon.
Food prices rise another 1%
WASHINGTON - Wholesale prices rose another 1 percent in March, humming.
made in office, not the government, and yielded-
ly. The announcement contradicts an indication last month that food prices
might be leveling off.
The March rise followed increases of 1 percent in February and 1.3 percent in January, the Labor Department said.
Together, they show wholesale prices rising at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 14.1 percent. Wholesale food prices increased 1.2 percent in March, down from 15.3 percent in February.
Energy prices increased substantially last month. Gasoline rose 2.9 percent and fuel oil costs climbed another 5.3 percent.
The Labor Department's producer price index for March was 208.8. That means that goods priced at $10 in 1967 had risen $28.8 last month.
Silkwood home said radioactive
OKLAHOMA CKTY-A former Kerr-McGee safety officer issued yesterday that employee Silkowear told him radioactive contamination in his body.
Wayne Norwood testified that he and two other health physics workers examined Silkwood's apartment for plutonium because she arrived at work early. The building was full of exposed pipes.
Norwood said he found high levels of contamination in the kitchen and bathroom and the highest level was on packages of bologna and cheese in Shimane.
Silkwood died in a traffic accident on Nov. 13, 1974. Witnesses have testified that she was on her way to meet a New York Times reporter and a union representative to present evidence of quality control fraud at the nuclear fuel plant.
K-State students stage protest
*TOPEKA—About 100 Kansas State University students* marched on the state capital yesterday to protest plans to rear down a burnt-out gymnasium at the Missouri State University.
Students gathered peacefully on the statehouse steps, stepping their opposition to a K-State administration request for $125,000 to demolish the remains of Nichols Gymnasium. The building, decorated with medieval battlements, was gutted by fire in December 1968.
At a brief rally, students displayed a model of the gym's shell and waved signs, including one saying, "Kent State again? Maybe."
DENVER—The Fort St. Vrain nuclear generating plant near Plattteville, Colo., was shut down last February because of a mechanical failure, not for refueling as previously reported, the Public Service Co. of Colorado reported yesterday.
Mechanical error closed plant
The students then broke into small groups to voice their complaints to Kansas legislators.
Gary Reeves, the news director, said the Feb. 1, shutdown was caused by a problem in the pump leading to a conventional generator. The problem did not involve any matter.
2 more rabid skunks in KC
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Health officials confirmed yesterday that two skunks in the city had week raid. Two other rabbit animals had been found in the city last week.
But the city's health department officials discounted the possibility that the cases pointed to an epidemic in the city.
Authorities said one of the skunks was killed near Greenwood in southern Californias nightmare and tried to attack two women. The other was captured the same day near a wild animal enclosure.
Weather...
Today will be partly cloudy with a high in the mid 50s. There will be a slight chance of a shower or thunderstorm tomorrow with temperatures climbing into the low 70s, according to the National Weather Service.
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)-Ugandan President Idi Amin reportedly returned to the capital city of Kampala yesterday and said that his forces had surrounded the
Tanzanians and Ugandan exiles who were besieging the city.
Amin says army surviving siege
Several of his top aides fled to Kenya. However,
Rehnquist grants appeal to stay Evans' execution
ATMORE, Ala. (AP) - John Louis Evans II was spared from death in the electric chair after being acquitted of Justice William Reimquist stayed the sentence for one week on an appeal by his lawyer.
Less than five hours before Evans' scheduled execution, R狮捷 ordered that Evans' death sentence be stayed until at least 5 m. April 13.
The justice said the sentence was stayed for further consideration of the application (to be heard) at next month.
When her son refused to make an appeal himself, Mrs. Evans sent attorneys to the court. Her lawyers, who had not served waned in a holding cell adjacent to the execution chamber of Holman Pearson near
Evans, 29, was convicted of robbery and murder in the 1773 slaying of a Mobile, Ala.
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KANSAN
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WEEKLY NEWS
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Military observers generally discounted Amin's claim as another of the dramatic statements he has become famous for. A Tanzanian government spokesman in Dar-Es-Salam said, "The push to Kampala is going steadily as planned."
There was no independent confirmation of either claim, although by most accounts, Amin's eight-year-old regime is on its last legs.
RADIO UGANDA quoted a military spokesman, usually a reference to Amin—as saying, "The enemy must know although we have had some of the tebebe and have dropped more than 200 bombs so far, that they have been cut off from us." And we are just watching what is on going.
Earlier in the day the spokesman had told his remaining soldiers in Kampala, "I am still going strong and am physically fit," the radio said.
Amin's appearance in Kampala indicated
However, diplomats and exiles reported that the invaders were occupying Entebe International Airport, 21 miles from Kampala.
MEANWHILE, there was a lull in the fighting, sources said. The invaders possibly wanted to give Amin's forces, in response to the battle, time to flee to avoid a major battle.
that he has not lost his fair for spectacular gestures despite five months of battlefield
Exile sources had said Wednesday night that Amin's regime could fall in a few hours or a few days, depending on how much Libyan demand the Ugandans received.
The airport had been an escape route and lifeline to Armis's Libyan backers, who left the city to fight Islamic State.
AT LEAST THREE Ugandan cabinet officials were reported to have arrived in Nairobi, including Mattya Libaeghe, who was asked to Amin in the Ugandian foreign ministry.
When: 12:30 p.m. Sunday, April 8th in the Big 8 room. Monday & Tuesday at 7:00 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom
Student Senate Meetings
Everyone is invited to attend.
Possible Agenda
II Admendment to the Revenue code unallocated funds.
The Budget for fiscal year 1980 will be considered.
III A resolution concerning KJHK
a resolution concerning spending of last years allocation.
IV A bill to consider membership into ASK.
---
These are very important meetings and everyone who is interested is urged to attend.
Paid for by Student Senate.
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3
Gregory brings tears of joy, grief
Bv PATRICIARICE
Staff Renarter
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Some people in the audience had tears in their eyes. First, the tears came from laughter as a comedian joked about having 10 children. He said it was his answer to black genocide.
Then, the tears came from grief as the comedian became serious and spoke of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.
Gregory spoke to an audience of nearly 400 people who attended a benefit dinner for the Black Adoption Programs Association.
Dick Gregory, comedian, humanitarian, author and political analyst, combined these roles to deliver a speech that drew the attention of the audience.
Among the audience members were several KU students enrolled in African Studies 888. The Rhetoric of Black America. The class is taught by Dorothy Pennington, assistant professor of African studies.
"Can all you people back in the cheap seats hear OK?" Gregory asked, as he opened his speech.
THE TALL, SLIM, outspoken man commented on his life,
his goals and the significance of April 4th, the date KING
was assassinated. He led a prayer for King, a civil rights leader.
"Here was a man who tried so much to save America and all it did in return to try discredit him." Gregory said.
He played a dialogue between Wayne Lance, a research associate of Gregory's, and a former FBI officer.
"R was known throughout the bureau that (J. Edgar) Hoover was trying to get King," the official on the tape
"I're ironic that the same squaw of men who was assigned to barrasing King was the same squaw who was assigned to the assassin."
Gregory said, "I know if Martin were here today, he would say 'no' to my playing that tape.
Gregory said America was morally and spiritually bankrupt.
"The blacks could leave this country to the whites or the whites could leave this country to the blacks; the men could leave this country to the women or the women could leave it to the women; the blacks could basically have the same problems," Gregory said.
"THE MEDICAL profession has killed more people
through unnecessary surgery than (AdolO) Hitler killed Jews.
"And the government has nuclear plants in California built on earthquake, faults," he said.
Gregory, who has made 300 speaking engagements a year and is completed an 886 run "mur for hunger" in 1974, spoke about
He has visited Kansas City annually for the past six years to support the Social Action Committee of 20, a community organization.
The author of nine books, including his autobiography, "Nuger," Giger has a doctorate in humane letters from Michigan, University in Chicago and Rust College in Mississippi, University of laws from Lincoln University in Pennsylvania.
In his closing statement, he read an FBI memo from the company that hoped that said, "We have long suspected that Gregory is responsible."
Gregory said the FBH had labelled him demented because of his civil rights activities and his support of the Muslim minority in London.
Gregory softened his voice and said, "We can turn all of this around. There is still hope for this nation. As long as you tune into that power, that God force, that overrides it all."
For those bowlers who just can't seem to get the 10th pin to fall, a tournament this weekend to benefit the Council on Aging may have just the answer.
9-pin bowlers to strike rich score
Hillcrest bowl will be the site for a "Nee
Fap. No Split! bowling tournament April 7,
8."
The tournament is unusual because a bowler who knocks down nine pins with his first ball of each frame will be awarded a trophy. Hopper, organizer of the tournament, said
benefit the Council on Aging and the other 40 percent will be awarded to the top five finishers in the men's and women's categories.
Any bowler who rols a split on his first ball also will be awarded a strike. Hopper ban.
at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. There will be three classes each Sunday, at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Hopper said the entry fee would be $5 a session and anyone may enter as many
In addition to those prizes and the strike-in rule modification, Hopper said there would be bonus strike frames, when a special prize was given to the bowler who roiled a torque strike.
Sixty percent of the prize fund will go to
He said there would be no age groups and no bowling handicap considerations.
Further information is available by contacting Hopper at 842-6043.
There will be two sessions each Saturday.
During a special meeting last night, the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission approved requests to include a new landfill and mall site in the city's flood plan district.
The request for the recently annexed property, at the corner of 31st Street and Armstrong Road, was approved by nine of the commissioners. Commissioner Dean Harvey said he opposed the action because he thought it was unnecessary.
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Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted. $1.50 admission.
sua films
The Downtown Merchants are offering the bus to all students, faculty and non-students as a continuing presence of their appreciation.
1900 (1872)
Exact Fare Only 25"—Driver Carries No Chanel
Friday & Saturday, April 6 & 7
Dir. ingram Bergman, with Ulla Jacobson, Eva Dallambre, harriet comedy that won the Cannes Film comic that won the Cannes Film and Prix for Best Comedy. Sweden's Sidenov.
(1977)
Dir. Bernard Bottelli with Robert
Direen, Niro Gerard, Donald
Sutherland, Dominique Sanda, Burt
Lancaster, Sterling Hayden.
Midnight Movie
OUTRAGEOUS
Dir. Richard Benner; with Craig Russell, Hollis McLaren, PLUS: "Bambi Meets Godzilla" 12:15 am.
Wednesday, April 11
SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT
Tuesday, April 10
The Palestinian Situation:
TO LIVE IN FREEDOM
(1975)
Made by a predominantly Israeli civil Israel's黎脏 subtilities. PLUS:
"The History Book, v.8."
FAMOUS EX-COP
FEELS GOOD KNOWING
LITE BEER IS BEHIND BARS.
Eddie "Popeye" Egan
Famous Ex-Cop
LITE BEER FROM MILLER.
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED
IN A BEER. AND LESS.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
APRIL 6.1979
KUAC plan questioned
The merger of the men's and women's athletic programs at the University of Kansas has produced disturbing changes in the organization of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation.
Two areas of concern within the current proposal for changes in the KUAC are the powers the board will have under the new plan and the reduction in the number of board members particularly in student members.
The potential result of these changes is the concentration of policy-making power in what is now the men's athletic department and reduced representation on behalf of both women's athletics and the student body.
CURRENTLY, THE by-laws of the corporation state the board has policy making powers in areas such as the budget.
But in a meeting in early March, Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said that the new KUAC board only serve in an advisory capacity. As Dykes noted, the board has always been designated as an advisory board. However, the board did effect duties as if it were just a policy-making board.
The second distressing proposal is the reduction of members serving on the KUAC board. The current board has 21 members, two of which are the Student Body president and chairman of the Student Senate sports committee, plus two students appointed at large.
THE CURRENT proposal will reduce the number of board members to 15, the reductions coming at the faculty, alumni and student levels. Elected representation on the board for each group will be reduced to one-half of current membership.
In pragmatic terms, that means that the faculty and alumni will have three elected members to the board. Whereas in the past, two students at large were appointed to the board, there will now only be one elected student, who is to be an athlete elected by the "K Club" on campus. Currently, there is no on campus "K" club.
REDUCTION OF membership on the board leaves student representation, aside from the two ex officio members, to an athlete who may be influenced by certain others on the board. It could, in effect, provide a yes
man for the athletic director's office. It has been suggested that the elected "K Club" member be kept on the board without a vote and that a second student be appointed to the board with a vote.
Nevertheless, upon completion of the merger, the women's advisory board, an ad hoc board, would be eliminated. The board has never been officially recognized by the chancellor.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, recently said, "It is not required that the women's advisory board be consulted. After the merger, their board goes out of existence and this one (KUAC) is restructured."
THAT ACTION is questionable. Who can make assurances that the sole designated female position on the board—the faculty representative of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women serving as an ex officio member, will be sufficient representation for women's athletic interests on the board?
There are more questions. Dykes said earlier there was really no need for change in the KUAC except for the "ambiguity in the language in the by-laws."
First, with the entire reorganization of athletic programs, isn't it reasonable to presume that some changes should be made to ensure that men's and women's athletics receive just and equal considerations in funding, equipment, etc?
SECOND, THE changes in the "ambiguity in the language" easily could be seen as an attempt to reduce the power of the board and to place major policy-making decisions within the hands of the athletic director.
In whose interests are these proposed changes being made? As usual, obviously not those either of the students or of women's athletics.
Perhaps members of the administration will propose or agree with further suggestions on the restructuring of the board. Let's hope so.
Final decisions have not yet been made on changes for the KUAC board. There is still time for the administration to ensure that just and equal representation for all will be provided on KUAC. It is hoped and demanded that action will be taken to meet the interests of all involved with KU athletics.
Trudeau is telling all despite embarrassment
S Margaret Trudeau, while suffering a guilt complex, tried to plump up a kitchen knife into her breast after her Canadian husband accused her of being unfaithful.
So what. Ask me if I care?
The knife incident was reported last week in a Toronto newspaper in a week-long serialization (hype) of Mrs. Trudeau's coming book, "Beyond Reason."
Vintage "kiss and tell," Mrs. Trudeau's book, according to early press releases, is a melange of uncertainty, feelings, secrets, romantic lianas, and other private oc- cious that most married and formerly married couples prefer to keep under their own roofs.
Mrs. Trudeau, however, is showing that she will have none of this, and has decided to join the ranks of those hoping to make an impact on her life, and embarking it may be to her husband.
INITALLY, one wonders how our
truth will ever be released.
The expiration of her book at this time.
Prime Minister Trudeau is facing an intense threat from members of his own Liberal party to defect. And his wandering wife, prancing around the world promoting her book, is attracting a lot of unfavorable attention.
But this, remember, is the lady who stunned Canadians two years ago when she announced she was separating from her husband, leaving their three children and
A. O. A.
Vernon Smith
At that time Margaret and Pierre Trudeau signed an agreement in which they pledged to do or say nothing that would cause the other party embarrassment.
moving to New York to become, among other things, a photographer.
But Margaret Trudene cannot be saddled with all of the blame. Were it not for the pain provided by a curious and star-craved publisher, was waste of paper would not be so common.
"Beyond Reason") is perhaps a very appropriate title for this particular book and the many others of this genre. Anyone with his wits about himself would not stoop to such a despicable level of literary achievement.
Throughout the Trudeau affair Pierre has remained in public solitude, keeping his eyes on the news, receiving many sympathy votes. But the body probably become No.1 on somebody's best seller list and a movie (usually not quite as big) of the book) will follow. All this just make a buck.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USPS 60-440) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and delivered Thursday during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and ballet Sunday. Subscription is $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County. Association subscriptions by mail are for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County. Subscription subscriptions are a $2 semester, pay through the activity fee. Send Charge
send changes of address to the University Dally Kannan, Finf Hall. The
University of Kannas, Lawrence, KS 60045
General Manager Rick Musser
Editor
Barry Massey
In the spirit of riding the private sector of government intervention, President Carter recently called for "more common regulation" in the operation of federal regulatory bodies.
Carter's rules cleanup begets rules
Taking note that the Food and Drug Administration required more than 100,000 pages—accumulated during a 12-year-period—to explain its decision about the use of peanut butter. Carter moved to simplify procedures used by agencies to effect rules.
Carter introduced proposals that would require regulatory bodies, including agencies such as the Interstate Commerce Commission and the Federal Comms Committee to list various ways of executing regulations and then to follow the least expensive.
CARTER SAID his proposals would eliminate many regulatory hearings and "clean up the enormous backlog of rules and regulations."
If the cheapest method is not used, then the agency must explain to the public why a policy was adopted.
Carter's idea sounds great. Who can argue with eliminating what many industries and businesses believe are unnecessary regulations?
Don't water minute:
Isn't Carter simply requiring more paper
Philip Garcia
But wait a minute.
work to effect another decision? Isn't this just another exercise in bureaucratic composition? Isn't this another attempt to benefit a small and somewhat insignificant one?
The point seems to be that regulation begets regulation, and that is the problem grawing at Carter, the bureaucracy and the general public.
A look at the growth of regulation gives us an indication of the great web of rules and regulations.
SINCE 1970, there have been 20 new regulatory agencies established, mostly in the areas of health, safety and environmental protection. In the same time span, the number of employees to operate these agencies has grown to about 80,000 people.
Among the more notable agencies, which are bothersome to many, are: the Environmental Protection Agency (1970); the National Highway Traffic Administration
(1970) ; the Consumer Product Safety Commission (1972); and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (1970). The report has had 1,000 "miticking" rules repealed.
In 1970, the cost of regulatory operations was $866 million. The regulatory budget for 1980 calls for an expenditure of $0.404 billion in increase of almost 600 percent in 1980.
One study said that the cost to 48 companies in 20 industries regulated by six regulations had been $2.6 billion; this total was about half of companies' total research and development costs.
IT IS estimated that the cost to in-*
*flect of meeting EPA standard will reach*
*10 million.
OSHA standards cost businesses and
estates about $2 billion or $3 billion a year and
can have a negative impact.
Many industries and businesses clamor about the regulations, and, in some instances, cannot be blamed. For example, the state requires students to be based, in part, on a 22-year-old study.
A Brookings Institute study estimated that in 1975 productivity growth was reduced by 20 percent. It is thought that standards for the safety of coal laborers has reduced labor productivity by about 50 percent.
regulations were introduced because companies failed to provide restraint in manufacturing. That caused government to produce pollution and safety controls.
But one must remember that most of the
around standards do not help the situation, and of course, neither do those who continually violate standards.
BUT COMPANIES say some standards are too high and cannot possibly be met without a decrease in production and lost revenue, or else higher costs for the consumer.
Some have suggested that fees be assessed to a company based on the amount of money they produce, and that the money be fed back into the company is fine, but what would stop companies from still passing on regulation costs, regardless of their proportionate fee to a regulatory agency?
As for decreasing the budget of the regulatory agencies themselves, it has been proposed that a spending lid be set, which a secular agency could not impurify in any way.
This looms as the solution, in view of all the talk about a balanced budget.
MCCNEY MERLEHMOND DRIES LEADER. © 1979 BY CHICAGO TRIBUNE
TRONSTEUS
CAUTION MEN AT WORK
SLOW TO 7%
--stating that the quality of the armed forces has deteriorated since the ending of the draft. I spent five years as an infantry officer and was awarded a commission in June 1978. I will categorically state, based on my own experience working with and training troops in Iraq, that the quality of the people coming into the Army has vastly improved since 1972.
Complacent Teamster image a myth
By PAUL POULOS
BY PAUL FUELOS
N.Y. Times Feature
WASHINGTON — Despite public awareness of Teamster corruption, most Americans still don't understand the problems Teamster drivers face on the job and in the union. If the public reads anything about them, it's that some can earn up to $30,000 a year under their current contract and, therefore, are overpaid.
Teamster rank-and-file members are said to be unconcerned about corruption in the union precisely because
Having spent 17 years as a union driver and this past year on the road talking to drivers all over the country, I can say unequivocally that the image of the complacent Teamster is a myth.
Furthermore, in truck stops, local union halls, on and off the band, the talk is about hours, safety, job security and community involvement.
Very few Teamsters in the trucking industry are happy with their union and its efforts to represent them.
PRESIDENT CARTER has linked the outcome of these negotiations to the success of his anti-inflation program, and the public seems to feel that if the drivers strike on Thursday, the president will gain more money than the president's 7 percent guidelines allow.
In the last week, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters has been negotiating a new national contract with the American Tobacco Association.
The news media, union, management and government focus attention on monetary demands and obscure the real concerns of most drivers. For them, working conditions—not money—are at the heart of their discontent.
Under their current contracts, drivers are forced to work long, irregular hours—up to 60 and 70 hours a week and 15 hours a day. Unlike other workers, they cannot refuse overtime and they get no extra pay for it.
FUMES, FATTIGE, noise and constant shouting in the casks of big 18-wheeler all take their toll in deaths, in accidents.
More than 900 long-haul drivers were killed last year in accidents that also took the lives of many motorists.
When an accident does occur, however minor, it's always the driver who is at fault. As management sees it, the driver's responsibility is to act.
Given the hardship of life behind the wheel, and on many loading docks, it's no surprise that Teamsters want better pension benefits and earlier retirement. But it's here that corruption is having an effect.
The pensions of drivers and other freight workers covered by the scandal-scarred Central States Pension Fund have not increased in six years, while employer contributions to the fund have almost doubled.
DURING THE same period, inflation has reduced the buying power of a $500 maximum monthly pension, and a $200 minimum.
Teamsters now know that the millions lost on Las Vegas loans came out of their pensions. In this new contract, large amounts of money will be needed to maintain the team's benefits, and pension improvements may not be possible.
That's why nearly 10,000 drivers have joined rank-and-tie reform groups such as the Professional Drivers Association.
The reform movement's goal is to improve benefits and working conditions by making the union more democratic from top to bottom and eliminating the influence of organized crime.
If Teamsters officials and benefit-fund trustees were directly elected—and many are not—by the members of the organization, they would have to respond to rank-and-file job complaints and conduct official's salaries and pensions in line with those of the membership, instead of many times greater, the office's staff more in touch with the real needs the average trucker.
IN SOME LOCAL unions, reformers have mume headway and initiated some changes. They have elicited the traditional Teamster member threats, beatings and killings to dislodge their dissidents. There have been some recent election victories, and a steady growth in reform-group membership, as they apathy and cynicism, which have long held Teamsters' sights.
In their battle for union democracy, pension-fund reform and a decent contract, reformers need the support of the labor movement.
But they also need the help of an informed public—people who see that Teamster corruption affects them, too, and that the changes in drivers' working conditions are, indeed, in the national interest.
Pablo Poulos, who was a Teamster driver in Florida,
works as national organizer for the Professional Drivers
Quality of volunteer army is good
To the editor:
In reference to the article published in the University Daily Kansan on March 28, Merits of Return of Draft Disputed," I mentioned disagree with the sentiments expressed by the members interviewed by your staff in regards to the status of the volunteer armed forces.
First, an ROTC cadet has absolutely no basis on which to express an opinion of this type, unless he has served in the armed force or prior to enrolling in college. Otherwise, his opinion has about as much expertise to lift it as any average man on the street.
Second, I beg to differ with the opinion
KANSAN letters
The quality of people coming into the Army now is as good as it ever has been. Historically, military forces have never been made up of the brighter, more intelligent elements of society. If the volunteer concept fails, it will be for one reason: poor leadership on the part of the Officer Corps. If the "brass" can't work with the people they're getting now, then they had to make a tough adjustment, calculation, instead of screening for the draft.
True, large numbers of them don't even have high school diplomas, and many are functionally illiterate, but that doesn't mean they don't make excellent troops. Furious about justification for restraining the draft, a student doesn't take a smart man to be a good soldier. It takes someone willing to follow or carry out orders. If the Army were made up of a lot of highly skilled "college-educated" people, it would fill the sandbags and dig the foxes' holes.
I voluntarily spent nine years of my life as a non-productive, non-participating member of society. trained for one basic purpose—destruction. I would hate to force her to defend herself against his wishes. We need the draft again about as badly as we need another work.
Richard L. Cram
St. Francis senior
Friday, April 6, 1979
5
Public affairs director describes commission elections as cliche
By SHIRLEY SHOUP
Staff Renorter
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday's city commission election was a "cliche election" according to the executive director of KU's Center for Public Service.
Palumbo said, (Robert) Schumm and (Jack) Landreth were supported by the weathier areas of town, and at the other end of the cliche, (Marc) Francisco was supported by the University and the student vote."
Schumm and Landreth are both businessmen; Francisco is a 28-year-old woman.
Donald Bins, Marcel Francisco and Robert Schummer were elected. Bins, the incumbent mayor and director of Lawrence High School's extension program, led all candidates with 3,666 votes.
Following him were Francisco, a staff member of Architectural Services and a part-time instructor at KU, with 3$80 votes; and James, a part-time instructor at UT, with 2$50 votes.
Unsuccessful candidates were Jack Landreth, owner of a local insurance company, 3,172, and Florence "Danny" Damry, owner of a local insurance company.
SCHUMM, WHO won a two-year term, was especially strong in the new sections of town. His biggest winning percentage was in the northwest corner of the city, where he won 26 percent of the votes and in the central and in the southwest corner he won 24 percent of the votes.
The south side of Lawrence supported Schumm with 22 percent of the votes.
Palumbo said the middle-class and blue-collar segments tended to vote for Francisco, who came in second and won a four-year term. She was strong in Oread, East Lawrence, Pinckney and Old West Lawrence neighborhoods.
Francisco had the three highest percentages of vote in any of the precincts. At the two polling places for Oread, South Park and the Methodist Church, she won 35 percent and 29 percent of the votes, respectively.
In East Lawrence she won 30 percent of the vote.
Polumbo said Bimbs, who won a second four-year term, drew support from both sides of the economic scale.
Binnis' support was from a mixed group across the city. BINNS held four precincts, but was second in 10 precincts. The highest percentage of Binnis was in the southeast of Massachusetts and 14th streets. It is also significant that Binnis placed second in the areas where both Francisco and San Diego were located.
"He drew support from both factors," Palumbo said.
Landreth won North Lawrence with 24 percent but was closely followed by Francisco with 22 percent.
Pallumbo said, "This election follows the general apathy of elections around the country."
Only 24 percent of the registered voters in Lawrence cast ballots. In the 1977 city election, 31 percent of those eligible voted.
sun.fri.
i.sat.sun.fri.
sun.fri.sat.s
i sat sun fri
weekend special ...
It is a special weekend when you
take advantage of the Weekend
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You can save $1.50 on any large
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have to do is ask!
This offer is good on any Friday,
Saturday and Sunday until
June 1, 1979. Ask for the
Weekend Special
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PIZZA
weekend special...
It’s a special weekend when you take advantage of the Weekend Special at Domino’s Pizza. You can save $1.50 on any large two-item pizza, and all you have to do is ask!
This offer is good on any Friday, Saturday and Sunday until June 1, 1979. Ask for the Weekend Special.
Fast Free Delivery
1445 W. 23rd phone 841-7900
610 Florida phone 841-8002
Stated prices do not include applicable sales tax.
Copyright 1979
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!
Walls:
Solid, rich brick.
Bedroom
140 square feet
Bath
Bedroom
140 square feet
Big Picture Windows
Location
On campus, on sun route
Thermostat:
You set the temp, we pay the bills.
Price:
From $275 everything paid.
Living Room
240 square feet
Cable TV Hookup:
Paid, just plug in your set.
Private Entrance:
security patrol in halls.
Carpet:
Wall carpet, several colors.
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 tower apartments
4603 w. fifteenth
View:
Take your pick.
Closets:
11 feet wide,
dresser built in.
Two Sinks:
no waiting; for
your roommate!
Bedroom
140 square feet
Walls:
Solid, rich brick.
Bath
Bedroom
140 square feet
Big Picture Windows
Thermostat:
You set the temp.
we pay the bills.
Location
On campus,
on bus route
Price:
From $275
everything paid.
Living Room
240 square feet
Cable TV Hookup:
Paid, just plug
in your set
Private Entrance:
security patrol in halls.
Carpet:
Wall to wall,
several colors.
Cracked panels on Med Center to be repaired, contractor says
A contractor said Wednesday that he would repair about 140 panels that compose the outer walls of Bell Memorial Hospital at the University of Kansas Medical Center by April 25.
The contractor, Niue DiCarlo, said, "We should be finished with the project by April 20 or 25, depending on the weather. It has to be done within three days, three days before we can do the repairs."
DiCarlo, president of V.S. DiCarlo General Contractors Inc., of Kansas City, Mb, sent a letter to the Kansas Secretary of Agriculture this week outlining his repair plan.
Last May, 140 cement panels on the hospital were found to be chipped and cracked. Dicarlo was told to repair or replace the panels.
The state had threatened to terminate his contract if he did not submit his够 bien document.
The panels have been inspected three times by state and University officials since May and have been judged unacceptable each time.
The state is withholding about $350,000 from DiCarlo on his $1.25 million contract agreement.
Jerry Dickson, an assistant attorney,
jerry.dickson@usb.edu, said the state had not decided yet if he would file his own suit.
Dickson was appointed last year to handle problems concerning Med. Center building
Dickson said the Clinical Facilities Executive Committee, which inspects the building's facilities, is in charge.
DiCarlo said his company had had trouble completing work on the hospital because there had been three state architects in Kansas in the past two years.
"We've had some problems working under so many administrators," DiCarlo said. "They each have their own ideas. We need to make sure we get a new architect who doesn't like it."
Despite the cracks and chips, DiCarlo said, the panels are structurally sound.
"It's really a minor problem," he said. "It's an aesthetic matter."
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
One day, Abraham, friend of God, was sitting in his tent door in 'the heat of the day.' They felt it gets mighty hot in room, 120 degrees or more. However, not far from where he was seated, the temperature suddenly jumped up maybe ten thousand degrees, or a million, as it began raining and water started to pour into the room. The nuclear blast occurs the rocks and sand melt, run out afterwards and cake up it appears, though, that the fire that fell from room is even warmer than it was even hotter, for it not only melted but consumed stone.
Note the powerful effect of the prayer and pleading on God's Friends, Abraham, who a few hours before "Stood before the Lord" The Angel told Lot to get his folks and ketches him up. Then he asked the angel, the Angel, hurry it up, and get out of here I canna! Abraham thou come thither — into another city' Abraham's DO made the Angel powerless until Lot got it! CANNOT DO First, he must be — an Angel of deliverance if he could be 'an Angel of destruction' Genesis 19:22
Should not this be a great encouragement to Friends of God? However, let us beaware of presumption, and not forget the qualifications of such a friendship. In John 15:14 Christ gave to the church the word 'mandeed you,' and in Luke 6:46 'And why call ye Me. Lord, Lord, and do not the things which say?" Abraham believed God, and did what he said. Abraham abgave God what He asked of him. And Abraham was
called "The Friend of God."
In Luke 17:28-30 we read these words of Christ:
Likewise ALL AS IT WAS AS IT DOKES OF LOT; THEY
WERE PLANTED, THEY PLANTED, THEY PLANTED,
THEY PLANTED, THEY PLANTED, BUT THE SAME DAY
that LOT WENT OUT OF SODOM IT RAINED FIRE and
BRISTMINE FROM HEAVEN, AND DESTROYED THEM.
THEY WILL BE IN THE DAY THE TOM OF MAN IS REVEALLED!
We are sure like Sodom in our eating, drinking, buying, selling, planting, and building. But there were other things Sodom was doing for which she has been noted and infamous down through the about 4,000 years since that time. We have no reason to believe crimes, deviates, perverts, etc. great crime takes it name from Sodom. This 19th Chapter of Genesis reveals that the homosexuals actually undertook to attack the Angels of God off, striking them with blindness; they
God's true people should pray we may have a genuine revival of vital faith and religion to sweep over our land that establish righteousness that will cause men "to fear God, receive His Commandments, which is the whole duty of man."
P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031
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Place an ad Tell the world.Call 864-4358
6
Friday, April 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
moonlight madness
24
it's MOONLIGHT MADNESS!!
at the Town Shop
friday evening, April 6th
all remaining winter
SHIRTS & SPORTCOATS 1/2 off
good selection
TIES
values to 13.50 each
JEANS 9.99
Clothing & Jackets 29.99
SPORTSHIRTS 9.99
SWEATERS
values to 50.00
NOW 12.99 each
OUTER COATS
values to 165.00
As Low as 49.99
PENDLETON & GANT
values to 37.00
Wool Shirts 24.99
Baretraps &
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$20.00-
$25.00
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eight thirty seven massachusetts 843-4255
MOONLIGHT
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One Group . . .
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REDUCED
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843-4833
FREE PARKING
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at Mister Guy of Lawrence
Friday 6th
7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
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Spring knit shirts . . .
in solids, stripes, and
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Values to $27.50
TONIGHT
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ALL MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE KNITS (Kennington, Campus, Himalaya, Gary Reed, Admit One) $3.00 OFF
740 Mass.
---
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 6. 1979
7
Coca-Cola
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
Olympic representative
Heidi Wallace, Tonganokia graduate student, stands next to a copy of the symbol for the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid. Wallace will represent Kansas on a 32-member torch
Student will carry Olympic torch
By MARK W. GATES
Staff Reporter
Early next February in Lake Placid, N.Y., the opening ceremonies of the Winter Olympic Games will culminate with the arrival of the Olympic torch relay team.
Heidi Wallace, KU graduate student in social welfare, will be a member of that
She was chosen from 6,000 applicants to join the 52-member team. The team represents each state, the village of Lake Placid and the district of Columbia.
This will be the first time a torch relay team has carried the Olympic torch to the United States.
The last Winter Olympics in this country was in 1932 at Lake Placid.
"This is really exciting," Wallace sand. It is something that I really wanted. I'm feeling so excited about it.
She said that she applied to be a member of the team after she saw a small advertisement in Runner magazine last December.
"I DON'T USUALLY read that magazine but I like the cover," she said. "It was after the deadline for entries and I decided to win; it was fun to write to the Olympics."
Wallace sent the required application and essay.
On January 1, she was notified that she was one of five finalists from Kansas.
She was interviewed by David Gershon, director of the Winter Olympics torch relay event.
Last Sunday, she received a call in informing her that she had been selected to be the new chairwoman of the board.
"I was my birthday and April Fool's day," she said. "They were serious though. I didn't expect them to come."
The relay team will follow a 1,300 kilometer course from Yorktown, Va., to the Olympic stadium in Lake Placid.
They will run in four teams of 13 and will trade off carrying the Olympic torch. The torch is made of plastic and weights two pounds.
"THE GAS in the torch lasts about 40 minutes." Wallace said. "We'll switch off the gas when we're finished."
The torch will be flown from Greece to Yorktown, where the team will begin the run on February 1. The runners will arrive in Lake Pacific Fld April 9. They will pass Philadelphia, Baltimore and New York City, as well as historical sites along the way, she said.
The Olympic flame symbolizes the continuity between the ancient and modern games.
The modern version of the flame was adopted in 1936. The torch used to kindle the flame is first lit by the sun's rays at Mount Olympus, Greece. it is then carried to the
site of the games by relays of runners. Stups and planes are used when necessary.
Wallace said, "I'm impressed that they are striving to find and express the Olympic There are 28 men and 26 women on the team. They have the best performance People were not selected simply for athletic ability. They focused on the true Olympic team, from the Greek concept of the whole man."
In the last two weeks of July, she will report to training camp in Lake Pleacet to
She also will be able to train free at the Olympic training center in Colorado Springs. And after the opening ceremonies she will be able to attend all the Olympic events free.
Wallace competed and lettered in track
and cross-country her first three years at KU.
"WOMEN'S TRACK at KU started the year before I came," she said. "I was aca-
tually shocked."
She also ran track for two years at her high school in Tonanaxie.
"The women's athletics has been a large part of my development. I've had a lot of fun. Now I run about five or six miles a day."
"They didn't advertise a lot for it. It's all been quite a surprise.
"I'm really not sure why I was picked," she said. "I have broad interests and my degree in journalism and work in social welfare are not highly specialized.
I keep thinking I'm going to the Olympic and I don't have to face the agony of defeat.
Construction back on schedule
Construction work on the satellite union and the Robinson Gymnasium addition is back on schedule now that the weather has stabilized. The director of facilities planning, said this week.
Bad weather stopped work on the $6.7 million Robinson addition and postponed exterior work on the $2.5 million satellite union for several weeks this winter.
He said the structure would be completed sometime this summer and would be open in the spring.
"They're starting into the interior finishing work now," Lawton said.
But Lawton said the weather had not significantly delayed the proposed compromise.
He said work on the Robinson addition was back on schedule and the building would be ready for next year's construction.
"They're back with a full crew," he said. The bricklayers are there and they're sitting on the deck.
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8 Friday, April 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
New 35mm Prints
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PERTOACTLY'S LEG
on sale in the science fiction section of the
Oriental Bookshelf. Thursday, Apr. 8th April 11th
in our office at 902-743-8344. Annually
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The University of Kansas Concert Series Presents
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A Rising Young Star with the Metropolitan Opera
Sunday, April 8 8:00 p.m.
University Theatre: Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the 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
Harris suspected of other killings
Staff Reporter
By DAVID EDDS
Authorities in Long Beach, Calif., have charged Harris with a double killing in the mass shooting at a State Penitentiary are investigating the possibility that Harris also was involved in the attack.
Lee Edward Harris of Denver, who pleaded guilty Wednesday to the November 1977 killing of Sam Norwood, may be facing trials in two other states.
Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said. "My understanding is that California is going to attempt to enter a bail hearing in the case of Harrison on a double homicide in Long Beach."
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"There are witnesses in the case that could not testify without placing themselves in jeopardy. The use of some of the inmates' testimony in court could get them killed in prison. That's what is holding up the prosecution of the case," he said.
"HARRIS WILL serve his sentence here first—but that doesn't prevent other states from taking part."
--while he was in the Colorado State Pententious at Canon City in 1978.
Malone said Harris would serve his
Kansas sentence before serving a sentence
"If Harris is paroled by Kansas in the future and has been convicted by California, he would be sent there to serve any penalties given by a California court," he said.
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Charles E. Moore, 23, Denver, who is fighting extradition to Kansas to face charges in connection with Norwoold on the same killings with Harris.
torney of Los Angeles County, Calif., said Harris and Moore were charged in connection with the stabbing deaths of Robert and Marie Crumb, an elderly Long Beach couple killed during a robbery of their apartment.
"The killings are a potential death penalty charge in California," he said.
California authorities will not be able to try harris until he is sentenced in Kansas on April 23, by judge James Paddock of the Douglas County District Court. Malone said he was arrested in Colorado in December 1977, was extradited to Kansas last December.
Harris, he said, is being investigated in
harness and the slaying of an inmate
HARIS, 24, pleaded guilty Wednesday to the shooting death of Norwood, 30, manager of the F.W. Woolworth Co. store, 911 Massachusetts St.
Ronald Ross, head deputy district at-
"WE WANT TO get Harris back here as soon as possible."
John Snow, corrector, investigator, Division of John Corrections, Colorado State Penitentiary, said, "It's quite possible that Harris will be arrested. Colorado for prosecution at a later date."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
On Campus
Events
TONIGHT: KU FOLK DANCE CLUB
TODAY: The KANSAK HOME ECONOMICS ASSOCIATION ANNUAL MEETING will be all day in the Kansas Union. An URBAN PLANNING LECTURE by Peter Stoopher of Northwestern University, will begin at 9 in 105 Marvin Hall, Greenwich Village, Germany parliament, will speak on WESTERN SECURITY POLICY at 10:30 in 4020 Wescoe Hall. LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY will meet at 11:30 in Cork 1 of the Union. VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be available from 2 to 4 in office in new Green Hall. BIOLOGY CLUB 4 in the Sunflower Room of the Union.
meets at 7:30 in 171 Robinson. A CIVIC CONCERT CHART will begin at 7:30 at the First United Methodist Church, 10th anderm street events. The KU Committee on Commemorative Film a film, "LAST GRAVE AT DIMBARZI" for Forum Room of the Union. THE ASSOCIATION FOR RESEARCH AND ENLIGHTENMENT will present a film about Edgar Caray, a psychic, at 7:30 in the Lawrence Public Library, 70 Verdigris St, New York. Suzanne Fairbairn, organist, will begin at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
TOMORROW: GUNG FU CLUB meets at 8 a.m. in 173仁傍唐。THE INTRAMURAL HOME RUN DERBY will begin at 11 a.m. at Quigley Field. SIGMA XI DAY PAPER
COMPETITION begins at 2 p.m. in the Council Room of the Union. A STUDENT RECITAL by Fran Bergmeyer, pianist, will begin at 3:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall and begin at 6 p.m. in SIGMA XI INSTITUTION will be at 6 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union. SCORBEM AWARDS DINNER is at 6 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union. COMPETITION begins at 3:30 p.m. in Watkins Room of the Union. SIGMA XI LECTURE is at 8 p.m. on the Union.
SUNDAY: SAUCH CHESS is at 1 p.m. in Parlor A of the Union. KU CONCERT BAND SPRING CONCERT begins at 3:30 p.m. in University Theatre in Murphy Hall. The KU BASKETBALL BANQUET is at 6:15 p.m. in the Union Ballroom.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 6, 1979
9
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Arts & Leisure
'Last Wave' carries message of fate, doom
Reviewer
Bv VINTON SUPPLEE
Water as an instrument of apocalypse is hardly an original conception. The Great Flood dovetails in virtually every corner of the world, including destruction. Update this hoary tale to 1788, set if in urban Australia, and a dash of white liberal guilt and you have Peter Wers' "The
Portents of doom form the film's substance. A clear sky spews forth monstrous hail, black rain and frogs. Abnormal rainfalls deluge Sydney; foreboding rainbows appear over the city. Water is a symbol of preternatural retribution.
Richard Chamberlain portrays a corporate lawyer who stumbles into defending a group of aborigines who've killed a transgressor of their trial laws. Chamberlain's personality disintegrates as his dreams are invaded, first by a young woman with a shaman, or respected tribal member (Nardijwarra Amagula). The lawyer is an atavist, his ancestors having brought supernatural powers to the first aborigines eons ago. It is his unhappy lot to foresee the annihilation of Sydney's population for definite reasons, and that Wave '7' reaches the denomination of Chamberlain's fate through dreams and omens.
WERI'S THEME is extremely romantic in its assumption that the instinctive will be
trumpet over the civilized, the primordial over the present. The fatalistic conclusion that man's destiny has already been determined by ancient, possibly extraterrestrial, forces, implicit in "The Last Wave" makes it similar to end-of-the-world exploitation films such as "The Late Great Oceanic Storm" is much superior in concept and in execution. The film's staging and photography are superlative.
Chamberlain's acting and the film's slow pace is its greatest drawbacks. Despite recurrent references to the lawyer's great spiritual powers' essential to his ability to speak, Chamberlain seems merely bewildered and outwardly ambiguous, for it is never certain whether he simply perceives the supernatural or actually precipitates it. In the contrast, the aborgines, as played by Gulpili and Amagula, are mysterious and gracefully sylvan even in urban settings. Clearly, Weir must have bold savage to the bourgeois modern man.
THE DELIBERATE PACE of "The Last Wave," combined with its morbid theme, kills any mass entertainment appeal in the quick scare game that it provides. The quick scare would be better directed to "Halloween: Invasion of the Body Snatchers." "The Last Wave" is an "art film" and it is flawed art, it displays considerable talent and artistry for its young Australian director.
The musical story of an unhappy prince who is cursed by an evil witch to fall in love with three oranges will unfold at 8 p.m. tonight on the University Theatre stage in KU's production of Sergel Prokofiev's opera, "The Love for Three Oranges."
A 55-member cast and a 47-piece orchestra will perform the opera, which was written by Prokofiev in 1919 to poke fun at the serious grand opera of the day.
Comic opera opens tonight
The opera, which also will be presented tomorrow, April 13 and 14 at b.p.m., was staged by George Lawner, professor of music and Mary K. Haira, instructor of theater.
The opera had an unsuccessful premiere
at the Chicago Opera Company in 1921 and was not performed again in the United States until 1949, when its production at the Lincoln Center made it a popular opera for young audiences.
The KU production features Larry Julian, Mountain Grove, Moe., graduate student, as the King of Clubs; Richard Stitt, Lawrence graduate student, as his son, the prince; Matthew Foerscher, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student; David Lai, Lecture in chemistry, as the second
The Gary Burton Quartet, a contemporary jazz-rock group, will bring its sound to the Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St., tomorrow night.
Jayne Casselman Frager, Hiawatha senior, seniors the role of the evil witch, and Julie McCorey, Portage, Wis., graduate students, plays the princess who emerges from one of the oranges and finds the prince's true love.
The band, which features Gary Burton, Bob Moses, Tiger Okehi and Jackchip, will be making its only Midwest appearance of this tour at the Opera House.
Concert, exhibit tomorrow
Two of the quartets members, Burton and Okoshi, are powerful jazz-rock musicians. Katz said. Okoshi is a “hot trumpet player” and has played with several groups.
An early love of art without a talent for creating it led Pierre Rosenberg to his career as curator of painting at the Louvre Museum in Paris.
The 1,000-year history of Poland will be recounted in an exhibit that opens tomorrow at the Polish Academy of Sciences.
"Perspektywa Polska," an internationally acclaimed exhibit sponsored by the American Institute of Polish Culture, includes portraits of major historical and cultural figures, such as Copernicus, Nicolaus Copernica, and photographs of architectural monuments. The show also includes Polish painting and sculpture.
Staff Reporter
Curator at Louvre explains his love of art
"My family was quite interested in the arts and I have always been to museums," he said yesterday. "But I am not an art artist myself. I have no gifts at all. I did not need to try in order to know that. I loved art but I knew making a living with art. That is why I studied law with art history in order to have a profession."
By RHONDA HOLMAN
Rosenberg, 42, is the first annual Franklin D. Murphy lecturer in art at the University of Kansas. His lecture last week was on *Tombstone*. Charidin was the featured event at the Midwest Art History Society meeting this weekend at the Helen Spencer Schneer
ROSENBENGER, A NATIVE of Paris, earned two degrees from the University of Paris. He said his job at the Louvre, the national museum and art gallery of France, combined his love of art with administrative abilities.
"One learns my profession through a practical approach," he said. "I'm in charge of exhibitions but that is not all I do. The variety of situations one has to resolve makes the pleasure of the job. The museum is growing and the number of visitors is constantly tremendously since I came in 1946. So the familiar aspect of the lob is no more."
Rosenberg will spend 10 days at KU and the Nelson School-Atkins Museum in Kansas City, Mo., giving lectures, individually with art history students.
Rosenberg said he traveled around the world in search of paintings to add to the Louvre's large collection.
He said the Louise owned one of the most comprehensive groups of European paintings in the world.
ROSENBERG IS A well-known connoisseur of 17th and 18th Century French painting. He has written articles for art and museum journals and books on several French painters and has cataloged several exhibitions.
"It's one of the biggest collections anywhere and it's an old collection which has never stopped increasing, although its wounds's ends 100 years ago," he said.
The Louvre museum dates back to the 10th century. It opened as a national public gallery in 1783.
Rosenberg, who visited Lawrence during the early 1960s, said he was impressed by the quality of works in the Spencer Museum.
"The new museum collection is not very large, but has a very fine variety, and certainly the collection of German art and international works are outstanding," he said.
"Now in France, people must p$u$, inhabitance taxes that are used to purchase works at the museum," he said. "So it's a very good thing for pictures. It's a very good thing to be able to pay for art with the state. The state has taken care of the arts in France since the French Revolution two centuries ago. It has had no dependence on private sponsors."
THE AMERICAN arts depend on private contributions, but in France, Rosenberg said, all the arts are funded through the government.
"Both systems of funding have their problems, but the private aspect of the American museum is each year diminishing and the public aspect of the
French museum is also diminishing. I think they're moving in opposite directions toward the same type of funding."
Rosenberg said he thought visual art, unlike music and drama, was not
dependent on performers for success and that art only needed appreciative eyes to endure time.
"Painting is existing now," he said. "It does not need to be performed to exist. It does not need us."
ALEXANDRA FREDERICK
Staff photo by BRUCE BANGLE
Pierre Rosenberg, curator of paintings at the Louvre in Paris, paused for a moment before going to one of his discussions during his visit to the Helen Forsman Spencer
Watchful Eye
Spare Time
Nightlife
Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts
seats St.
- Gary Burton Quartet, with Happy Jack Feder, April 6.
- Pat's Blue Riddim Band, April 7.
- Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts St.
- Carol Comer and Milt Abel, April 6-7
Theatre
The Love of Three Oranges by Prokofie, b.p.m. April 6 and 13-14, University Theatre. The Fantails by Rene Marques, b.p.m. April 10 and 12-17, William Inge Theatre.
Concerts
Graphics show offers wide variety
- KU Convention Band, 3:30 p.m., April 8.
University Theatre.
- Lawrence Stirling Quartet, 2 p.m., April 8,
Science Museum of Art
UNIVERSITY MUSEE:
Bairmen Hall, soprano, 8 p.m., April
Carmen Balfour, soprano, B.p.m., April
8. University Theatre.
9. Gustavo Fiorentino.
- Herbie Mann, 8 p.m. April 8, Horec Auditorium
- Oklahoma Woodwind Quintet, 8 p.m.
April 11, Swarthout Recital Hall
Suzanne Fairbairn, organ, 8 p.m., April 6
Fran Bergweier, piano, 3:30 p.m., Valerie Nystrom, voice, 8 p.m., April 12
all recitals are in Swarthout Reception Hall
Recitals
Rv SARAH ILES JOHNSTON
Reviewer
There are a lot of very famous and very good prints and drawings now on display at the Spencer Museum of Art. There are very famous names on the tags underneath them, too, such as James Francisco, Giovanni Fazio, Emil Noldo, Robert Motherwell and Christo.
But some of the best work in this show, "Recent Acquisitions in Modern Graphics," is by lesser-known artists, such as Max Klinger, from the German metaphysical school of the late 19th century; William Sharp, an American artist of the mid-19th century; Kathie Kolwitz, a German expressionist of the 1930s; and John Talurell, professor of art at KU.
Klinger offers us an united etching that has an effective lack of traditional polish and finesse. The subject is centrals—but not the grand, haunty creatures usually seen in the raucous, defiant ones told about in mythology. Klinger's contours are puerile, and he gives them a real English children splice onto feyties one. It is three-ringed around a rock in a way that draws the viewer's sympathy to the ack.
THE SCRATCHY Brown lines Klingen use to sketch the centurions and the rocky peaks of the background helped create a childish, adventurous tone.
These prints are an eerie hybrid of scientific illustration and fantasy techniques. Looking larger than life, the lilies are insistently unquagmic. These prints are the first a viewer sees as he travels into the gallery. They shay his eye continually as he travels "around the exhibition.
Sharp drew the spittle yepers on the lily pods with precision and they bristle at the viewer from underneath the glass. The petals are
A series of four chromolithographes by William Sharp is on display. Victoria Regina or the Great Water Lily of America," she said.
KANSAN
At the Gallery
ALTHOUGH KOLLWITZ'S name is not widely known, she has produced several prints about women and death that are familiar to many viewers. "Death and a Woman" is included in Spencer's show.
so symmetrical, and the leaves float on the water with such organization that the lilies look like cunning machines that have almost been disguised as plants. The colors seem brighter than the normal flowers could have, and this adds to the alien, threatening tone of the prints.
John Tallerue is exhibiting "Flying Bishop," a pleasingly macabre color woodcut and pencil drawing done in 1968.
Against a gray, hazy background, cluttered with pigeonish wisps,
the heaviest, dark shape of a bishop is placed.
The bishop looks spokey, because he looks dead. His hands are crossed on his chest and his face—printed in softly rumple purple ink—like a carbon-paper copy of a real face that was left out of the image. He is also in an express flight—projected straight from Earth to parts unknown.
AS USUAL, in his larger shapes, such as the bispous's roof. Talleur has placed interesting shards of color, a by-product of the woodcut technique. These give his prints texture and a hand-hewn, slightly primitive look.
These prints, and about 25 other prints and drawings, will remain on display in the Kress Gallery until May 27. The coordinators of this exhibition, who managed to bring us seldom- seen gems yet at the museum, are Teresa Gandolfo and Rachel Cohen in modern graphics, deserve praise for this variegated show.
Movie pods create terror, suspense
By RON BAIN Reviewer
Reviewer
There, that's one of them! No, don't touch it! It's not just a flower—it's one of them!
You can't sleep. That's when they get you—while you sleep. Run, got to keep running.
Involving aliens have been pictured by the film industry in many forms: bugged midges, green slime, mummifying silver robots, silver robot robots and pink flowers.
In "Invasion of the Body Snatchers," mysterious seeds from outer space land on earth, sprouting pink flowers capable of producing zombie-like replicas of humans. The movie, a remake of a 1960 science-fiction thriller, stars Donald Sutherland, Brooke Adams and Leonard Nimoy.
Pink flowers?
Nimoy, famous for his role in "Star
Roll" as the unemotional Mr. Spock,
has a sense of humor and an adorable
her boyfriend's changes are all in her
mind. Later it is revealed that Nimoy is
Emotion is foreign to the invading plant beings, whose evolution shaped them to a single purpose: adaptation and survival. Nimoy, as a spokesperson for the invaders, returns to the stone-faced act he performed during his role as
The story is suspenseful and tense. On-foot chase scenes dominate the latter half of the movie, building to a teethy end as the villain plants duplicate more and more people.
SUTHERLAND PLAYS a San Francisco health department official who is one of the first persons to recognize the need for social media assistant, played by Brooke Adams, convinces him that his boyfriend is not acting normally, and they try to find out
KANSAN Review
Although "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" was undoubtedly meant to ride on the science-fiction coattails of "Star Wars" and "Close Encounters", its obvious that director Philip Kaufman intended to produce a first-class horror movie rather than another sci-fi flack. The movies we saw in theaters were used much since the '50s, but Kaufman converts the worm story line into a convincing tale of terror.
Spock, after his psychiatrist cover is blown.
The last half of the film is a paranoid's nightmare. Sutherland and Adams seem to be the only real humans left in a world where everyone who carry on human affairs unsmilingly.
THE FILMS' special effects are average by today's studio standards, but they convey the appearance and nature of the aliens adequately. Scenes showing the "births" of duplicate humans from plant pods are well done.
Tension is built methodically throughout the movie, reaching a nerve-wrenching crescendo near its end. Children might be terrorized by certain scenes, so well are special effects and suspense tied together.
Pink flowers may not seem dangerous, but anyone who sees "Invasion of The Body Snatchers" will think twice before visiting a flower shop again.
The acting, particularly Sutherland's, is consistently good. Kaufman's direction and the mesophere of terror that pervades the movie. Even the soundtrack, often strange and discordant, adds a paranoid rhythm to the movie's many fast-paced
SUN·FIS
By RON BAIN Staff Reporter
Invasions of bacteria or viruses from outer space might have caused the bubonic plague, the common cold or influenza, according to an article that appeared in *The Scientist* magazine. The article was written by British astronomer Fred Holey.
A professor of astronomy at the University of Kansas, Don Bord, described Hoyle's article as "interesting speculation."
Space flu infects Earth, story says
Comets, which were considered harbinger of doom in the Middle Ages, could have brought the alien microorganisms to Earth during collisions or near-misses. Hoyle proposed in his article.
Haley's comet will pass near the Earth
Cornets, such as Koboutek, have been shown to carry some of the organic molecules required for the development of primitive life forms. The impact of a factor four billion years ago might have caused the origin of life on Earth, the article said.
"He's certainly a very intelligent person, a person with a far-ranging intellect," Bord said.
HOYLE'S IDEA is "not entirely out of the realm of possibility, but it would be very hard to verify." Bord said yesterday.
Bord said that Hoyle's reputation among other astronomers allowed him to take public speculation a little further than most scientists would, and, that Hoyle's speculations had created confusion in significant scientific research.
in 1986, according to Bord and if Hoyle's speculations are true, an outbreak of an unidentified strain of influenza or some other disease should follow the comet's pass by Earth. Haley's comet was last seen in 1910, Bord said.
"THE FIRST clear description of a disease resembling influenza was in the 17th century A.D., while the earliest reference to the common cold was in about the 15th century A.D." Hoyle wrote.
According to modern medical theory, new strains of the cold or flu develop from naturally-occurring mutations, and are spread from person to person. Immunities to new strain develop slowly, while those against flu over continents before being stopped.
Hoyle disagrees. The Earth passes through left-over dust from comets regularly, and this comet dust could be a source of influenza or cold, his article said.
"RELATIVELY MINOR variants of the 'name' disease—the common cold—could be due to more frequent, regular infections in children of shorter-period combs." Hooke wrote.
Hoyle, a science-fiction writer as well as a scientist, often takes ideas that seem to be science-fiction and presents them in books that makes them seem probable, Bord said.
Hoyle's "suggestion," as he calls it, dredges up memories of an old science-fiction movie, *The Andromeda Strain*. Mr. Hoyle points out that Earth on a satellite that fell from orbit.
If Hoyle's speculation is true, comet scares may replace UFO scares as kicks for stargazers.
10
Friday, April 6,1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Police Beat
- Compiled by David Edds
BURGLARY
Lawrence police said electronic equipment and power tools valued at more than $2,000 were stolen from the office of the New York State senator, between March 28 and April 4.
A cassette tape deck, valued at $240; a tuner, valued at $120; two speakers, valued at $60; a turntable, valued at $30; a stereo pre-amplifier, valued at $80. Two phones were stolen from Williams' home at 890 New York St., police said.
Investigators said burglar removed a screen from a window to enter the house. LARCENY
Lawrence police said navigational equipment was stolen from four boats at the Captain Shop, 1441 W. 23rd St., early Tuesday morning.
Police said the stolen items were removed from boats that were outside the business.
Two navigational steering wheels valued at $320 and twoILLs, which are used to guide sailboats, valued at $50, were stolen, police said.
Correction
In the Audiotronics Stereo Elimination Ad, which ran Wednesday, April 4 an incorrect price was stated on TDK SA C-90 Cassette tape. It was printed at $19.95 for 10 Cassettes but should have read $34. We're sorry for any inconvenience that it caused
that it caused.
AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
--tomorrow
Sigma Phi Epsilon and Kappa Alpha Theta present
Superstars Competition
events begin at 10:00 a.m. at Broken Arrow Park
Come and Support Your Athletes!
AXO—Carol Ferraro
AXO--Carol Ferraro
Delta Tau Delta--Glenn Weatherly
Sellards--Babett Plum
ATO--Craig Penzler
ATC--Brandy Hyatt
ADPI--Casual Colburn
Theta's--Susie Newton
Sigma Chi--Joe Hullings
Phi Delt--T Jensen
AGD—Julie Nordling
SAE—Rob Robinson
Lamba Chi—Brad Gaul
PI phi—Amy Hollowell
Chi O—Renee Neville
PI psi—Jekalfem勒
DU—Mike Rawlings
Tr Delf—Linda Thompson
Proceeds go to the Douglass County Association of Retarded Citizens to help send them to their Special Olympics. You contributions are greatly appreciated.
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A believer in the law of averages might be wise to prepare for a lot of tornadoes this way.
By TOM ZIND Staff Reporter
Phil Shideler, chief meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Topeka, said recently that Kansas had been luckier than usual the past few springs.
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Shider was not willing to make any predictions on the basis of averages. However, he did offer some facts that might lead to a prediction for severe spring weather.
Law of averages predicts rash of tornadoes
Shider said the outlook for April called for above normal precipitation and below normal precipitation.
"The number of tornadoes has been down the past few years and it has to average out sometime," he said. "Our time is going to run out."
Shidler said that during the past 30 years, Kansas averaged 45 tornadoes a year. Last year, Shidler said, Kansas had 28 reported tornadoes.
"THE APRIL outlook would support a good number of tornadoes," he said.
Above normal temperatures for May and June also could mean an increase in tornadoes or storms.
"We had a cold winter, so we would expect to see a shift in patterns for May and June," he said. "If that should happen, that could support a larger outbreak than normal."
Larry Cosgrove, director of the KU Weather Service in Lindley Hall, said Kansas could experience about 30 percent more severe weather this spring than last spring. Severe weather, Cosgrove said, referred to thunderstorms and tornadoes.
"We observed a slight increase in the number of frontal systems that came to mind."
"While it will be worse than last year, it be a real burglar," he said.
Cosgrove said this could account for an increase in severe weather.
Citing research done by a graduate student in 1972, Cosgrey predicted that there might be an abundance of bad weather in the 1800s.
Congrove stopped short of warning Kansas residents to stock their storm shelters.
Coffee Shop
"I THINK THE really active years are yet to come," he said. "It's going to jig bed in the
Shidler also offered advice for people unfortunate enough to get caught in the path of a thief.
He said the best action to take when
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caught in a tornado white in an automobile was to stop the car and find cover in the car.
However, he said that if it appeared that water could be outrun, it would be wise to water it.
Shielder said that if a tornado appeared to be standing still, it was probably moving through the ground.
ALL SALES FINAL
"If you've got the road in front of you, you can try to run it out," he said.
Shaderd said people often had more time than they thought to take cover in severe weather.
COSGROVE SAID a typical sign of an impending tornado was a sudden stop in a car.
The worst place to be in a tundra is in a collapsible structure, such as a house, he
If a tornado were to hit the KU campus, students living in residents halls would be instructed to evacuate the upper floors and to the ground floor or basement of the hall.
GEORGE EDWARDS, assistant director of residential programs, said there were contingency plans for safety procedures in a building. The school's pamphlet given to residence hall directors.
Edwards said that J.J. Wison, director of housing, said all of the residence halls were structurally sound and were able to withstand severe weather.
Spencer spring festival to feature California artist
The festival includes four simultaneous exhibits of two artists and two special exhibitions.
Betsy Broun, curator of prints and drawings at the museum, with the most unusual collection.
A work by Robert Irwin, a conceptual artist, will highlight a spring festival of art, beginning Sunday at the Helen Forsman Gallery at the Helen Festival will continue until May 27.
"It is a temporary installation designed to heighten the perception of space in the building."
Irwin, a California artist, has had similar exhibitions in Chicago, Berkeley and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. He installed the Spencer exhibit.
His exhibit, "Robert Irwin: An installation," consists of two large pieces of velvet stretched from ceiling to floor, resembling a passaeway.
The work of Dottie Attie, a New York artists, also is being shown in the exhibition.
All of the exhibits are sponsored by the Spencer Museum of Art, SUA and the National Museum of American History.
"Each image is taken from an old master painting," Broun said.
Her exhibit, "The Traveling Conjurer," is a series of 149 pencil drawings.
The four-inch-square drawings are assembled consecutively on the walls
"It's like a silent movie, complete with words to direct you to what is going on."
Another part of the exhibition is a special collection," Recent Acquisitions in Modern Art.
The exhibition introduces prints and drawings that the museum has acquired
The 19th and 20th century drawings were purchased by a special grant for living in Brooklyn.
"IImages of the Floating World" is the fourth part of the art show.
This is a collection of 48 prints of late 19th century Japanese art.
The prints were sent to Spencer Museum by Merrion Dalley, a New York art dealer.
The University of Kansas
& School of Fine Arts and the University Theatre • Present
THE LOVE FOR THREE ORANGES
An Opera by Prokofiev
April 7th 13th 1920
Impersonation Dancer
Midway Hall SC Opera
Ticketmaster
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Call 516-856-3922
Library Corporation
RU Square Rose
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SUA
SUA IN ASSOCIATION WITH "INE & MARTIN WOLFF PRESENT
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WALKER BROS.
FRIDAY, APRIL 27 8:00 PM
ALLEN FIELDHOUSE
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE
GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE: $7.00 RESERVED
TICKETS AVAILABLE IN LAWRENCE AT SUA BOX OFFICE AND
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THE DOOBIE BROTHERS
Friday, April 6, 1979
11
Lists of students bring business
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
What's in a name? For some, the answer is money.
Buying, selling and trading lists of names is a big business for marketing companies.
Insurance companies and oil companies also have a piece of the action in the mailing list business.
marketing companies compile lists of names and sell the lists to insurance and oil companies and magazine publishers.
Harry Murray, vice president of the Marketing Development Corporation in St. Louis, said his corporation had been the first to accept a grant.
“It’s the best way to get the most accurate information and the most up-to-date and complete lists,” Murray said. “We have use admissions records, but we can no longer get them. So we rely on the directories.”
MOBIL OIL Company and Old American Insurance Company buy lists from marketing companies for direct distribution.
"We've been buying our lists for a number of years."
Gordon Cathryn, a Mobil Oil oil spokesman in Kansas City, Mo., said: "It's the best way for us to get an accrual list of new customers."
Alain Fleetner, a spokesman for Travelers Insurance Company, said Travelers had a number of ways to get tickets.
"We buy some names from marketing companies, but we also trade names with other businesses, such as book and record clubs," Fletcher said. "And some listes of fraternal organizations are made available by students sending them."
Old American Insurance Company also buys lists of student names.
"WE USEALLY always buy lists from companies that do nothing but establish those lists," said Martin Burea, an agent for Old American. "But sometimes we can get the names directly from the school."
However, Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records, said the University of Kansas did not sell names.
"We make it a policy that no lists are provided." Dyck said. "It's a matter of student privacy."
He said most companies usually got KU student names from the student directory.
"As a matter of fact, I listed both my children's names in the directory in two ways," Dyck said. "And the mail they get reflects that the addresses were taken from the directory."
Murray said his company had purchased a KU student directory this year.
"We usually get the directories available through the mail at a minimal cost," he said.
Betty Brook, manager of the Kansas Union Bookstore, where directories are sold, said she did not send copies for mail-order requests. However, William Getz, manager of the bookstore, also which sells the directories, said so. ■ 4-41
MURRAY SAID that in turn, his company made about two cents profit a name each time the name was sold
"I think the directories can also be used for recruiting purposes, such as for jobs," he said. "So why should I understand that?"
Getz said, however, that he was considering changing his policy.
Senior class to donate fireplace
The 1979 senior class gift is a fireplace for
the Satellite Union, next to Weddenman,
senior class.
He said the decision was made last week by senior class officers and members of five
Wiedeman said there would be an official presentation of the gift at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday. The gifts will be delivered on Saturday.
Many gifts that senior classes have given to the University in the past have been geared toward the Kansas Union or the North Carolina State University, however, have focused on student health.
The classes of 1969, 1970 and 1971 contributed funds for equipment for Watkins Hospital and the 1972 senior class conference at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The four members of the graduating class of 1873 began the gifting tradition when
they gave an engraving. "The Temple of Karnak to the University. The class of Phi Beta Xi."
SINCE THEN, senior classes have given gifts to the Union including a clime clock, funds for a fireplace, a piano, a service unit, a trophy case and a stage for the ballroom.
Some classes concentrated on a particular room in the Union. The class of 1938 helped to complete the Pine Room, the class of 1938 furnished the English Room and the seniors furnished the Kunisara Room. The Governor's Room was finished by the class of 1967.
Seniors helped beautify the campus by donating crabapple trees in 1945. The class of 1946 provided steps leading to the Carpaniile and the class of 1956 gave the University the bronze statue of a Jayhawk that stands in front of Strong Hall.
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Recreation Release Upcoming Recreational Events
The Intramural Home Run Derby
The Intramural Handball Tournament Deadline has been extended to Friday. April 6th at 5:00 p.m.
will take place on Saturday, April 7th at 11:00 a.m. in Quigley.
Participants may enter this event until the start of this tournament
The Dam Run Co— sponsored by Recreation Services will take
place on Saturday, April 7th at 10:00 a.m. This event is open to all runners.
There is an entry fee for the event.
Recreational Water Polo takes place every Sunday from
6-7:30 p.m. in Robinson Pool. Additional information and entry forms may be
obtained in room 208 Robinson Center, Recreation Services.
208 Robinson University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 66045 (913)864-3546
Recite Line 684-3456
AURH Student Positions
Information: List of intern responsibilities and applications at resident hall desks, Office of Residential Programs. AURH office
Requirements: Must be returning resident, enrolled in no more than 4 summer school hours
Term: May 30 through July 28
AURH Committee Chairpersons
Compensation: Room and board at JRP and a stipend of $960
AURH Summer Intern Program'79
Information: List of committee descriptions and chairperson responsibilities available at the AURH office.
Term: Fall 1979 and Spring 1980 semesters
Personal letter of application
Compensation: Single room at double room cost
Requirements: Must be returning resident
Return all applications no later than April 6th at the AURH office at 210 McColum
AURH is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer
The fountain court at Murphy Hall was constructed with the help of the classes of
Without the aid of the class of 1928, the Kansas Permanent Statue, cost of Frasert Hall, was erected.
PRACTICAL STUDENTS gave the campus map display board to the university library.
The classes of 1947,1952, 1954 and 1955 landscapeed various areas on campus.
board and bench in front of Watson Library in 1931.
The HOPE award, given each year by the senior class to a University instructor who exemplifies progressive education, was begun by the class of 1959. The class deposited $2,000 with the Endowment Association to fund the $100 award.
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More than 400 submit schol hall applications
The office of residential programs has received more than 400 applications from students who want to live in scholarship housing. Of the students, ORP-1 assistant director, said volunteered.
The deadline for applications was February 15.
He said there were 100 to 120 vacancies for next year.
"The quality of the candidates is amazingly high," he said.
Although the grade point average requirement for living in a scholarship ball is 2.5, he said, so many applicants meet the GPA requirement that students selected often have a 3.0 average or better.
Edwards said financial need and the application submitted by the student also were important factors in the selection
The office abides by affirmative action
laws, which try to ensure equal opportunities for women and minorities when choosing scholarship hall residents.
But he said few minority students lived in the halls.
schneider retail liquor store
The name 'scholarship ball' frightens away both whites and blacks because of the academic requirement," he said.
He said there would be a "specific recruiting effort" of minority students next year.
However, Edwards said he had been talking with Vernell Spearman, assistant director of the office of minority affairs, and Mr. Spearman, a majority students about schoolkids him.
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Friday, April 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Hits save error-prone Jayhawks
Sports Writer
Bv TONY FITTS
Strong hitting salvaged what might otherwise have been a disappointing afternoon for the Kansas baseball team and Yankees Jayhawks defeated Baker University 17-7.
The score was not too close, but the team had five wins and two losses as they commited five errors and gave up five unearned runs. The game was supposed to go nine innings, but was shortened to seven innings.
"You would think, KU coach Floyd Temple said after the game, "that in the best weather we've had since we've gone to work, they wouldn't would be ready to play—and wewerup!"
The Kansas hitters were ready to play Brian Gray, designated hitter, scored five runs on a run home, a double and a single. In the third inning, he hit the game, each time he came to the plate.
Last year, Gray started at first base for
the 'hawks, but this year Matt Gundelfinger has taken over that position.
I "STARTED off real slow this year," Gray said. "Since we got back from Texas, my hitting has been coming around. I just will then play. Hitting's more fun anyway."
Gundelfinger continued to show that he can hit, with two home runs and a double with four RBI. He now has five homers on the season, and is second in batting averages with an average of .391. The two homered tails a KU single-game record, shared by six other players including Andy Pettitte and Martin Montain, this year's shortstop.
In the last three innings, Gundelfinger had two chances to hit a third home run, but he
"I gave it one downtown swing." he saed in reference to his last at-bat, "but then I thought that's no good. I'll settle for a double anytime."
JOHN SPOTTSWOOD wasn't quite as
AFC
Basketball bliss
Three members of the Alpha Phi intramural basketball team embrace after their team won the intramural women's CHAMPIONShip last night. Alpha Phi beat an entire team of 32 defenders.
Alpha Phi captures Hill crown
Alpha Pli jumped to an early lead and held on to defeat the Everreadys, 37-34, and win the women's intramural championship last night in Robinson Gymnasium.
Rebounding and defense were the keys to the game for the Alpha Pi team. The team, which has an extensive defensive rebounds and then used its zone defense to deny to the Evergreens good
"This was definitely our toughest game we have played," Jane Loughridge, Alpha Phi captain, said. "It is usually a good game between us because they don't let their tempers get into the game."
Chuck Morton, Everlastly coached, said, "They are a good all-around team, but we should have played better in the first round. We needed a few more minutes to catch up."
Alpha Phi held its largest lead at 28-15 before the Evergreen closed the gap late in the game. The final margin was 70 points and the final margin had been since early in the game.
THE GAME WAS close until Alpha Phi pulled to a 16-7 lead and then extended it to 26-15 at the half.
This was the second year in a row the two teams had played for the championship. Last year the Everreadys won.
Temple sent five pitchers to the mound during the game in an attempt to find a fourth starter before the Big Eight opener tomorrow, but no to avail.
spectacular, but he continued to hit well. he went three for five yesterday to raise his team-leading average of 430. Through April Eight batting average with a 408 average with a 408 average.
"I still don't know about that fourth pitch," Temple said. "We have three, but the pitcher hasn't had any balls."
University tomorrow. He also named Dan St. Clair to start one game against Colorado
Temple said Terry Stutcliffe and Kevin Kerschen would start against Kansas State
The Kansas State and Colorado games are away games. KU returns to Quigley Field next Wednesday for a double-header with Sioux Falls College of Sioux Falls, S.D.
Baker University... 602 600 21 - 7 7
Warsaw...
Baker University...022 050 21 -
Baylor University...022 050 21 -
Mature, Wate (K), Bunnykey, Neo (7) and Norwand,
Noble (8), Hammond, Jordi (9) and Norwand,
Piacenza (6) and Graham, Dickman (7) Ns-Norwand,
Weight Harvey (H), HH-Goodfellow (13) G., Gray, K.
Weight Harvey (H), HH-Goodfellow (13) G., Gray, K.
Royals rout Toronto
KANSA'S CITY, Mo. (AP)—John Wathan drilled a bases loaded trip and Darrell Porter added a two-run single in a nine-run second innning last night to carry the Kansas City Royals to an 11-2 opening-night rout of the Toronto Blue Jays.
The Royals, the American League's West's defending champions, pounded Tom Underwood for all nine second-miring runs in the fourth inning and six errors. Only three of the runs were earned.
Dennis Leonard, 21-17 last year, worked six innings for Kansas City and allowed six hits. He was nicked for two unearned runs in the fifth.
PLAYING IN 36-degree temperatures, AI Cowswalled when he led off in the second. Another walk and Rock Howell's error loaded the bases for Wathan. An error
by second baseman Dave McKay allowed Clint Hurd and Fred Patok to score three runs.
Left-hander Steve Mingori relieved Leonard after the sixth inning.
| | a | b | r | h | r | h | r |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Griffinff s. | 4 | b | r | h | 2 | 4 | b |
| Ballerf r. | 5 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 8 | b |
| Bailer f. | 5 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 8 | b |
| Carly d. | 3 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 4 | b |
| Wood pr. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | b |
| Wood pr. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | b |
| Wood pr. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | b |
| Boettel c. | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| Willbern c. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| Willbern c. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| McKay k. | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| McKay k. | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Gerson c. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Gerson c. | 35 | 2 | 7 | 2 | 6 | 36 | 11 |
| | a | b | r | h | r | h | r |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Griffinff s. | 4 | b | r | h | 2 | 4 | b |
| Ballerf r. | 5 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 8 | b |
| Bailer f. | 5 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 8 | b |
| Carly d. | 3 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 4 | b |
| Wood pr. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | b |
| Wood pr. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | b |
| Wood pr. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | b |
| Boettel c. | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| Willbern c. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| Willbern c. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| McKay k. | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| McKay k. | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Gerson c. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Gerson c. | 35 | 2 | 7 | 2 | 6 | 36 | 11 |
Toronto 000 020 000 - 2
Kansas City 011 011 000 - 11
E-Howell 2, Mckay 1, Brief 2, DP-Toronto 1
LB- Labreton 7, Kaniway 6, Kanaya City 7, HM- Maybury 8
Tacoma 9, Fitzgerald 3, Gale 4, Titon 1
Wathan's change of habit nets 3-run triple for KC
By JOHN P. THARP Associate Sports Editor
"It FELT GOOD to come out with the bases loaded right off the bat," a smiling Wathan said afterward. "Then it felt real good to get the RIBS right off the bat."
Wathan did a back slide into third. He said he had tried to slide on his back because in the Royals' last exhibition game, he had done a leg slight and had received a large strawberry bruise on his right thigh that was still tender.
During spring training, Wathan couldn't
muster a triple. He played in 16 games and
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - John Wathan did something different last night. Because of the 35-degree temperature and a strong wind chill, he wore a scuffing glove. Usually he doesn't wear one.
Those gloves were maybe what helped Wathan fire the Kansas City Royals to a record-tying second inning when they colled for their 32th in the Toronto Blue Jays, Kansas City won 11-2.
With Kansas City in the lead 1-4 in the second, Al Cowens, Hal M稻e and Darrell Porter loaded the bases. With no outs, up stepped Wathan.
He slammed a low line drive to left-center field. All three base runners scored, Wathan stretched his nicely-placed hit for a triple and the fans began to leave, as Kansas City built a lead that was more comfortable than the minus 5 degree wind chill.
Yankees lose, 5-1
Caldwell, whose 22-9 record a year ago earned him the runner-up position for the CY Young Award, behind Gudryn 23-8, allowed him to score four innings, but only two over the next five innings.
NEW YORK (AP) — The Milwaukee
injuries, jumped on Ron Gadney for five
innings,扣下了Ron Gadney for the
in the sixth day, defeating the world
champion. York Vankees 1-3 behind
the Rangers.
Gudryd, who had won 37 of 41 decisions since Aug. 10, 1977, did last year’s last pitch a no-hitter. But last night’s Yankee Stadium crowd of 52,719 began to complain that it happens a perfect game—when the hard-throwing leftrightretired the first 16 batters.
had 15 hits for 45 at bats for a respectable .33 Grapefruit League average. Only Royals Jamie Quirk and Joe Zdeb did better.
Late in the game, Wathan moved to catcher after Porter pulled up complaining of a little pain. Wathan said he enjoyed the situations and hitting three-for-five in the game.
The four-run sixth was the most scored in one innning against Guirksey since Sept. 18.
"I think I can be a value to the team playing a lot of positions," Wathan said. "We've got a lot of guys who can play two or three positions and that really helps us."
Kansas City faces Toronto again tomorrow. Game time is 7:30 p.m.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Snow keeps golfers at home
Sports Roundup
KU's men's golf team didn't expect the
No year's girl team don't expect the unexpected. A snowstorm cancled its planned trip to Ames, Iowa, for the Cyclone Invitational Tournament.
Coach John Hanna said he hoped the team would get a respite from wintry weather to get in some practice in Lawrence.
The squad's next action will be April
18-20 at the Wheatshocker Invitational in Wichita.
After two tournaments, Jim Doyle leads the Jayhawks with a 78.5 stroke average. Other KU averages are: Mark Crow, 79.7; D.R. Sensenman, 79.9; Mark Brennan, 79.1.
Britt Harrison of defending NCAA champion Oklahoma State University, has the best 18-hole average in the Big Eight conference with a 72.7.
Soccer tournament set here
Rockhurst College and the University of Missouri join Kansas and Kansas State universities for the tournament.
Games will be played both tomorrow
Four soccer teams will compete in the Jayhawk Invitational tournament this weekend.
and Sunday. Tomorrow's games will begin at 9 a.m. at Holcom Sports Complex and the last game will start at 3:30 p.m.
Sunday's games will start at 10 a.m.
and the last game of the tournament will
start at 4 p.m.
Crew goes to Big Eight meet
The KU crew teams will row on unfamiliar water for the first time this season when they compete in the Big Eight championships at Stillwater, Okla. this weekend.
women's varsity titles. Last year, KU rowed only in the novice division.
This will be the first time KU will compete for the conference men's and
KU will enter a men's and a women's
kurtv eight and a woman's and a women's
novice four. Kansas State and Oklahoma
State universities will compete against
the University of Purdue. Purdue because of a scheduling problem.
Four Big Eight schools have crew teams.
Women netters play triangular
The KU women's tennis team faces Kansas State and Iowa universities for a triangular meet this weekend on the Allen Field House courts.
Coach Tom Kivisto said Iowa would give KU the test it needed.
He said KU had been playing so well lately that team members were having problems concentrating.
"We need to have a tough match," he said.
Kivists said a commitment by Big Ten conference schools for increased funds funding caused improvement in conference teams, including Iowa.
Iowa should give the Jayhawks that kind of match. Iowa's Iowa 1 player from last season is playing No. 4 singles this week. But that's not successful recruiting efforts last year.
But Kivisto said K-State would not provide much competition. The
Jayhawks own 9-0 and 8-1 victories over the Wildcats this season.
For the Jayhawks, this weekend's meet will be the final tuneup for the Big Eight tournament, which will be April 13-14 here.
One problem for KU is No. 1 doubles, Kivisto said. Carrie Fotopoulos and Val Block are KU's No. 1 team.
"I expect some improvement in No. 1 doubles this weekend," Kivisto said. "It will have to come if we expect to challenge for the Bie Eight title."
All matches will be played on the Allen Field House courts. In case of bad weather, the matches will be moved to Alvamar Racquet Club.
KU will play Iowa today at 2:30 p.m.
The K-State-Iowa match will be played at
10 a.m. tomorrow, and KU will meet K-State
at 10:30 a.m. Sunday.
The last time a KU men's tennis team beat Oklahoma, members of the KU class of 1979 probably were studying the three R's in second grade.
Sports Writer
Sooners stiff tennis competition
By DAVID COLBURN
The Jayhawks will try to end a 14-year jinx against OU this weekend. The Sooners join KU, Kansas State University and the University of Missouri in a quadrangular meet at the Allen Field House courts.
With a 102-6 conference record over the past 15 years, Oklahoma promises to be the host of the 2023 NCAA tournament.
"It's going to be a close one. I think we should beat them," KU coach Kvistio Vassiliev said.
Brian Crozier, Big Eight Conference No. 2 singles champion in 1977 and 1978, is the Sooners' top player. Andy Scott, 1978 No. 5 singles conference champ, now plays No. 2 singles.
Missouri's squad is young and relatively inexperienced. The loss of two players at the start of the spring season left the Tigers with only two lettermen and four freshmen.
KU and K-State have met once before this season. The Hawks embarrassed the Eagles last year.
Kivisto said he expected little difficulty against either the Wildcats or the Tigers.
"They don't quite have the depth that of the other big Eight schools have," Kwamei of the other school.
Tournament results will help determine individual seedings for the Big Eight Tournaments.
Two matches will be played today. OU and K-State face off at 3:00 a.m. and the game will end at 4:00 p.m.
Tomorrow's matches are: KU-KState,
8:30 a.m.; MU-OU, 10 a.m; and KM-state,
8:30 a.m.
Snorts Writer
Texas tourney next for golfers
KU plays MU at noon on Sunday.
The Lady Cardinal tournament will feature 11 teams from the Southwest and Midwest, and should provide a good challenge for the squad, KU coach Sandy Bahan said. Traditional powers such as Alabama and Texas A&M will participate in the tournament.
Bv DAVID PRESTON
Coming off a strong showing last week in a triangular match in Lawrence, the KU women's golf team travels to the Lady's International in Beaumont, Texas, this weekend.
Kansas is coming off a victory over Kansas State and Nebraska, and Bahan said
the team showed definite signs of improvement.
"We have made a lot of progress since the beginning of the year," she said. "I think our winter conditioning program is going to pay off, and we are a better team."
KU was led in the triangular by freshman Cathy Eyre, who was a medalist for the first time in her college career. Eyer shot an 81 on a windy Alvamar Hills course. It was her best score of either season, fall or spring, by five strokes.
Nancy Hoin has been the most consistent scorer for the Jayhawks with an average
stroke total of 82.6. Hoins, a senior, finished second in the Wichita Invitational, the first match of the spring season, and finished fourth in last week's triangular.
Bahan said that Hons' leadership has been valuable for the team, but that the younger performers were improving with experience.
"Nancy is our only really experienced golfer," she said. "but when we learn to play a little smarter and not go for the ball, we'll be even more committive."
The squad will take a practice round in assessment tomorrow. The tournament will be on Wednesday.
KANSAN WANT ADS
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to them when teaching Western Civilization 3. For exam preparation. *New Analysis in Western Civilization* available now at TopCorn Books.
Mix and Match
Bone-like
Combs & Bracelets
4 for $100
at your
Kansas Union Bookstores
Year sets of Psychology today and/or Human
Biology meetings. Various sizes of curtains
provide the standing place, reduced price,
never burned, equipped 840-462-
6-9 p.m.
Fender Mustang Bass Guitar with strings, cords,
tunes, pickups and covers. Very good condition.
Embellishments, cables and covers. Very good condition.
Sun-Space is sun glazes our speciality. Non-
Sun-Space are our selection, reassurance
1021, 841-370-7501.
841-370-7501
1978 Toyota Celica GT Liftback 5-0m, AM-FM
condition, condition condition condition condition
condition $700, 841-$1,601, 1601-$2,400
$2,400-$3,200, 3200-$4,000, 4000-$5,000
WATERED MATTRESSES $39.98, 3 year guarantee,
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. #1386-1386.
Watch for truck on Sundays selling product.
Jayhawk Foods, 9th & Illinois. Also wooden
Must sell Audio Reflex Turntable in mint condition. Cleaning kit. Moving, make off. 842-291-1050.
ITALIAN used car CLASSIC: The Flat 124 Sport Coupe. *车身装备* features than the other models, including a DOHC; wheel disc brakes, and more. Body is clean, and wheel drive. Fitted extremely reasonable. Call 841-807-81
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
for MOTIVE LIGHTS, units RB, RM, WB,
MOTIVE LIGHTS, 842-800-9567, WB, 6th
floor, 1100 NW Federal Way Blvd.
TRH-6 Triumph owner's new red newwheel TRH-6 Triumph owner's new red newwheel 4—Hay Stonehawk's .925 Marmon 4—Hay Stonehawk's .925 Marmon
Fire closest! Brand new 17-84, 16-10 to 73-
55. Cale cut to $15.00 each. Ray Stoneback &
Mass. 45
250 Yamaha runs good. Must sell for best offer...
Stereo Closetphone! Used Combo $99.00, new Mfg Component $130.00, New Sony TV and speakers $180.00, New Max $240.00
7 Honda CVCW 400-200 - CF Mega steroe, excellent condition, $250.00 Call Mike 4-60
7 Yamaha DT250 - 220 Series Top condition--All street gear. Andy - 843-843-2200
166 GM Vmc customized interior—must see at 1007 West 21st Street, 5:00 p.m. 4-10
167 West 21st Street, 5:00 p.m. 4-10
Fantastic Pioneer Stereo System includes receivable tape deck and new turntable,甘垫盘
Must sell配,mobile home 2, bedroom dhcred, fitted treadmill, storage sheds
Must sell配, mobile home 2, bedroom dhcred, fitted treadmill, storage sheds
Offers 841-2199 4-11
Must sell配, mobile home 2, bedroom dhcred, fitted treadmill, storage sheds
Technics 1-2 turntable receiver; asking $380,120 and $112 respectively Doooyard Sale-Kitchen & personal appliances
Technics 1-2 turntable receiver; asking $380,120 and $112 respectively Doooyard Sale-Kitchen & personal appliances
FT,滑雪相机& extra, fast & fast, 842-872 4-12
Fort Ford Galaxie; excellent transport,deck
1969 Ford Galaxie; excellent transportation,
depending on; ps. BI- 6481-6480 after 4-12
1978 400 ac + Lrotate six-speed hybrid Yamaha
1978 400 ac + Lrotate six-speed hybrid Yamaha
only ensures 620-620 between 5 and
6, whereas the Yamaha only ensures 620-620 between 5 and
6.
1974. Mouze Carlo, Sunflower, AM-FM radio, PS1.
Powered by Amphenol, crank crush or control. Line feed signal $81-106-253-4120.
CANON. EP body with case. $20. Lenses. FO. 15"x20". Portable for outdoor use.
$75. CAT7. PB, bells with cover slip copier $75.
$80. CAT7. PB, bells with cover slip copier $75.
72 Grand Prix in Good Condition, vinyl top,
AM FM stereo. Call events. 842-0720. 4-9
WHY RENT? When you could own this beautiful home, like the beautiful bedroom with built-in cabinets and a private bathroom. Like the large bedroom with built-in cabinets and a private bathroom. Like the large bedroom with built-in cabinets and a private bathroom. Like the large bedroom with built-in cabinets and a private bathroom.
Storage building, rust blesis, fruits, turtle garden s
AM-FM stereo with turntable; 30 gallon aquarium, $35.00 each. 813-948-049.
4-6
Gitane 10 speed bicycle—Like new. Keith-841-
4208.
SUNSEMILLA, SEEDLESS, HERBAL, SMOKE
SUNSEMILLA, SEEDLESS, HERBAL, SMOKE
SUNSEMILLA, SEEDLESS, HERBAL, SMOKE
MULNENE, PINK, INGREDIENTS, BRADK
MULNENE, PINK, INGREDIENTS, BRADK
PER OZ. MOONING MIXTURES $100
PER OZ. MOONING MIXTURES $100
COTTONWOD, ARIZONA 65236- 4
COTTONWOD, ARIZONA 65236- 4
black w bird gold bird
many options. Call Carr 811
Motorcycle; 1979 Yamaha 525, excellent cordial
MISCELLANEOUS
Campbellton Nestlé
Found 3 piece suit: 841-2154
4-6
FOUND
Found-Calculate in Learned Hall. Identify and claim.
4-6
Learned, Learned
THESIS BINDING COPYING--The House of 'Sheri's' Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their thesis binding and copying in Lawnery. Let us help you at $88 a month, or phone at 842-3610. This is also online.
Dog-pointer jopter signed—Male, 15½"
Dog-pointer jporter signed—Male, 15½"
Dog-pointer jporter signed—Male, 15½"
Dog-pointer jporter signed—Male, 15½"
LOST
Lost: StU ID and bus pass April 3, possibly in
Strong. Please call Susan, G4681-1628. How-
ard L4-3: Ladies' gold ring with small purple
humbent signal value. REWARD 843-6971.
843-6971.
4-10
REWARD--Lost on campus. Blonde Cooper Spanker
Answers to the name of bomber. Wearing a red collar and blue sweater with Zaykah in it.
For any information at 842-6966 or 4-12-
213.
Lost steel spring key ring with 3 keys in Wex-
4-9
3.29) Call 841-8243
NOTICE
VETS—Are you getting your benefits? Maybe not
check campuski i18 B11 Union 864-4749
DRATH! WHY BOTH? BOTHER!
Acquire Science on Bedroom Travel. 842-342-8421.
www.acquire-science-on-bedroomtravel.com
If you would like to earn a tx-money Recreation Services needs people to help with the Intraluna Home Run Derby and Intraluna Game if interested please 644-534-8 and a&k Irene
Enroll now! In Lawnway Driving School, re-enroll at any time before your first test. pass transportation; drive low traffic; or take a bus.
Join an important student service Committee, and help represent your membership on the Board of Directors Electors for the District School System.
They took our room—but they can't take our bag. They'll bring it to the SUNRISE Sunday at 7 in the UNION LOBBY.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 6, 1979
13
KANSAN WANT ADS
Aeromodels, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansas are offered to all students without regard to sex. Prices are based on full-time employment. ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FILT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times 15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $4.00 Each additional 01 02 03 04
AD DEADLINES
.01 .02 .03 .04 .05
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
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These add can be placed in person or taken to the UDR business office at 864-4358.
U.S. BREAKFAST OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4338
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
GREAT FOOD. GREAT SERVICE just like you do at Bread & Butter. Mon., thru Sat, 11 a.m. Sunday, midnight through 1 p.m.
Spring Festival Book Sale April 1-15. 10% off
Effort Sprint Art Museum Book Shop
Alie is coming! Alie is coming! Saturday April 4th. 10th. 409-A 4-6
Employment Opportunities
Students major in business, pre-med, pre-hawk,
pre-graduate or post-bachelor's degree. Major:
Hawk '07 per month. For interview please
e-mail HR@ucr.edu.
FOR RENT
Still looking for a place to call home? Nahmith's 1935 Ford Tudor, built by the manager of the year. Son by and over him we look good to give you the details and allow us to be your driver. 832-SS340 Nahmith HALL, 1800 Nahmith Hall Drive, 832-SS340
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENTING
10,500 SF. 2-story home with unfurnished, from $179. 1st floor, luxury, large office, on KU has 800 SF. INDOOR HOTEL POOL $342-$449 or, at $342 Frontier Room, New door frame.
COOPERATIVE LIVING - an established student cooperative located within easy walking distance of the KU campus and downtown Lawrence. In-person classes are available at utilities. Evening 814-948 or 814-3125.
Partners in M&M community wanted to share benefits of the company's commitment to the community. Shares would be given on a first-come, first-served basis with good credit $50 plus any other conditions.
Summer abbreviation. Completely furnished. 2 BR, 1/2 bath apartment Swimming pool, sama room, basketball court, and club house with great amenities. Great for summer living. Call 811-0866 evening.
Christian Houghton Now and Summer. Close to
her hometown, 843-802 between 2
5-6 oo. Keep trying.
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most
prominent street entrances. Local town or
phone. Phone 843-7576
Spending the summer in Lawrence? Do yourself a favor. Call an office in your apartment 841-297-3997 or put in my apartment 841-297-3997.
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE first floor room $250
kitchenette $125 pottery barn from Atmos
kid's kitchen from Access from Otto
family room, fireplace, nearly captured, new
furniture, stone sink $250
$250 $250
Jauhawker 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
Tollback a one bedroom, new, modern furn-
ished home starting May 28 - option
合同 943-1641
Sublease sublease one bedroom furnished Sa-
ridge apartment $180.00 + utility Call: 613-259-4799
Sublease for summer, just hire bedroom apartmen-
t to move in. Please call 516-849-2370
distance to compete. Price negotiable. Call
612-268-3270.
See the sample from this house adjacent to
the building. The ground floor is $200.
1 Also, 2 & 3; Bowerhead, two story house
$200.
must sublimate 1 br. Surrender Apt. 842-752T
6 p.m. Reent negotiable
4-6
Luxury 3-bedroom, 2-bathroom, 3-bathroom, Two-story Pools,
Dishwasher, Bathtub, and more. Available in 46 styles.
Call (800) 517-2242.
Apt. 2 BR and efficiency. Compare to campus. Utili-
pate clean, clean, quiet, and comfortable.
Dinkley to be submitted for J-Aug 15. Closely
back is the CMAK certificate for $165 per month CMAK for Davies or
$180 per month CMAK for Davies.
You know those, great looking, spinnin' chairs,
a great inside great out dining room,
is a great inside great out dining room,
is a great inside great out dining room,
MARK K & II Apartments now renting for summer occupancy in two locations: One Queen Bays & One Queen Bays, mind, wish to move to bedrooms, central air conditioning, carpooling, kitchenette, laundry facilities, and handy Facilities. Resident Migr for ages 18+. Please visit www.markkik.org.
Sublease 1 BR Apt. available May 1 Gas & Mgmt
Rates available May 24 Mgmt rates available May 30
Bath rates available May 31-32 6-pc per unit
LIVE IN LUNISY used to author beautiful
journals, articles and essays.
Workshops, classes, book reviews,
and marketing opportunities.
HELP WANTED
COLLEGE MEN- Resawning summer in Colorado
work with children in camp setting. Work
with children in camp setting. Black-
out many outdoor programs. Write now include
these opportunities.
Ethan, Florida. 609-6162. Contact Prism
Emes. Floridian. 609-6162. Contact Prism
Summer Suburbine 2 BR, 28' Kit, unfurnished
home with Villa Ville
electricality 811-800-5252
phone 811-800-5252
EXOTIC JOB! LATE TAHOE, CALIFORNIA!
Little expense, fantastic time! $1760-$4000 annual
travels, restaurants, cruises, liver rafts, & more.
60129, Sacramento. California 59856-424
60129, Sacramento. California 59856-424
Position Announcement. Curriculum and instruction for Survey in Storm Water Hour Rounds Ages 42 and Over (Ages 18-50) will be offered at the college coated ac on a student and be able to share the course with international students at International Resource, Inc., Halley Hall, 1227 N. Michigan Avenue, New York, NY 10019.
A student assistant for female quadratric. Student needed for Monday afternoon and Wednesday morning. Students must have studied to school (own care) with helping students or K-12 teachers (the two own care). K-623-ME2 or K-623-1011 afternoons and evenings, 4-9
Cooks positions opening very soon for head cooks and grill cooks. All around experience is required. Must be able to read and follow prevail recipes and have new ideas for specialties. Full andparticipated in all kitchen activities. Personality are absolute must. Also needs to know the Sanctuary 432-650-1000 Ave. on Rebecca's behalf. MSS-650-1000
Research Assistant in Neuropharmacology R.B.
Research Assistant in Neuropharmacology R.B.
Mixed mass money package $8,000-$12,000 per year
from March 20, 1979 through April 9, 1979. Shift to
further information please contact Professor
morris and Tekkenen University of Kansu.
morris and Tekkenen University of Kansu.
Affirmative Action Employer or Equal Opportunity
Affirmative Action Employer or Equal Opportunity
The University Information Center is now accessible from campus beginning May 27 and August 19, 1999. A computer-based system is in use for April 13, 1999. The University has an Opportunity-Alitative Action Team who plays a role.
Summer Sublime Two bedroom Apartment. 4t
2 person AC, swimming pool $250. 843-127-68
OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer year round, team
S. Ammonia, Australia, Asia, Ea All Fields $260-
$340 Expenses, Experience, paid sight seeing, Free
Info- USA, L.C. Box 25-GA, Kansas City,
Ints-WA 87255
4-36
87255
Summer-in-abuse, Furnished, 2-bedroom Art
Infts & Maintance A/C dishwashers, cofferd
glass, refrigerator, microwave.
Now some squirrel named *Rose* will
give the girl Gigi pills.
He will attack her and play a game.
Angry ballet between 2 and 4 monkeys through
a tree, where the monkeys try to escape.
G. P. Lloyd is now taking application for business-
related employment in the field of hospitality.
Apply in person at Birmingham Hospital.
Opening for part-time evening and weekend nursing aid for female quadriplegic in nursing provide will be available air transport (W1T train Provider) and nursing care 3 a.m. to 4 p.m., and 8:19-7:31 a.m. for Chick-Ai, 4:16-6:30 a.m.
Washoe County Public Safety Department, 1200 North Ella Avenue, Logan, ID 83349.
Interview submitted to Mission, 116-227-7111, interview.submitted@mission.org
ENTERTAINMENT
G.P. LORD'S Always great looking ladies Never a cover charge
Coors on Tap. Most bottle & Can Beer- $ 5 5^{\circ} $ .
This ad worth one free draw.
Limit one per person.
GUIDE
MONDAY: 25° Draws
$1.25 Pitchers
Monday we start all over again.
Memberships Avail
MUSIC
TUES: ___ 15° Draws
80° Pitchers
WED:___ Same as Mon
SAT: ___ Same as Fri.
THOR. --- Same as Wed.
EPK. --- Some as Thuy.
THE OTHER PLACE
MINGLES DISCO
Now Open Sunday
at 7:00 P.M.
PRIVATE CLUBS
1717 W. 6th
THUR: ___ Same as Wed.
FRI: ___ Same as Thur.
HAPPY HOUR
4:30 - 6:30
1/2 PRICE SET-UPS
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
: **************************** TONIGHT & TOMORROW!*
CAROL COMER & HER BAND FROM K.C.
BIGK'S
RESTAURANT & PRIVATE CLUB
MON-THURS 7:90:
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7:90:
5.0' Schooners & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1:70:
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
TONIGHT!
GARY BURT QUARTET
$5.00
Doors open 8:00 Snowtime 9:00
SATURDAY!
PAT'S BLUE RIDDIM BAND
HOT REGGAE!
The Lawrence
Opera House
The Club
7th & Mass
DINING
Memberships Wed.-Sat
620 mm. 843-8575
* * * * *
Aztec Inn
American and
Mexican Food
LUNCHEON MENUS
Vermont
842-9455
Available round back
国家税务总局监制
BEER/AMUSEMENTS
BEER GARDEN
Weekly Pinball Tournament
*Free Pitcher*
Bud. Pabst & Natural Gas
14th & Tern
$1.50 Pitcher's
COMPUTER PROGRAMMER. The Information and Research Department of the CIO of Ranau has a wide range of computer applications. This position requires a Bachelor's degree in computer programming in Cobol, Java or knowledge of computer programming in COBOL, BASIC or another language. The latest in min-computer IBM mainframe and the latest in min-computer言行者 in geographic data processing and geographic information units. We need a well-educated, well-trained project and vigorate new work experience. We require a daytime devleve in desktop environments and modern office systems. Our team of 190 programmers are encouraged to send resume to Municipal Office Building, 201 N. Seventh Avenue, Municipal Office Building, 6401. An Equal Opportunity Employer.
Fountain & Grill permanent! Neons and jazz
Fontain & Grill permanent! Neons and jazz
W 6th, F 10th, A 435
TIME. Some musical knowledge helpful. Hotel, Good town and dependable. A1- A3rd, 2100 bedrooms. KC Star newspaper is looking for multimedia reporter of folk, blues, rock and jazz in lawsuits or lawyers and sample of cover interview to Shirta Stein. 1728 Grand, KC Me. 64108. 4-10 1728 Grand, KC Me. 64108.
NEMBER 158 Local legal for nightime work on construction projects. May 14th, 19th, & 26th $30 per hour, with steward with hard work or long hours. Time and a hall fee apply. Lawyer: E. O. Lignot Opportunity Employer: 4-11
Part-time temporary wanted. Must be with www.schmidt.com. Apply by calling (804) 259-2677 or email schmidt@schmidt.com. Possible to hold a double holiday salary target. Possible work position in New York, NY.
FIELD DEPART OR OFFICE INFD Project Follow-Up JOB TITLE Graphic Designer 60 position, 42-54 hours per week 60 position, 42-54 hours per week DUTTES Design posters/borders (including layout and QUERIMENTS) 1 Enrolled student 2 Experience PREPARED BUT NOT REQUIRED 1 Knowledge of Newspaper and on newspaper production industry APPLICATION PROCEDURE 1 Head of Williams 260 Hawthorn Hall Include phone numbers graphics姑姑 to complete and return
FIELD DEPT. OR OFFICE, IPHN-Providence Through, JDTTITLE, PHOTOGRAPHY Graphic Design, 2006, 50% position, $18-$40 per hour DUTY TITLE, PHOTOGRAPHY Graphic Design and teachers in schools, and graphics for presentation and printing photography, television graphic design and professions and other graphics as needed QUIZMENUMS 1. Formulated study 2. Photography of graphic design PREFERRED, BUT NOT REQUIRED, and color tie photography 3. Experiences in better and more quality production and editing production 4. Graduate studied. APPLICATION INDIOPHOTOGRAPHY and examples of graphical studio include phone numbers for yourself and to complete and return by April 18, 39th September return to be here complied. 219 Haworth JOB AN AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EQUAL OPPORTUNITY JOB AN AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EQUAL OPPORTUNITY AND WOMEN OF ALL RACES AND PERSONS DISABILITIES ARE ENCOURAGED TO "WORK."
POSITION: Research Associate (DUTIES: Planning, conducting and evaluating documentation, shipment, and strategies of the Behavior Analysis program. Assist in reviewing those services to Projects groups by providing technical agreements for these services, and freeing up practical agreements for these services, and facilitating services. QUALIFICATIONS: Required Master's degree in Psychology or related field. Parttime in applied Behavior Analysis good writing skills, experience with positive attitude and work
Research Assistant - Pharmaceutical Chemistry 34 to half time. Minimum requirement of 15.0 L of laboratory space should have plan research laboratory experience in the following areas: *Equipment and instrumentation*. Experience with computers and instrumentation. Experience with equipment is required. Position available immediately for applications that require continual per month deployment of manoeuvre and qualification. Contact Dr. Thomas F. Patton (912) 811-6311. The university of Kansas is an equal Opportunity Employer.
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night Passover Seder.
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14
Fridav. April 6, 1979
University Daily Kansan
ASK...
From page one
people who don't have a lot of political clout or a lot of money." Hein said.
Another legislator with ties to ASK in his background is State Rep. Mike Meacham, R-Wichita. Meacham was once a student at the University, where he received a long-time member of ASK.
Meacham said be thought ASK had come a long way since his years at WSU.
"They seem to have grown much more sophisticated," he said. "They were an outgrowth of the late '60s student population, so they seem to have handled themselves well."
Two Lawrence representatives who have worked with ASK on legislation agree that
"I think they're pretty well-established up here. I'm not sure they're as effective as they could be, but they probably do a pretty fair job of representing students."
John Solbach, D-Lawrence, sponsored a landlord-tenant bill for ASK this fall and the group was as effective as many professional lobbies.
However, he too said ASK could not always be heard from other lobbies and did not have the resources did not have the resources
"ASK CAN'T have the impact that some groups do without spending enormous sums of money," Solbach said. "Some lobbyists can take three or four legislators to lunch and run up a bill of $50. ASK just doesn't have that kind of money."
Solbach said retaining the same director
ever year would add to ASK's ef-
ficiency.
"It is important for continuity," he said. "Although students interest remain the same year after year, the students themselves change."
"Of all the support I had, ASK was the
most supportive and helpful. They put together statistics, talked to representatives and senators, made a presentation themselves and gathered a lot of students' calls, "he said
Glover said he thought rejoining ASK would be a good investment for KU.
"I've always said KU was good for ASK and ASK would be good for KU," he said. "Obviously they'll gain a great deal of prestige from being associated with KU and getting them a pretty good job of getting students' opinions known and representing student interests."
KU's School of Social Welfare recently received $84,988 to develop the nation's only graduate level community health training program.
Mental health training gets grant
It is the first grant to a university to develop a graduate program that combines
INDEPENDENCE CITY COUNCIL
Students' lobbyist
Hames Zacharias, executive director of the Associated Students of Kansas, spends his working days in the capital building in
Staff photo by CHRIS TODD
committee meetings and with legislators in an attempt to influence decisions concerning students and higher education
Todd Vanlaningham
former director of Gay Services of Kansas
will speak
Tues. April 10 7:30 PM
Kansas Union
sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas
TICKETS
The Douglas County Emergency Service Council
The Douglas Coun-
presents
Benefit Basketball
Sunday, April 8
1:30 PM/Allen Field House
PAUL MOKESKI, BRAD SANDERS, V. C.
SANDERS, ADRIAN MITCHELL, KAREN
JAMISON, PLUS MILT GIBSON, KEN KOENIGS
AND DONNIE VON MOORE PLAYING THE
RIVER CITY ALL-STARS
ADULTS $1.00
KU STUDENTS $1.50
HIGH SCHOL
& UNDER $1.50
Served every evening from 5-10 pm 2309 Iowa
50
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Time1 Hour 8 min. past hour 10 min. past hour 13 min. past hour
Time1 Half-Hour 38 min. past Half-Hour 40 min. past hour 45 min. past hour
First Bus 10:00 am 10:08 am 10:10 am 10:13 am
Last Bus 4:00 pm 4:08 pm 4:10 pm 3:45 pm
The Saturday-Downtown Merchants Express Schedule
The Downtown Merchants are offering this bus to all students, faculty,
and non-students as a continuing gesture of their appreciation.
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Introducing:
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classroom and field instruction activities in community mental health centers, Patricia Ewalt, associate professor of social welfare, said recently.
"More and more towns are setting up community mental health centers," she said. "The trend is to take patients out of situations and treat them in these centers."
Jan Sanders-OWNER
As part of the program, eight graduate students receive monthly stipends of $325 and have their fees paid by the grant, which is funded by the National Institute of Mental Health.
The students spend a year working at community health centers in Lawrence, Manhattan, Topeka, Kansas City, Kan, and Kansas City. Mo. They work with patients conduct workshops and programs on probiotics to help maintain a vital communication and response to crisis.
THE STUDENTS also are enrolled in classes in mental health policy, clinical practice, advanced human behavior and research and consultation.
"There is no other concentration of this kind in mental health education in social work at any university in the country," Ewalt said.
Arthur Katz, project director and professor of social welfare, said social
worker represent the single largest profession practicing in community health.
President John Kennedy appealed for more community health centers in 1983 and since then the number has increased, Ewalt said.
Rosalynn Carter, who served on the president's commission, also has been important in developing these centers, she said.
Advisory...
From page one.
board needed to become more involved in the academic affairs of student athletes.
"I hope that after the chancellor announces the merger I can begin to work with Marcelo."
“WE HAVE certain expectations from this merger,” she said, “and we can’t afford to wait until July 1 (when the new fiscal year begins) to address some key issues.
"I'm seriously concerned about the academics of adulthood. I know about problems and get involved in helping the students. Isn't that what the faculty representatives say?
The Astronomy Associates of Lawrence Invites the public to our weekly
OPEN HOUSE April 6-7:30 pm
426 Lindley Hall
Film will be "The Starry Messenger" by Jacob Bronowski
If clear, there will be an observing session at 8:30 with the largest telescope in Kansas. Objects of interest will be Jupiter, Saturn, and the Great Nebula in Orion.
Partially funded by Student Senate
HERBIE HERBIE
MANN MANN
in concert in concert
HERBIE HERBIE
HEM
MA
HEM
MA
HEM
MA
NN
cert
BIE
NN
cert
BIE
NN
cert
With The KC. 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. Presented by SUA and The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra.
SUA
HERBIE HERBIE
MANN MANN
in concert
in concert
in concert
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Proposed pay raise could attract nurses
By PATRICIA MANSON
Staff Reporter
A pay increase recommended by the Kansas Senate could help the University of Kansas to reduce costs.
The senate voted last month to provide $405,851 for a 5 percent increase for nurses working the evening shift at the Med Center and an 10 percent increase for those working the day shift. The legislative legislation decided to wait until April 25 to take final action on the Med Center budget.
Carol Theis, nursing recruiter at the Med Center, said Friday. "If nurses are going to work crazy hours, like in the evening or night, they should be compensated. Every hospital in our area has that compensation."
THE EVENING shift at the Med Center is from 8 p.m. to midnight and the night shift is from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
About 45 percent of the nurses at the Med Center quit each year, according to a report by the Senate Ways and Means Committee, and a "major contributing factor" to this rate is the requirement that nurses rotate shifts with no extra pay.
The proposed pay increase could be the crucial factor in recruiting nurses for the Bell Memorial Hospital, scheduled to open on September 4th with 600 beds, 214 more than the present hospital.
The Med Center employs 438 registered nurses, their said, and will probably need more than that.
Karin Williamson, director of statt
development at the Med Center, said the extra pay would attract more nurses to the Med Center.
"I think a differential would help," she said. "It may not help us with the attrition rate, but it will help us with recruiting."
THE MED CENTER'S recruiting efforts include a refresher course for retired nurses Mary Anne Eisenbien, director of nursing services, said nine of the 11 former nurses who took this course this winter went to work for the clinic. Another refresher course is scheduled for the fall.
However, she said, the Med Center gets the largest number of recruits from its own nursing school.
The Med Center also has increased its advertising and its participation in high school career days. Eisenbise said.
"The most successful program is inhouse," Eisenbise said. "Last year about 58 percent of our graduates stayed at the Med Center."
Extra pay for nurses working at night would help the Med Center retain its staff as well.
"We are the only hospital in the Kansas City area that does not pay a differential," she said. "On top of base pay, other hospitals pay the differential. It makes a big difference to some of our nurses. A lot of leave because we don't have the differential. It's really been a morale problem."
The nursing school's enrollment has increased from 45 students this year to 123 next year, Eisenbise said.
Music Mann
Staff photo by STEPHAN SPECTOR
Herbie Mann, here last night with the Kansas City Philharmonic, plays "Night Moves" for an appreciative audience of 1,400 people. He and his band, The New Family of Mann.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, April 9, 1979
Vol. 89, No. 127
Despite protest, ASK vote tonight
By CAITLIN GOODWIN
The Student Senate will decide whether to retain KU's membership in the Associated Students of Kansas, a student lobbying group, at tonight's budget bearing.
The bill for retention was pushed up on the agenda at last night's bidged hearings by Steve Young, journalism senator and KU member of the board of directors of ASK.
Young said he had asked for the change because Hannes Zacharias, executive director of ASK, was available at last year's meeting to explain and support the bill.
However, Etwa Walker, holdover senator,
opposed the change because she said there were people opposed to the bill who were not aware that the bill would be presented later in budget hearings.
Consequently, Walker said, she was the sole opponent to the bill.
"By moving the bill up, we have denied the people who oppose it to the right to vote."
SHE SAID her main opposition to the bill was that it would end the purpose of Concerned Students for Higher Education, a KU lobbying group.
"We should redouble our efforts and funding in CSHE," she said. "In ASK, we are denying destinations from the other schools. We have nothing in common with technical institutions, very little in common with Pittsburgh State and Emporia State."
Besides KU, and Pittsburgh State and Emporia State universities, the other members of ASK are Fort Hays State, Kansas State and Washburn universities.
Zacharias said KU would work better as part of one large lobby than as an individual
"Legislators would rather listen to one
large voice than seven individual voices," he said.
Young said he would like to see ASK and CSHE exist together at KU.
"We are not killing CSHE." he said.
Margaret Berlin, student body president,
said she thought there would be enough
interest in CSHE to have it function with
the new CSHE. Since the CSHE was listed in
the new budget.
CSHE is FUNDED from the unallocated portion of the Student Senate's internal budget. Keith Maith, Senate treasurer, said that CSHE had been allocated $83 last year, but he did not include it in the budget this year because it did not spend last year's money.
"The SHE is now a rather definite group," he said. "They held no meeting last year and do not meet."
However, Walker said she did not think the two could exist together. She said that they were unrelated and had nothing to do with each other.
played with the orchestra for the first half of the concert, then the band played the second half without the philharmonic. See story page three.
ASK, it would remain dissolved if KU
remained in ASK.
KU joined ASK with a provisional membership last year for $2,500. Full membership will cost KU 25 cents for every full-time student, or $150 this year.
The Senate also elected members to the Senate Executive Committee. First, it decided that of the three SenEx members, one would be a senator and one would be a graduate senator.
THE MEMBERS had to be chosen from those serving on the University Council, which was chosen last month. The Senate elected Mark Bernstein, holder senator, as the graduate member of SenEx, and Walker and Claire McCurdy, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, as the undergraduate members.
However, McCurdy's membership is not official because she was not at the meeting.
MARCO SCHNEIDER
Staff photo by TRISH LEWIS
Polytopes
Vince Roark, a Kansas City, Mo., artist, has been building
polytypes for years. Polytopes are three-dimensional, faceted geometric figures, which张kork makes out of heavy wire.
Polytope artist makes living bending wires
By GENE BROWNING
KANSAS CITY, Mo—Alone, sipping coffee in the Nelson Art Gallery coffee shop, a man in his fifteen pulled scraps of cash from the museum's pocket of the souls his soliued gray sport coat.
Staff Reporter
The man, Vince Hoark, wrote more figures, intermittently punching numbers into a hand calculator.
Roark, a Kansas City, Mo., artist,
builds polytopes for a living. A polytype is
a faceted geometric figure with many
surfaces.
"This kind of work is not for those who can't sit still," he said yesterday. "I've been making molotovs since 1948."
ROARK BECAME interested in polytopes in the summer of 1946 when he read an article about them in *Scientific American* and made making polytopes, he built model airplanes.
Although he spends much of his time working with numbers,he said he had no formal education.
"Started falling behind in sixth grade math. I'm 50 now. Don't feel like it though. I learn when I go to talk to people about polytopes. Look at their bodies if nothing else," he said, smiling toothlessly.
Rork has lived in Kansas City all his life, selling his polypotes to anyone who will buy them. He said he had sold them as well. The college instructors to college professors to simu
He did not start building the figures immediately after he read the 1946 ar-
See ARTIST back page
Legislature adjourns after eventful session
By GENE LINN
and IAMMY TIERNEY Staff Reporters
The 1979 Kansas Legislature ended its regular session Saturday after making fundamental changes in liquor-by-the-drink laws and the reapportionment and the death penalty.
The Legislature will reconvene from April 25 to 27 to consider unfinished business, including the University of Kansas budget, any vets who are any vetos, John Carlin hands down.
Both houses passed a historic liquor-by-the-drink bill, but limited it to private clubs and required club members to pay a 10 percent tax on their drinks.
Revenue from the tax would be given to local governments to use in their general funds and recreational and alcoholism programs.
Non-profit clubs, such as the EKs, could offer reciprocal membership under the bill. Other clubs may get at least 50 percent of their revenue from sales, so they could also enter reciprocal agreements.
AS ORIGINALLY passed by the Senate, the bill would have given all clubs the right to offer reciprocal memberships and would not have included the 10 percent tax.
However, the House limited reciprocity provisions, tapped on the tax and refused to pay.
The path for the bill was cleared by Attorney General Robert Stephens's ruling in February that the state's constitutional protections open saloons did not apply to private clubs.
In another first, the Legislature acted for the first time on a 1974 state constitutional amendment that requires reapportionment every 10 years.
The reapportment process stirred up a fight over Douglas County districts that will include a showdown April 18 when the Kan- tler Court will hear oral arguments on the case.
Local Democrats and some KU students have said they will argue before the Court that the bill would split the KU student vote. Republicans supported the bill for State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence.
HOWEVER, ONE of the students preparing arguments against the bill said yesterday that he was not sure whether he and his team were working with him would go before the Court.
"It appears we have very little constitutional basis, if any, on which to fight the war."
He said he had looked at case law to see whether it was unconstitutional to split the company.
"You can't split racial groups or precincts," he said, "but we don't fall into that."
In a surprise move, however, Carlin veted the measure. During his campaign, Carlin had said he would sign any constituent death penalty bill that reached his desk.
The session also was highlighted by the passage of the first death penalty bill in seven years. All previous bills have been passed by the House but killed by the Senate. This year's bill, his personal condemnation would under murder would be executed by a druid injection.
Bills left unapproved by legislators in-
Legislature
GOVERNMENT
included a measure to rescind the Equal Rights Amendment, a proposal to build a coal slur pipeline across Kansas and a bill extending penalties for possession of marijuana.
Glover said the two marijani bills he had sponsored had not been acted on this session. "They've always done," Glover said.
ALTHOUGH BOTH the ERA and coal slurry bills had strong support from both legislators and lobbyists, neither were passed out of committee.
"We've got the same problem—Ed Reilly." Glover said.
State Sen. Reilly, R-Leavenworth, is chairman of the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee, which has refused to vote on bills to the Senate in the last two sessions.
However, he said he was not sure about the chances of the bill that would lower the penalty for possession of less than an ounce of pot to a maximum $100 fine.
However, Glover said, "In my opinion, he does not understand or does not want to
Really said he thought the bill would have a fairly good chance next year if studies came out that answered some questions about the "health aspects of marijuana."
GLOVER SAID that another member of the committee had told him Friday that his children smoked pot, but that he could not have paid bill because of political considerations.
"As long as people are more interested in their political time than in doing what's important to them," she said.
He said that the problem now was to educate the public and that he planned to set a statewide network to provide information the benefits of lower possession penalties.
Glover was more optimistic about the chances of his bill to allow marijuana to be used to treat glaucoma and cancer chemotherapy patients.
"That bill has gotten a lot of favorable attention in the press," he said. "It has a base."
Unfinished business before the two houses includes approval of a $443 million Kansas
Although a conference committee, assigned to iron out differences between the House and Senate versions of the budget, reached a compromise late Saturday afternoon, legislators will wait until the April 25 session to take final action on the budget.
INCLUDED IN THE compromise bill is a provision for a 6.5 percent increase in valuations for faculty members. The Senate passed a bill to address this issue and the House endorsed only a 6.5 percent increase.
The conference committee also agreed to reduce from $2 million to $1 million a Senate recommendation for accessibility students and improvements to save energy.
Included in the bill are recommendations for a 6 percent increase for other operating expenses and a 9.5 percent increase for student employee wages.
2
Monday, April 9,1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Somoza visits son in Topeka
SOMOZA
TOPEKA- Nicaragua President Anastacio Somoza flew into Topeka yesterday to visit his son, a student at
SOMOZA
Somora was staying at a hotel in downtown Topeka and said he was planning to leave soon for Florida.
Somozna is out of his country at a time of political unrest. The northern city of El Sauce had been captured by anti-Somozna guerrillas, and the Nicaraguan national guard re-took the city yesterday.
Strike cripples auto industry
DETROIT - A shortage of vital parts normally supplied by truck threatens to choke the industry as a Teamsmach teamlockout and strike enters its
The Labor Department yesterday estimated that 200,000 auto workers, or a quarter of the hourly work force, would be laid off this week.
The truck U.S. auto manufactures already had laid off 56,273 workers last Friday and had 74,200 short-hr shifts.
Friday and had 74,200 on short-hours basis. Bargaining is scheduled for tomorrow in Washington between officials and Mr. Sullivan for 450 miles of teamwork. 1,900 Teamsmts.
Representing our institutions broke off Friday. Both sides, largely divided over President Carter's anti-immigration wage guidelines, said they would not budget the program.
Chrysler Corp. officials said 85,000 workers would be laid off, virtually shutting down production. Layoffs at General Motors tended to occur Friday, and, as many as four others were expected last week.
6 executions reported in Iran
TEHRAN, Iran—Revolutionary authorities sent six more men to their deaths before firing squads yesterday, Tehran newspapers reported.
Meanwhile, violence flared in the streets of Tahron in the aftermath of Saturday's encounter of Amir Akgan Hoveida, who served as prime minister.
State radio reported that Hoveida, prime minister from 1965 to 1977, had been executed on charges ranging from corruption to spying for the United States to drug trafficking.
Sunday's six executions took place before dawn in four cities, the newspapers said. Those executed included two pre-shah army men, three of the shah's policemen and a landlord who was charged with illegally seizing land and ransoming several women.
State radio reports confirmed only that three of the executions had taken place.
the official execution toll stands at 76 since revolutionaries began their work after the Feb. 12 fall of Shah Mohammad Reza Pa叭lavi's last government.
Flight attendants end walkout
WASHINGTON—Negotiators for Pan American World Airways and its flight attendants union reached a tentative labor agreement yesterday, ending a brief walkout that had disrupted some Pan Am flights in Europe, airlines officials said.
Pickets were reported at a handful of airports in the United States after the two sides failed to reach an agreement by midnight Saturday, the deadline set for the airline's final decision.
The new pact was reached after a series of bargaining sessions that began last week under the auspices of the National Mediation Board.
Although the terms of the proposed contract were not disclosed, Richard Drake, the union's national strike director, predicted union members would take action.
Nuke investigation to begin
HARRISBURG, Pa.—Sign-carrying demonstrators conducted "last rites for HARRISBURG Mine" plant nuclear yesterday on the Capitol steps, insisting it was
Congress will begin a series of lengthy investigations tomorrow into the causes of the accident at the nuclear plant.
Meanwhile, engineers still are trying to bring the damaged reactor to a cold shutdown. Authorities said the job could take at least five more days.
Protestors belonging to a group called Three Mile Alert stood 1,000 yearly; continuing a protest that began eight years ago when Metropolitan
The company is paying $1.1 million per day to replace power load in the accident, but the bill has not yet been passed on to consumers. Utility officials said they expect it will be about $200,000 a year.
In Washington, a senate nuclear regulation subcommittee will summon all five members of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to explain the origin of the accident. The subcommittee also has requested Senate approval for ad-demanding to pay an expanded staff for an investigation expected to run up to a year.
Austin keeps interest in nuke
**AUSTIN, Texas—Citty voters approved the issuance of an additional $18.55 million in bonds to keep the city '10 percent share in a nuclear plant now available.'**
A turnout of about 34 percent of the city's registered voters approved the proposition with 53 percent in favor to 67 percent against.
The city had paid $160 million for its original share. But cost overruns and additional expenses had forced citizens to decide whether they wanted to spend the additional $215.85 million to issue revenue bonds needed to maintain their proportionate share in the nuclear plant.
Houston, San Antonio and Corpus Christi also own the plant, which is owned by a company that cultivates the island plant. The first union in the nuclear project is scheduled to begin product production.
Bay City is 135 miles southeast of Austin.
Czar says gas prices peaked
WASHINGTON- Energy Secretary James Schlesinger said yesterday that gasoline prices may have peaked for the year, but he agreed with a prediction by the Senate Energy Committee chairman that prices may exceed $1 a gallon by 1981.
Scheinger said that because of President Carter's decision to decontoll oil prices between now and September 1981, the nation had seen the decline in energy prices.
He said the phased decortal of domestic oil prices would proceed regardless of whether Carter got his proposed windfall profits tax, but he thought public opinion was weak.
5-mile restriction to be lifted
Sen. Henry, Jackson, D.Washington, had predicted that by the end of 1981, gasoline could be 15 to 20 cents higher, or $1 a gallon for most types of gasoline.
Thornhill decided yesterday to continue that advisory for at least another day after meeting with Joseph Hendrich, chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
HARRISBURG, Pa.-Go. Dick Thornburgh's warning that pre-school children and pregnant women stay outside a five-mile radius of the damaged Three Mile Island nuclear reactor may be lifted today, the governor's spokesman said.
Thorumburn issued his warning March 30 after there were several leaks of radiation from the nuclear power plant.
Paul Critchlow, Thornburgh's press secretary, said the warning would be lifted if officials thought they could continue the cleanup without more radiation.
Weather...
Today's high temperature is expected to be in the 60s, according to the National Weather Service. The low tonight will be in the 30s.
Amin's troops hold Kampala line
NAIROBL, Kenya (AP)-Tanzanian forces attacked the southern approaches to Kampala with heavy artillery fire yesterday after apparently being stopped by unexpected resistance from fresh Ugandan troops, according to exile sources and residents of the Uganda capital.
Travelers arriving from northeastern Uganda reported, meanwhile, that President Idi Amin's soldiers were rounding up members of two Christian tribes that have been persecuted repeatedly for alleged ties to the Modern Amin. Their fate was unknown.
BUT EXILE sources said yesterday the invasion force of Tanzanian soldiers and anti-Amin Ugandan rebels had run into new opposition—the Bondo Battalion, loyal troops, which sought down from Amin's home area of West Nile province in northwestern Uganda.
Amin's harsh 8-year rule seemed in its final hours Saturday when the last of an estimated 2,000 Libyan troops defending him were reported to have fled toward an air base in the north, evidently to fly back to Libya.
Those sources said the reinforcements were thought to have stalled the invaders along the road to Kampala from Entebbe, site of Uganda's international airport 21 miles to the south. The airport was reported captured by the invaders last week.
Kampala residents contacted by telephone said there had been heavy firing about five miles south of central Kampala. Some said their homes had shaken after a severe shaking of two hills lying between the invaders and the heart of Kampala.
Some observers said the Tanzanian commanders might be examining the capital to ensure there were not traps or unexpected pockets of opposition.
Although the invasion force of nearly 7,000 has been in Kampala's southern and western outskirts for several days, it has not launched a final assault.
AMIN REPORTEDLY has moved his headquarters to the area of Jinja, 50 miles east of Kampala. Witnesses there said loyal Ugandan troops had set up a roadblock at the Owen Falls Dam, just west of the city, and were confiscating arms and ammunition from fellow soldiers fleeing from the direction of Kampala.
In recent days, Amin has repeatedly spoken to his nation over government radio to insist he is winning the war, to exhert his soldiers and to pledge he would fight to the death.
Travelers from Sordi to northeastern Uganda said Ugandan troops had begun
rounding up Acholi and Langi tribesmen there.
The Acholi and Langi, both Christian tribes, have been among the principal victims of what international human rights groups say are government-inspired massacres of tens of thousands of Ugandans.
Cambodian loyalists report recapture of border town
ARANYAPRATHET, Thailand (AVI-
Cambodian troops loyal to overset Premier
Pol Poh fought along the Thai-Cambodian
border yesterday, and said they had
regained control of the strategic town of
Poipet from Vietnamese forces.
Admiral Car Rental
But no flag was hoisted at the border bridge to replace the Heng Samin flag—a red banner with the five yellow towers of Cambodia's Angkor temple.
The PoP Pot guerrillas and they virtually controlled the area around Paupe since 1962.
That military authorities confirmed that the Pol Pot forces apparently had recapacitation. They said there had been heavy fighting, including morning, when 300 to 400 Pol Pot guerrillas attacked the town, driving almost 200 army soldiers across the border into Thailand.
That suggested that large areas near the border seemed to be controlled by neither
The flag of the Vietnamese-supported Cambodian regime of President Heng Samin was hung down at the bridge and situated in a boundary between Poipet and this Thai town.
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25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA
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Dir. Lina Wertmilier, with Giancarlo Glianni, Mariangela Melo, Italysubtiles.
Fri — 7:00
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Tuesday, April 17
RECORDS & TAPES
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Tuesday, April 10
The Palestinian Situation:
TO LIVE IN FREEDOM
Friday & Saturday, April 13 & 14
Made by a predominantly Israel crew, IsraelPaleasinuteshields. Includes an interview with Yasir Arafat. Palesenotes. PLUS "The History Book, v. 6."
Dir. Norman Taurog; with Fred Astaire, Eleanor Powell, George Murphy. Great dance sequences and songs.
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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Wednesday, April 11
SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT
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Monday, April 9.1979
University Daily Kansan
3
Mann, philharmonic blend talents
Reviewer
By PATRICIA RICE
To say the least, it was entertaining.
To say the least, it was entertaining.
The concert in the city of
Mann, together with the Kansas City
Philharmonic Orchestra, exemplified last
night in Hoch Audio Hall in
Kansas City and applied to music.
In the beginning the mood was serious, as the sounds of Mann's electric flute dominated his "Concerto Grosso in D Blues," which he wrote with William Fischer. It was surprising to see how well a jazz octet blended with an orchestra.
Mann, who had not played at the age of Kunze since 1971, performed before a marquee at the New York State Fair.
After the orchestra had played the opening selection, "Fanfare and Dance," Mann and his sextet quietly walked on and cantivated the audience for two hours.
The pairing of the orchestra with Mann's music lasted through the symphonic arrangement of "Memphis Underground" and an arrangement by Mann called "Underground." Then, after an internmission, Mann and his group resampled without the orchestra.
THE BAND got a little more casual as it began with a tune called "Cinnamon Flower." The combination of jazz and bossa influenced the band's cleilent percussion of Raphael Cruz. The
KANSAN Review
It was hard to believe that the ssexet had been together only a year, especially when the group drifted into the harmony of "Cricket Dance."
only drawback was the bad acoustics of Hoch.
He progressed from the classical concert to the sound Brazilian jazz to an ending of the work.
Cruz, with his percussion sound effects, Ricardo Silvera on electric guitar and Mann with his electric flute were highlighted in this tranquil jazz tune, which relaxed the audience and prepared it for what was to come.
THE AUDIENCE might not have been sure at first, but as Mann began to blow into his pipe and sway to the slow, pulsating rhythm of the bass guitar, everyone knew it was the blues.
After Mann introduced the motif with his flute, Gravis took over and demonstrated the sound that musicians such as B.B. King made famous.
As the blues mood took over, each musician was illuminated as he played his instrument.
Feyline & the K-State Union/UPC Concerts are proud to present an evening with
BILLYJOEL
Eddie Warner
Saturday, April 28 8:00 pm Ahearn Fieldhouse Kansas State University Reserved seating:
Claudio Rudidi was on trumpet, Ted Léo on keyboards and LeRoy Clouden on drums.
$7.50
$8.00
$7.00
Tickets available now at the K-State Union; also, April 7-15 at the Record Store in Aggleville, Conde Music in downtown Manhattan, Mother Earth Records in Topeka, Kie's in Lawrence, Ft. Riley Recreational Services, House of Sight & Sound in Salina and Del's TV & Tape in Salina.
The audience was so overwhelmed that after the music ended and the band had left the stage, a standing ovation and shouts of "Love" and "Sound" brought back the group.
The performers gave the audience its final pleasure with a tune called "Love and Peace," and then, as quietly as they entered the stage, they left.
THE ONE THING that could have improved the performance was less playing by the orchestra. It was good, but some of its time could have been given to Mann. This time he could have pleased the audience, because it called back Mann's group for a second encore.
One of the members of the group said he had been hesitant about playing with an onetoat.
k-state union
upc concerts
"An orchestra isn't a sctet." Clouden said. "But, it's working out OK."
It did work out OK, and the combination of music was appreciated. But Mann's sextet won the prize.
The band has played with orchestra in Boulder, Colo.; Austin, Texas; and Dallas. From Lawrence the band will go to Minneapolis.
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Copyright 1979
Copyright 1979
The LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE Presents . . . Wednesday, April 11th . . .
The JAN HAMMER GROUP
In Concert
$4.50 advance
THEATER STUDIO
$5.50 day of show
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BOOMTOWN RATS
Tickets available
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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.
APRIL 9,1979
Stop Wolf Creek now
It was bound to happen. And, as usual, the government has begun its preventive measures after the fact.
The near disaster at the Three Mile Island nuclear power station outside Harrisburg, Pa., has prompted a resolution in the Kansas Senate asking for the formation of a special committee to investigate the safety of the Wolf Creek nuclear plant now under construction near Burlington.
That resolution is similar to other motions sprouting up across the country in the wake of the Pennsylvania accident.
THE PROPOSED committee in the Senate resolution would be charged with studying general safety of nuclear generating stations, the safety of the Wolf Creek facility and the effects of a nuclear accident in Kansas.
But while increased safety standards for nuclear plants should be encouraged, there is actually only one method that would ensure public safety—shutting down the nuclear power industry.
For, as much as nuclear advocates hate to admit it, the accident in Pennsylvania has effectively proven what nuclear opponents have been saying all along—nuclear power plants are not safe.
THE ACCIDENT at Three Mile
Island leaves nuclear advocates with a significant credibility problem. Namely, why should the public believe what nuclear advocates say when recent events have proved them so terribly wrong?
The conflicting and often deliberately misleading reports emanating from the utility that operated the Three Mile Island plant showed that the utility's interest lay with company profits, not public safety. And as long as profits are the motivating factor in dealing with such problems it will be able to believe what it is told by the utilities and by nuclear officials with vested interests in the proliferation of nuclear power plants.
THE WOLF Creek power plant is scheduled to begin operation in 1983. Should Kansans be subjected to the residents of central Pennsylvania?
The answer is clearly no. It is incumbent upon us to make that clear to the officials of the utilities that own the buildings and to Kansas government officials.
The accident at Three Mile Island has shown us what the future holds if we accede to further dependence on nuclear power. Are we willing to accept that fate?
Abel had Cain. Richard Nixon had Donald, Lyndon Johnson had Sarn Houston, and alus, Jimmy Carter Billy—and Jean and Gloria.
NOTHING IS RISKLESS!!!
Pump failure in system led to malfunction of Electro-KR-2 Humatic. Shifting main control rod which caused main gear to fall out, forcing complete shutdown.
SCHLESINGER
Brotherly troubles go way back in history, and they seem to have gotten worse for the men residing at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. in recent years.
Carter insisted that Billy's comment to visiting Libyans that they were some of his best friends in the world—"there's a hell of a lot more Arabians that are Jews," had not been anti-Semitic and that he would not condemn him for it.
In addition to a governmental investigation of the $6.5 million credit line extended to the Carter peanut business during the recession, Mr. Schoenfeld included pressure to make a statement condemning brother Billy's comments about Jesus and sister Jean's arrest for disobeying conduct after she refused to quit Argentina or herniconia in a restaurant in Americas, Ga.
CARTER HAD at first tried to avoid the Billy issue; then he issued a weak statement saying only that he and Billy were disassociated. Finally, still under pressure, Carter said, "Billy is my brother. He is seriously ill at this point, I love him."
But never has a president been so beset with family troubles as Carter. Last month, in a speech in New York City, the most presidents right out of the White House. The Carter clan waged have on
Carter should sever ties with Billy
But questions were raised about the nature of Billy's illness after a doctor treating him in Americas for bronchitis said Billy was not seriously ill.
BUT IT MAY lead to the demise of Jimmy Carter, who apparently thinks that Billy is, indeed, very sick. Carter aides have said that Billy has been under so much pressure might proverbially even worse outbursts than the Jewish slurs.
"Seriously ill," Billy's physician, Paul brown, said, "meant it could lead to his death."
Billy may be realizing himself that he is very sick. Last month, he was readmitted to the Americas hospital and is now at the Long Beach, Calif., Naval Hospital. This time, however, it is for the treatment of alcoholism, not bronchitis.
Yet his comments and actions of a few months ago still seem to be a cause of
FEW PUBLIC officials, much less a president, would be able to put up with a beer-guzzling brother, an evangelist sister, a mother-turned-Perce-Cope volunteer who loves the harmonics so much that she makes it to dinner and refuses to quit playing.
So, while Americans may be wondering if Jimmy Carter is a strong leader, they can be assured that he is definitely a strong family man.
January, Billy urinated on the side of a building and then made his infamous remarks about Jews. When he did that, he embarrassed not only his brother, but a Jewish-American people. A few of them laughed with larger number of them expressed outrage.
Billy's allys, once funny and rather innocent, have ceased to be humorous. His actions have deteriorated to the point that he frequently dissatisfacely selfishly from his brother.
Why, he continually asked witnesses—mostly local journalists—subpoenaed by the defense, was this case such a big outcider? "outiders" like the Southern Christian Leadership Conference spied on their shill recruitment spies and their talk of confrontation.
And so Carter, always a strong family man, faces the dilemma of disassociating himself from Billy, which he doesn't seem to understand. He is a political lover for not condemning him.
Bill Brock, Republican National chairman, astutely defined Carter's problem, "To some extent," he said, "each of us is our brother's keeper."
Racism awakened in Ala. rape trial
Why had the local and national media played the whole drama up? Why was there all this talk about the defendant's being unable to get a fair trial in his court? Why had the good character and biennial customs of Cullman citizens been tortured? Why did he have no control? Why had the issue of race suddenly become so dominant in a community in which it had once been so dormant?
BECAUSE JUSTICE has not been equally fair, nor even equally random, for black people in towns like Decatur all over Alabama and the South; not in the Scottsboro days of the '30s, in the "Great" settlement" days of the '60s, not in the "New South" days of the '70s.
The judge ruled that the state statute was superceded by the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution, which guarantees trial by an impartial trial, and the 14th Amendment, which provides for the process of law.
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N. Y. Times Feature
CULLMAN, Ala.—Breaking recent with the Alabama in an unabashedly venerates, Judge Jack C. Riley of Cullman county court recently removed the defendant any further charges against him. Tommy Lee Moe redacted black man whose arrest in May in Decatur, Ala., together with his conviction and sentencing in Cullman to 30 years in prison, was uncovered nearly 10 months of bitter racial protest in northern Alabama.
Because a black's rape of a white, especially when unsolved
ON MARCH 2, Judge Riley apparently found what he was looking for as for he ordered another change of venue for the remaining charges, this time to Birmingham, the largest city in northern Alabama.
By state law, only one change of venue is permissible. That judicial card was played last summer by a Decatur judge who, having witnessed in his own town the angry demonstrations of local Hines supporters, members of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and Ku Klux Klanism, sent forth the coming court actions—three separate rape charges and a related robbery charge—32 miles down the road to Culmen County, where less than one percent of the population is black.
But Carter is also the president of the United States and as such, Bill's actions are in line with the state's policy.
Mary
Ernst
concern for Carter, who continues to feel the pressure to rebill Bake's comments.
By JQSEPH P. KAHN
While playing host to the Libyan oil men in
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 Kansan, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
Letters Policy
for a period of months, exerts a community pressure on local law enforcement that too easily invites application of what some black Decatur residents call the "nearest available nigger" school of police philosophy.
Because, guilty or not guilty, Hines, who had never been in trouble with the police and whose character was stanually defended by school associates and fellow church members, suffered disgraced fingers at the hands of interrogating officers who communicated—a grossly incompetent suspect for whom access to the legal and civil counsel should have both swift and obvious.
Because Decatur housed some other prince suspects who were never adequately questioned about the crimes eventually hung
These factors may mean little to Hines, who sits in a cell on the psychiatric ward in Kidney Prison with his impaired memory and learning ability, that has been evaluated as that of a 3-year-old. But they are crucial for cognitive ability to look at how he got there and ask, "What?"
BECAUSE PROGRESS in Southern justice has largely been achieved through the integration of jury panels, and moving the Hines trial to Cullman a gratuitous bow to an ugly, disreputable past.
Now that venue is the latest variable to change, it appears that it will be Birmingham's turn to wrestle with the hows and whys of the local. That old steel mill with a bloody perspective is the best place for the Cullian to see Decatur's biracial carnival swinging toward its portals, but at least Birmingham will have a broadened audience in the parade. And it will offer a representative number of blacks.
"They said. 'Let's get Tommy a white lawyer.' And maybe if we had—maybe if we paid him X-thousands of dollars and let him spread the money around where he needed to—then maybe Tommy would be free today. But there’s a lot of sickness in Decatur that been getting ignored, and the Hines case would not have been the last of it. Nothing would have changed."
Because the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and the Klan, in vastly different ways and with markedly different motives need dramatic issues like the Hines case to revive their moribund images.
Joseph P. Kahn has been attending the trial of Tommy Lee Hines in connection with a book he is writing on justice in the
"Some of them were furious with me when I insisted on getting Tommy a local black attorney," said Al Robinson, a paper mill employee who also now serves on Decatur's newly formed church, led the initial organizing for his young friend's defense.
Because Decatur's blacks felt they had to shake a sleeping, complacent city awake.
Mandatory draft not key to manhood
To the editor:
In your story on conscription (March 28) you quoted ROTC member John Persyn as saying that the draft "ought to be a mandatory two years for everyone. It gives you a little responsibility—it makes a man out of you."
I am amazed (and amused) that a senior in an institution of higher learning can embrace such a simple-minded and antiquated notion of manhood. That Persyn would pressure to impose his twisted idea of himself, the rest of us, however, is unforgettable.
I intend to do all I can to see that my son does not grow up under the shadow of the Soles.
In the meantime, I would suggest that Percy not take those John Wayne movies that have been made.
Stephen Bunch
Stephen Bouch Assistant Instructor of English
Armed forces service shouldn't be required
To the editor:
I would like to make some comments about Dob Riechman's article of March 28, 1995, in the *New York Times*.
in your article you talk to some of the future military personnel who really do not know or have been well indoctrinated about what military life is like. Sure they get their training when August gets here it is back to school. They are somewhat different in real life.
thank you tor showing an unbiased bit of journalism. You have done extremely well. It appears that you have forgotten to add up sides of the coin, however. When one reads "disputed" in your headline, one would think of equal time. But after reading your article, you have forgotten to add or write 'you' not believe in equal time. By the way—four pro, two con.
There are so many demeaning and demoralizing things happening to you that you begin to wonder, "Why the HELL am I here?" Anything to keep you in your place. Regulation after regulation telling you when you are supposed to get up from the restaurant, drunk, smoke and everything else.
Military life is great. Go to work, then to the barracks, then to work, etc. Or sometimes you can go to the NCO club and have several drinks. Lots of fun.
You cited an Associated Press-NBC News study about the draft. Studies are great. I would like to see a study done on the military and the number of alcoholics we are counting in a crisis situation. I'm sure we would all be astounded!
No one should be forced into the military for any reason. Maybe we should listen to Comrade Persyn, he really knows what is best for all. I've been there. I know what it is.
Norm Kinney McLouth senior
Treaty supporters ignored human right
To the editor:
Tuesday and Wednesday, March 27 and
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
28, were days of public protest for various Moslem, Arab and American students. The issue was the Egyptian-Iraeli treaty and its neglect of the Palestinian people.
The Palestinian homeland (or rather, lack of a homeland) is without a doubt the core of the Middle East problem. The majority of tension stems from this issue. The Arab country has been an island of orderly; the unprepared Israeli counterpart was emotional. I found it interesting to note that in this country of freedom of opinion, the Israelis' most common (and still printable) comment was "The Palestine, showing a definite lack of tolerance."
And yet, do they not realize that in their own cry they have embraced the entire problem? The Palestinians do not have a home to which they may return. That is exactly the point that they were trying to make. Somehow in the shuffle, that very basic human right, human need even, has been ignored, and that what it was all about
Coleen P. McKeighen Los Angeles, Calif. senior
Religion not needed to take part in TM
To the editor:
We would like to thank Bob Anthony for his interest in Doug Henning, Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sihi protocol, which are necessary to correct his misunderstandings.
A religious man sees religion everywhere, a scientist sees science and an artist sees art. These diverse views enrich society; a religious person feels ennobled; thy eyes feel there is a religious aspect to the TM program, then for him there is—even though many religious leaders do not agree. If he feels that truth is not to be found in any form, then we can only think that he is a faint.
We disagree with Anthony's opinion of Heming. We both know Doug. He is well-known. We don't know who he is.
psychology and is a truly gifted performer. People who attended his performance at Haskell Indian Junior College expressed great delight that he came.
Anthony is incorrect when he states that belief in the TM and TM-Sidih program is required. Practice of TM and TM-Sidih all involve a belief and all benefits occur automatically.
Anthony also seems unaware that hundreds of saints and religious people (St. Francis of Assisi, St. Theresa, etc.) have suffered during the martyrs' cities as living, where few sacribes lay.
Anthony's condensation of Maharishi European Research University's report of the Maharishi effect ignores the fact that the odds of these results occurring by chance are more than one in a billion. Anchton was not aware that principals of national science conferences were concentrated in countries where sufficient numbers of people practice the TM and TM-Sidih program. While these developments are still in their early stages, their principles are scientifically verifiable. Over 300 scientific studies conducted by more than 100 separate research facilities throughout India validate the TM and TM-Sidih program.
Anyone can verify these claims in his own experience without involving 'belfire' in the story.
We encourage all interested people to attend a MahariSh International University visitor's weekend where they can observe a large population practicing the T-MiSidi program, attend lectures by MIU faculty and visit with the students.
Anthony's fright at the possibility of a simple, natural, scientifically validated program that quickly develops personal confidence in him. A certain cern but must point out that a reaction that is opposed to the most intimate nature of life shows a fundamental misunderstanding of
William R. Weston
Sara Quijada
MIIU Field Representatives
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KANSAN
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Monday, April 9, 1979
Folk medicine alive and well
By BRENDA WATSON
Staff Reporter
Continued unseasonally cold weather could catalyze a delayed surge of sniffles, sneezes and coughs among KU students.
Sufferers seeking temporary relief would turn again to their preferred commercial cold medicines.
What the sufferers do not realize is that they are practicing folk medicine.
according to Jerry Stannard, professor of history, folk medicine is an integral part of today's society.
It has just taken a different form. People are using "new drugs and chemicals". Stannard said. "Hopping an
A more formal definition of folk medicine is "beliefs and practices employed by the folk in medical matters." But Stannard said that any self-administered medical practice could be based on a clinical diagnosis could be considered folk medicine.
Stannard, whose speciality is history of medical botany,
said, "Folk medicine not only does continue today, but it
had better continue or doctors' offices would be packed
like cars of sardines.
"WE CAN'T GO running to the doctor for every little ache or pain. We know that usually whatever is ailing us will go away by itself. If it doesn't, then we do something about it."
Examples of ailments treated by folk medicine include
Until about 1850, when scientific medicine began to develop, and even as late as 1900, people around the world relied on home remedies for relief from colds and other ailments, he said.
'sick headaches' and indigestion, which nearly everyone suffer at once or another, but which generally go away
Now, however, folk medicine as practiced in its traditional sense, using readily available plants, usually is confined to isolated areas such as Appalachia, he said. Stannard said, "I suspect that in some ethnic communities folk medicine is still practiced today just as it always was."
Clarence Meyer's "American Folk Medicine" is a good source of representative examples of common folk medicine.
Meyer's book includes some recipes and advice that might seem bizarre to a modern reader. However, Stanfield said, the rationale behind them might not differ much from the way we eat food. Both use a kind of mechanistic model in treating the systems.
IN OTHER WORDS, if you were cold and your nose was running, the logical thing to do would be to try to warm up.
"A sore throat is rather grating so it makes sense to look for something smooth—like honey," he said.
not looking about the money, he said.
Two of the more questionable remedies suggested in
University Daily Kansan
Meyer for colds are eating raw onions and rubbing the chest and throat with skunk's oil.
For treating fever, Meyer's book suggests, among other things, mixing mustard with the white of an egg and laying it on the wrist, applying sliced onion to the soles of the feet, and drinking at 30-minute intervals until the fever is broken a concession derived from simmering a "good handful of cocklebur" in a quart of water.
stamard said he was interested in folk medicine for its worth in historical research.
FOR A THROAT that is "sore deep down," one remedy suggests chewing bark from a slippery elm and swallowing the juice. For a nighttime cough, swallowing a pinch of salt is recommended, but if that does not work, a cough syrup whose recipe calls for 100-proof whiskey as a base also is listed.
Although most of these recipes must be viewed in an "intellectual perspective" and should "absolutely not" be tried, there are some folk remedies that may have some value.
He said he uses only two—mud on bee stings and aloe plant on burns.
"I must admit that I was somewhat dubious about the properties many attributed to the aloe, which I had always considered to be a rather useless plant," Starnard said. "But when I tried it on a localized but deep burn once, I was amazed by the amount of relief from pain it provided."
'New' radar aids funnel detection
By LYNN BYCZYNSKJ
Staff Reporter
Because tornadoes are as unpredictable as the weather that causes them, as many as two-thirds of all twisters arrive unannounced and go off-Eagleman, KU professor of meteology.
But Eagleman said tornado prediction soon should become a more precise science when the type of radar that has been used to track hurricanes or motorists is put to work in weather stations.
Eagleman said he had worked with the National Severe Storms Laboratory in Norman, Okla. for more than a year in 1980 and with the Doppler radar for tornado forecasting.
That type of radar, called a dual-Doppler system, can detect tornadoes as long as 30 m/s.
"People don't know how unscrupile, in terms of instruments and gadgetry, tornado weather conditions, highway patrol reports and storm spitter organizations."
The type of radar that is used now can detect only air conditions that might result in an accident.
Dual-Deploper radar, however, presents a three-dimensional picture of the speed and direction of wind within a storm. Circular movements of air that precede tornadoes can be detected long before any movement is visible from the ground, he said.
Eaglerman said a Doppler system probably could have spotted the tornado that killed 15 people when it overturned the house. Whippoorwill on Lake Famona last June.
USING THOSE sources, the National Weather Service issues a tornado watch when twisters are likely to form. A tornado is a rapid attack on a funnel has been spotted on the ground.
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DOPPLER RADAR systems installed in weather stations could detect tornado movements in thunderstorms as far away as 100 miles, he said.
Lawrence would be covered by the National Weather Service stations in Topeka and Kansas City if Doppler systems were installed.
The cost of a Doppler system, which could run to thousands of dollars, would rule out the possibility of equiping the KU weather station with the system.
But the day when Doppler radar will be used widely elsewhere is not far in the horizon.
"It will be practical within the next five years, from both a technical and financing perspective."
Reluctant prisoner caught after fleeing county jail
Eagleman said he had become interested in tornado forecasting in 1966 when he began to study to find the safest place in a house during a tornado. That place, he said, is the northeast corner of the basement, away from windows or doors.
Three Lawrence police officers got a morning jog Friday when a man being booked into the Douglas County jail suddenly fled.
Police said Lonney R. Teichmann, 19, 2522 Alabama St., had run down the stairs and out of the Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center, 111 E. 11th St., after authorities told him that there was an outstanding warrant for his arrest. The warrant was for allegedly driving while under the influence of alcohol.
Teichmann had gone to the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center to speak to the
Officer Jessie Treu, who was escorting Teichmann to the jail, said Teichmann had run away when they reached the jail entrance.
city attorney. Before speaking to the attorney, he went to the police station on the second floor of the building, where he was told about the warrant.
Treu, Sgt. Miguel Garcia and Sgt. Mike Reeves chased him into an alley in the 1100 block of Rhode Island St., where he surrendered.
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Cost of living pay raises to be weighed for faculty
A proposal that would give faculty cost of living as well as merit pay increases will be sent next week to the Council of University Administratorsuncle Archie R. Dykes said yesterday.
The Council is made up of the presidents and chancellors of the Regents schools.
KU Member IAWS
The proposal was approved at a meeting Friday between KU administrators and faculty from both the Lawrence campus and the Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
Merit increases are awarded by committees in the departments and schools. Criteria for increases may vary among the schools but most rely on evidence of outstanding scholarly achievement or involvement in departmental affairs.
The proposal was made because faculty pay increases have not kept up with inflation, according to one of the faculty members at Hartz, professor of curriculum instruction.
The most recent faculty pay increase, approved by the Kansas Legislature last week, calls for a 0.5 percent increase. But, according to the staff, faculty reach nearly 10 percent this year, faculty
members would lose 3.5 percent of their salary's buying power.
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Swartz said the proposed system wound give faculty members an increase based on inflation in addition to keeping the merit award system, which KU schools and departments use to distribute the increases awarded by the Legislature.
Dykes said he would introduce the proposal at the Council of Presses' meeting.
Political Action Women & the Arts Human Sexuality
- Applications are now being accepted for Committee Chairpersons of;
Dykes said that if the proposal were approved unanimously, the council would recommend that the Regents use the system in next year's budget requests.
- Applications for Executive Board officers are presently being accepted.
Further information and applications available at 218 Strong— Emily Taylor Res. Center, Due Wed., April 11th.
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6
Monday, April 9.1979
University Daily Kansan
Women win second straight meet
By CARLOS MURGUIA
Sports Writer
Keeping its outdoor winning streak intact, the women's track team finished first for the second consecutive week last weekend the Nebraska Invitation in Lincoln, Neh.
Gone into the mile relay, the last race of the meet, the Jayhawks trailed Nebraska by one point. KU finished second in the race and Nebraska finished fourth. Thus, Kansas won the team title with 147 points and Nebraska finished second with 144.
The mile relay team of Denise Homa,
Vicki Simpson, Deb Hertzog and Lori
KANSAN Sports
Lowey, set one of the four school records set in the meet by finishing a time of
Two of the records were set by Karen Fitz,
who placed third in the 5,000 with a 17:47.2
clocking, and Tammi Rose, second in the
invelin with an 136-9 toss.
Behindes being on the mile and 440 relay teams, Lowry had an outstanding injury history. He was a four-time winner of the Ironman.
THE ONLY other Jayhawk to win twice was spinner Lori Green. Green, taking up the slack for KU's injured Sheila Calmese and Amy Miles, won the 10-meter dash in a meet record time of 11.87 and run away with a meet record time of 23.9 in the 200-meter dash.
hardies in a school record time of 61.51 and finished first in the 100-metre hardies with a time of 63.82.
Michelle Brown was the third KU athlete to win. She won the 1,500-meter run in and Wendy Harner finished second (4;43.57) and Wardy Warner was fourth (4;31.58) in the race.
Showing balanced team scoring, the
team had five first places, six seconds and four
thirds.
Simpson finished second in the 800 in 2:16:65. Shawn Corwin was second with a personal best of 18:74 in the long jump, and the 400-meter relay team of Lowery, Green, Gwen Poss and Claire Overstake was second in a time of 48.1.
The Jawhays third-place finishers were Poss in the 100-meter hurdle (14.94), Homa in the 400 (59.3), Jane Brock in the 10,000 and Maureen Fainholm in the 3,000 (10:19).
Splits mark conference openers
By TONY FITTS
Snorts Writer
MANHATTAN—The Kansas and Kansas State baseball teams play each other six times this season. The Tigers win five, Big Eight standings, and Kansan lost one of those Saturday. The team splits a doubleheader, with KU taking the first game, 12-4, and K-State winning the second.
KU and K-State were not the only teams to split Saturday, Missouri and Oklahoma, and Iowa State and Oklahoma State did the same. Nebraska was the only team to win conference play, defeating Colorado, weekend of conference play, defeating Colorado, KU's opponent today, 7-4 and 5-1.
This year, KU and K-State are in different divisions of the Big Eight baseball race, but a strong rivalry remains and many teams are upset at the outcome of the second game.
KANANS COACH Floyd Temple was disappointed in his team's pitching.
"If you don't get pitching," he said, "you don't win. We let them off the hook and they score five runs in the late innings of the first game. We lost our momentum for the second game. If you can't win with seven runs, you've got problems.
"We've had it easy so far, but we're going into our conference schedule. You gotta get there."
"If some of our people don't come around and start getting the ball across the plate, you might just see Mr. Worley in a starting role."
Galen Worley has traditionally been a short reliever for the 'Hawks. He came on in the last innings of the second game Saturday and got the last three outs, with one walk and a strikeout. Worley has a 0.68 ERA in 13 and one third innings, the best on the team.
THE FIRST GAME was almost a laugher, as KU scored eight runs before K-State got a base hit Terry Sutcliffe started for the team with three hits and one run against Alexander, K-State third baseman, stroked
a hot grounder past the mound in the bottom of the fifth.
Four KU players hit home runs, tying a school record set in 1971. Job Sportswould led off the game with a homer and Matt Browning hit three double-figure shots Martin added their later. Gudgiefinger hit another in the second game, bringing his season tailed to seven, two short of the triple-double he had on both.
The second game did not go as well for the Jayhawks. Kevin Kerschen started for KU and gave up five runs on six hits in three innings. Clayton Fleeman got the loss, giving up the winning run on a triple by Jeff Stapleton, KState second baseman, in the fifth.
Track placings elusive in Texas
The men's track team left Austin, Texas,
Saturday with little more than it came with.
All of the Jayhawks had to show for the 12th run of the Texas Hooligans were one third better.
"We didn't do much," KU coach Bob Timmons said. "We all disappointed."
The 1.600-meter relay team captured the
three-place finish, with a 3.97 sec clocking.
finishing behind Texas and Baylor. That mark, recorded by Kevin Newell, Tommy McCall, Stan Whitaker and Lester Mickens, will be for the NCAA Outdoor Championships.
A freshman, Sanya Owolabi, captured a three-wince place, jumping 50-4 in the triple jump.
Mickens previously had qualified in the
Kings, Royals garner victories
Kings clinch title KC takes series
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Guard Chris Birdsong scored 32 points Sunday, including 16 in a five-minute spurt in the third quarter, as the Kansas City Kings clinched a spot in the Conference Tournament Midwest Division championship with a 107 victory over the Indiana Pacers.
Kansas will play a doubleheader at Colorado this afternoon. The Jayhawks return to Quigley Field Wednesday after the Kansas against Sioux Falls College at 1:30.
400-meters, and freshman Jeff Buckingham had met the NCAA standards in the pole
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—Paul Splittorp pitched a five-hitter and George Brett collected four hits and scored three runs Sunday as the Kansas City Royals beat Toronto 8-3 for a three-game, season-opening sweep of the Blue Jays.
Randy Hall of Texas &M won the university competition in the rain Saturday
Yerry Porter, a KU alumnus and a member of the Worcester Track club, won the team's championship.
the 400-meter relay, the KU squad, which had barely missed qualifying for the NCAA Outdoor at the Arkansas Relays, had its qualifying hopes dashed when Anthony Coleman pulled up lame in a preliminary race.
Several KU athletes go to Texas competed in the Emporia State Invitational.
Exhibition sets KU v. Rovals
The Kansas City Royals have tentatively scheduled an exhibition game with the University of Kansas baseball team for April 18 at 1 a.m. at Rovals Stadium.
Royals manager Whitey Harris is expected to start Steve Busby at pitcher and to keep his usual starting line-up in the game for at least the two innings.
"We're ticked to play them," KU coach Floyd Temple said Saturday. "I think one reason they want to play us is to give Busyhawk a chance to prove we can if we can help Busy, we're going to do it."
Busy has been suffering from a lingering shoulder injury since the 1975 season. He underwent surgery in 1976 to repair a torn rotator cuff in his shoulder.
"Of course, it's a great thrill for our kids," temple said. "Not many kids get a thrill like mine."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Weekend Roundup
Netters win weekend matches
In its final matches before the Big Eight Conference tournament, the KU women's tennis team beat the University of Alabama State University this past weekend.
Kansas beat Iowa 7-2 Friday, as four KU players played won their matches. They were No. 1 Carrier Fotopoulos, No. 2 Blake, No. 4 Shari Schröfer and No. 6 Larsuari, Mary Slauffer and Kathy Merrion of lost in the No. 3 and No. 5 matches.
In doubles, the team of Fotopoulos-Block won the No. 1 match to lead a KU sweep. Stauffer-Schruter and Merrion-Leonard got the other Kansas victories
In a match yesterday, the Jayhawks picked up their third victory over Kansas
State this season, blanking the Wildcats 9-0.
Barb Ketterman played 5. 3 singles for KU defeated Emily Clohser. Theresa Lahey stepped into the 6. 1 singles spot and beat K-State's Denise Beckerman.
Other KU singles victories came from Fotopoulos, Block, Stauffer and Schrufer.
KU completed the sweep of the match with three easy doubles victories by the teams of Fotopolos-Block, Stauffer-Schruer and Merion-Leonard.
The next action for the Jayhawks will be the Big Eight tournament Friday and Saturday on the Allen Field House courts.
OU jinx continues for KU
The KU men's team tennis won two of three matches against Big Eight Conference foes in a quadrangular meet here last weekend.
The Jayhawks could not break a 14-year losing streak against the University of Oklahoma, as the Sooners dominated the singles division to win 6-3 Friday.
KU's No. 1 singles player, Mark Hosking, picked up KU's only singles victory. No. 2 Colli Chelier, No. 3 Bill Krizman, No. 4 Wany Seale, No. 5 Bick Wertz and No. 6 Joe Ryusser lost their matches.
The Hawks drubbed Kansas State University 7-2 Saturday.
KU coach Tom Kivisto said a loss the previous week to Wichita State University may have affected the outcome of the Oklahoma match.
"Up until that time, we hadn't lost the close ones," he said.
In doubles, KU got victories from Hosking-Collier and Ruysser-Wertz. Wall-Washington of OU defeated Krizman-Sewall.
KU won five of six singles matches with the same line-up as it used against Oklahoma. Ruysser suffered the only Kansas defeat.
In doubles, Hosking-Collier and Ruyser-Wert woz. KSU's No. 2 item of Henderson-Titus beat KU's Krizman-Ed Bolen.
The University of Missouri offered little resistance Sunday as the Jayhawks breeded to a 94 victory.
No. 3 Bill Krizman was the only Jayhawk pushed to three sets in the one-sided affair.
Kivisto said that this weekend's results would give Hosking a shot at the 1.0 seed for the Big Eight tournament. He also said Hosking and Chet Collier could be the tournament's top-ranked doubles team.
Rockhurst wins soccer tourney
The KU soccer club placed third in the round-robin tournament. Kansas State University was fourth.
Rockhurst College beat the University of Missouri 2-4 yesterday to win the fourteam Jayhawk Invitational soccer tournament at Memorial Stadium.
KU finished the tournament with two, one victory and one loss. Saturday morning, KU played Rockhurst to a 2-1 victory and that afternoon tied Kansas State 1-1.
Yesterday morning, KU was shut out 40 by Mouriori, but bounced back in the afternoon behind Cal Bekel's two-goal performance to beat Kansas State 31-2.
The Ottawa and Avila soccer clubs were expected for the tournament, but withdrew because of injuries and scheduling conflicts.
KU's next action will be the Big Eight soccer tournament Saturday and Sunday at Boulder, Colo.
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THE KANSAS UNION
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 9, 1979
7
Senate group splits on S. Africa issue
By LAURIE WOLKEY
Staff Reporter
A. Student Senate ad boc committee formed to research the effects of American investments in the country.
At the Feb. 28 Senate meeting, Veronica Cruz, student senator for the School of Social Welfare and a committee member, presented a resolution calling for divestiture by the Kansas University Endowment Association of its investments in South Africa.
However, the Senate failed the resolution and formed an eight-member ad hoc committee to
Now, some of the members have drawn up a counter-resolution. The counter-resolution favors the Sullivan Principles, which call for U.S. compliance with Africa to change their policies rather than withdraw.
In recent policy statement, the Endowment Association used the sultan Principles as the basis for the policy statement.
But Cruz said the committee members had drawn a counter-resolution without thoroughly researching it.
"WHAT I AM upset about is that before they had done the research, they had already made up their minds."
She also charged the three members who had drawn up the second resolution had not discussed it.
However, Rex Gardner, chairman of the Student Rights and Responsibilities Committee and a member of the investigating committee, said that although he and two other committee members had signed the second resolution, no decision had been made by the Rights Committee.
Gardner, who drafted the Resolution last week,
said the resolution was not intended to be the committee's consensus.
"I can't figure out what it is about. I don't think she knows what it is going on." Gardner said.
"The ad hoc committee will not render a decision on the resolutions. It is just an investigating committee," Scott Schmalberg, a member of the committee, said.
Resolutions the归亥 committee writes will go to the Student Rights Committee, which will meet Thursday. The Student Rights Committee then will introduce its recommendation to the full Senate. It is possible that both resolutions will go before the Senate, according to Schmalberg.
CRUZ SAID THAT Schmalberg, one of the authors of the counter-resolution, was representing the views of the endowment Association.
However, Schmatterberg said that although he did agree with the Endowment Association's position, he did not represent the association.
"I have asked many questions about whether diversitie is in the best interest of the students. To said people, this has given the impression that I have not been able to the Endowment Association," Schmalberg slandered.
Cruz said, "Hex and the other two met with Todd Seymour and Seymour has been giving them information that was written by corporations. Of course, the corporations' view is to divest."
Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, said several committee members had contacted him and he had given them information about investments in South Africa.
DON JOHNSON, a member of the ad hoc committee, said he also favored the Sullivan Principles.
"Dive-insurance is one bold stroke. We should work within the companies to end discrimination," he
Johnson said the research he had seen indicated that about half of the companies in which the KU Endowment Association invests already had agreed to the Sullivan Principles.
However, Crus said that the information she had seen did not support that view.
"What I stress is what the people who live in South Africa are aware about American companies' involvement."
KANSAN WANT ADS
However, Dykes said yesterday that he had not discussed the issue with any committee members.
Cruz said she was disturbed by the committee members meeting with Seymour and that some members also had discussed the issue with Chancellor Arche R. Dykes.
Accommodations, goods, services and employment
for employees of the City of Albany
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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
ADVERTISING.MENTS
Found cards can be advertised FREE of charge for up to exceeding three days. These cards can be placed on person or computer and can be used the CUR business office at 864-1258.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Employment Opportunities
DEFEND YOUR INLAINABLE RIGHTS to life,
property, and liberty. Students for a Libertarian Society in the fall.
www.libertarian.org
FOR RENT
Students major in business, pre-med, pre-law,
and pre-english. Major in marketing. Make 1,800 per month. For interviews, contact Barbara at 1-800-752-4161.
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimuthus will be happy to help you. The master of the stage, Sipa, will look on as we unveil our new movie. We are so excited and we will be glad to give you all the details. Call us at 843-8590 HALL, 1800 Naimuthus Hall, 843-8590.
COOPERATIVE LIVING—an established student cooperative located within easy walking distance. Parks, rooms and balconies down Lawrence-Park room and balconies including utilities. Evenings 84-0481 or 84-3425
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NEW NEXT
RENTALS, furnished with carports and
unfurnished from $790. Two lofts are
available. Open 10am-5pm U.S. bus route:
INDOOR HEATED POOL APT. 315 Frontier Street, Next door to Runaway Hill's East.
SUNDANCE
NOW 'LEASING
All New & Contemporary
Visit our furnished display unit today &
you'll see why the move is to Sundance
Apartment. Complete furnished studio of
the converted location of 27th & Fonda,
just west of the Sanctuary on All Bus Route.
8415256-842340
8415255·842.4455
Summer sublease. Completely furnished. 2 BR, bath apartment. Swimming pool, sauna, carriage, playground. Fully equipped billboard table, tennis table and laundry facilities. Great for summer living. Call 841-9586 evening.
Christian Houghton Now and Summer. Close to
4:00. 9:00. 10:00. 842-658 between 2:00
5:00. Keep trying.
Apartments and room furnished, parking most rooms. KU and near lakes. Nose phones. Phone 843-2676-763
bundle to one bedroom, new modern Jur-
contra 834-1641 starting May 20-option
to contract 834-1641
Sublease for summer one bedroom apd. unfurnished house located 150m from campus distance to campus. Price negotiable. Call *86-22-7430*
Trailridge, amuner sublease, 3 Bidrm. 2 bath.
Luxury Townhouse, $340 mo. 841-8325 6-111
See the campus from 11th house adjacent.
The first story has a two bedroom, $200.00
Also 2 star room, townhouse $200.00
3rd floor guest suite, apartment $200.00
Luxury 3-bedroom, 3-bath townhouse, Posh
Location in desirable neighborhood.
Dishwasher, and more. Available to
buy by October 15th.
Apt. 2 BR and efficiency. Close to campus Utili-
paid. Clean, quiet, and comfortable. 300-764-8911.
Display to be submitted for J-Aug-15. Clause to
be furnished on J-Aug-16. Call Mark or Dave at
Rent $16 per month. CALL Mark or Dave at
Rent $16 per month.
Jayhawker TOWERS Apartments 1603 West 15th
1805 WEST 75TH
Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
Laundry Rooms
Much, Much More!
Come up and see our DISPLAV APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
**MARK A 1 II. A** Apartments new renting for summer apartments, 7.5BR, 12BR and 18BR. **MARK B** Luxury apartments, 7.9m walk to balconies, curtained balconies, off-street marketing
Sublease 1 BR Apt available May 1 Gas & Electric 1 BR Apt available May 1 Summer rates available MAY 31, 2017 Summer rates available JUNE 31, 2017
Snowmiser-bucket Furnished 2-bedroom Apt. 1275-0435 Northwest Boulevard, condition 814-922-6019
Two bathrooms
4-125
Summer Subluez Two bedroom AppleApp Or
2 person, AC swimming pool, $240, $432-$492
Summer Sublease 2 BFR, 1½ bath, unfurnished
room; monthly charge = $849.50
monthly charge = $819.50
4-12
LIVE IN LUXURY: need to submit beautiful 3
bedrooms, 2 bath apt. 2 balconies, fireplace-free
room. Call Caithe Havery. Water paid for
erect? Call Cahthe Havery or River
Bobman, 843-6231. Evenings: 843-5055 4-19
Perfect Summer sunday! $12.15 for 2 bedrooms
Perfect Summer sunday, repaced, roomset:
Call 841-3852, eventing.
1 bedroom, partially furnished apartment apart-
ment with a rear downflow $130-
Call Sandy, 841-724-5789
Contemporary efficiency studio. Measured through high-quality laboratory equipment, furniture, bathroom, and externally reasonable lighting. Work is on-site.
Apartment partially furnished; one bedroom;
apartments in nearby buildings; available
quiet apartment #82-0784 from
www.deliverycenter.com
SUMMER SUBLUESE Sundance Apartments, 2
202, $201 Bedroom furnished Available
202, $201 Bathroom furnished Available
Hell of a Deal-Hue one bedroom furnished
apartment Nice pool $180 utility $84
$260
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization Makes sense to make sense out of Western Civilization (ration 3) For exam preparation. *New Analysis* (ration 4). Cater, Mals Bookstore, or Oread Bookstore, if
Summer submarine with option for Fall, one bed. Raised panel door. Air conditioning, pool water paid. Close to ocean. Wheelchair access.
Sunbirds - sun glazes are our specialty. Non-
Sunbirds - sun glazes are our selection, essential
1921, 841-847-3021.
FOR SALE
Finder Mustang Basket Gather with straws, cords, and cords. Carefully wrap the cords and covers. Very good condition.
Recompute wanted to share house in country.
Roommate wanted to share house in KU, $80-$90.
utilities = 843-269 after
discounts.
1978. Tucson Celeste GT Liftback. Scoop. AM/FM
Music. Excellent condition. $700, 849-7140.
More excellent condition. $700, 849-7140.
Watch for truck on Sundays selling produce.
Foods, 5th & Illinois Also wood
crates.
Alternator starter and generator. Specialists
for alternators. **MOTIVE ELECTRICS**,
843-9600, 9360, W60, *61*. For
motor motors. **ELECTRICALS**,
843-9600, 9360, W60.
WATERED MATTRESSES $38.98 3 year warranty
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. 832-186 12ff
1966 GMC Van—automated interior-mirror to see in
at 1007 West St. Street after 5 p.m. —4-10
at 1007 West St. Street after 5 p.m. —4-10
Must sell gift, older mobile home, 2 bedrooms,
2 bathrooms, kitchen, living room, garage.
One carpat, carefully furnished $1000 will come.
All must be paid on time.
Fantastic Stereo Stereo System includes reciv-
eability, desk and new carpet and desk-
gallon, 841-6751.
Shares: CT-3000 computer controlled resale
Shares: CT-3000 computer controlled resale
$128,000 swrist receiver; sold $128,000
$45,000 swrist receiver; sold $45,000
15 PT. SLOOP w /rails & extras, fast & lively.
842-872.
4-12
1968 Ford Galaxie; excellent transportation.
dependable, air, PS, 6481-6480 after 5.
4-12
1979-400 en 4 aislese discarded with轴 Yamaha T550
et Yamaha T650. Ensemble only. 824-600库存于 3 和
4.
SAVE! on
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
$24.30
All with
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
THE BATTERY SHOP
842 2922
Haway 40 N. Lawrence
Actions from Labrador
Batteries 30
CANON EF body with case, $290 Lenses, FD 58mm f/2.8, ASPH. EF mount.
$175 Canon FD, with slide cover. $175 Canon FD, with slide cover.
73 Grand Prix in Good Condition, tup. 49
AM FM stereo. Call evening 824-0720
Gltane 10 speed bicycle—Like new Keith-841-
4206
SINEMILLA - SEELESS DE HEFAL SMOKED.
MILLENNIAL - SEELESS DE HEFAL SMOKED.
MULLEN LINE - FINE INGREDIENTS OF TRADITIONAL NAVIHOU SMOKING MINTURES $3.00
NAVIOUS LINE - FINE INGREDIENTS OF TRADITIONAL NAVIHOU SMOKING MINTURES $1.25
221T COTTONWAVE - ANZOZA #6288
TRANS-AM 1977, low tails, black w gold bird,
may options. Call 831-257-3237
4-12
Motorcycle: 1973 Yamaha 250, excellent condition.
841-660 after 250
4-12
74 Camara LT, V.8, air, 8p, p.-b. p., power, windows,
AM-FM FM 3, track $0.00, 640-529 5-109
Zsomm Lenx: 80-200 mm F.3.5, good condition.
930mm F7.2" #72 Call Dave H. (812) 842-7826
www.zsomm.com
We have Weibach CIV, cln. vnt., Mallia Bookshop,
711 W. Zirr. St. 842-7152
4-13
74 Monte Carlo-AT, PS, PB, AM Radio, AC
4-13
Lat 542-238 at 6 p.m.
Seize Walk-Logger Exerciser-brand new-
new used. $150 or trade for good quality.
$200 or better.
1912 Nearth AloS Sewing Machine Good condi-
tions, 842-5619. Call evening and
night services, 842-5619.
FENDER TWIN-ReVERB Amp. Good Condition 4-13 643-3422
Ladies' write watch outside of Union, Found Saiton Instrument Brand Call 865-7204 to identify it.
FOUND
EKOTIC JOBS! LOKE TAHOE, CALIFORNIA!
Little expense, fantastic uptake $1700-$4,000 annual
amounts. Travel includes meals, boat rentals,
ranches, cruisers, river rafts, & more.
Eq. Box 5029, Sacramento, California 95806.
Sacramento, California 95806
Position Announcement: Curriculum and instruction survey assistance needed to distribute materials to students. May 9 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and May 10 from 12 noon to 2 p.m. Must be currently enrolled in a previous above hours with another student. Apply at the location described in April 13, 1978. **4-13 Application deadline is April 13, 1978.**
HELP WANTED
A student assistant for female quadriplegic. Student needed for Monday afternoon and Wednesday morning, taking student to school (has own van), helping student with homework or 843-423 or 843-101 afternoons and weekends, 9:40-10:40.
The University Information Center is now open.
Please visit www.theu.edu on May 22 and Aug 19, 1979. Applications may be submitted by September 15, 1979 or April 13, 1979. The University of Kansas has an Opportunity-Affirmative Action Manager.
Cook's operations opening very soon for head cooks or girl kitchen. All around experience in preparing and serving meals. Must be able to read and follow special recipes and ideas for special presets. Full and part-time new idea employment. New person/service personality are absolute. Also needs to have a Bachelor's degree or equivalent at the Banacharye; 843-0540 for appointment. -11
Need some surrounding money? Wednesay, Old Faithful.
Need something to do for a new year? Wednesday, Old Faithful.
Need something to do for a new year? Monday, Old Faithful.
Films of 1972 and 1983 are on view.
OVENSKA JOBS - Summer-time round, Europe.
S. America, Australia, Asia. Etc. All Fields: E630
230% monthly. Expenses paid Sight seeing free.
CMA 8230. ILC. Box B2-RA. Cornei Del Mia
CA 8235.
Opening for part-time evening and weekend nurses aid for female quadriplegic in nursing home. Should be available by 9 a.m. Will train at Nursing Home, 81-452-4628, 81-452-4632, p.m. and 81-749-1943 on 3 a.m. Ask for Chair 4-118.
Fontain & Grill personnel Noon barry and
Stephen Krause in person at Vera's Flushing
W. 6th, 117
HELP WANTED FULL TIME. Some unruthen-
ed knowledge. Must be fluent and degree-
ed in English.
K. C. Star newspaper is looking for qualified writers who can do review of folk music, bluegrass and country music, as well as manual and content review to Sherlma Stefan Entertainer Edition, Kansas City Star, now located at 105 S. Fifth Avenue, NW.
SUMMER JOBS - Local agent for nationally web
sites (www.localweb.com) from August 18th to
April 4th, 2018. $25 per job, travel with us,
monthly. Need individuals who are not stranded
hard by fire. Call 603-779-5141 or A.K. Lowe's
lawyers, legal Empire Agency.
Portfolio secretary wanted. Must be well-suited to working with teams of 10 or more people. Bachelor's degree, salary equiv. Positions open for Bachuree in finance. Interested candidates apply online at careers@microsoft.com.
FIELD DEPT. OR OFFICE IHPL Project Follow-through. Through JOB TITLE: Designer. Designs outdoor billboards for job position: $244-$450 per hour. DUTIES: Design outdoor billboards, including layout and design of posterboards, outdoor billboards supporting layout and design of outdoor billboards. EQUIPMENTS 1. Enrolled student 2. Papermenets 3. PRESENTED BUT NOT BEQUIRED 1. Knowlved 2. Newspaper and on newspaper production crew 2. Newspaper and on newspaper production crew 3. Application PROCEDURE 1. Send William 216 Hawthorn Hall Include phone number on page graphics task to complete and return graphics task and return it when necessary CATIONS: April 18, IBM AN APPLIATIVE
FIELD DEP. OFF OF OFFICE HILP, Project Follow Through JOB TITLE: Photographer Graphic Designer (28) 306-251-3999, $35-$40 per hour FIELD DEP. OFF OF OFFICE HILP, project follow through and teachers in schools, and graphics for schools and pre-production. Graphic design for interfacing and preparing graphs, letterheads, bounces, and gateways and other graphics as needed QUIRIMENTS 1. Enrolled student 2. Photography on graphic design PREFERRED, NOT BUT REQUIRED by the program. and easier slide photography 2. Experience in letter and/or newspaper production and editing production 3. translate student APPLICATION for job with graphic design, and examples of graphic design photography
POSITION Research Assistant (DUTIES) Planning, conducting and evaluating dissemination, sharing and strategies of the Behavior Analyst position; levering these services to Projects across the behavioral sciences; providing technical agreements for these services, and freeing up other resources. SERVICES: QUALIFICATIONS Required: Master's degree in Psychology or related field; professional training in applied Behavior Analysis; good proficiency in Teaching experience; grant writing skills; experience with public relations and organizational skills; encouragement to apply APGENDING TITLE $750 to $1200 month depending on parent's availability. LINE 1 may be 1:29 a.m. to APPLE-Williams, Associate Director, Follow Through, Lawrence, Kensi 6004, AR FARMFEST AC COMPANY, Lawrence, Kensi 6004, AR FARMFEST AC COMPANY, Lawrence, Kensi 6004, AR FARMFEST AC COMPANY, Lawrence, Kensi 6004, AR FARMFEST AC COMPANY, Lawrence, Kensi 6004, AR FARMFEST AC COMPANY, Lawrence, Kensi 6004, AR FARMFEST AC COMPANY, Lawrence, Kensi 6004, AR FARMFEST AC COMPANY, Lawrence, Kensi 6004, AR FARMFEST AC COMPANY, Lawrence, Kensi 6004, AR FARMFEST A
Research Assistant-Pharmaceutical Chemistry (24 to full time). Minimum education of B.S. (14) required. Should have prior research laboratory experience and training in the fields of edulinary and instrumentation. Experience with ebsc. equipment required. Position available immediately for applicants who possess a post-mortem period upon experience and qualification in any of the following: Contact D; Thomas F; Pallon (713) 648-4099; Affirmative Action Employer 4-10
JOHN SMITH MEN WOMEN NAIVE BOYZ
SCHOOL DISTRICT BASED CITY OF NEW YORK
SALMONSON $25.00 - $35.00
SUNSHINE $45.00 - $65.00
WAVELAND $85.00 - $1,250
INFORMATION:
OFFICE: 518-788-5190
E-MAIL: john.smith@newyork.edu
Now laking aquifers for Foundation & Girlie
Gardens. Apply in person or via Web. Remainst
10% off.
"Want to spend this summer selling the Caribbean? The Passion Market Carving other party items. The Passion Market offers food, hotel and guest crown free information, merchandise and accessories 8523室. Suite 601, Hotel 77068. 4-11
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: Royal Prestige meals above average students paying an all or part of the rent. Fourth semester, $1,600 per month. For further info, name to Karen Hagan. Great Room: 12-29, 3-28, 4-30, 4-10
Britches College is our accepting applications
for summer and our summer help. Apply
Max. 4/12
Must:
LOS'T
Live, NU 10 and bid June, April 3, possibly in
Stress. Please call Suan Kiat, 86418. Reward
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Lost steel spring key ring with 3 keys in Wex-
4-9
3.729 Cork-814-8243
List 4.2 (1) 'gold' ring with small purple
lustre, half-ornamental value - REVIEW:
CARD 901 (3)
102.900 REWARD Thank you
40.800 women’s silver watch on March 5th, byh
103.900 women’s silver watch on March 5th, byh
103.900 women’s silver watch on March 5th, byh
Led at Blue Hite Bed, Red Bld. (c) 2014 with permission.
The author cannot be credited for any content of anything. No question asked about the use of this image.
MISCELLANEOUS
THISIS BINDING COPYING - The Home of
"Dick's"小型 Copy Center is headquarters for
them binding and copying in Lawrence, LA 142
for 358 MHz, or phone 932-3601. Thank you.
NOTICE
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PERSONAL
Join an instant staffed asset appraiser Customer
Assistants on the Board of Directive Electric
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REKKS HIRE SHOP is now open, 298 Balangay,
P.A. & Dale, Inc., and Catering facilities in stock.
For details visit http://reks.hire.shop.peakmedia.com/
FOX HILL, SURGERY CLINIC. Abortion up to 12 weeks. Fertility tests, Birth Control, Consulting. Tubal Ligation. For appointment call: 917-854-3000 (463) 400-3601 4601 Overland Park, Ks
DIABETIC GROUP
Warkers Memorial Hospital
Tuesday, April 10, 7:30 P M
Dr. Joseph Kyner, M.D. from KUMT
BARGAIN SPECIALS 4-6月 Mon, Tues, and Wed $25
10-3月 Mon, Tues, and Wed $30
MADISON BLAIR NIGHT Wed $199 per person
Guy Leblon Academy, referrals now handled through WXInfo. 864-356-003 or headquarters, 842-356-003.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortion up to
17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing. Birth Control.
Consulting. Total Lagomography. For appointment
20 hours. 422-356-4326, 400-1919,
No. Siverland Park, KS.
Handmade tin with wedding band. 1 ea net
price. Send us a note to the manufacturer
for $24 will be paid for it. If you have been looking
for tinware, this is your best choice!
EVERYONE'S
TAN MAN!
TAN MAN DAY IN MAY.
Watch the Personals for Details
—Dad
Wanted: Double partner for nine班 on White River in Missouri over Raft. Call 618-600-4927 or visit www.whiteriver.edu.
Yours is get to look back to see Home ECKANAR
Fargo Case 6. You can talk on calls and discover
your new home in a few minutes.
Apartment for rent. Private bath, walk-on closet, tarmac and carpeted floor, fully furnished with kitchen, breakfast room, covered floor, kitchen facilities available. Free Wi-Fi, so call 7 p.m., 822-300-6194, Ask for Basky.
HAPPY 21st BDAILY: MARRY BOSEBOW!
Alan Blank, Larry Larkin, Jackery Jerry,
Johnny Blac
OPERATION FRIENDSHIP Tongue at 7:00 Meeting at the Center, 629 W. I90. We offered a brief atmosphere, interesting conversation, and significant learnings with an international team. We have 4
Tam Mac. Who is his father? the boy who told him that he was getting set on the Texas coast. I am proud of getting on the Texas coast. I am proud of getting on the Texas coast.
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTOR M.A in math, patience, university professionals' experience (824-534). U.S.
Need help in math at CS? Get a tutor who can
help you with your math or CS problem.
841-4767
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with Alice at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 4 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 4 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at Mass.
REWRITING EDITION. Your manuscript, thesis or form paper edited into an effective, grammatical document. Bring your thinking with precision and smoothness. Outlining of texts and articles also available. Eyesight problems.
EXPERT TUTORS. MATH 000-123. call 844-372-7722
TUTORIALS FOR COMPUTER SCIENCE 100-200. COMPUTER SCIENCE 100-200.
RUESCHHOFF
LOCKSMITHS
Complete Lock & Key Services 843-2162
1015 W. 9th
Male model Arts & Design. Gates-Relyes-
Mon, Thurs., Fri.-P.O. Box 1025
4-30
Tried of learning yourself? Naimah Hall is offering for the first time over a boarding plan. We can advise how long week can be years if you choose this plan. Shop HALL 109 Naimah Driver. 843-8508 AMIBIF HALL 109 Naimah Driver. 843-8508
TYPEWITHER TUNE-UP. Have that SCM Electronically blocked earlet for those year-end sessions at Stirling's Offer Nystrom, 1009 Vermont. For details, call at breakfast or as a deadline at 4-11
Lawrence Open School Exciting Summer program
with faculty in art, music, crafts,
study and building. fine arts, organic gardening,
individual classes in Language Arts, Math, and Re-
search. For more information call 1-800-424-6590 or
1-800-642-8430 or slide code tuition. Call now
1-800-642-8430 or slide code tuition. Call now
Academic Internship The Learning Quizen School
Math and Reading Relief Call now 814-1600
Math, and Reading Relief Call now 814-1600
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 852-4476. t
---
Typist/Editor IBM PixeElite Quality work
Training dissertation welcome
842-919-9271
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980. lt
7 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Inspect树木, Law papers, term papers. Mm
mmmmmmmmmm
Experienced Typei II-term paper, thesis, mice, mice
and mice. Req.: Master's degree in
Computer Science, Spelling, spelling cem-
pany #413 9542, Mrs. Wiley
Experimented typed-themes, dissortations, term-
paring, and categorization selective, batch
46-311,雯雯. 8622190
Expanded typed-themes, dissortations, term-
paring, and categorization selective, batch
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Quality typing guaranteed- IBM Select Tern.
paper sheets, dissertation, msc. Carole Kornblatt
Now accepting term papers for quality typing.
Lyrn, 841-206. see 5.36.
If
Typing on Elite Computer Typewriter by exprel-
ment. Express Transport service. Proofreading. MA-
853. 845-737-1290
TYPING on 30,000 pages saved. Quality work.
Includes training or live or LinkedIn:
891-910. We to stay all for you.
You can also:
e-mail us at info@jobs.moe.com
Accurate, experienced typist—term paper, thesis,
essays, and reports. Availability: 9:00am-12:30pm
service per page. Per页率: 824/244.
TYPING: Over 30,000 pages served. Quality work.
Work on your resume or line of business.
- 1:40pm. We Team All For You.
Expert typing all kinds, over night service up, editing available. Up to 841-4723 for help.
1. do darned quick typing. 20 pp. & under.
night service. Call fathr. 843-6438. 5 p.m. 5-12.
Experienced typid - accurate, references. Profil-
dator. Instructs; Uses paper, mills, mice. Profil-
dage 422-5007.
Reports, dissertation resumes, legal form,
graphic edits, briefing correct selective. Call 812-737-6088.
812-737-6088
WANTED
Enthusiastic woman's softball team seeks qualifi-
cations. Call after 5 p.m. - 8:34am or 8481-6290 - 410
2 roommates wanted to share older home, for
enrichment and or for Full 8412.5 utilities - 442
822-5368
We need rooms accommodate at 1019 Maine starting startling 8am. We offer for bill or by phone or on stop at the hosts.
Monday, April 9, 1979
University Dally Kansan
Residents advised on room check
About 15 members of Joseph R. Pearson Hall met last night with representatives of the Student Senate to discuss options they could take in response to a spring-break
Rex Gardner, chairman of the Student Rights and Responsibilities Committee, told residents they could do nothing, file either an individual or a class-action suit against the University of Kansas or go before the University judicial board.
In a check March 10, Richard Frohl, resident director, and Bob Nugent, assistant resident director, entered student rooms to check for possible safety hazards. During that check, a list was made of rooms in the building, plants, alcohol and road signs were found.
The rights committee passed a resolution
March 29 status, that student privacy 49 were violated in the incident because notice
"What should you do?" Gardner asked the residents. "I can't tell you. In my heart I don't think Richard Frelik, Bob Nugent or the office of residential programs did this until now."
Gardner said a suit could be filed on the grounds of invasion of privacy or breach of
"IF YOU FEEL they did this with
the reason to go in and check people, you can
Julie Mahaffey, constituent services
"Or you can do nothing," he said. "The risk you run in not taking action is of it happening again, even if OPR says a policy will be drawn up."
director of the Senate, said, "It sets a precedent. If this is allowed to continue, it affects what happens to future students at KU."
Mahaffy said that she did not encourage residents to file suits but that the meeting had been held to inform them of the actions they could take.
No action was taken at the meeting.
"It's an important thing," she said. "You shouldn't just let it slide."
She argued the students at the meeting to discuss the options with other JRP teams.
Gardner originally had called the meeting for last Wednesday evening. Mahfouf said the meeting had been postponed to allow time for notIFYing residents.
No JRP staff members attended.
Artist...
From page one
title because he had to do more research, he said.
"You can spend almost a lifetime learning to make notebooks," he said.
HE SAID that after he read the magazine article, he checked out books about polyptopes from a library. He is now easily responding with a Canadian mathematician.
Although he sold a number of the figures three years ago, he said, the business is
"People don't ask for them as frequently as I would like it to be," he said. "Three years ago I made a good killing."
He said he sold some for $40 and others for 600. A 600-cell volvolets sale for about $40
A 600-cell polytope looks like a ball with many faces and has symmetrically arranged wires forming geometric figures inside the polytube.
He took some other slips of paper from his
pocket. They were covered with intricate drawings of polytopes.
He said he had made more money selling the drawings than selling polytopes.
ROAK MAKES polytopes from wooden sticks, bamboo or wire. A 600-cell polytype has 720 pieces of wire. The materials are glued or woven together to make the final object.
Roark knows many of the artists in the area and spends much of his time in coffee with them. He taught his students how he taught another Kansas City M, artist, Roger Williams, who welds art objects, to Roark.
Williams said that an artist could make polytopes without a background in mathematics, but that if he wanted to make difficult figures, geometry was needed.
"Vince is the geometry pusher for the area. You can start at any level making the
polypotes. I met Vince four years ago at an art show," Williams said.
He said Roark had asked him to try making polytopes from welding wire. Since that time, Williams has made a number of them using Roark's calculations.
Williams pointed to a bronze dragon in his apartment as an example of artwork he had welded before he met Roark. Then he used the molds he wired polyresists hanging from the ceiling.
ONE WAS a polytope in six dimensions, a precisely made geometric figure of welded
Thirty juniors initiated into 1979 Mortar Board
KU's Torch Chapter of Mortar Boaro initiated 30 members for the 1979-80 school year yesterday at the Chancellor's residence.
The group initiated only women until 1975, when its constitution was altered to allow men to become members.
Mortar Board also recently selected
Mortar Board is a national senior honorary group that recognizes students who are chosen by members are selected each year by outgoing members, and will elect one.
six KU professors as Outstanding
educators of 1979. These are the only
teaching awards handled entirely by
students.
The professors are: Robert Anderson, French and Italian; John T. Booker, French and Italian; Brower Burchell, physiology and cell biology; Coralela Price, classics; James Shortridge, chemistry and Henry O. Stone, microbiology.
They were chosen by members of Mortar Board from nominations that were open to all students.
Roark walked about Williams' apartment, pointing to a polyte in one corner and explaining about another he had built and already sold.
The judge also ruled admissible for the April 18 trial a piece of jewelry and two earrings.
The ruling by James Paddock, the district judge, came after nearly three hours of testimony presented in a hearing on two motions.
Judge approves motions
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Statements made by Charles Hunter, a Lawrence youth charged with several counts of sexual assault and residential burglary in the city, were given freely and voluntarily and can be used in court, and County district court judge ruled Friday.
Roark said that the polytopes could be used in architecture but that he had not worked with any architects. His plans include building a polytope in 10 dimensions.
Hunter, 16, 1234 Tennessee St., faces felony charges of eight counts of aggravated burglary, four counts of rape and two counts of attempted rage.
An appeal has been filed in the state Court of Appeals seeking to overturn a ruling ordering Hunter to be tried as an adult. The court rejected the appeal by judge of the Douglas County district court.
Eitwell ruled earlier that Hunter's juvenile status should be waived based on the seriousness of the charges and his previous contacts with juvenile authorities.
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Roark has no permanent address, but said he had "permanent residence in the Plaza area." He said one of his goals was to invent a pollycott.
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Asked whether he made polytypes because of the satisfaction he gained from building them, Rork examined one of his reactions and said, "Something like that."
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KANSAN On Campus
KU
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be available from 6 to 8 a.m. in the legal aid office in new Green Hall. The staff will provide help and will give the 1079 BAYLES MEMORIAL EDUCATION LECTURE at 7:30 in the Forum Room of the Union, AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL will meet at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. Wahs Hahl, Midwest coordinator for the group, will Norman Farm Room, and Inci Bashar Center will co-organize with a FACULTY RECITAL at 8 SWertheater Rectal Hall in Murphy Hall.
TODAY: There will be a PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM by R.C. Powell, Oklahoma State University, at 4:30 in 136 Malot Hall. The KU COMMITTEE ON SOUTH AFRICA meets at 5 in the International Room of the Kansas Union.
KU's 'Love for Three Oranges' enthralling, melodramatic farce
By PAMEKEY
Three 6-foot Sankist oranges were the impetus for a daring rescue from a giant cook and her even bigger soup spoon Friday night in the University Theatre.
The rescue was part of the amusing and well-staged opening performance of Sergei Prokofiev's operatic fantasy, "The Love for Three Oranges."
Reviewer
The opera employed a variety of fantasy cliche to produce a farce on the traditions of grand opera and on fantasy itself. The audience, it seemed, was not that professor of ensembles, and Mary-Kay Harris, instructor of speech and drama, was a lively performance that kept the audience chcking at the lyrics and at the stage. But the plot. Lawner also conducted the opera.
In the opera, the hypocondriac Prince of Clubs, who suffers from, among other things, mononucleosis, hallitosis and intellectual constipation, is cured when he laughs at the witch Fata Morgana. The insulted witch curses the princess to fall in love with her brother, who then on a series of absurd misadventures until he is united with his One True Love.
THE ABSURD NATURE of the opera allowed the performers to melodramatically exaggerate their acting as well as to display their vocal talents.
Richard Stitt, Lawrence graduate student, turned a skill performance as an actor into an artful act in the weak, whining voice of an invalid to the strong, purposeful voice of a man obsessed with death.
Review
The King of Clubs, performed by Larry
THE HILARIOUSLY unreal atmosphere of the opera would not have been so effective with the excellent set design by Gregory Hill, instructor of theatre, and costumes by Chez Haeh, associate professor of speech and drama.
-KANSAN-
Julian, Mountain Grove, Mo., graduate student, and the King's favorite, Pantail, performed by Mark Stingley, Salina senior, complimented each other in their several duets, although they occasionally were drowned out by the orchestra accompaniment. However, their individual performances well suited to the opera's comic lines.
Charles Foerschak, Kansas City, Kan., senior, was the best of the comedians as well. His role in "The Prince" to induce the Prince's laughter drew many chuckles from the audience but failed to get a laugh.
The setting of Nowhere was appropriately represented by playing cards and Roman arches suspended from the ceiling, which were flanked the stage for the Eclectics to watch the performance and to comment on its progress. The curtain resembled an imaginative Oriental-style painting of a human figure, and humans thrown as if in a dream.
SINSTER CHANCELLOR Leandro, played by Leonard McWilliams, Lawrence senior, coveted the throne and plotted to take over. He was guided by the Eccentrices, a group of performers who commented on the opera and intervened when the plot didn't move as they wanted it to, the audience missed in their eyes. They bowed at the conclusion of the performance.
Fleming, Overland Park junior. Harris choreography included many deliberate misuses that kept the audience in sittches when the dancers bumped into each other or couldn't quite keep their steps synchronized.
The best female performance in the opera was turned in by Lisa Claire Anderson, Evergreen, Col., freshman, who was the King's niece, Princess Clarissa. The sweetness and clarity of her voice combined with her excellent projection as acting would have been well-suited for a larger part in this male-dominated opera.
A fanciful element was provided throughout the performance by the dancing of co-director Harris; Kristian Kingman, Lawrence graduate student; and Demis
The King and members of his household were dressed in clothing showing their card suit-clubs. Witches, clowns devils and doctors made appearances in colorful attire. The uses of overgrown props with these costumes added to the fantasy atmosphere. The doctors, who pronounced that overgrown hypodermic needles, and the giant cook was accompanied by a soup spoon that was at least 7 feet long.
The combination of Prokofye's saint and an excellent production by the ensemble is unmistakable. Arts create a fantasy performance that is almost too good to miss. For those who missed the opening performances, "The Artist" will be given in a bill at p.m. Friday and Saturday.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN:
Police Beat
BURGLARY
—Compiled by David Edds
KU police reported a theft of more than $80 in case from a safe in the Murphy Hall Building.
POLice said it appeared that a key had been used to enter the room.
A prary bar was used to open the safe, police said.
Lawrence police said John J. Oehler, 2170 17:10 E. 24th Terrace, was injured on Saturday afternoon while working on an ammonium-based Traane Air Conditioning Co. 1290 8:28 St.
P police said Oehlert had been working on the machine, when apparently the earthmover's arm squeezed him against the machine's frame.
ACCIDENTAL SHOOTING
Ronald D. Hunt, 1900 W. 31st St., was treated at and released from Lawrence
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KU BAHAI CLUB
"To Live in Freedom" plus-
Will meet on Monday April 9 at 7:30
sua films
Film on Mid-East conflict:
presents
BAHAI FIRESIDE
"The History Book, v.8"
Discussion will follow films.
Tuesday, (4/19, 7:20 p.m.
Tuesday April 10 7:30 p.m.
ADM $1.00 Woodruff Aud.
- "Revolution Until Victory" has been cancelled.
*This has been rescheduled from April 12.
Police said Hunt had told them he was driving in the country southeast of Lawrence when he accidentally fired a shot. Police also reported that he had handed the weapon carelessly.
Memorial Hospital after he reportedly accidentally shot himself in leg Friday
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Pot Luck Dinner
The Women's Coalition presents an open
Tuesday, April 10, 6 pm
Attention Women
All women are invited to attend.
All women are invited to attend.
For location and information call 864-4934 or dren by the Women's Coalition office
or drop by the Women's Coalition office
A Student Senate funded organization
Todd Vanlaningham
former director of Gay Services of Kansas
will speak
Tues. April 10 7:30 PM
Kansas Union
sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas
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Funds for ASK approved
Staff Reporter
BvCAROL BEIER
The Student Senate renewed KU's membership in the Associated Students of Kansas lobbying organization last night in a meeting to protest from senators and non-senators.
The University became a member of ASK last fall under a provisional membership of $2,500. Membership for fiscal 1890 will cost $1.13 million, which is 25 cents of each hour.
Peter Griffith, Leawood senior, spoke in opposition to membership in ASK and referred to what he considered "stupid efforts to legalize marriana."
Griffith repeatedly asserted that ASK ignored the "issue that unites all KU students--getting the best possible education."
After another opponent of the bill implied that support of the decriminalization of marijuana, the 1979 legislative session, conflicted with the goals of higher education, Rex Gardner, Liberal Arts and Sciences got through finally—without marijuana?
SEVERAL OF THE EOLE to the bill said continued membership in ASK would strangle Concerned Students for Higher Education, a KU lobbying group.
Bob Tomlinson, education senator, said KU would lose its representation for issues specifically related to KU if ASK membership were continued. He referred to KU's lack of reaction to a Kansas House apportionment bill that divided student voters.
Another senator said ASK asked KU with other universities of less influence, thereby diminishing KU's own lobbying effectiveness.
THE SENATOR, Mark Goldman,
Nunemaker 1 senator, said, "As a group alone, we have a strong voice. We're joining a bunch of weaker colleges."
Etta Walker, holdover senator, agreed with Goldman.
"They need us more than we need them," Walker said.
Steve Young, journalism senator, agree that ASK needed KU for reasons of both prestige and finance, but he said that a KU would in no way weakened KU's representation.
"Anyone who tells you that we don't have common interests with other schools in this region," he said.
Young also said KU had assumed a dominant role in ASK, holding about one third of the voting positions in the organization's legislative assembly.
YOUNG SAID THE Senate's approval of continued membership did not necessitate the demise of CSHE but he questioned the group's effectiveness.
"I do not necessarily support two separate organizations," Young said. "I do think it’s important to me to be involved with interest solely to KU that it is important the Legislature is made aware of our needs."
Walker conceded that, because students were "stuck with" ASK, they probably would get involved to improve the organization.
"ASK has assumed in the past that
student issues are liberal issues," Walker said. "If we stuck with it, we're going to have to look for a better way."
SUPPORTERS OF THE BILL cited a passage in the by-laws of ASK that refers to an individual student's right to withdraw his or her school organization although his school is a member.
However, Claire McCurdy, Liberal Arts senator, said that opposition to the ASK had been overturned.
"I don't think the people that were here to speak against the bill realized that an individual's choice to withdraw his membership would not affect funding," McCurdy said.
The by-laws state: "If a student desires to be exempted from membership, he may do so by notifying his campus headquarters in writing that he does not want to be a member of ASK. However, such exemption is unlikely in no way affect any (tuned based upon students' needs)."
In other business, the Senate gave its final approval for funding of several student programs.
The organizations and their allocations were:
Blacks in Communication, $800; KJHK radio station, $9,157; University Daily Kansas, $73,260; Women in Communications, $250; Kansas Engineer Magazine, $309; recreation services capital improvements fund, $20,233; recreation facilities fund, $15,479; tramurals, $38,800; Cricket, $135; Fencing, $42; Frieture, $109; Hang Gliding, $145; Karate, $85; Rubygo, $679; Soccer, $790; Crew, $285; and Volleyball, $390.
ILLINOIS
Sleepy senator
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
Stacie Leslie, Belleville, Ill., freshman, found the Student Senate
budget hearings less than exiting last night. Leslie is a senator in the School of Fine Arts.
ku
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Tuesday April 10,1979
Lawrence, Kansas
The University of Kansas
Vol.89,No.128
Stephan's opinion on hall check expected
State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said yesterday that he expected an opinion within two weeks from Attorney General Robert Stephan on the legality of an unannounced safety inspection of student rooms in a KU residence hall.
Glover asked for the opinion after staff members at Joseph R. Pearson Hall enlisted in his effort to ensure a check for possible safety violations. During the check, a ladder made of rooms was found in the hall.
Rex Gardner, chairman of the Student Rights Committee of the Student Senate, said his committee had not been informed of the time of the last committee meeting.
against state officials. However, that bill will not be in effect until June 1, Glover
what they do is right and there is no cwr remedy, the abuses of power are liable to occur more often. Because of the act, officials will be a little gun-shy from now
"Students could sue under the act, but the point isn't to sure it's to point out to students what is wrong."
"I called Glover and he told me he had done it on his own, without a specific request by a student." "Gardner said."
The Kansas Legislature passed a court liability act this session that allows suits
Glover said the attorney general's ruling
The Student Rights Committee passed a resolution March 29 stating the room check was a violation of student privacy rights. That resolution will be considered by StudEx for possible consideration by the full Senate.
would not be based on the court liability act but on the contract signed by students living in residence halls.
"Students are safely vulnerable to this sort of thing during Christmas or spring break," he said.
AURH OKs residence hall ID sticker
A proposal to identity students who live in residence halls by placing stickers on their KU ID cards rather than issuing them separate cards was approved at last night's meeting of the Association of University Residence Halls.
The hall identification sticker would prevent non-hall residents from purchasing parking stickers for hall lots, using hall equipment and eating free meals, Chris Cline, chairman of the Services Committee, said last night.
Cline said there had been a "fragrant misuse of residence halls," and that hall residents "lose services they're paying for."
J. J. Wilson, director of housing, had suggested a separate card, Cline said, which would require the purchase of nine laminating machines at a total cost of $25,000; it did not include the cost of plastic pouches for the cards, printing and other materials.
THE COST OF stickers was estimated at about $1,000.
However, one possible problem with the first system would arise if the card were needed for another purpose after it had used to check out equipment, Cline said.
which the lots would have designated spaces for cars of various sizes.
each car size could be determined by requiring hall residents to fill out a form that would ask the size of their cars.
Solutions to the overcrowded parking situation were discussed.
Parking lots would be re-striped this summer.
Cline said Wilson suggested a plan in
Members of AURB also were concerned with the non-resident use of laundry equipment.
CLINE SAID that the cost of washers and dryers were inexpensive compared to off-campus laundries. Halls charge 35 cents to wash and dryers are free. Local laundermats cost 50 cents to wash and up to 25 cents to dry.
Eggs may hatch a warning
By DOUG WAHL
Staff Reporter
Experiments with chicken eggs by KU researchers must bring an insecticide to the lab.
The chicken eggs are being used by KU professors in a three-year research study of the deformative effects of inbreeding in the early development of the human embryo.
One of the researchers, Charles Wyttenbach, said last week, "We know insecticides are harmful to an older embryo. What I'm anticipating is that we'll find they will be more harmful on early development."
The other parts of the experiment, which began in January, are being conducted by Paul Kitos, professor of biochemistry and cell biology, and Edwin Uyeki and John Doul, professors of pharmacology at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Wyttenbach, professor of physiology and cell biology, will observe deformities in the structure of tissues and organs as his part of the four-pronounced experiment.
He said the effects of insecticides on less developed embryos were relatively low.
THEY RECEIVED a $300,000 grant from the National Institute of Health through the National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences.
Wyttenbach said the team would inject the eggs with insecticides after the eggs had been incubated.
According to Kitos, exposure to insecticides in common use, even in relatively small levels, could prove to be harmful to an embryo.
Kitos said, "These compounds are active at extremely low concentrations.
"ALTHOUGH THE HUMAN body has a system that tends to detoxify the insecticides, what you don't know is what hasn't shown up yet. There is a link to some kind of embryonic developmental change in smaller doses that could cause deformity."
Eaq driller
Staff photo by STEPHAN SPECTOR
Charles Wyttehenhack, professor of physiology and cell biology, demonstrates how to inject insecticides into an egg with a device
he helped design. He and three other professors at the University of Kansas use the machine to study the effects of insecticides on
Legislature finds some solutions
Staff Reporter
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Although a few fresh issues faced the Kansas Legislature this year, the session was highlighted by new solutions to old problems.
The elimination of the liquor pools in the state's nearly 1,000 private clubs and the first death penalty measure to reach the state's marks marked some high points of the session.
Although the liquor bill is limited to private clubs, and although patrons will pay a hefty 10 percent tax on all the liquor they buy, they don't have to know that some that liquor by the drink will be in law in KC.
The bill also ends yearly attempts by legislators to sidestep a provision in the Kansas Constitution that prohibits open saloons.
The path for the historic measure was cleared by an opinion released in February of 1974.
In his report, Stephan concluded that the open salon provision did not apply to him.
The House previously has passed a death penalty bill only to have it rejected by the Senate.
THE DEATH penalty bill was another first, only in a different way.
He fought for the confirmation of his appointees to the Kansas Board of Regents in January. And, although only two of the six officers were established himself early as a tough fighter.
Despite its drama, the session also proved to have its share of political skirmishes by the audience.
Passage of the bill was the first time in seven years that both houses had agreed on a bill to be passed.
Although still considered a freshman governor, John Carlin managed to make his presence known in the Republican-controlled Legislature.
AWARE OF the cost-conscious attitude that prevailed in the Legislature this year, Carlin offered a bare-bones budget that he termed "compassionate and conservative."
Continuing to establish his hold, Carlin won another battle in trying to make state government operate within a spending limit.
Although members of both houses worked diligently on a bill that would impose a 7 percent spending limit each year, Carlin finally said in the matter and vetoed the bill.
Raising objections that he had made continually, Carlin said the 7 percent lid failed to provide for future tax relief, allowed for future tax increases because of lower government reserve reserves and forced the Legislature to appropriate less for supplemental funding.
Carlin is expected to veto that bill as well, leaving Kavannas without a spending bid for Tucson.
IT WAS ONLY a partial victory, however,
because his counter proposal, a bill that
would establish a yearly spending limit, was
not approved. In those houses until it
resembled their original plan.
In other issues that confronted the Legislature, Carlin stunned many
KANSAN Analysis
legislators and constituents by his refusal earlier this year to endorse bills that removed the sales tax from groceries and utilities and by his recent veil of the death penalty. Both were issues in his election campaign.
HE ALSO had said that although he personally opposed the death penalty, he would sign any bill that reached his desk and met Constitutional requirements.
Carlin had attacked incumbent governor Robert C. Peninn on the utility issue saying he had done nothing to help Kansans who could not afford rising utility bills.
Carin made little attempt to explain either turnabout and merely said he had four years to fulfil promises made for him. But the judge changed his mind about the death penalty.
Both issues are sure to surface again in the next gubernatorial election.
The surprise discovery a month ago of nearly $100 million in excess tax collections generated much enthiasm among摩尔多邦 about how best to return it to the people.
AS THE END of the session neared, House and Senate leaders from both parties worked out a $79 million tax relief package to help them address budget cuts and elimination of the sales tax taxes.
Although the House approved the package, Senate members flatly rejected it. In its place, the Senate proposed its own $117.5 million plan for tax relief.
One of the proposals of the Senate package, the elimination of the sales tax on utilities, was passed by the House and sent to the governor. The other Senate proposals included the Clerk and Taxation Committee awaiting a three-day cleanup session that begins April 25.
Another political battle erupted in mid-session in the House about remapping of representatives districts. The Legislature is to redraw the districts every four years.
ALTHOUGH NEW boundaries for Senate districts were easily approved by both the Senate and the state Supreme Court, a similar situation in the House quickly became a skirmish between Democrats and Republicans.
An amendment offered by State Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, that would give a new measure to the Republican Party Republicans was hotly disputed by Lawrence Democrat representatives
Glover said that the amendment would disenfranchise KU students and appealed to House members to reject it. After much debate, the issue finally failed on a party-line vote.
Last-ditch appeals to the governor to veto the bill failed and Carlin, too, approved the new map. The bill will go before the Kansas Supreme Court April 18 for a hearing.
Although the session sometimes was marred by shaky relations between the new governor and the Legislature and their failure to agree on a spending lid and tax payment, the 1979 session probably will best be remembered for making liquor by the drink legal.
2
Tuesday, April 10, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services
Derailment evacuation ending
CRESTVIEW, Fla.—Thousands of Florida Panhandle residents, forced from their houses Sunday by toxic fumes billingowing on the area's latest chemical train derailment, awaited word yesterday on when they might be able to return.
About 4,500 people were evacuated from an 80-square-mile area surrounding the pileup and spent the night in temporary shelters. All were allowed to go home.
The evacuation came after 28 cars of a Louisville & Nashville freight train, almost all carrying toxic chemicals, tumbled off the rails Sunday west of
There was only one minor injury.
By midday yesterday most of the gas that had been in the damaged tank cars was expended. Officials said the spilled chemicals were acetone, carbalic acid,
A dermalment on the east side of Crestview last May prompted a smaller evacuation. Last year in Youngtown, about 75 miles away, eight people died in a car crash.
More killed in Islamic purge
TEHRAN, Iran—Iranian courts continued to exact their swift, methodical retribution from members of the old regime by executing six “enemies” of them.
Nineteen persons have been executed since Thursday, when the secret
teachers recanted their work after a three-week suspension.
Besides the six, unconfirmed reports said four policemen were executed in the city of Bebbahan.
Islamic militiamen, meanwhile, continued to hunt down 152 persons on a list of wanted persons issued by the revolution regime.
Executed early yesterday, before a firing squad, were a former air force commander, a former labor minister, a former section chief under the army
More than 5,000 people are thought to be in Iran jails as a result of the revolutionary purge, many apparently awaiting trials before the revolutionary junta.
Pope affirms priestly celibacy
VATICAN CITY—Pope John Paul II yesterday upheld mediate celiacy for Roman Catholic priests, taking a tough stance against those seeking
The pope issued the reaffirmation of the 1,500-year-old ban on priests marriage in a pastoral letter to all priests of the church and in a separate letter to bishops.
"Since the priesthood is given to us so that we can unceasingly serve others after the example of Christ the Lord, the priesthood cannot be renounced because of the difficulties that we meet and the sacrifices asked of us," he wrote.
The pope issued the letters for the Holy Thursday celebration this week.
Amin troops attempt invasion
NAIROBI, Kenya—Ugandan troops loyal to Idi Amin took new positions east of Kampala after Tanzanian forces showed a last-ditch Ugandan victory.
Exile tests said Ugandan reinforcements launched an assault against the invaders during the weekend on the road to the Entebbe airport.
Amin is reported to be set up new headquarters at Jinja, 50 miles east of Kampala, the capital, and he is said to have made several forays into the city.
Meanwhile, sources said Amin's government announced the execution of four "foreign mercenaries." The victims were thought to have been two West German and two Swedish journalists who tried to enter Uganda by boat across Lake Victoria.
One refuge from the fighting, John Payne, a British civil engineer, said he expected Amni to make a last stand at Nijia in the next five days. But, he said.
10.000 reported slain in Chad
PARIS-Marauding tribal gangs in south Chad, inided in some cases by mutinous troops and police, have killed at least 10,000 people in the last month according to reports reaching Paris yesterday from missionaries in the capital of N'Djamena.
Reports from Jesuit missions said 9,000 to 10,000 people—mostly Moslems—were murdered in the first two weeks of March.
Sources at the missionary headquarters in N'Djamaa took the tribal and religious slaughter on Friday after several weeks of calm.
The religious violence follows civil war in Chad between forces loyal to former President Felix Malloum and various Moslem factions.
Malloum, a southern Christian, was replaced by Gookouri Ouedddei, tribal chief of the street Islamic Tribe on northern Chad.
Nuclear plant not tornado-proof
OKLAHOMA CITY — The storage vault of the Kerr-Meck Gnee plant was not designed to withstand a tornado, the plant's first manager testified
Bill Utage, one of the engineers who designed the plant and its first manager, testified for the defense in the $1.15 million plutonium contamination trial of
Utage said the plant would be able to withstand strong winds, but not a direct hit by a tornado.
Plaintiff's witnesses testified that the allotted time during a tornado alert was not enough to store all the plant's radioactive material in the vault.
Silkwel's survivors brought the negligence suit against Kerr-McGee in connection with her contamination by plutonium.
Kahn lists guideline alternatives
WASHINGTON—If President Carter's voluntary anti-inflation efforts fail, it could lead to mandatory control or a recession, Carter's chief inflation fighter
Alfred F. Kahn, chairman of the Council on Wage and Price Stability, told labor leaders at an ALI-CIO rally that the alternatives to Carter's wage and benefit plan are "not a good idea."
But, he added. "An honest person has to admit that if this voluntary program doesn't work, we may get one or another of those alternatives, whether we like it."
License law could save money
TOPEKA-Legislation signed into law Friday by Gov. John Carlin that would require color photographs on Kansas driver's licenses is expected to save the state about $60,000 annually in administrative expenses, a state official said yesterday.
John Bottenberg, director of the state motor vehicle division, said the savings would result from a reduction in paperwork required when people applied by car companies.
The new law goes into effect July 1.
Correction . . .
A headline on page 6 of 8 yesterday *Kansas incorrectly stated that a Douglas County District Court judge approved a motion to suppress statements given by a 16-year-old Lawrence youth after his arrest in connection with several sexual assaults.*
The judge denied the motions by the youth.
Weather
WEDNESDAY EVENING SERIES
Today's skies will be cloudy and there is a chance of rain today and tonight, according to the National Weather Service. It will rain today and tem- perature will reach 70 degrees.
Museum of Natural History
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The Role of Cholesterol in Malignancy by Dr. Harry Chen Jackson laboratory Bar Harbor, Maine (sponsored by KU Biochemistry Club) 2:30 p.m. Thurs 9-12
Rm.610 Haworth
sua films
"To Live in Freedom" plus-
presents Film on Mid-East conflict:
"The History Book, v.8" Discussion will follow films. Tuesday April 10 7:30 p.m. ADM $1.00 Woodruff Aud.
- "Revolution Until Victory" has been cancelled.
* This has been rescheduled from April 12.
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Tuesday, April 17 7:00 pm
SCHOLASTIC CLASSROOM
MAKE SURE YOUR VACATION DOESN'T TAKE OFF WITHOUT YOU.
There's nothing lonelier than being left behind at vacation time.
That's why we've got Continental Reps right on campus. Our travel specialists fill you in on schedules, discount airfares, tours and routes. And save you from calling all over town to get the right flight at the right price.
whether you're heading home or off to that special vacation, talk to your Campus Rep. Ask about our "Let Yourself Go" charge card too. We'll show you the best way for your vacation to take off. With you there to enjoy it.
Your Campus Rep is Melanie Zollars (913) 843-7874
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Tuesday, April 10. 1979
6.28
Tigers dump Royals
KANSAS CITY (UTY)—Ron LeFlore drives in four runs with a double and single last night to lift the Detroit Tigers to a 7-3 triumph over the previously unbeaten Kansas City Royals behind the combined pitching of Mitkox Wilcox and John Hiller.
The Tigers were trailing 2-1 in the seventh when LeFiore, who had gone hilted in seven previous at-bats this season and at bats with Alta, Pia Markowski and Trammelli, who had both singled.
Lefore added a two-run single in a four-
run ninth as Detroit handed Rich Gale
his first win.
DETROIT WENT Ahead 1-4 in the fourth on a triple走 Kemp and a sacrifice飞 by Bankowski. Kansas City later took the lead with a pair of runs in the sixth on an RBI double by Pete LaCock and—and after Wilcox consecutive walks to load the bases—a go-head sacrifice fly by Frank White.
Softball team rained out in finals
The KU women's softball team made it to the final round of the Southwest Missouri State Tournament in Springfield last fall before the entire tournament was raided out.
University, 5-0 in the second round before losing to Texas Women's University, 40.
KU qualified for the six-tteam final round but the meet was canceled Sunday. Therefore, KU finished fourth in the tournament.
UK blacked Tarkio College, 8-0 in the round and defeated Oklahoma State.
KU's next game is Thursday at Emporia State University.
Rugby team loses in Big Eight finals
The KU rugby club advanced to the finals of the Big Eight Rugby Tournament last week in Norman, Oka, and lost to a powerful Oklahoma team, 24-1.
"We were in the finals against Oklahoma like I thought we would be," Boyle said, "we just had a bad day."
According to the club's presiding officer, Bill Boyle, the squaw was a bit disappointed with its play in the finals. The winner of YOU was to present stiff competition.
KU had advanced to the final by defeating Oklahoma State University in the first round, 22-8, and The Rows in the semifinals, 12-4. The Rows, a team from an area near the place of Iowa State, which failed to show up for the competition.
The ruggers' next game will be Saturday at home against the Kansas City Blues.
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The Kansas baseball team split a doubleheader with the University of Colorado yesterday afternoon in Boulder, bringing KU's Big Eight record to 2-2. KU took the opener 11-0 and CU won the second game 5-3.
Steve Jeltz, sophomore second baseman, starred for the Jayhawks in the first game with a three-run home run in the fourth inning, a bung single in the sixth and a solo homer in the seventh. The home runs were the first of Jeltz's collegiate career.
University Daily Kansan
KU splits twin bill
Kansas... 210 403 - 1 - 11 - cr ... 4
Colorado... 000 000 - 0 - 4
St. Clair and Dekalb; Larkin; Lembeh; W. Waverly
W. W-Strich (B-34) L.-Strich (A-1); H-Jer-12
2, KU
On Campus
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansas 400 107 1 3 1
Michigan 400 92 1 3 1
Wisconsin 400 92 1 3 1
West Virginia 395 86 1 3 1
Worcester 395 86 1 3 1
*Pick a team.*
TODAY: THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY meets at 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. MICHAEL HIGGINS, professor of anthropology, University of Northern Kentucky, doing Anthropology as a Radical Activity," at 4 in the Walnut Room of the Union.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be available from 6 to 8 in the legal aid office in new Green Hall. M.A.S., GNSW, professor of anthropology, University of Minnesota, will speak on "Marxist Approaches in Anthropology" at 7 in 17 Fraser. Phyllis Brill, soprane and Antonio Perez, baritone, will perform at 8 in Raventhal Court in Murray Hall.
TOMORROW: WEDNESDAY FORUM will present Charles Gallagher, American
Universities Field Staff, at 11:45 a.m. in the EMC Center, 1204 Oread, MICHAEL HIGGINS, professor of anthropology, University of Northern Colorado, will speak about "A Nurse's Clinic in Salt Lake," at 4 P.M., Kawan Room of the Union, KU SAILING CENTER, and C of the Union, EAST ASIAN EMIS SERIES will present "Red Beard" at 1 Dyne Auditorium, KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 7:38 in 173 Robinson.
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KU India Club Presents:
a night of
Classical Dance of India
featuring:
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with Vocal solo by Bahrat Trivedi Instrumental music by Krishna & Menon
April 14 7:00 pm Hoch Auditorium
$1^{00} KU students
$1^{50} General public
tickets at SUA
and at door
For further information call 864-3477
MARIE GALLEMAND
Partially funded by International Club, Student Activity Fee, and SUA
IN ASSOCIATION WITH NE & MARTIN WOLFF PRESENT
SUA
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Doobie Brothers
WITH SPECIAL GUEST Jay Ferguson
THE CABEZONES
FRIDAY,APRIL27 8:00 PM ALLEN FIELD HOUSE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS,LAWRENCE
GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE CLOSE TO STAGE:
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TICKETS AVAILABLE IN LAWRENCE AT SUA BOX OFFICE AND KIEFS, KANSAS CITY AT ALL CAPITOL TICKET OUTLETS,
CAPER'S CORNER, CHOOSEY BEGGAR, 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 DOOBIE BROTHERS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
APRIL 10, 1979
Park solution closer
After years of bitter feeding, there is new hope that supporters and opponents of a Tallgrass Prairie National Park in Kansas finally will be able to agree on a general proposal for the park.
REP. LARRY Winn Jr., R-Kan, who is sponsoring the legislation, hopes that the new bill can eliminate the opposition to the park from Flint Hills landowners by simultaneously
The new proposal would allow land to be passed down from one family generation to another. But once land goes on the open market, the federal government would have the first chance to purchase it.
That proposal, which will be submitted to Congress later this year, would remove the process of condemnation as a means of acquiring land for the park. That method has been at the core of much of the opposition to the park.
preserving both the tallgrass prairie and the way of life in the Flint Hills.
Of course, there are problems with Winn's approach. By waiting until the land is for sale, the park may be overgrown. Winn said it could even be 100 years.
But the alternative--booting land-owners from land that has been in their family for generations—is not a pleasant one.
CONSIDERING the heated battles that have been precipitated by mention of a prairie park, it appears that Winn might be on what one observer called a "soft road to conservation." And most anyone can tell us that reason and understanding, rather than anger and force, will get the best results.
And if the new proposal is good enough to preserve the prairie land and bring a tallgrass park to Kansas without disenfranchising the landowners, it will be worth the wait, whether that wait is for 10 years or 100.
Dick Clark was considered in November 1978, after his first term in office, to be one of the most effective liberal senators to enter the U.S. Congress for some time. He was a strong supporter of the rights of his own Democratic party, but also by Republicans.
Interest groups block representation
Indeed, Clark's positions on an overwhelming number of issues were supported by voters in his home state of Iowa when they went to the polls last November. But Clark last week issued a statement on one issue—abortion laws. One issue defended him.
Clark's early death in the political arena has, unfortunately, become an ever-increasing occurrence. And the reason for the demise of many young politicians is their desire to become the pawns of single-issue, special interest groups.
A NUMBER of people have warned for years about this new phenomenon of the "special interest state," which was brought about primarily by the decline of political parties. In a special interest state, the enormous power of special interest groups to control public policy in their own interests less interest provides national solutions to national problems.
With an abundance of special interest groups, the ability of the citizen to be represented and served by our political system dwindles—and does so rapidly. This is an alarming trend in a country that has prided itself on its ability to maintain its citizens and to strive for a higher national purpose, instead of only the most powerful and working for their purposes.
The driving force behind these groups is money—and lots of it. Interest group contributors admit proudly that they are making a political investment. That explains why such a large percentage of the political contributions go to congressional incumbents, who are fully aware of the ramifications of accepting large sums of money.
THE DEPENDENCE of many politicians on these contributors has left them indebted to a small number of other public officials.
Mary
Ernst
---
unresponsive to a larger number. In fact, the power of special interest groups may be so dominant that the popular sentiment of the people is not only ignored, but trampled upon.
One example is the consistent and overwhelming support of handgun registration and regulation by Americans, as shown in Table 13.2. The laws decades. Yet despite this obvious concern, the gun lobby, led by the extremely powerful National Rifle Association, has not stopped the assaults.
The American Medical Association is another group that, although small in size when compared to the 210 million U.S. citizens, wields tremendous clout. The AMA led the list of interest group givers to congressional campaigns in 1974 and 1976—more than $3 billion was given to House and Senate candidates in that period.
THE AMA and hospital groups oppose legislation that would place a "cap" on the annual rise in the cost of hospitalization, a move that is supported by a majority of physicians. The cap is proposed through time getting through the vital House Ways and Means health subcommittee. The reason may be found in the correspondence to the eight members of that subcommittee in 1974 and 1975.
When the clout of American political parties began to decline in the 1950s and 1980s, something was bound to fail. However, special interest groups do not adequately fill it. They do not begin to serve the interests of the large numbers of citizens that the parties served in their prime.
Somewhat else, then, is obviously needed. And something else, in fact, does exist—the citizen action group.
THE PRIME example of a citizen action group is Common Cause, which has been the primary force behind the implementation of public financing of presidential candidates and the public financing of congressional races, among other things.
However, Common Cause and the public face an uphill battle in that area.
Common Cause has been credited, even by its critics, with increased reform in both state and federal government. A much desired, but still not achieved, part of that reform is the decrease of the influence of special interest groups by the establishment of public financing laws for congressional campaigns.
Jack Germand, a Washington columnist, warns, "As the special interest contributions increase in geometric proportions, it will become increasingly difficult for incumbents to turn off the tap. A committee chairman who is going to more as a campaign not 'for his reelection bid is likely to give it difficulty to generate much enthusiasm for reform."
YET DESPITE that fact, Common Cause continues fighting. and it does so on a variety of reissue issues.
its success in issues such as public financing of presidential campaigns, House and Senate committee reform, open meeting rules in Congress and new ethics policies, and Senate and Senate has been praised by both critics and supporters.
As the special interest groups tighten their grip on members of Congress, we should look for some sort of alternative—for something that will strive more for a higher national purpose than for a selfish purpose.
Common Cause and other citizen action groups may be the right answer. At the very least, they are the best alternative to often ineffective political parties and self-oriented special interest groups.
Law to spare rod can spoil families
From one of the most liberated and socially inventive countries of the world comes an innovation—no spanking.
Starting July 1, parents in Sweden may not strike their children or treat them in any other humiliating way. This isn't a child-abuse statute, because the mistreatment of children is covered under the offense. Rather, it is a law against the spank. Spanking is now out.
"It is a totally absurd, totally ridiculous law, the kind of thing that means nothing and cannot be interpreted or enforced," said Alicer Kerdik, one of those who voted against it. The father of men to go on administering his own family of justice.
But Bertil Ekdahl, a magistrate who wrote the law and its appendix feels differently. He says the new law is based on commission hearings in which expert testimony "showed overwhelming that children just do not respond when they are hit or threatened." He added, "Their reaction is the opposite. They think in terms of revenge, and they can live in fear."
INTERESTINGLY, the law does not suggest punishment for offenders, on the assumption, according to Ekdahl, that complaints would be handled by the police and social workers, with referrals to family courts.
"We have tried to make it clear that this is a pedagogic law," said Sten Lindberg, a Ministry of Justice spokesman. "We hope to use the law to change attitudes. If we launched a bag campaign on climate change in our year. But the law stays, and it enters the public consciousness."
Will hirdes of young, glassy-eyed children with tales of horror line up at police stations and social service offices to complain about their parents? Will the other children of the world, when they are taught the new Swedish measure, plead to their elders to do the same?
THE LIEKLHOOD of either of the two scenarios occurring is, at best, extremely unlikely. But the ramifications of the new measure do pose some interesting questions that must be dealt with.
Vernon Smith
Vernon Smith
---
As Lindberg stated, one of the purposes of the law is to increase the level of consciousness in parent-child relationships. With the high rate of child abuse cases reported in this country, parents need for some consciousness raising becomes more apparent.
But by allowing the government to make it as unlawful for parents to hit their own children, a dangerous precedent may be created.
if a government can be given the authority to tell parents that they cannot hit their own children, it doesn't seem at all unlikely that they will be telling them other things—such as what to feed and how to cloth their children.
Essentially by legislating appropriate behavior for the parent and the child, the natural bond between the two is threatened
Of course, there were times when I felt afraid and even hated my parents for punishing me. But the hate and fear I felt were usually short-lived, for my parents had a way of explaining their action once it was over.
HAVING BEEN reared under the "spare the rod, spoil the child" philosophy, I can say unequivocally that in the days of my youth I had no idea of what I was doing.
Perhaps I'm a bit old-fashioned in this regard, but an occasional swat, coupled with some love and understanding, can do a lot.
But, in retrospect, I feel that those brief moments of pain, when strap and flesh come together in a harmonious clap, were all part of the process.
MARTIN IN
the DUNNY
MAPFAN
MASSACHUSETTS
THIS AREA
CONDEMNED
BY
MEGA MALL
INC.
CLEVELAND, OHIO
Minority transition foremost priority
To the editor:
The editorial page of March 28 was a most interesting collection of ideas. Jonathan Kozol addressed functional illiteracy among adults. He advocates a 5-million volunteer program to teach 23 to 30 million others enough English for them to cope with the challenges of examples of Brazil, Cuba and Israel are presented to prove that such a scheme is practical.
Phil Garcia highlighted "Latin Week" and cited several statistics to demonstrate the significance of the Latino population in the United States. "The Latinos still hold firm to their religion and family," and "". Latinos no doubt will add to the country's vitality", and following some dismal education statistics, the government is considering for the advancement of America's latinos."
These two authors recognize the correct problem—any advancement or success in this society will be measured by the standards of the White Anglo Saxon Protestant Church, and the judges also will be WASFs. The editorial author Jordan insured this work in their lead editorial.
I can appreciate the desire of the editorial staff (and many other well-intentioned people) to the transition from a child's perspective to an adult's. The society made as easy as possible. The ease
Proficiency in English is the only hope of a minority-language student. The options are exploitation by those who are bilingual and unfamiliar with the language of the family home or the shetto streets.
KANSAN letters
of the transition, however, must be second priority. First priority is that the transition must be made. Have we learned nothing linguistically divided neighbor Canada?
There are unoubtedly many things that teachers and school district administrators must consider when children into our society. The catch words "bilingual" and "multicultural" will only grow more important as they mature.
The children involved are on a one-way street to their future. It is neither fair nor benign for them to learn about the realities of our society by using mirrors of their language or reflections of their
Lawrence graduate student
M. B. Kimbrough
The members of the KU Committee on South Africa were shocked that during ourally recently the University administration's police were allowed to set up an observation post in the Chancellor's office. The very presence of an anonymous
To the editor:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(UPSP 60-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and holidays during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday weekends. Purchases may be made by delivery or postal快递 $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 a year county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, passed through the student activity menu.
Monitoring restricts freedom of speech
Above all, a university is supposed to foster the free interplay of ideas. We hope and presume that in the future, Chancellor Schultz will urge the institution obligation to protect the democratic expression of students, faculty members and campus workers. At future rallies (and we may well have more) we expect there will be an important display of intentionally chilling camerawork.
We were not informed that the rally would be videotaped. Consequently we had no idea who was behind the camera, why they were behind the camera, or what was going to be done with the film. Surely the University realized the inhibiting effect that has on us and we are required to speak. We have many foreign students on this campus who quite rightly fear for their safety and for the safety of their families. We have many American students who do not want their names entered on secret police dossiers. What if the FBI or any other agency were able to record of campus protests? Would the Chancellor's office be open to them as well?
Further, it is disturbing to be treated as criminals or potential criminals. All of the people at the rally were lawfully and peacefully assembling to engage in a constitutionally protected activity. Why not have police cameras mounted all over the city, never know when some abberant individual will commit a criminal act. Why not have the entire University community under constant police surveillance?
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Halt. 101
University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60045
The KU Committee on South Africa
Managing Editor Direk Steimel
Editor
Harry Massey
police camera monitoring people engaged in lawful activities is deeply disturbing.
General Manager Riek Musser
Business Manager
Karen Wenderott
Editorial Editor
John Whitesider
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
To the editor:
Paranoia too evident in KU leadership
May I add a few comments in amplification of Laurie Wokley's excellent coverage of the anti-apartheid rally held before Strong Hall last Friday?
Kenneth Brouhard, who voiced blue-cou-
s support for the campaign to end University
support of American investment in con-
stitutionally racist South Africa. is identified in the Kansas report as "a former steamfitter for KU's facilities operations." In fact, until last month Kenny Brouhard had worked 17 years as a KU steamfitter, and had received consistently laudatory fitness reports all those years.
More accurately, Kenny Brouhard is the leader and one of the founding members of the union representing KU's blue-collar workforce against discrimination is voiced against background of his own experience fighting the KU administration's efforts to break that union. Himself a near-fatal victim of labor action, Kenny has a constant defender of the workers against favoritism, harassment and exploitation. Kenny has engendered in the bosses at Facilities Operations and at Strong Hall a collection of what they call "personal differences."
Once one understands how the KU administration's union-busting tactics are akin to the legalized prohibitions against black workers in South Africa, one also understands both blue-collar concern for other oppressed persons and the KU administration's firm resistance to dissent from its announced and unannounced policies.
In similar manner, the University's concern to ensure that the rally in question remained peaceful was implemented by videotaping the actions of participants. It is a consummate irony that the video camera was installed in the window of the building where the person who ought to have advised the administration of the impropriety of that invasion of privacy and of the fraudulent nature of the claim that taking someone's picture will prevent him from doing violence. Everyone should understand that surveillance of this sort is a form of threat. It is a warning to those that they are watching. The University Attorney watching. Why are they watching? Whom are they watching?
Do they watch pep rallies "for problems like shoveling or other disturbances?" Are they just watching back because we are watching them?
Carl Leban
associate professor of East Arian Studies East Asian studies
Full access frivolous to handicapped
By SAM SCHRAEGER N.Y. Times Feature
ASBURY PARK, N.J. - Between 1963 and 1985, I was city editor of a small daily paper in nearby Long Branch and, whenever the rear door was unlocked, I dirtied, creaked freight elevator to the third floor, when the newsroom was located.
So did a reporter with cardiovascular problems. I wear leg braces because I had palo in childhood. The reporter and I were grateful when we didn't have to climb the steep stairway at the front of the newspaper building.
On a recent television news show, a young man in a wheelchair said that his rights were being violated because he had to use a ramp at the rear of a New York City office building to visit a state agency.
Certain representatives of hand-dicapped veterans and other physically impaired people object to van service. The committee has recognized the disabled from the rest of society.
What difference should it make to me or any other disabled person that we enter a building through the rear or the side rather than the front—as long as we
THEY CONSIDER the lower cost of such service, as compared to making virtually all transportation accessible to those who need it most in importance. They even discount the greater convenience and the increased mobility it would provide as negligible.
what's the use? They're never going to be satisfied!"
a perplexed audience. Just as significant elements of the public and private arenas of power, such as the needs of the disabled, a few handicapped people and some who purport to speak for many of them are not perceived by the audience and stridency of irrelevant demands.
An ever-growing concern should be that those working to remove barriers to access and travel will throw up their hands some day and say, in effect: "Oh
If a van gets to my job, my doctor's appointment or to some other engagement on time, why should I be upset because my fellow passengers have been in the hospital on society's Short trips—car, bus, subway or van—are rarely social occasions.
THOSE WHO speak for the disabled should apply the pressure where there are needs:
On the airlines, to make air travel more convenient and comfortable for the handcapped because it is impractical to provide parallel service for them.
On hotel, motel and apartment house operators to provide quarters the handicapped find accessible and livable.
on employers, public and private, to make work opportunities available to qualified handicapped people and to pay them on an equal basis with the able-
Every person -disabled or not - deserves an opportunity to earn a living through meaningful work. All handicapped people should be able to freely in and out buildings and through comfortable and pleasant modes of transport.
However, badgering the owners of buildings about the location of access to the building is not a good idea; every subway station and every bus be usable by any disabled person. To insist on the unimportant, despite price incentives, the city today can afford, to a court defeat.
Sam Schraeger, a former assistant city editor of The World-Telegram and Sun, writes about the disabled for The Asbury Park Press.
Tuesday, April 10, 1979
Puerto Rican drama opens tomorrow
University Daily Kansan
5
Set in San Juan, Puerto Rico, the drama tells of three sisters in the midst of their country's struggle for identity. The jealousy, greed and hatred among the sisters is revealed through the conversation of one sister, Emilia, with an imaginary
A contemporary drama of poverty and isolation will be presented tomorrow night when Rene Marques "The Fanlight's" performs in the William Inge Theatre in Durham Hall.
The play, written in 1958, is a mirror of Marques' conception of Puerto Rico at that time. Marques, a native of Puerto Rico, uses lights and sounds to enhance the drama.
The KU production is directed by Luis Antonio Gaujan, San Juan, Puerto Rico, graduate student. The show has a cast of three women, Sarah Hendrick, Tuscson, Artz.
April 17 to 21 in the Ingle Theatre. Tickets for the production are on sale at the Murphy Hall box office. All seats are general admission. Children will be admitted free with a KUID.
Commission to pick mayor
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
A new mayor will be chosen and newly elected commissioners Marci Francisco and Robet Schumann will be officially seated in the meeting of the Lawrence City Commission.
Traditionally, the commission annually elects as mayor a commissioner who is serving a four-year term and has received number of votes in the general election.
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Donald Bims, the present mayor, has served a one-year term as mayor. The office is now expected to pass to Barkley Clark, vice mayor, who received the next highest number of votes in the city commission election two years ago.
Francisco and Schumm will take their oath of office and out-going commissioners Jack Rose and Marine Argerius will be presented keys to the city by the new mayor.
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We are proud to offer $100 custom logo design and $400 custom logo design. Call us at (800) 261-9211.
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CLASSIFICATION OF MIDL INITIATION AND JARING
ASSEMBLY. CLASSIFICATION OF MIDL INITIATION AND JARING ASSEMBLY.
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
one two three four five
times times times times
15 words or
fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
01 02 03 04
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
Apt. 2 HR and efficiency. Close to campus. Utilize clean, quiet, and comfortable. 843-791-0561.
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 items can be placed in person or contacted via the UD business office at 843-1553.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Employment Opportunities
DEFINE YOUR INVALIDABLE ROOTS to include
the following files:
* StudioFor a virtual machine in the right
folder for the application (e.g., StudioFinder).
Students majoring in business, pre-grad, pre-low,
pre-high, post-grad. Major make 1097 per month. For interview
requests call (212) 435-6878.
FOR RENT
COOPERATIVE LIVING - an established student cooperative located within early walking distance of the 416 campus and downtown Lawrence. Attendance is required for utilities. Kennings 841-988 or 841-3125. 4-10
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimathim's family members of the visit. Stop and look on our number of the day. Stop and look on our number of the day. Stop and look on our number of the day.
$500 and we will be glad to give you all the money. 100, Naimathim HALL, 1800, Naimathim Hall, 843-8503, 843-8504
FRONTIER HUDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT:
The front of the 508-floor apartment, unfurnished from $120. Two living rooms, large bedrooms, and a balcony. Or OK you can rent THE INDOOR BOOTH POTION BATH INDOOR BOOTH POTION BATH INDOOR BOOTH POTION BATH. Next door to HOUSE'S HEAD. 243 Founder Road, Next door to HOUSE'S HEAD.
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
LIVE IN LUXURY: need to subtract beautiful 3
bedroom. 2 bath apt. 2 balconies. fireplace-free
inside. 1 kitchen. Water paid for interior;
eatall Kitchen. Caverity & Water.
Richardson 843-1021; Evanston 843-5053 4-19
Summer solarium. Completely furnished. 2 BRL. 1'/2' bath apartment. Swimming pool sauna, carver table, court, and club house with billiard table, table tennis, billiard table, summer great for summer call. Built 841-6986 evening.
Toiletright summer sublease, next year optional.
2. Fath. 5, Luxury Laundry. $104/m.
3. Toilettright summer sublease. $104/m.
To suburban one bedroom, new modern, futur-
al room, starting May 20, option 431-846.
Bridgetown 846-715.
Apartments and room furnished, parking now,
involved. Please contact new town mall.
Phone: 845-767-5671
Christian Houghton Now and Summer. U.S.
Christian Houghton 942-823-6087 between
8:00-10:00 Keeprying
Durability to be subject for JAN-14 EAR. 15 Guse
Discounts are based on the number of cases.
Rent $16 per month CALM Mark of证书. Rewire
$80 per month
MARK 1 & II. A Repairments room renting for summer holidays in the Marina, two hour landlord/daylight hardware apartments, 7 min from campus. 4 rooms, 2 bathrooms off-street parking, dainty warehouse dispensers, large storage areas. Contact us at 1015 West Ave, Apartment # 917, Bldg 8-202, 813-251-8111.
Sublease 1, HR Avail.申请 May 11, 2017
Sublease 2, HR Avail.申请 May 11, 2017
Summer rates apply. Call 841-3125, 6-9 p.m.
or email us at benns@norton.com
Antibacteria-ambulance. Formulated 2-bedroom Apt.
9100 Fax: 81-601-7322 A C diving-experience ex-
gain 8110-601-7322
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
At new & current property
visit our furnished display unit today &
you'll see why the move is to Sundance
Apartment. Completed within studio of
48th Converter located at 12th & Fountain.
Just west at the Sundance on UR Blvd.
841 5255 842 4455
8415255·842·4455
Summer Sunshine Two bedroom Applicant Jr.
2 person AC, swimming池 $240.61-626.79
Summit Sublease 2 BHR, 11 h: bath, unfurnished
Apartment. Malls Vilas Villa. Villas $385
& $490 per month.
Library 2nd floor, 28th Street Townhouses Pascal
Cabot, Clifton, Dishbone and more Available in May
and June.
Perfect summer sunday! $21.75 for 2 bedrooms,
or $13.50 per a/c pool, remodeled, balcony.
Call 641-8588.
1 bedroom, partially furnished basement apartment. On bairn surface near downtown $135-mo. Rentals in this area are $200-$300 per month.
Apartment, partially furnished; one bedroom;
Rast Lawyer; $116 office; available on request.
SUMMER SULFASEP Rundare Aparitions, 2 bedroom house furnished Available: M1405
Hell of a Deal-Hate one bedroom furniture apartment Nice pool, $180 utilities 441-500
Two pairs need one or two Christian restaurant restaurants. Three beds, double and twin dining rooms, lobby. 31 Two bedrooms, double and twin dining rooms, lobby. 31
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to follow the same instructions as Western Civilization 3). For exam preparation. *New Analysa* Western Civilization* is available now at Towne Educational Publishing*.
Bummers sublease with option for Fall one bed room.
Two bathrooms. Two master baths.
Conditioning of Water Paid Charge to Cox to install.
Financing available.
FOR SALE
Ponder: Mumming Bass Guitar with strings, cordz, picks, strings and covers. Very good condition, picks, cordz and covers. Very good condition.
1966 GMC Vee-customized interior-mat see
1067 West 77th Street. 2 feet wide. 4-16
1978 Toyota Celica GT Liftback. Swap. AM-FM
amplifier. Exterior trim. $750,000. Exterior
Exterior Condition. $750,000. AM-FM
amplifier. Exterior Trim. $750,000.
Fantastic Pioneer Stereo System includes receiving, powering, deck and new warranty, four battery, 841-6761.
WATERED MATTRESSES $39.98 3 year guarantee
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Max. 1826-1280
touchscreen
Watch for truck on Sundays selling produce.
Watch food, 8th & Illinois. Also wood crates.
Mant will suit older mobile house; 2 bedrooms,
1 bathroom, en-suite; £6500; Will accommodate a caredly parrot partly furnished; £7000. Will accommodate a pet dog.
SunFests - Sun glasses are our speciality. Non-perspex lenses are our selection, reassured by 1021 Mass. 843-7570.
Ships: CT-3288 computer controlled control units
ransfers 2100-3600-watt receivers adding $120, $140,
$150, $170, $190, $210, $230, $250, $270, $300, $320,
$340, $360, $380, $400, $420, $440, $460, $480, $500, $520, $540, $560, $580, $600, $620, $640, $660, $680, $700, $720, $740, $760, $780, $800, $820, $840, $860, $880, $900, $920, $940, $960, $980, $1000, $1020, $1040, $1060, $1080, $1100, $1120, $1140, $1160, $1180, $1200, $1220, $1240, $1260, $1280, $1300, $1320, $1340, $1360, $1380, $1400, $1420, $1440, $1460, $1480, $1500, $1520, $1540, $1560, $1580, $1600, $1620, $1640, $1660, $1680, $1700, $1720, $1740, $1760, $1780, $1800, $1820, $1840, $1860, $1880, $1900, $1920, $1940, $1960, $1980, $2000, $2020, $2040, $2060, $2080, $2100, $2120, $2140, $2160, $2180, $2200, $2220, $2240, $2260, $2280, $2300, $2320, $2340, $2360, $2380, $2400, $2420, $2440, $2460, $2480, $2500, $2520, $2540, $2560, $2580, $2600, $2620, $2640, $2660, $2680, $2700, $2720, $2740, $2760, $2780, $2800, $2820, $2840, $2860, $2880, $2900, $2920, $2940, $2960, $2980, $3000, $3020, $3040, $3060, $3080, $3100, $3120, $3140, $3160, $3180, $3200, $3220, $3240, $3260, 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$16620, $16640, $16660, $16680, $16700, $16720, $16740, $16760, $16780, $16800, $16820, $16840, $16860, $16880, $16900, $16920, $16940, $16960, $16980, $17000, $17020, $17040, $17060, $17080, $17100, $17120, $17140, $17160, $17180, $17200, $17220, $17240, $17260, $17280, $17300, $17320, $17340, $17360, $17380, $17400, $17420, $17440, $17460, $17480, $17500, $17520, $17540, $17560, $17580, $17600, $17620, $17640, $17660, $17680, $17700, $17720, $17740, $17760, $17780, $17800, $17820, $17840, $17860, $17880, $17900, $17920, $17940, $17960, $17980, $18000, $18020, $18040, $18060, $18080, $18100, $18120, $18140, $18160, $18180, $18200, $18220, $18240, $18260, $18280, $18300, $18320, $18340, $18360, $18380, $18400, $18420, $18440, $18460, $18480, $18500, $18520, $18540, $18560, $18580, $18600, $18620, $18640, $18660, $18680, $18700, $18720, $18740, $18760, $18780, $18800, $18820, $18840, $18860, $18880, $18900, $18920, $18940, $18960, $18980, $19000, $19020, $19040, $19060, $19080, $19100, $19120, $19140, $19160, $19180, $19200, $19220, $19240, $19260, $19280, $19300, $19320, $19340, $19360, $19380, $19400, $19420, $19440, $19460, $19480, $19500, $19520, $19540, $19560, $19580, $19600, $19620, $19640, $19660, $19680, $19700, $19720, $19740, $19760, $19780, $19800, $19820, $19840, $19860, $19880, $19900, $19920, $19940, $19960, $19980, $20000, $20020, $20040, $20060, $20080, $20100, $20120, $20140, $20160, $20180, $20200, $20220, $20240, $20260, $20280, $20300, $20320, $20340, $20360, $20380, $20400, $20420, $20440, $20460, $20480, $20500, $20520, $20540, $20560, $20580, $20600, $20620, $20640, $20660, $20680, $20700, $20720, $20740, $20760, $20780, $20800, $20820, $20840, $20860, $20880, $20900, $20920, $20940, $20960, $20980, $21000, $21020, $21040, $21060, $21080, $21100, $21120, $21140, $21160, $21180, $21200, $21220, $21240, $21260, $21280, $21300, $21320, $21340, $21360, $21380, $21400, $21420, $21440, $21460, $21480, $21500, $21520, $21540, $21560, $21580, $21600, $21620, $21640, $21660, $21680, $21700, $21720, $21740, $21760, $21780, $21800, $21820, $21840, $21860, $21880, $21900, $21920, $21940, $21960, $21980, $22000, $22020, $22040, $22060, $22080, $22100, $22120, $22140, $22160, $22180, $22200, $22220, $22240, $22260, $22280, $22300, $22320, $22340, $22360, $22380, $22400, $22420, $22440, $22460, $22480, $22500, $22520, $22540, $22560, $22580, $22600, $22620, $22640, $22660, $22680, $22700, $22720, $22740, $22760, $22780, $22800, $22820, $22840, $22860, $22880, $22900, $22920, $22940, $22960, $22980, $23000, $23020, $23040, $23060, $23080, $23100, $23120, $23140, $23160, $23180, $23200, $23220, $23240, $23260, $23280, $23300, $23320, $23340, $23360, $23380, $23400, $23420, $23440, $23460, $23480, $23500, $23520, $23540, $23560, $23580, $23600, $23620, $23640, $23660, $23680, $23700, $23720, $23740, $23760, $23780, $23800, $23820, $23840, $23860, $23880, $23900, $23920, $23940, $23960, $23980, $24000, $24020, $24040, $24060, $24080, $24100, $24120, $24140, $24160, $24180, $24200, $24220, $24240, $24260, $24280, $24300, $24320, $24340, $24360, $24380, $24400, $24420, $24440, $24460, $24480, $24500, $24520, $24540, $24560, $24580, $24600, $24620, $24640, $24660, $24680, $24700, $24720, $24740, $24760, $24780, $24800, $24820, $24840, $24860, $24880, $24900, $24920, $24940, $24960, $24980, $25000, $25020, $25040, $25060, $25080, $25100, $25120, $25140, $25160, $25180, $25200, $25220, $25240, $25260, $25280, $25300, $25320, $25340, $25360, $25380, $25400, $25420, $25440, $25460, $25480, $25500, $25520, $25540, $25560, $25580, $25600, $25620, $25640, $25660, $25680, $25700, $25720, $25740, $25760, $25780, $25800, $25820, $25840, $25860, $25880, $25900, $25920, $25940, $25960, $25980, $26000, $26020, $26040, $26060, $26080, $26100, $26120, $26140, $26160, $26180, $26200, $26220, $26240, $26260, $26280, $26300, $26320, $26340, $26360, $26380, $26400, $26420, $26440, $26460, $26480, $26500, $26520, $26540, $26560, $26580, $26600, $26620, $26640, $26660, $26680, $26700, $26720, $26740, $26760, $26780, $26800, $26820, $26840, $26860, $26880, $26900, $26920, $26940, $26960, $26980, $27000, $27020, $27040, $27060, $27080, $27100, $27120, $27140, $27160, $27180, $27200, $27220, $27240, $27260, $27280, $27300, $27320, $27340, $27360, $27380, $27400, $27420, $27440, $27460, $27480, $27500, $27520, $27540, $27560, $27580, $27600, $27620, $27640, $27660, $27680, $27700, $27720, $27740, $27760, $27780, $27800, $27820, $27840, $27860, $27880, $27900, $27920, $27940, $27960, $27980, $28000, $28020, $28040, $28060, $28080, $28100, $28120, $28140, $28160, $28180, $28200, $28220, $28240, $28260, $28280, $28300, $28320, $28340, $28360, $28380, $28400, $28420, $28440, $28460, $28480, $28500, $28520, $28540, $28560, $28580, $28600, $28620, $28640, $28660, $28680, $28700, $28720, $28740, $28760, $28780, $28800, $28820, $28840, $28860, $28880, $28900, $28920, $28940, $28960, $28980, $29000, $29020, $29040, $29060, $29080, $29100, $29120, $29140, $29160, $29180, $29200, $29220, $29240, $29260, $29280, $29300, $29320, $29340, $29360, $29380, $29400, $29420, $29440, $29460, $29480, $29500, $29520, $29540, $29560, $29580, $29600, $29620, $29640, $29660, $29680, $29700, $29720, $29740, $29760, $29780, $29800, $29820, $29840, $29860, $29880, $29900, $29920, $29940, $29960, $29980, $29900, $29920, $29940, $29960, $29980, $29920, $29940, $29960, $29980, $29920, $29940, $29960, $29980, $29920, $29940, $2996
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
at Motive Motors. 843-690-2600, 2000 W, 6th, fc
MOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-690-2600, 2000 W, 6th, fc
15. PT. SLOOP w/salita & extras, fast & lively.
842-8722
4-12
1969 Ford Galaxie, excellent transportation
841-6800 after 5. 4-12
pedeadei, air, PS 841-6840 after 5. 4-12
1978 480 an a-drive six-speed wheel start Yamaon midcycle车, 1400 miles, no falls; $12000 (firm,
m.p. or 10 midnight) between 5, and
p.m. or 10 midnight
SINEMELLA SEEEDLES HERBAL SMOKE
MUSKELLER FINE INGREDIENTS OF TRADITIONAL NAVAJO SMOKING MIXTURES $3.00
COTTON CLEAR MULTIPLEX MULLEDEN, FINE INGREDIENTS OF TRADITIONAL NAVAJO SMOKING MIXTURES $3.00
225 COTTON CLEAR MULTIPLEX MULLEDEN, FINE INGREDIENTS OF TRADITIONAL NAVAJO SMOKING MIXTURES $3.00
TRANS-AM 1977, low miles; black w g bird,
many options: Calls 843, Hilz 257-90
4-12
CANON ET, bothe à FÉ. 240mm F2.80mmlan. FD 75mm f1.4. Cannon FT, bothe à FÉ. 320mm F2.80mmlan. FD 75mm f1.4. Canon FT, bothe à FÉ. 320mm F2.80mmlan. FD 75mm f1.4. Canon FT, bothe à FÉ. 320mm F2.80mmlan. FD 75mm f1.4.
Motorcycle: 1973 Yanaha 20, excellent condition
811-6480 after 5.
4-12
74. Cauvier IV, F-8.4, ab jp. p. bw. harbor wifi with
Lynx Lornet 200m. 290f. pts. good corralism.
Zoom Lornet 100m. 290f. pts. good corralism.
2402 LARCO 8200 HASSIN 9500 GREEN 1000 good condition.
762 PAT. CALF DAVE H. (3) 4-10 4-16
9577
We have WC, Clv. notes, Mallis Bookshop,
711 W.2nd St. 842-7152
4-12
74 Monte Carlo-AT, PS, PH, AM Radio, AC,
4-13
542-2518 after 6 p.m.
1972 Nerch Aloe Sewing Machine Good condi-
tions Call evenings Call earliness
numerals 442-5619 4-13
numerals 442-5619 4-13
Seasons Walker-Jacker Excursion—brand new,
6310
6310
$150 or trade for good bike-12
FENDER TWIN-REVERB Amp. Good Condition 4-13
842-3522
1972 CB506 Honda, Reliance, new battery,
up to best. Up buy, B64-6117
4-24
Rromati 6,5 H 6 H Le Cac 0,000 mils 24,000 mils
Rromati 6,5 H 6 H Le Cac 0,000 mils 24,000 mils
Rromati 6,5 H 6 H Le Cac 0,000 mils Maint airtight bag
Rromati 814 mils 814 mils
Rromati 814 mils 814 mils
FOUND
Ladies'剧 wrist watch outside. Found on Fouad Sawat Texas Instrument brand. Call 842-7294 to idea.
HELP WANTED
EXOTIC JOBS! LAKE TAHOE, CALIFORNIA
Little expense, fantastic fun! $1700-$4,000 sum-
mage. Bike rental, boat rentals, canoe renta-
tures, rancher, environs, river rafts, & more.
Workdays: Monday - Friday. Qualifying Eq. 20,
6029. Saturdays. California, 952-288-3100.
Position Announcement: Curriculum and instruction survey assistance needed to distribute materials. May 9 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and May 10 to 18 from 12 m to 2 p.m. Must be currently enrolled at college or allow hours with another student. Apply at the position description. Application deadline is April 12, 1979. 4-13
The University Information Center is now at 680 W. 15th St., Brooklyn, NY, beginning May 22 and Aug. 19, 1979. Applications must be received by Friday, deadline is 4 p.m. Fr. April 13, 1979; Equal Opportunity-Affirmative Action Exists.
Cookings position opening very soon for heat cooks and grill cooks. All around experience is required. Must be able to read and follow special requests and have new ideas for special. Full and-participation; personality are absolute. Also needs to be able to work in the Sanctuary 845-630 for appointments.
OVENSKA JOBS- Summer-year round, Europe,
N. America, Australia, Asia. Etc All Fields, $600-
$1200 jobs) Expenses paid Sight setting Free
(LC, Box 80-KA, Box 42)
CA 8252 CA 8253
Opening for part-time evening and weekend nurse aid for female quadriplegic in nursing room. Should be available all summer long. For additional information, call 814-7943 or 2 a.m. for Kickie C4-116.
*Want to spend this summer sailing the Caribbean? Enjoy Europe! Cruising other parts of the world, with the freedom to boat owners need crowds! For free information, boat owners need crowds! By Xarandx. 6833 Goes Suisse Suite 641. Houston.
K.C. Star newspaper is looking for quam-
sities to contribute on folk, rock, blue,
and jazz concerts in Lawrence and Suita.
They want a collection of concert reviews to Shirta Stein,
1728 Grand, K.C. Star. 604-6188
naben, 1728 Grand, K.C. Star. 604-6188
SUMMER JOINT- Local legal for nationwide wide availability. Mature legal position available immediately start May 1, 2024 @ $35 per hr. $25 per hour for hard work or long hours. Time and a bad paid job is required. Lawrence, KS - Equal Opportunity Employer.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: Royal Presidency needs above average students paying all or part of their tuition. Send resume to Karen Groom $1,600 per month. For further info, email to Karen Groom Grand Room - 12:30, 2:30, 4:30, or 5:30.
JOBS
MEN WOMEN SAILBOATS:
CRUISE SHIPS! No experience. High pay! See
Caribbean, Hawaii, Europe, World Summer see
Caribbean, Hawaii, Europe, World Summer see
60129, Sacramento, Ca. 95800
4-24
Need some spending money? Wendy's Old-Fashioned
Apples. Apply between 2 and 4 months through
Wendy's.
Purpose: secretary wanted. Must be well organized, possess thorough salary open. Applicant must have 5 yrs exp in a position with the company.
Fountain & Grill perennial *Nom rosea*
*Fountain and Grill at viva Vista* in Bristol
*W. 61*, with **M. 43**
Research Assistant-Pharmaceutical Chemist Research Assistant-Pharmaceutical Chemist Minimum experience in biologic (biologics) applications. Applicant should have print research laboratory experience with a Master's degree in Biochemistry, biotechnology, culture and instrumentation. Experience with a Bachelor's degree in Biochemistry, biotechnology, culture and instrumentation. Experience with a Master's degree in Biochemistry, biotechnology, culture and instrumentation. Position available immediately for applications from 608-855 per month depending upon experience. Contact Dr. Thomas J. Davis at 11.19.1290 Contact Dr. Thomas J. Davis at 11.19.1290 Air Quality Attendance of Kauai is on an equal opportunity basis.
FIELD DEPT. OR OFFICE UPPL Project Killed by THOR JOY TITLE Graphics Desk Repair through JOB ITTLE Graphics Desk Repair 36 position, $42,400 UBIL DUTIES Design and create posters, postcards including layout and QUALIFICATIONS I. Enrolled student II. Experienced PREPLIED BUY NOT REQUIRED I. Known! III. Newspaper and on newsletter production crew IV. Newspaper and on newsletter production crew V. Application PROCEDURE I. Send Williams, 29 Hawthorne Hall Include phone number Williams, 29 Hawthorne Hall Include phone number www.graphicstask.com to complete and return graphics task and return I to key web pages. CAMELS APRIL 18, 1997 IN AN AMBITATIVE QUALIFIED MEN AND PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES ARE ENABLED AND PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES ARE ENABLED.
FIELD DEPT. OF OFFICE HTML Project Follow through JOHN TITLE TITLE Photography Graduate June 20, 1998 360 position, $5.50-$4.50 hourly and lectures on schools and graphics for both landscapes and buildings to schools, and graphics for preparing and printing photographs. Letterhead design and preparing photography in needed QUEIIMEMENTS 1. Enrolled student 2. Photographer 3. Photographic design PREFERRED BUT NOT REQUIRED for graphic designs PREFERED BUT NOT REQUIRED for color slide photography 3. Experience in letterhead or newspaper production and editing of images 3. Graduate student APPLICATION NOW IN MEMORY for outdoor photography and examples of photography Half. Include phone numbers for contact and complete by April 1978 if not returned it in when he is consulted. 212 HWAYNE 1999 AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EQUALITY MONTH AND WOMEN OF ALL ROSES AND WOMEN AND WOMEN OF ALL ROSES ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY.
POSITION: Research Associate (DPTS) Plan, conduct, and evaluate designation, training, and strategic goals of the Behavior Analyst role, including their services to Projects across the behavioral sciences. Req's Master's degree in behavioral science or related, plus two years' practical agreements for these services and free travel. Served with other professional services. QUALIFICATIONS: Required. Masters degree in behavioral science or related, plus two years' practical agreements for these services and free travel. Served with other professional services. REQUIRED EXPERIENCE: Req. Professional experience in applied Behavior Analysis. Prefer Teacher experienceGrand+with skills experience with public relations and community engagement. Encourage to apply APOPTIMYMENT DARRY $250 to $2800 per month on previous employment. May 17, 2017 at 5:30 pm to APPLY Williams, Associate Director, Follow Through Attorney, Lawyers, 600 AD, AN Affirmative Action办公室. Qualified MEN AND WOMEN OF ABILITIES AID ARE COURIED TO
HELP WANTED FULL TIME. Some mechanical
work required in NYC. Exp will require
4-11 A-Rental, 2100 hours.
Now taking immigration for Foundation & Grants
and helping to pay for a new university in Yellville, Indiana.
Mature-minded college student or grant warden,
preferably with 2-4 years of experience,
billing odd $3-5 off 2-4 afternoon bus. per day.
Apply in person at AA 312 Hunting Terrace
Apt. 890, Wetzel College, Wetzel, CO 81675.
Applicant must be Qualified man and women.
British Corner is now applying applications for Spring and Summer dates. Apply
4, 12
4, 12
Student Research Assistant. Project entails interfacing devices with A/D and D/A, setting up a control panel, using keyboard and other peripheral equipment in LM-111 or half or three-unit time for three modules of treatments accepted until April 16, 1979. Contact Dr. Richard K. Lawrence, K. 6005, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS.
JOEBS IN ALASKA. Interim job list. British Columbia.
Job #1002304. Must be a Bachelor's degree in Biology,
Chemistry, Engineering or related field and
graduate from US or Canada. Job #1002304.
Become a Master's degree in Biology,
Chemistry, Engineering or related field and
graduate from US or Canada.
THEISM RINDING. COPYING. "The House of
'Theres's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for
beautiful blending and copying in Lawrence. Let us
guide you at 838 Main, or plane 642-8160.
Thank you."
LOST
Lot 47 L3: Gold ring gold with rose white high sapphire value REWARD V-124
845-6071
Lost women altar watch on March 31th by
last woman in a cemetery. Found in lake by
last woman in a cemetery. Found in lake by
REFUND: 95KWF.
MICROSOFT HELP DESK
Microsoft Help Desk offers IT support with Microsoft
Help Desks. The Help Desk offers a range of support
services for your business. Microsoft Help Desk
offers support services for your business.
MISCELLANEOUS
NOTICE
DEATH WHY BOTH? ECKANKAM
Accident Señor of Sand Travel 832-842, 831-822,
830-821
TAN MAN POSERS!
Wanted: Wednesday,
April 11, 3:00
in front of Watson.
Everyone that wants their
picture in huge advertisements
for Tan Man Day come
"undressed" like Tan Man
& join in the fun!
- Everyone's a Tan Man.- Dad
V717A you getting your breath, Mary
Didn’t check volume. V717A 18 R Usau (664) 842-3900
PERSONAL
June, my husband studied aviation at Emanuel University.
He also took a private flight on the Board of Directors of Research
Education.
BRLRS HIRS SHOP to new copy 200, Refurls
port (shop) 100,035,048,065,075,085,095,105,
port (shop) 100,035,048,065,075,085,095,105,
BAYA, PAYA, IDIAMI, 2009 KIMBRO Buffalo Park
888-734-1111 by JEFFREY KENTENBURG, 2009 KIMBRO Park
888-734-1111 by JEFFREY KENTENBURG, 2009 KIMBRO Park
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortion, up to 15 months. pregnancy tests, birth Control, Consultation. Tubal Ligation. For appended call. 904-387-2692 or 904-387-4308. Overland Park, Ks
WRES
Start Training for the April 28 - 29 INTRAMURAL TING TOURNAM
every Tuesday and Thursday 5-7 pm in Robinson South Gvm
Call Recreation Services 864-3544
for additional Wrestling
information
人
HARBOUR SPECIALS • $6.95 Mum, Two and $4.95 Dad
MASSIMO NIGHT • Wed $10.95 Mom, Two and $3.95 Dad
Carytown remounting referrals now handled
through EHU, M4-366 or Headquarters, M4-365.
FOX HILL SURGERY CENC Absorbs up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing, Birth Control, Continuing Total Ligation For appointment. O2C-3064 - 491-107 St. OSCOLland Park, KS.
Wanted: Partner for partner for cation trap on White Haze in Missouri over Eater. Call 811-6050, after 6pm.
Virtually you get blind fund to use these ELEARAN
funds. If you want to buy an ELEARAN fund,
Come to a talk on microinvesting and discovery
technology.
DABETIC GROUP
Wakins Memorial Hospital
Saturday, April 10, 7:30 P.M.
Tuesday, April 10, 7:30 P.M.
Or. Joseph Kramer, from KUMC
J. Dr. Joseph Kramer, from KUMC
Appointed for each private bath, walk-in closet,
privacy room, provided, fully furnished, vaulted
wardrobe. Ground Grow. Kitchen facilities
available. Ground Grow. Call or call after 811-342-5022
Ack for Bedroom. Call or call after 811-342-5022
Ack for Bedroom. Call or call after 811-342-5022
JUNIORS Apply now for next year's 16-20. B.K.
on university level (April 19 - 20) 157, B.K.
on university level
Would like to meet the girl who plays maidens
in the movie "Little Women" at her
before we begin the afternoon? *9*
at 10:30 a.m. on Tuesday, June 28th.
Tam Marti - What a Tamar Marti! A Tam Marti does what we do. He doesn't just walk around and speak to people of all kinds. He doesn't care what people think of him or how he feels about himself. He keeps books and bindings in his office, helps with research on marine life. He keeps bank and business records. He also takes care of the environment. Everybody wants to be a Tam Marti.
SERVICES OFFERED
Biology/Biology Master's, Selection of transcripts for most academic year. April 8th - May 16th.
MATH TUTOR MA, in math, patience. Three years professional experience. 824-3241.
Need help in math or CS? Get a biter who can
help you with math or CS problems. Call:
814-315-7477
814-315-7478
REWITING EDITING. Your manuscript, thematics in term paper edited into an effective, grammatical and coherent document, is built with mentioning with provision and annotation. Outlines and articles also available. E-mail: REX-135
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Aim at the House of Uber/Quick Copy Center.
Also is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
to Saturday, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., on Saturday at
Mass.
EXPERT TUTORS: MATH 009-1221, cell 864-5772.
EXPERT TUTORS: COMPUTER SCIENCE 100-2030, cell 864-5772.
EXPERT TUTORS: COMPUTER SCIENCE 100-2030, cell 864-5772.
EXPERT TUTORS: QUALIFICATIONS B.S.
IDENTITY: cell 853-0956.
Master model ART & Design Group Roses Forest-Rowan, MA. Apply online for a free master model of feeding chambers! Nassim Hall is off duty and highly skilled in delivering models and balanced feed per person or give on a call. NASSIM HALL BAY MA
TYPEWRITER TUNE-UP. Have that SCM EEC card checked out and placed in your year-end position of Storenvia Office Syndicate, 1640 Vermont, 10427. Don't risk a breakout at a crucial time.
Lawrence Office Opened! Featuring Summer programs in architecture and design, arts, organic gardening, local chats in Lawrence Art, Math, and Biology. Available at 732-746-8188, taylor@lawrence.org, 732-746-8188, walters@lawrence.org, Call for information.
Academic information. The Lawrence Open School
Middle School, 2015-2016; Math and Reading
School, Call 841-753-8200.
Gardening / Quality work, reasonable rates.
Dairy Farming / Lowercase, Calif. C-479
TYPING
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. 1
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. ff
Type/Editor: IBM PCM/File/Excel Quality work
welfare. Send brief description welcome.
If mail to: 84127928.IMC@ibm.com
5 years experience. Quality work guaranteed.
Required for Lawyer form papers. Must have
1-year experience in law firm form papers. Must have 2 years of
Experimented. Apoptotic themes, disturbances, term
functions. Evaluated. Selective selective: electrophilic
810-1131. Validity. 812-1131.
Experienced Typed-term paper, tests, mice,
experiments. Mail resume to:
801-633-9244, Mrs. Wright.
Quality Naming parameters - HIM-Select Terms
British, French, illustrative music. Carols #648
3125176
Now copying term paper for quality typing.
Lynn, 416-266 after 5.30.
if
Trainee on Elite Life Typewriter by experi-
mental service profleeding *Masters*
843, 1279
**SCHEDULE**
09-10 & 11-12; 14-15; 16-17; 18-19
TYPING on 20,000 pages per week Quality work.
We take 1-2 weeks to finish.
81-059. We tie it all but you.
4433
Aeroville experienced hybrid-den chair papers, threepaper, and a double-sided card. Editing service per page. 824-379-5260.
TYPE2P: Give 30,000 pages saved. Quality work,
innovative designs and fast delivery. Lane
literature L1-624-9100. IT All for You.
824-9100. IT All for You.
I do derived quick tranfers. Under 20 papers, I do derive about 50 quick tranfers. Under 25
Expert training all kinds, night service business-
called existing available. Call 811-421-1423 meetings.
Experienced typist- associate, reference, Proof-
coding. Resumes, then papers, mails, proofs.
812-307-6007
Repets, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
Registrations, telephone selections, Selective Call,
Or Joanston, 811-7127
WANTED
EstateHoldings women's softball team seeks quality
players for fall season. Apply online at:
www.EstateHoldings.com or 812-593-6070.
Ball after fall 2, apply to: 812-593-6070.
Mittens after fall 2, apply to: 812-593-6070.
and interested partner to visit this location. Call after 5 p.m. - 842-684-841 or 841-682-40-10
2 roommates wanted to share older home, for
or Fall. $4.25 4 utilities. **428-536-396**
We need rinnupers at 1019 Maine starting this
week. 841-9146 and ask for BILL or
idp at the office.
Female roommate to share 1 bedroom meadow
and summer only 2 Rent request.
Call 841-8506
KU employee would like to form a carton
Glue to Lawrence. Call me 641-2489.
415-785-7600
Wanted—quot Christian made to share 2 B
Baker, Christian I Call 1824-1475 (419)
a.k.i. for Bkm. a.p. for Dkm.
6
Tuesday, April 10, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Arson alleged in warehouse fire
Lawrence Fire Department officials said yesterday that arson may have been the cause of a fire Sunday that caused an estimated $200,000 damage to paper stored in a warehouse at 600 New York St., near the south bank of the Kansas River.
An employee of the Kansas Color Press Inc., 2201 Haskell Ave., reported the fire at about 1:40 p.m., according to the fire department.
The employee was unloading rolls of paper from a railroad car when he discovered the fire in the warehouse. The warehouse is about two blocks northwest of the Santa Fe Railway Co., depot on East Seventh Street.
Damage to the contents of the building
was estimated at $200,000 by the fire department. John Carver, treasurer and controller of Kansas Color Press Inc., owner of the paper, said it would be sometime before his company could know the exact extent of the loss.
The fire department estimated damage to the building to be $3,000. The warehouse is expected to cost $25,000.
James McSwain, Lawrence fire chief, said yesterday that the fire was still being investigated by his department and the Douglas County Sheriff's office.
"The fire is of suspicious origin. Investigation has virtually eliminated any potential threat."
McSwain said a portion of the Douglas
"When you eliminate all accidental reasons for a fire, it leads you to believe it's not."
County Arson Squad may be activated to investigate the fire.
Carver said he did not know of anyone with a reason to set a fire at one of his neighbors.
Firefighters spent about 30 minutes battling the blaze before bringing it under control. Fire officials said the warehouse was still open, and there were extensive fire when fire crews reached the scene.
Carver said the fire would not cause serious production disruptions for Kansas Color Press because the company has paper stored at other locations.
ELECTIONS for the Pre-Nursing Club
Offices Available President Secretary Treasurer
Wed. April 11 7:00 pm
Walnut Room, K.U. Union
Speaker will also be there . . .
please attend
Partially funded by student activity fees.
Attention Women
The Women's Coalition presents an open Rallach Blues
Tuesday, April 10, 6 pm
All women are invited to attend. For location and information call 864-4934 or drop by the Women's Coalition office
A Student Senate funded organization
Todd Vanlaningham
former director of Gay Services of Kansas
will speak
Tues. April 10 7:30 PM
Kansas Union
sponsored by Gay Services of Kansas
A LEVI'S
April
On each sell* we make bold the original brand
of quality clothes in confidence,
by passing from Levi's. Womanize can
Dress is called "Head Dress." Strightly.
We're committed to maintaining thread
Made of high quality fabric and upholstery.
Normally these beads are used.
The shirts are made in our factory.
Try On A Coordinating Top.
LEVI'S
WOMENWEAR
QUALITY NEVER GOES OUT OF STYLE
LTWIN'S
831 Mass,
where clothes are for
Open late Thurs &
'til 9 pm
LEVI'S
HOMMEWEAR
QUALITY VIRTUAL GOES OUT OF STYLE
BEND OVER PANT
Open Sunday 1-5
$ \Delta\Delta\Delta $ALCOLM $ \Delta. $
ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS
ILLER
Are interviewing for the following Kansas City area positions:
*ARCHITECTURAL ENGINEER*
15 Yr Experience
Salary 10K Rent
"DRAFTSMEN/DETAILERS"
Architectural Engineering Drawings Graduates $12K Range
*CIVIL or ARCHITECTURAL ENGINEER*
1. 6 perps Expirement
Structural Design & Build
Artech Group International
Architectural Engr领
Send Your Resume To
$ \Delta\Delta $ALCOLM $ \Delta. $ILLER
P.O. Box 7207
Shawnee Mission, KS 65207
or call (013) 694-4948
FOE
Kirk Company
Unbounded opportunity for personal fulfillment and financial reward for those willing to carefully execute the time and effort.
Why Real Estate?
Why Now?
An unprecidented demand for single family residences by virtue of the record number of new families entering the market place.
Why Now?
Why
Kirk Company
* Our Sales Associates
enjoy educational
and supportive
services unsurpassed
in this area.
- We benefit from the rich tradition of over three decades of successful residential marketing.
You are invited to on
campus – Real Estate Career
Awareness
Presentation.
April
7:30 p.m.
Room 401
Summerfield Hall
$14700* mexicana
For a confidential personal interview please phone 272-5555 and for Larry Groves or Steve Kirk.
2810 Gage·Topeka
Kirk Co. REALTORS
KANSAS CITY — MEXICO CITY
ROUND TRIP
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 $84.00 additional). To qualify for this special fare you must remain in Mexico for at least five months and/or live in your low cost hotel and sightseeing packages. We have prepared a colorful brochure to fully describe this fare and our low cost tour programs.
Travel Coordinators and Mexicans are also offering Study Program at Mexico's finest colleges and universities. There are a wide variety of courses offered. A few examples are: Anthropology, Architecture, Arts and Crafts, Botany, Ceramics, Falkon Dances, History of Mexico, Interpretation, Botany, Latin American Politics and Economics Mexican Educational System, Psychology, Sociology, Spanish Language and Literature, and Theatre.
We will also be happy to send you information on these schools.
Please send my your brochure describing this fantastic 6147.00 fare to
Mexico and/or information on the Student Study Programs.
Name __
Name ___
Address
School ___
My Travel Agent is.
□ Send information on discount airfare, hotel, and sightseeing program
□ Send information on the Student Study Programs.
mexicana M
1101 Walnut Ave. Miami, FL 33120
1101 Walnut • Kansas City, Mo. 84106
--caterer pollenbaton miMhRelibrngates at tn:
`t$ its goal to be a $10 billion company by the
TECHNICAL GRADS & MBAs:
Texas Instruments is opening a whole new world for you in marketing.
The revolution in consumer electronics is just beginning. The world market for consumer electronic products within the scope of its interest is projected to jump from 178 more to 925 billion by the late 1980s.
Openings/Benefits
Texas Instruments has openings for Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering, Computer Science or Physics. MA preferred for all categories. If you have a Master's degree in business, marketing development and planning, market research, etc., and would like to live in Dallas or Lubbock, Texas, with subsequent assignments to the major in cities throughout the nation, then you are invited to apply. It is looking for in our growth marketing program.
Frontier:
This market is still a frontier.
Consider these facts. See what they tell you about the
power potential of oxides as x1.
$P(x_1) = \frac{20}{x_1^2}$
- Its goal is to be a $10 billion company by the late 1980s.
- One of Tis three major growth thrusts is consumer electronics.
TI has long been the leader in solid-state technologies. It is this catalyst technology that provides the foundation to TI's leadership in consumer electronics such as handheld and programmable calculators, electronic learning aids, and other so-called new consumer products.
Opportunities
At TI we are aware of your efforts to receive the best education possible, and we recognize that you want to improve your skills and provide you with your knowledge and skills and will provide you with ample opportunities to demonstrate them. Can any
If interested, send your resume to Personnel
Director; Consumer Products Group/
29265-29265
JR'S
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
Be an active part of next years SR. CLASS Apply now for 1979-1980
Standing Committees
HOPE AWARD
REGALIA & SR. CLASS GIFT
CLASS UNIFICATION
PROMOTIONS &
ADVERTISING
HOMECOMING
BANNER
Deadline April 20,1979—Level 3
107 B Kansas Union
sua films
Tuesday, April 10
The Palestinian Situation:
TO LIVE IN FREEDOM
(1975)
Made by a predominantly Israeli crew,
Palestine/Palestinian subtilities. Includes an
interview with Yasir Arafat. Pale-
sian PLUS ."The History
book v. 8.5."
Wednesday, April 11
SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT
(1955)
Dir. Ingram Bergman; with Ulla Jacobson, Eva Dahlbeck, Harriet Browne, and the comedy that won the Cannes Film Festival for Best Comedy for Best Comedy. Sweden's institutions.
Friday & Saturday, April 13 & 14
MEAN STREETS
Dir. Martin Scorsese; with Harvey Kellet, Martin D绍军, Amy Robinson, Cesare Danova.
"Fri... 3-30 & 9-30
(1975)
SWEPT AWAY
Dir. Lina Wertmiluer; with Giancarlo
Giannini, Mariangela Melato, Italy.
subtilities.
*Fri--7:00*
Sat.—3:30 & 9:30
Tuesday, April 17
BROADWAY MELODY OF 1940
(1940)
Dir. Norman Taurog; with Fred Astaire, Eleanor Powell, George Murphy. Great dance sequences and songs.
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 midnight unless other noted. Note 1. $15.00 admission.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
$200^∞ Per Week
Royal Prestige Needs Students Who Will Be Living In Kansas City, Topeka, Lawrence, Wichita & Other Areas
For Further Info:
Come To Kansas Union—Oread Room
12:30, 2:30, 4:30 or 6:30 Today
Attention Women
RAPE
is an issue that affects ALL of our lives.
What can we do about it? An upcoming woman's RALLY AGAINST RAPE will help to answer questions on such issues as: The psychology of rape, campus safety, rape prevention, what to do if you're a rape victim, or know someone who is, Rape & law, and more.
How can you help? Come to an organizational meeting
Tuesday, April 10, 8pm in the Jayhawk room (Union)
Sponsored by
KU's Women's Coalition a Student Senate funded organization
Assembly votes to terminate IHP
By ROBIN SMITH
Staff Reporter
After nine years of controversy, the Integrated Humanities Program at the University of Kansas will officially end this fall.
The College Assembly, with 115 of its members present, yesterday voted unanimously to abolish the HPV Advisory Committee and HPV-courses in the department of humanities.
The professors who teach the IHP courses said yesterday that the action amounted to censorship of their teaching and would hurt the classes.
In its vote, the College Assembly followed the recommendations of the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising, which approved the authorization of Liberal Arts and Sciences, had approved
**HP IS A** four-semiester series of six-hour courses that fulfills part of the English requirement for undergraduates. Until 1973, HP fulfilled all English, speech, Western Civilization and humanities distribution requirements for freshmen and sophomores. In 1973 College Assembly voted that HP could not substitute for those courses.
Now, a new Humanities Committee will administer all humanities course offerings at KU, including the IHP courses. The committee also will develop a budget and student members and will administer a budget for instruction and support services for the humanities. The committee also will develop a budget to provide library services.
Dennis Quinn, director of IHP and professor of English, will leave his position as director July 1. He said yesterday that he was grateful for the support the committee that Cobb had offered him.
"ABSOLUTELY NOT." he said. "To serve on such a committee would imply that I agreed with the abolition of IHP as a program."
Couns said that he was disappointed in Quinn's decision not to serve on the new committee but that he assumed Quinn would continue to teach the courses.
Qin said that he had an obligation to his students to teach the classes but that he was still very busy with work.
"At least they left the courses in," Quinn said. "But the whole is more than the sum of parts. The program will lose its character. There will be less direction."
"It will not be integrated—but disintegrated."
John Senior, the other IHP professor, also said he was not sure whether he would teach them.
"IF SOMEONE is going to tell me how to teach, 'I'm not going to teach,' he said. "The action (of setting up the committee) I consider to be direct censorship."
Senior, professor of classics, said he would not be on the committee if he were
"That would constitute bad faith about theork we've been doing," he said. "I won't.prepart with it."
In a recent press release, Quinn wrote that serving on the committee "would involve us in direct cooperation with an arrangement that we consider a disgrace to the University and to the principles of academic freedom."
IHP has been controversial since its
beginning in 1970. Students do not take notes during class, and do not ask questions of the teacher.
CRITICS SAY THE HP professors present one-sided viewpoints in class, try to convert students to Catholicism and urge students to rest the gnost of University life.
Supporters of the program say it offers students a unique, in-depth study of the humanities that is superior to taking separate courses in the subjects.
"It was the dean that eliminated IHP," Quinn said yesterday. "Two years ago I was told there would be some changes—I knew all this along. The dean did what he wanted, taking from the start; he just spread the responsibility to around ..."
Quinn said Cobb had opposed IHP and had pushed through the proposal to end the program. On March 9, Cobb sent a letter to Quinn, outlining the IHP recommendations that he had approved and asking that Quinn give IHP's tife to the Humanties Committee.
Cobb denied the charges.
"THE RECOMMENDATIONS were not solely due to Robert Cobb," Cobb said. "And I'm sure that those members of the College Assembly and the Committee on Unattendance will be surprised that this is being viewed as a purely administration action."
IHP students and former students had mixed reactions to the decision to end the program and to put the classes in the humanities department.
Jim Bassom, Manhattan junior and a former member of IHP, said, "All along it has been the administration's objective to just accept the class and just another class within the University."
"I'm not surprised about Quinn's reaction. The administration's last motive is to give him more freedom, so he was dismissed. Now, if Quinn accepted a position on the new committee, it would only dignify the actions of the administration."
GARY SEATON, Lawrence junior and a former IHP student, said, "The University must have thought about losing Quinn by getting her expulsions. It must not have thought that it would be a loss."
"I think it was all a political move. And now, from the move of the administration, students will have to deal with a watered-down consequence of the program."
However, another former IHP student, Amy Tarnower, Teopka junior, said, "It has always been the students who gave the character to the program. They will still work together, I am sure. The program won't change; it will be stronger than ever."
Janette Luehring, Topek junior and an HP student, said the new committee might lack knowledge about the program but students could give advice.
"And I am sure that students will be able to turn to Quinn if they have any questions about the course."
Quinn also said members on the new committee might not have the knowledge
"If we leave, who will know what the program is about? Who will know what it means?"
However, Quinn emphasized that he would not serve on the committee.
"I refuse to kiss the hangman," he said.
Photo by ORLIN WAGNER
MORRISVILLE, IL - A windmill stands tall amid a foggy night, emitting steam into the air. In the background, a large industrial building is partially visible, its lights dimly illuminated. The scene captures a quiet moment in an otherwise misty landscape.
Power production
Kansas winds, which have been a source of power for decades, give way to larger coal burning power plants, contrasting two separate approaches to the energy problem
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, April 11, 1979
Vol.89,No.129
Killer twisters hit Texas border
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Pompano Beach. At least 36 people were killed, most 850 injured yesterday when tornadoes struck along the Texas-Oklahoma border, an area known as "Tornado Alley."
Officials said damage was running to millions of dollars.
In Wichita Falls, Texas, a city of 100,000, a huge tornado smashed through two shopping centers, demolished entire neighborhoods and left at least 20 people dead. One of the dead, a four-year-old girl, died on a tableting table during emergency surgery.
officials confirmed four persons had used and that the unconfirmed deaths were from a car crash.
Police Capt. Bob Edmondson said he feared many bodies would be found today because many elderly people lived in the residential section hit by the twister.
In Vernon, Texas, a city of 12,000, there were 12 confirmed deaths. In Lawson, Oka
An estimated 700 people were treated for injuries in Wichita Falls, according to James Lee, Civil Defense medical coordinator. He said at least 500 people would require surgery, hospitalization or extended doctor's care.
A spokesman at Hesthana Hospital in Westhita Falls said 139 people had been taken to the hospital.
operating on emergency power, the spokesman said, and injured people were treated.
Nursing homes in the area said they had treated at least 200 people for minor injuries, in addition to those seeking aid at Hospital and Wichita General Hospital.
At Wilbargar Hospital in Vermon, administrator Billy Robertson said corridors were packed with the injured from the tornado.
"We have legs cut off, a guy with his chin nearly gone and a lot of broken bones,"
In Lawton, hospital officials reported treating 58 injured people.
Oklahoma Gov. George Nigh accrued the National Guard to assist in the damaged area in Lawton where two trucks carrying hazardous chemicals were overturned—one a block from a hospital. A chemical firm was through the night to neutralize the water.
The National Guard also was activated in Wichita Falls to guard against looting.
In Kansas, a tornado struck Hays, injuring two persons and damaging about 20 mobile homes and at least two businesses. The area were treated and released at a local hospital.
Gasoline alternatives provide little relief
By TOM ZIND Staff Reporter
As predictions for the price of gasoline spiral toward the dreaded $1 figure, it appears that Lawrence drivers will have few alternatives to paying the higher prices.
Several Lawrence service station managers say that gasoline, the much publicized alternative to gasoline, does not appear to be part of Lawrence's future.
At least one state has been experimenting with the fuel, which combines grain alcohol and ethanol.
According to a Kansas City Times
editorial, 400 Iowa service stations now carry gasolol.
However, seven Lawrence service station owners and distributors said yesterday that the
Wally McGrade, co-owner of M&M Oil Co. 645 Locust, which distributes Phillips 66 products, said use of the fuel did not appear to affect grain supplies were used to make the ale.
MCHIDEK that because of the world need for grain as food, gasoloh's use has been reduced.
able to develop some other source to come up with the alcohol," he said. "The cost is prohibitive also. I've read that it costs 16 cents a gallon more to produce gas."
One fuel source that could be used more extensively is diesel fuel, which one service station owner said is, on the average 6 cents to 7 cents cheaper than regular gasoline.
Mike Finneran, manager of Lawrence Turnpike Standard, predicted that more service stations soon would be pumping diesel.
"It won't be widely used unless they're
Finneman said that car manufacturers were building more diesel-powered automobiles and that diesel fuel was easier to burn than gasoline, the fuel required fewer oil changes and no tears.
RON ROWLAND, salesman for Jimm Clark Motors Inc., 2121 W. Bristol ST. Terrace, said the price of a pickup truck that had been stolen from his house was $1,600 more than one equipped with a gas engine Rowland said the option was discontinued because it did not meet standards.
Ellena said diesel-powered cars were attracting buyers in part because they got about 20 percent better mileage than gas-powered engines.
Although the better gas mileage makes diesel cars appear to be a good investment, the savings are offset by the higher price tag of diesel cars.
greater amount of them in the future," he said.
HIS STATION is selling diesel fuel for 69.8 cents a gallon.
And until auto manufacturers step up production of diesel-equipped cars, many Lawrence service station managers say they won't invest in diesel fuel.
Jack Ellena, owner of Jack Ellena Buxo Oldmobile GMC Inc., #121. W. 29th St. Terrace, said almost all models of Old-engine were equipped with optional diesel engines.
Dallas Davis, owner of Davis FinA Sinae,
1900 W Sixth St., said he don't carry
dairy products.
"I would expect that there would be a
"I wish I did carry diesel," he said. "I more or less demand it."
HE SAID he knew of one person who had modified his vehicle engine to burn propane, which Davis said cost about 36 cents a gallon.
McBride said that some of the service stations he supplied carried diesel but that the demand for it was not great enough to justify investing in more diesel pumps.
He said the cost of putting in a standard 8,000 to 12,000-gallon diesel tank was about $20,000. The cost of the pump could not be at the current demand for the fuel, he said.
Davis predicted that all service stations soon would be pumping diesel.
McRide agreed with other service station managers who predict the death of the car.
"The demand for premium will probably be plashed out and replaced with diesel," he
WHILE THESE traditional alternatives to gasoline are being exploited, research
George Forman, professor of mechanical engineering at KU, said yesterday that there had been research into the possibility of using power to power the cars of the future.
$
At KU there has been an ongoing study into electric-powered cars.
into ways of changing the vehicle itself also is being conducted.
Dale Rummer, professor of electrical engineering who has been directing the research, said a prototype had been built and tested here.
Illustration by BRUCE BANDLE
Rummer said, however, that there were problems with an electric car.
"ITS STILL not practical in the sense that it doesn't have the range and speed of a plane."
Hummer said he did not know of any companies that were marketing electrical products.
Forman agreed that Lawrence probably would be stuck with gasoline for row, rather than fuel.
"Here in our community we have not actively pursued these concessions," he said.
Motorists to pay higher fuel costs
By PATTI ARNOLD
Staff Renorter
It won't happen overnight, but President Carter's decision to deregulate crude oil prices eventually will increase gasoline costs. The same local service station owners said.
Wayne Hattabough, owner of Wayne's Mobile Service, 900 Iowa St., said deregulation "will cost people." Prices will rise and then continue to rise slowly, he said.
Prices at several stations are about 72 cents a gallon for regular gasoline at self-service pumps and 76 cents for self-serve gasoline. The average 75 cents for regular and 78 cents for special
The legal maximum that can be charged for regular gas is about 75 cents a gallon.
cents is a gallon. Controls on domestic oil
riches will be lifted gradually through 198
Bil Strom, manager of Sinclair Service Station, 845 Iowa St., said unleaded gasoline prices would go up first. He said the prices would rise "any day."
AND DALLAS Davis, owner of Davis Fina Service, 1500 W. Sixth, said he expected his价 for regular gasoline to soon increase five cents a gallon. He said that when the distributor increased his prices, the service was forced to follow in order to keep a profit.
Riley Eckert, owner of Hillcrest Standard Service, 914 Iowa St., is taking a wait-and-see attitude. He said he was going to watch his children play in the park and companies before he made any predictions.
Eckert said people were buying small,
ALL THE owners agreed that a reduction in driving would not be used to fight higher prices. They said people would continue to buy gasoline rather than curtail driving.
economical cars that got better gas mileage as a means of fighting high gasoline prices
Some KU students confirmed the predictions that consumers would not cut carbon taxes.
Lisa Pretor, Dodge City sophomore, said and not cut down on driving yet, and did not eat.
CARLEN THEDEN, DeSoto junior, also said she did not plan on cutting down.
"It's difficult when you're on a budget, but if I want to go, I pay the price and go anyway. But, according to my parents, prices here are cheaper than at home. They're paying as much for regular as I do for unleashed," she said.
"I don't think I use enough gas for it to be a problem," she said.
However, Theden's roommate, Pam Davis, DeSoto junior, said, "I don't drive too much but if it keeps going up I'll cut down. My car devours gas!"
Ardia Bryan, Gardner sophomore, said she probably would cut back on her driving if gas prices kept rising. She said she would buy a car and dump truck with a small car to save on gas.
"I don't like small cars," she said, "I'd work on my truck first."
John Childers, manager of Snappy Gas,
400 New Hampshire St., said people would
not be able to go to the store.
"People pay $3,000 for a car and they aren't going to park it. The way Americans pay is the same."
2
Wednesday, April 11, 1979
University Dally Kansan
IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wires Services
Blast rocks KC arain elevator
KANASAS CITY, Mo.—An explosion rocked a grain elevator in North Kansas at last night, hospitalizing at least six persons and causing an unrestricted evacuation of the area.
The explosion occurred at about 11:10 p.m. on the west side of the ADM Milling Co. elevator, about two miles north of downtown.
About 30 people were in the plant when the explosion occurred during a thunderstorm, but all were accounted for. Rowkin said.
Four persons were listed in aerosis to critical condition at North Kansas City Memorial Hospital and two were in fair condition, according to Ron Fugate, a nurse.
Two of the critically injured, Dale Compton, 22, and John Parker, 39, were scheduled to be transferred to the University of Kansas Medical Center in Brooklyn.
Hometowns of the injured were not available
Jeffrey Poseet, 30, and Donald LeFridige, 44, were listed in critical condition in the intensive care unit. Thomas Hake, 21, and Russell S. Berry, 22, were in
Tanzanian jets attack Kampala
NAHMOH, Tanzanian-tainan troops attacked the Ugandan capital of Kampala with jet fighters yesterday, launching the fiercest rocket and artillery strikes over the capital.
The advancing Tanzanians were greeted by people dancing in the streets, but troops loyal to Amin were still firing artillery at the invaders from the town's
The attack came after a night of shelling by Tanzanian forces who were south of the city. The Tanzanians have been advancing since defeating some of them.
Residents of Kampala said government offices were vacant following the attack. The attack yesterday was termed by residents of Kampala as the final assault on the city.
Teamsters reach agreement
WASHINGTON - The Teamsters union and the trucking industry reached a tentative agreement late yesterday on a new contract to immediately end a 10-year strike.
Earlier yesterday, sources said several non-economic issues were standing in the way of agreement on a three-year contract.
The mediator, Wayne L. Horvitz, said procedures for returning at 235,000 Teamsters to work would be started within 24 hours, ending the longest trucking
The dispute has crippled the automobile industry, which has laid off nearly 91,000 workers and placed another $7,000 on short shifts because of parts availability.
The shutdown has had only minimal impact elsewhere in the economy. But government officials have said serious economic disruptions could begin if the government cuts funding.
Columbus collision investigated
COLUMBUS-A federal investigator has joined railroad officials in investigating yesterday's collision of two freight trains that killed a conductor and forced the evacuation of about 500 residents in Columbus, a small town south of Pittsburg.
Residents, who had fled their homes when a fire started near a tank car filled with ammonium nitrate, returned to the town about three hours later.
An official of the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway said his crew was apparently at fault when a Missouri-Kansas Texas freight crashed into the rear of a truck.
Authentics estimated damage to the two trains at more than $100,000. Several cars on the two trains dalled, but the tracks were expected to be open to traffic.
Fiery store traps shoppers
BUCHAREST, Romania—a Fire trapped hundreds of Easter holiday shops in Bucharest's oldest department store Monday. Unconfirmed reports said a man had been stabbed inside the building.
There was no official word on fatalities caused by the blaze. Witnesses said they saw people jumping from third-story windows and many ambulances that were not there.
The official Romanian news agency, Agerpres, did not mention the fire in its newscasts for foreign subscribers yesterday.
A commission appointed to determine the cause of the fire said it started because of welding work being done on the store's second and third floor. The fire quickly spread through merchandise and melted some metal fixtures with its intense heat.
Israel bombs Palestinian bases
TEL AIVI, Israel—Israeli jets, flying their first war mission since peace was made with Egypt, bombed Palestinian bases yesterday in retaliation for a demonstration of US military aggression.
The Israeli said the planes hit Damascus, a guerrilla base near the southern part of Tyre. The Palestinian Liberation Organization said the raids were a sign of aggression.
The explosion in the open-air market, crowded with shoppers, killed one Israeli man and wounded 33 other persons, eight of them seriously, authorities
In addition to the bombing attacks, other problems arose in the new peace between Israel and Egypt. The Egyptians ruled out a speedy opening of borders, and two Israeli cabinet ministers postponed trips to Cario in apparent anger over what Israel considered to be a provocative Egyptian statement.
Carter urges fuel exploration
WASHINGTON-President Carter said yesterday that he favored government action, if necessary, to require oil companies to explore for new petroleum and gas supplies with the money they would receive from decontrolled oil prices.
Carter said that even if Congress enacted his proposed oil profits tax, the oil companies would receive a net profit increase of $6 billion during the next three years.
He also said proposals to stop the oil companies from owning competing energy sources, such as coal mines, should be explored.
The president said nuclear power could not be rued out as a form of energy, despite the accident at Pennsylvania's Three Mile Island nuclear plant.
Nuclear gauges may be faulty
But Carter said that the nation must expand its use of coal and that he would urge Congress to approve a bill that Commission on Coal, to hold hearings to find ways to substitute coal for oil and
WASHINGTON - Forty-two nuclear power plants have been notified that they have pressure gauges that could give faulty readings during an accident like the one at Three Mile Island, the chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said yesterday.
Joseph M. Hendrie, the NRC chairman, made his remarks to a Senate nuclear regulation subcommittee.
A House subcommittee also investigating the nuclear accident voted 6-2 to止隔泵 tape recordings and transcripts of all closed-door meetings by the House subcommittee.
The chairman of the House committee, Rep. Anthony Moffett, D-Conn., said the NRC was illegally withholding information needed in the committee's investigation of the accident—one of nine congressional inquiries on the accident that have been started.
Weather...
It will be cloudy today with a 90 percent chance of light rain, according to the National Weather Services. Winds will be northwesterly, 10 to 20 mph. The low pressure system will bring a drop in temperature.
LA&S drop policy retained
By MARK W. GATES
The College Assembly has voted to retain an current drop policy in the College of Liberal Arts.
Staff Reporter
The members of the College Assembly, a representative body for the College, voted by mail ballot at more than a 3 to 1 margin to keep the drop policy.
The policy allows a student to withdraw from a course at any time during the first seven weeks of classes by signing a drop slip in the department office.
After the seventh week of classes, a student may withdraw from a course only by petitioning the College. The petitions are on Undergraduate Studies and Advising.
If a course is dropped during the first four weeks of classes, it is deleted from the student's transcript. During weeks five through seven, a "W" is recorded on the
received by the College and 541 were ap proved.
LAST SPRING. 783 petitions were
The previous drop policy for the College was the University drop policy. Each school may establish its own drop policy, but it cannot be as stringent as the University policy.
Under the University policy, a student may withdraw from a course without penalty until the 12th week of classes. There are usually two ways to petition for withdrawal after that time.
The purpose of the policy is to reduce the number of drops and to discourage students from enrolling in more classes than they need. The College is also an important member of the College, said yesterday.
The College policy was implemented on an experimental basis in fall 1977 and was revised in the fall of 1983.
SHE SAID the number of drops had decreased significantly since the implantation.
During fall 1976, there were 4,396 drops in
The results of the mail ballot were presented at the College Assembly meeting
There were 390 ballots returned, which is about 40 percent of the members of the committee.
the College. When the current policy was adopted in fall 1977, there were 2,882 drops
There were 292 votes for retaining the policy, 31 votes opposing one abstention and 8 votes for not retaining.
Reaction by faculty to the retention of policy was favorable.
Ernest Angino, chairman of the geology department, said he voted to retain the
Those sentiments were eched by Thurston Moore, chairman of the bureau.
"The previous policy was a joke," he said.
"Some of the students were playing games with it. The current one should be tightened up, but I can live with it."
Chinese tale of young love to be acted out in Spencer
"I THINK there has been a genuine improvement," Richard Himes, chairman of the biochemistry department, said. "I was always opposed to the policy where students were allowed to drop at the end of the semester."
"The Western Chamber," the second part of the museum's program on Calliope, muse of the epic poem, is directed by Nai ha 'tung, China, graduate student in theater.
A Chinese folk tale about young love will be acted on tonight and tomorrow night at 8 in the central court of the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art.
"The next thing the University needs to do is establish a stricter University-wide drop policy," he said. "Because the College of Engineering is the largest part of KU, this new policy is a big step. But the drop policy still should be improved by making it stricter. I would train more engineers."
"It is the story of a young scholar who, on the way to the capital city, stops in a temple and meets a young girl," she said. "They get acquainted, they grow up, they approve and try to end their love." The
mail servant of the girl helps them over-come her wishes."
Tung said the entire play, which was written in verse, took about five hours to perform, so she had chosen what she saw as the most interesting segment of the play.
Tung designed and constructed the costumes for the five cast members. Her work on the play is part of her master's decree work.
on aspects of rape. Included in the rally will be speakers on the treatment and support of rape victims, campus and neighborhood self-defense and the psychology of rape.
Tung also said tapes of music from a production in Taiwan would be used.
Other groups participating in the rally will be the Rape Victim Support Services, the Emily Taylor Women's Resource and the Women's Transitional Care Services, the Women's Transitional Care Services.
Andrew Tsubaki, associate professor of theater and East Asian studies, will lead a discussion following the performances, which are sponsored by the International Theatre Studies Center and the department of East Asian studies.
"The style is pretty close to the original," she said. "The set is very simple and uses tables and chairs to represent everything from mountains to furniture."
She said she had tried to stage the play as it would be done in China.
Anti-rape rally date moved
A rally against rape, previously scheduled for May 2, has been rescheduled from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. May 4 in the area between Dyche Hall and the Kansas Union.
The rally is being sponsored by the Women's Coalition.
At a meeting last night in the Jayhawk Room in the Union, Coition members were arrested for drug possession.
COURTNEY SCHOOL
Thank You Athletes! for participating in the 1979 Superstars Competition
Newton, Carol Colburn, Julie Nordling
first row: Babette Plum, Karol Ferraro, Susle
second row: T. Jensen, Mike Rawlings, Joe Hullings,
Glenn Weatherby
third row: Craig Penzler, Brent Hilyard, Rob Robinson, Brad Gaul
Not Pictured: Renee Neville, Amy Hollowell, Jeff Kallmeyer, Linda Thompson
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Women's group given allocation
Funding for the Women's Coalition sparked the most debate in otherwise smooth Student Senate budget hearings last night.
Despite a question raised by some senators as to whether the Coalition duplicated services of the Commission on Women, the Coalition was allocated $755.
The Commission on the Status of Women was allocated $1,335.06 in Monday's Senatemental meeting.
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consideration of duplication of services.
However, Melanie Anderson, business senator and Senate Services Committee cochairman, said the two groups differed structurally.
The Senate voted not to consider the possibility of duplication of services, and requested that the House make a report.
THE SENATE also decided to take $2,296.04 in additional funding for the Culture Committee allocations from the 1979 budget and to make its money left over from previous funds.
George Gomez, student body vice president, told the Senate it could vote to reconsider the allocation at tonight's budget hearings.
The Culture Committee had decided that it would have to exceed its allocation of $9,625.17 by the additional amount to fund its organizations.
The Senate decided not to fund KU Students for a Radioactive-free Kansas on the grounds that it was a politically-oriented organization.
Organization, $720; Students Concerned with Disabilities, $415.28; Volunteer Clearing House, $280; Women's Coalition, $755; Awareness International, $555; Black Awareness Month, $1,200; University Dance Company, $1,041.54; and Science Fiction and Fantasy Club, $445.
It also voted to fund nine organizations. The organizations and their alliances are:
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Program protection discussed in seminar
By RON BAIN Staff Reporter
Computer programmers are the behind-the-scenes thinkers who do the real work in making computers compute, but they are rarely recognized for their work. KU computer research associate, said第二天 at a computer-users seminar.
The seminar, the first in a series presented by the User Services Group of the Computer Center, was a panel discussion on computer programs from being copied.
Other speakers at the seminar were Mike Davis, KU general counsel; Donald Johnson, a partner with Schmidt, Johnson, and Christopher; and Stephen Farrn, firm; and Alexandra Mason, KU librarian.
Software, or the language and symbols used in programming computers, has become at least as important as computers themselves in recent years, Burch said.
A computer program is instructions given to a computer, in a language designed for computers, by a programmer to control and order its functions.
"SOFTWARE, INITially, was never expected to be such a big problem; was never expected to be such a huge component of a computer system," he said.
Computer programmers have tried in the past to patent or copyright their programs, but have had little luck, said Johnson, a law student at handed legal problems with computers.
The Supreme Court considered a patent case involving a computer program 11 years
ago, but never made a definite ruling on whether computer programs can be written.
In general, current patent laws do not apply to computer programs, but the 1968 Supreme Court ruling indicated that exceptions might be made in unusual cases, he said.
COPYRIGHT LAWS apply to the text of the computer programs, Johnson said, but they do not prevent the use of a similar program. Johnson wrote of an unrelated computer program.
Burch said that because there were several different computer languages, a program that was copyrighted in FORTRAN could be legally copied in PASCAL. FORTRAN and PASCAL are names of two computer languages.
Protecting the rights of the authors of computer programs would aid the computer industry.
"Providing feedback to the producer of that work is the only way, is the best way of getting quality work, quality performance from computer programmers."
Law professor elected as mayor of Lawrence
BY TAMMI HARBERT Staff Reporter
Barkley Clark was unanimously elected mayor of Lawrence by City Council and became mayor night after Marcel Francisco and Robert Schumman, who were elected to the City Council.
Outgoing commissioners Marnie Argersinger and Jack Rose were given keys to the city.
University Daily Kansan
Donald Binns, former mayor, read a farewell ode to each.
Parts of the ode to Argeringer, with whom Bimis had sided on many issues, said, "Marie. I'm going to miss you a lot and that you're gone. I'm alone on the spot."
Clark, a University of Kansas professor of law, said his priorities for the coming year would be to complete various city building projects such as the city hall and the city water plant, to build a housing complex and to minimize labor relations problems.
dinance regarding mobile signs so that businesses could not use trucks or cars with advertising on them on the business' property.
According to Brent McFall, management analyst who drew up the proposed changes, some businesses in Lawrence have used such advertising, but it is not regulated under city codes. A decision was deferred for one week.
In new business, Francisco asked the commission to consider an amendment to the Oread Plan, a plan for re-zooning the area that extends from Ninth Street to 17th Street and from Massachusetts Street to KU.
The amendment would require commercial businesses to provide parking for bicycles and cars. The motion was seconded by the Planning Committee of County Planning Commission for study.
Friscoce also called for clearer guidelines for community development in Lawrence because of a dispute between the commission and Margaret Brun, president of the North Lawrence Association, a neighborhood group.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
APRIL 11.1979
Veto shows leadership
In these cynical times, it is unusual and sometimes shocking to find a politician acting on personal beliefs rather than on political considerations.
But that is precisely what faced Kansas residents last week when Gov. John Carlin vetored a death penalty bill passed by a majority of Kansas residents.
Carlin, who had pledged during his campaign for governor that he would sign any constitutional death penalty bill sent to him by the Legislature, said in his veto message that he was philosophically opposed to the taking of a human life.
"I AM AN optimist," Carlin said. "I believe that society can find a way to deal with violence without using violence."
In vetoing the death penalty bill, Carlin left himself open to charges of breaking campaign promises and deceiving the Kansas electorate. And his critics wasted little time in leveling those charges at Carlin.
Senate President Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, called Carlin's veto "a clear example of his callous disregard
for Kansas citizens and their expectations."
But since his inauguration in January, Carlin has displayed the ability to make tough decisions without an excessive amount of consideration for the resulting political fallout. And that means that Kansas might finally have a leader who will lead rather than grovel before special interest groups and political pressure.
It's about time.
And that means that in the end Kansas might finally have a governor who is more interested in results than in appearances, more concerned with people than with votes.
While Carlin's opposition to the death penalty probably ends the possibility of Kansas adopting a capital punishment law during his term as governor, it does leave Carlin vulnerable during his re-election campaign in 1982.
Educators ignore need for 'productive idleness'
BUT WHILE Carlin may have ignored the will of a majority of Kansans, he did pay heed to the dictates of his own conscience. And given his stable motives for the decisions of many our politicians, that is no small deed.
N. Y. Times Feature
By KATHRYN TIDRICK
WASHINGTON - Why do intelligent and competent Americans who have spent many years in a series of reputable educational institutions study English, the Irish people to be fundamentally uneducated?
I think it's because Americans work too hard.
As a result they lack a sense of measure, an instinct for what is of value in the life of the mind, that only comes with years of productive idleness.
A GOOD school mainly helps by providing concentrated doses of essential information and then pointing the student in the right direction.
I HAVE often heard parents of elementary school children complain that their children were doing mostly "busy work" for homework.
From an early age they have spent so much time writing term papers, studying for tests and pursuing independent research that they have never had a moment to themselves.
I mean by "productive idenity" time spent in undirected reading, uninterrupted thinking, and aimless talk. It is in these idee an eligent person becomes an educated person.
Less work, but more concentrated and purposeful work, probably would be better.
The wise teacher knows that the mind must be given space in which to grow. The wisest teacher 1 ever had, who was the chairman of my department at London University, always told his first-year students that he expected them to spend a week on their formal studies; the rest of the time was theirs to use as they liked.
It will seem eccentric to parents worried about declining test scores to suggest that children ought to do less schoolwork. Yet a close look at the kind of work they do would be more intellectual value would be lost if 50 percent of the assignments were never given.
Some of these tedious and time-
consuming assignments are clearly supposed to be "he", "fun," and to count more as
My daughter, 10, still knows the difference between work and play and regards the assignments as work. I wonder if the teachers know the difference, though.
The ghost of Puritan New England stil walks in America and turns up in the most surprising places, such as child-centered classrooms where students play is enshrined as orthodoxy. Real intellectual play, the kind that ultimately produces the Theory of Relativity, has very little to do with classrooms, but it provides a real hazard—the dead hand of instruction is clamped upon it. It is hard to think of a better way of discouraging children from reading than asking them to write down a weekly book on the alphabet in practice in American elementary schools.
When I hear such things I feel not only angry but afraid. How am I going to protect my daughter from a school system that has been so badly damaged by education but also leaves no time for her to educate herself? What kind of a person will learn these hours are programmed for her in this way.
In moments of extreme discouragement I almost long for the anarchic freedom of the old unreformed English public schools, where boys were whipped through Latin but had time, if they were so inclined, as Byron was, to read "huge amounts of history," all the British poets, French (Houssaye, English and French philological), 4,000 Allowing for some Byronic exaggeration, it really doesn't sound like a budding.
If my daughter ever has time to read huge amount of anything I shall be very surprised.
Kathryn Tidrick is an English psychologist
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Nation must heed accident's warning
But events in movies rarely happen in real life, right? Unfortunately, the world now is grimly aware that they do.
It depicts nuclear power hazards, possible overheating causing meltdown of the core, and cover-ups stemming from failure of its containment.
The "China Syndrome" is just a movie, right?
Three separate human errors recently caused low level radiation leaks from the Three Mile Island nuclear power station near Harrisburg, Pa., mistakes that have led scientists to call it the worst nuclear accident in history.
The accident jeopardized the lives of 1 million people living in the plant's region. More than 180,000 people evacuated the area, fleeing from something they could not see, feel, touch or smell.
A NERVOUS American public received conflicting reports of the danger from plant operators who were too guarded and from Nuclear Regulatory Commission officials to be honest, but were unsure of the danger themselves.
The Three Mile Island accident was too realistically frightening to be a movie script.
"I don't think there is any doubt that it will make it much more difficult to license nuclear plants," said Walter Meyer, engineer and chairman of public information for the American Nuclear Society. "We now have a public to what I consider a very severe accident and they now feel the feeling for the consequences of a severe situation."
MEYER IS right. But, in the middle of the Three Mile Island crisis, Energy Secretary James Schlesinger urged Congress to speed licensing for nuclear plants. Despite the accident, he said, there is no way around nuclear power if the nation wants to reduce oil imports from the Middle East.
Those three errors, along with faulty plant construction,
surely will alter the course and threaten the construction
of a building.
Jake Thompson
Schelsinger's statement is heartless at best, but one that is frequently spayed by bureaucrats and military leaders because it goes to the core.
We were lucky this time. No one died outright as a result of the Three Mile accident. Whether persons contaminated with the low level of radiation later develop cancer may never be traceable to the accident.
Yet, one thing is certain. If nothing is in drastically tight safety checks and precautions in nuclear plants, or halt construction altogether, we will face greater threat in the future.
IN THE United States, 72 nuclear reactors are in operation. Within the next decade 110 more are planned for construction. The nation will be risking a much greater cost of accidents, simply on the basis of number of plants in operation.
Will we be so lucky next time human error interferes with what pro-nuclear people call 'inaffable' back-up 35%?
When the next mysterious hydrogen gas bubble forms as a faulty plant beams an uncontrollable amount of radiation into the air and officials again fear a meltdown, will they be able to stop it?
The human risks and financial cost do not outweigh the economic benefits of nuclear power. The Three Mile Island accident japonicized lives and some officials estimate it would cost $150 million to repair and decontaminate the plant. It cost $1 billion to build and had only occurred operation four months when the accident occurred.
One would hope, even demand. so.
As a result of the Three Mile Island accident, Americans will be more skeptical when nuclear plant builders and NRC officials assure safety of a plant. Credibility of the nuclear industry was heavily battered by officials from the Metropolitan Edison Co. who continually played down the danger at Three Mile Island.
SOLAR POWER is the primary replacement for nuclear power, but scientists require more money to manage it.
State and national politicians were alarmed and are beginning to agitate for greater safety controls in all areas.
Because human error can circumvent back-up systems, if given special circumstances, the nation should take a cue from the near-disaster at Three Mile Island and push for intense development of alternative sources of energy.
"THERE WE no measurable release of radiation into the atmosphere," Don Curry, a spokesman for Metropolitan Edison said at noun on the day of the acetylene leak in an orderly manner with no consequences to the public).
That threat and cost was for one plant, one accident.
The reports were so conflicting that President Carter issued a gag order to the company requiring them to keep his office closed.
What if there were 200 nuclear power plants? The threat magnifies and costs could be staggering.
Further development of nuclear power should be halted by the federal government. Will it, as predicted by some groups, take a large number of deaths from a nuclear disaster to change the one-track minds of our federal officials?
One hopes not. The federal government should concentrate its energies and finances away from nuclear power. The threat to public safety and cost are not worth it.
DEAR WHAT DOES MR. O'MALLEY DO FOR A LIVING, ANYHOW?
WORKS AT THE NUCLEAR POWER PLANT DOWN THE ROAD, WHY?
To the editor:
Risks of a nuclear future too great
As a result of the accident at the three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant, I would like to question what the American people know about nuclear energy and who is saying it.
In a recent Kansan, Hobart Woody, KU nuclear reactor operator, and Russell Mesler, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, echoed the opinions of government and industry around the country.
Woody contends that in everything we do there is an element of risk involved and that we can't have progress without nuclear power. He also remarked, "I don't think people are too afraid of nuclear power. They just don't understand it."
Mesler contends that the accident will somehow increase public confidence in the nuclear industry. Presumably, because in spite of it up to six separate systems failures, the NRC and the engineers were able to keep the reactor from melting down. This includes a certain hydrogen gas bubble, planned for in any contingency plans. What other potential problems lie in waiting, unplanned for in other plants?
I have no quarrel with spending $25 billion over 10 years to send men to the moon, as we have reaped many unexpected benefits from that investment. Money invested in the moon will give us only more power to waste and more waste to somehow dispose of.
I personally take offense to Woody's remark that people don't understand nuclear power. I admit I am not a nuclear scientist, but there are reputable nuclear scientists in the world. The great majority of anti-nuclear people not mere romanticists urging the nation to regress to the Stone Age. In fact, alternative energy sources will require substantial advances in technology and studies have been done on the economy and can stimulate the economy and provide jobs.
The government and industry tell us that
KANSAN letters
by closing so many nuclear plants we would have to import so much oil to compensate. Now, we don't want that, do we? They don't tell us conservation is the best and safest means of insuring energy for the future. Evidently, they believe the American people will not take it upon themselves. Maybe their current use of electricity has condensed since 1983, but our standard of living really increased commensurately since then?
In America, we would not like to depend too greatly on any one source of energy for what are now obvious economic and social reasons. Yet, this is just what the government has done for many years. We nuclear power for the next 30 to 40 years. If we think the power companies have too much control now, we had better stop and think about the real possibilities we now have to decentralize our energy sources, or expand it with freedom through increasing dependence.
We can individually decide whether to risk driving our cars down the interstate, and most of us frequently do. But what if it was a power outage or had to drive the Indianapolis 500 to work every morning? As each of us weigh the risks of nuclear power, consider the following remark by Mike Gravel, scientist at MIT: "It's not going to boil water." Jeff Miller
Overland Park junior
Protest by rejecting alumni membership
To the editor:
On March 30 a group of concerned KU students met in front of Strong Hall to protest our Endowment Association's policy of investing in corporations which do
business in racist South Africa. The viewpoint favoring divestiture was voiced peacefully if not quietly to Chancellor Dykes and the rest of the administration.
To complement this expression of opposition, I now suggest economic pressure be applied. The senior class of 1979 has already received its first invitation to join the Alumni Association. I recommend all members of the Alumni Association the Endowment Association divests. If the class of '79 can make its disapproval of our endowment association felt by the Alumni Association, I am certain Mr. Wintermote, director of the Alumni Association, will send a letter to President of the Endowment Association. The boycott can be done in two simple steps:
1. Refrain from joining the Alumni Association. Seniors intending to become lifetime members are especially urged to bovcott the association.
KU has been good to me. It has given me both an education and many friends. Someday I intend to support KU by becoming a dues-paying member of the Alumni Association but not until KU sheds itself of this current disgrace.
2. Write a letter to the director of the Alumni Association, Mr. Dick Wintermort, declaring your boycott and explaining what must occur before your first dues are paid.
Stephen Wolk
Stephen Wolk Lawrence special student
To the editor:
Professor questions death penalty stand
I am a trifle puzzled by your editorial of April 2 which describes the death penalty as barbaric and uncivilized. Resounding is indeed, but this is sort of rhetoric insulted?
forget that the death penalty has for centuries been part and parcel of criminal justice both in the West and in many other parts of the world.
The best argument against the death penalty, in my judgment, is that it is irreversible. Make a mistake, and there is way to rectify it. But we must never
Must these cultures and civilizations all be branded as barbaric? While it trust none of us condones indiscriminate killing, I do not think it will markly ease our consciences to know that all murderers will confine themselves to the rest of their days confined behind bars.
To any educated European of the 13th century, that might have seemed like cruel injustice, I would all of us doubtless agree that to the leftoon off-scottare is a trifle injudicious. Precisely how then do the apothecaries of mankind propose the awake reader to crime? W. Keith Percival
Professor of linguistics
I attended the Intercollegiate Association for Women Students Convention at KU from March 28 to 31. Coming from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, known as the Southern Part of Heaven, I didn't know much about it. midwestern university, I was impressed!
Convention delegate impressed by KU
To the editor:
The students and community are very lucky to have the Emily Taylor Resource Center on campus. You are also lucky to have its staff and strong student support. I urge you to take advantage of it and help it whenever possible.
I would like to thank all those who worked so hard to put the convention together. I've never learned so much in so little time and I know that we must share problems, ideas and support.
Your campus itself is beautiful. It leads me to think of KU as the midwestern part of heaven. Thanks for your hospitality. Keep the faith. Alice Thompson
Association for Women Students Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Weak directing dims 'Fanlights'
Bv KATHLEEN CONKEY
An excellent cast, an expressive set, a poetic script, strong sound effects and effective costumes give "The Fanlights," by Rene Marques, an opportunity to soar.
Reviewer
However, the direction by Luis Gauter is planted firmly in reality and that has become a way of life.
"The Fanightis" is a disappointment only in that it comes so close to being great but doesn't quite make it, largely because of flaws in the direction.
Marques, who died several weeks ago, was one of Puerto Rico's most important dramatists. Although the play is set in San Juan, it applies to any area in which an old and cherished culture has passed into the hands of what Marques calls "barbarians."
It is the story of three sisters whose guilts, jealousies, hatreds and loves destroy each other.
KANSAN
Review
THERE IS INES, the oldest sister, the strong one who has always had to take care of and suffer for the younger sisters; Emilia, who has a crippled foot and is mad; and Hortensis, the delicate, beautiful woman, who has taken a long time to die of cancer.
The play takes place in one day. When it opens, Ines is 70 and Emilia, 65. Hortensia is 41.
Marques' lines are poetic. They deal with the intangible themes of time and age. Hortensis appears only in flashback scenes remembered by her sisters.
*Marques'* characters and words are symbolic. They should be dealt with in bold, dramatic symbolic terms. But Guttier has chosen to be realistic. His blocking, his slow
GAUTIER HAS MET the script's challenges in the scene in which Ives has monologue and also in the ending scene. You must apply that power throughout the play?
pacing and his decisions about the acting are all underplaced.
Sara Hendrick as Ines, Mary Dellasgea as Emilia and Katherine Wartel as Hortensis give equally powerful performances, in her constraints placed upon them by the direction.
Hendrick's portrayal of strength and a quick mind shows in all her facial expressions. Dellasgea's hands flutter as if they want to fly and her voice fluctuates with her madness. Warfel is completely unaffected by this, but the two others miserable for so many years.
Stanley Haelt's setting is strong enough to dominate the sisters and close them in, as it follows his line of thought.
THE SOUND EFFECTS and music by Russell Cutright border on the melodramatic, but such overlay is needed for "The Fanlights."
colors and decaying atmosphere are perfect for the play.
The lighting by Nancy Ettinger is somewhat inconsistent. It is often bold and dramatic, but when it is not, the fault is glaring.
Susan Schriener's costumes are thoughtful and well-constructed. The straight lines of lins' dark cotton dress and the flowing silk of Emilia's and Hortensia's dressings gowns define the characters better than signs around their necks could have.
The cast and designers of "The Fanights" give this play all the trappings of a great drama, but without the backbone of a flying direction, the play just misses its mark.
Midwestern flights still available
Students who want to fly home for Easter can still get flights to most Midwestern cities despite the United Airlines strike, Sam Miranda, manager of the travel services division for Maupintour, said yesterday.
"Space is available, but the longer students have the less chance there is for learning."
Miranda said that people who had reservations on United could be booked on other flights and that those who had special accommodations for the same price if space were available.
He said that all United flights were canceled until June 8, but that reservations would be taken on June 9, even though the strike might not be settled.
United Airlines is the largest carrier in the United States.
Miranda said more people were bumped off flights during holiday seasons because
Most of the airlines overbook their flights because their statistics show that a certain percentage of passengers with confirmed reservations do not show up for a flight, he said. Overbooking by a certain percentage increases the chances for a full plane.
He said that if a person had a confirmed reservation and was bumped from a flight,
The University of Oklahoma *Woodwind Quartet* will perform at 8 tonight in Swarthmore. Tickets are $15.
the airline would pay the person a percentage of the ticket's cost, usually above 50 percent, and would try to get him on the next flight. If the person insists on taking his passenger, he will be asked that passengers already seated on the plane if one of them will relinquish his seat for a fee.
Members of the quintet are Christine Smith, flute; Jason Weinraut, bach; David Etheredge, clarinet; Charles Kaufman, bassoon; and William Scharmberg, horn.
Miranda said that airline fares were always changing for each airline, but that they often were cheaper now than they were in the past.
"With all the special fares like Super Saw, Home Free and together, for the family."
OU wind quintet to play tonight
Spec.
Body
$25.00
FOR MEN ONLY!!
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"The Fainlights" will play at 8 p.m. today, inorrow and April 17th in the William Avery Theater.
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Entertainment
April 6 & 7 Vale Spell April 12 High Ball April 11 Pats Blue Riddim Band April 13 & 14 Glass Apple
25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA
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University Daily Kansan
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UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
604-531-2788
The Third Annual University of Kentucky
POW WOW
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Lawrence Community Building
115 W. 11th St.
Lawrence, Kansas 64030
April 13-14, 1979
Gourd Dance 12:00 North Bay
ALSOt
1st Annual Men's and Womens All-Open
Basketball Tournament
West Junior High School
900 Yale Road
Lawrence, Kansas 60210
Friday 4:30-11:00 AM April 15, 14,
Saturday 7:30-10:00 AM April 28
Sponsored by: Native American Alliance Office of Minority Affairs Student Senate
Student Senate
Sperry Top Siders
PAPERS
royal college shop
eight thirty seven massachusetts 843-4255
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FOR HELPING US WIN THIS YEARS
MARATHON
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6
Wednesday, April 11, 1979
University Daily Kansan
COMMISSION
STATUS
WOMEN
KU Member IAWS
- Applications are now being accepted for Committee Chairpersons of:
Political Action Women & the Arts Human Sexuality
Minority Affairs
Publicity
Women & Int'l Affairs
- Applications for Executive Board officers are presently being accepted.
Further information and applications available at 218 Strong - Emily Taylor Res. Center, Due Wed., April 11th.
MARIE M. COBLE
SUSAN CASHIN . . .
one of the talented professionals
at headmasters
27
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COLLEGE OF FRESH ENGINEERING AND AGRICULTURE
1606 W. 23rd St. 843-3516
804 Iowa Street 842-1667
932 Massachusetts 843-7044
Party rooms available
Men & Women interested in being
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for the 1979-80 school year
Come to Room 136
Parrott Athletic Center
Tuesday, April 17
7:00 pm
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Whitenight's
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839 Mass-
843-5755
sua films
Presents
Cuban Cinema:
"THE TEACHER"
nevolum
-plus
"The History Book, v. 8"
Thursday, April 12
Woodruff Auditorium
7:30 pm ADM. $1.00
- Rescheduled from April 5.
OSU selects coach
STILLWATER, Okla. (UPI)—Paul Hansen, who coached 24 years at Oklahoma City University, was named head basketball coach at Oklahoma State yesterday, and he vowed to return the school to prominence in the Big Eight Conference.
"We're going to put the Cowboy back on"
"in the Big Eight," Hansen said. "That's
what we need."
Hansen, introduced by Oklahoma State athletic director Dick Young as "one of the most popular people we've ever been in contact with," succeeds Jim Killingworth, who resigned to become head coach at Texas Christian.
The 50-year-old Hansen was at Oklahoma City for 24 campaigns, 16 of them as an assistant coach and 8 as a coach at the University of Texas. He had an 8292 record in his six seasons as head coach.
ADMITTING HE was concerned about taking the job only one day before the signature date for high school recruits, Hansen said he believed returning players
would form the nucleus for a good team next season.
"But superior recruiting is necessary for the next year," he said.
Hansen said that he would retain Wayne Ballard, another candidate for the job, as chief assistant, and that the two would begin recruiting immediately.
Hansen indicated he was looking for big players, especially a freshman forward, guard and center to be developed in time for the 1980-81 season.
"The big teams win the big games," he said.
Royals rained out
VALUABLE COUPON
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) - Rain forced the postponement of last night's game between the Detroit Tigers and the Kansas City Royals.
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Offer good with coupon only.
A spokesman said the game would be up as a double-hander during Detroit.
The
HOLE
In The Wall
Expires: Wed., April 18, 1979
Effective April 16,1979 The Kansas Power and Light Company has a new telephone number.841-7100.
You can now call directly to a customer service representative for account information.
Billing Information - Weekdays 841-7100
Moving In or Out -
Weekdays 841-7100
KPL
THE KANSAS POWER
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Emergency Service-
24 hours/day
843-6000
For administrative calls weekdays, please call 843-6000.
You can
Burcher - 73
You can sleep later and save gas!
Whether you've been studying or partying the night before, you could forget the rush hour hassle and enjoy a few extra winks each morning at our place. If you're involved in campus activities, you can walk to meetings instead of driving. Save your gas money for that special date with your special friend. There are other good features here you'll like. So . . . make the right move.
RELAX NEXT FALL-MOVE TO NAISMITH HALL!
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith
843-8559
Wednesday, April 11, 1979
University Daily Kansan
7
ELECTIONS for the Pre-Nursing Club
Offices Available:
President
Secretary
Treasurer
Wed. April 11
7:00 pm
Walnut Room, K.U. Union
Speaker will also be there... please attend
Partially funded by student activity fees.
BORDER
BANDIDO
BORDER
BANDIDO
Sausage Burrito Sale
Buy one get one free!
(Regular or Texas)
Offer good April 11-15
Good with this coupon only.
1528 W. 23rd across from Post Office 842-886
RING TAG
TACO
TACO
Celebrate Spring at the 1st Annual AURH Spring Formal
Celebrate Spring at the
1st Annual AURH Spring Formal
April 28, 1979
9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom & Balcony
Featuring: The Original Artists
Refreshments will be provided. Admission is free for all hall residents and their guests. Tickets are available today through 4/28 at your hall desk.
Semi-formal or formal dress is appropriate.
*Tom KusmaStaff and Wife Keports*
*national signaling day for basketball players*
KU looks for basketball recruits
From Kansan Staff and Wire Renarts
It looks as if the KU staff won't be too busy collecting signatures.
Yesterday, Ricky Ross, who was the state's leading high school scorer, said he wasn't going to reveal where he would play college basketball until this weekend. Ross, who has had his harrowed choices to KU and Arkansas, where he visited last weekend.
with every Haircut at
FREE Airform!
DAVID PIEHLER, an all-state guard from Newton, said yesterday he would play in the first round of the NCAA tournament.
Kelly Knight, another top KU prospect, won't be signing anything today either, according to his coach Larry Forsythe. Knight is still interested in Kansas, Iowa State and the University of Nevada-Reno. He'll visit the Reno campus this weekend, when Knight will play for the 6-13 California South player averaged 22 points and 13 rebounds this season.
SHEAR DIMENSIONS
TONIGHT IS Pitcher Night AT THE HAWK
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
The Role of Cholesterol
in Malignancy
KU India Club Presents:
Dr. Harry Chen Jackson laboratory Bar Harbor, Maine
a night of
(sponsored by KU Biochemistry Club)
2:30 p.m.
Thurs., April 12
Rm. 610 Haworth
featuring:
Hema Rajagopalan
Classical Dance of India
with Vocal solo by Bahrat Trivedi Instrumental music by Krishna & Menon
April 14 7:00 pm Hoch Auditorium
$1 ^{00} $ KU students
$1^{50} General public
and at door
For further information call 864-3477
Partially funded by International Club, Student Activity Fee, and SUA
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Piehler, who averaged 28.6 points a game his senior year, was heavily recruited by a number of schools including Kansas State, Missouri and Wichita State. He had earlier said he had narrowed his choices to SMU and Arkansas.
basketball at Southern Methodist. KU was interested in Pielou. Both of his parents
eliminated Kansas from the list of colleges he is considering, Roger Berger, his high school teacher.
Another KU prospect, Harrisonburg (Va.) High School star, Ralph Sampson has
Sampson, 7-3/4; had narrowed his list from 16 to seven last week, including KU. The schools he is still considering are Kentucky, North Carolina, Virginia and Virginia Tech. Besides KU, he eliminated Louisiana and Michigan State.
The high school coach gave no indication when Sampson might make a decision on a
Bill Blair, head coach at Colorado, said yesterday that John Addison, who averaged 54 points per game in Semi-Broke Country Day School in Kansas City, was national letter of intent this week. Blair and Addison was recruited by Kansahawks coach Jared Duncan, Louisiana State, Texas and Texas A&M.
school or whether the youth may opt to bypass college and go directly into the workforce.
Temple miffed with Big 8 start
Kansas baseball coach Floyd Temple has mixed feelings after his team's first win over Washington.
"I'm quite pleased with our hitting," he said, "and I'm pleased with the pitching of Sutcliffe and St. Clair, but our other pitches just haven't been consistent."
"WE PLAY perfect games, except for one mistake," Temple said.
KU is 2-1 in Big Eight play, splitting double-headers with Kansas State and Colorado. The 'Hawks are 19-5-1 on the season.
Kansas won the first game of each series by a wide margin, behind the pitching of Terry Suttlechik at K-State and Dan St. Clair at CU. But KU also lost the second game of each series because of erratic 'pitching and untimely errors.
The second games weren't exactly perfect. Kansas made more than one costly play, including a penalty for a dunk.
BIOLOGY/BIOCHEMISTRY MAJORS
Selection of representatives to important student/faculty committee for next academic year.
April 11 6:30 P.M.
Room 217 Snow Hall
A MESSAGE FROM
coordinated by the biology club
ECKANKAR
ECKANKAR IS A WAY OF LIFE. It is the most ancient religion known to man, and its teachings and questions are seen in their deepest meaning and answered God, and Spirit (JCK).
ECKANAR allows one to be confident with a greater understanding and love for all life. Those individuals who fall prey to the illusion of finding an adventure in personal freedom and spiritual exaltation.
For Youth of All Ages
ECKANKAR International Youth Conference For Youth of All Ages
Sri Darwin Gross
The Living ECK Master
April 13-15, 1979 Kansas City Municipal Auditorium
Free Introductory Talk & Film
Thursday, April 12, 7:30 p.m./Radisson Muehlenbach Hotel
For Local Information call 523-5685 or Write
ECKANTERN International P.O. Box 1003, Mino Park CA 94023
ECKANTERN INTERNATIONAL
The Jayhawks were scheduled to play Sioux Falls College this afternoon, but the games have been canceled at the request of the league. The team will meet KU tomorrow for a doubleheader.
a run in the second game against K-State and a dropped third strike in the fourth led to another run. Against Colorado, a throwing error led to an unearned run for Colorado in the sixth inning of the second game.
Kansas is tied for second in the eastern division of the Big Eight with Missouri and Iowa State. Nebraska is on top with a 4-2 record. The top spot in the western division of Kansas is in Oklahoma State and Oklahoma, both 2-2, while CU and KState are tied for third with 1-3 records.
Swimmers to AAU
The two swimmers were accompanied by coach Bill Spahn.
KU swimmers Steve Graves and Jim Sauer left for California early this week to compete in the AAU swimming and diving championships, we begin today and will run through Saturday.
Graves, selected by the seven league coaches as the Big Eight's outstanding scorer, will also swim the same events he qualified for in the NCAA championships last month—the 200-yard breaststroke, the 200-yard individual medley and the 400-yard individual medley.
Wiley Wrey, assistant swim coach, said Graves had a good chance to place in the top 10 of the rankings.
The top three will make the Pan-Am team.
KU golfers get 9th
KU's women's golf team ran into stiff competition in the Lady Cardinal Invitational in Beaumont, Texas, and finished ninth in the 11 team field yesterday.
The Jayhawks finished at 1,022 for the three-day tournament, won by SMU with a 926. The host school, Lamar University, finished second, four shots behind SMU.
Kansas was paced by senior Nancy Houns, who shot a 54-hole total of 247, 20 shots behind the co-medalist, Teresa Hession of SMU and Kim Bauer of Texas A&M;Candy Johnson had the second lowest score for the game with a 208, and freshman Cathy Eryre shot 201.
Sally White had the best 18-hole score of the tournament for KU with a 79 on the final day, and finished at 360. Lisa Howard outed KU's scoring with 276.
Make a new plan, Stan.
Here's your plan for an elevated new lifestyle.
Here's your plan for an elevated new lifestyle.
View:
Take your pick.
Closets:
14 feet wide.
dresser built in.
Two Sinks:
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Walls:
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April Special:
Save $90 when you sign
your lease this month.
Bath
Bedroom
140 square feet
Big Picture
Windows
Thermostat:
You set the temp.
we pay the bills.
Price:
From '275
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Living Room
340 square feet
Location
On campus,
on bus route
Cable TV Hookup:
Paid, just plug
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Private
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security patrol in halls.
Carpet:
Wall to wall,
anewer colour.
The TOWERS, make it part of your plans. Sign your lease for next fall before April 30 and save $90!
Show apartment now open
jayhawker towers apartments 1603 w. fifteenth
8
Wednesday, April 11, 1979
University Dally Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: LR. LARRY JONES, a University of Illinois psychologist, will give a lecture on "Multi-dimensional Models of Interpersonal Cognition and Preference", from 10:30 to 11:50 in 410 Gallagher, American Universities Field Staff, at 11:45 in the EMC Center, 1204 Read Ave. BASEBALL, KU versus Sioux Falls College, a double-header, at 13:01 at Quigley Field. MICHAEL HIGGIN, professor of anthropology at University of Northern Arizona, will speak in Sixtus Lake at, 4 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
TONIGHT: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be available from 6:00 to 8:00 in the legal aid office in new Green Hall. KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 in Parsons B and C of the Kansas University. ADOFY SEILACHER, Haas Visiting Distinguished Professor of Geology, will give a lecture on "Constructional Morphology and Evolution of Sand Dollars," at 7 in 232 Landley Hall EAST ASIAN FISH HOUSE, Board at 7 in EAST ASIAN FISH HOUSE, MICHAEL HIGGINS, professional thropology, University of Northern Colorado, will lecture on "Urban Poor in Oaxaca: Production and Reproduction of Poverty," at 7:00 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. KU GUNG FU
CLUB will meet at 7:30 in Room 173仁蔑朋. CHAE JIN LEE, will give a KU INTERNAL Law Society lecture on "Normalization of U.S.-Chinese Relations", at 7:30 in Room 109, new Green Hall. KU COMMITTEE ON SOUTH AFRICA will sponsor a discussion and two films on multinationals in the Big Eight Room of the Union at 7:30.
TOMORROW: UNIVERSITY COUNCIL meeting at 3:30 in Room 105 Blake Hall. REX MARTIN, KM professor of philosophy, will speak on "Recent Themes of Economic Justice," at 3:30 in Room 112-C Summerfield Hall. SUA BRIDGE will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor A of the Union. SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Union. LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY GROUP will show a documentary film about the history of Puerto Rican Independence, "The Nationalist," at 7 p.m. in the Jahayk Room of the Union. PARMSONG, a new film on the history of Puerto Rican Independence, at 7:30 in Room 105 Hall. VALERIE NYSTROM, a senior in the KU School of Fine Arts, will present a recital at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. EDWARD DORN, considered one of the foremost contemporary American poets, will give a public reading at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
$1,500 FREE!
Have you seen the 96x1 sign on the Holiday Plaza, 25th and Iowa? If you're the first to send us the elec. sign, please call us at 718-553-1111. SIGN SHOW, you will all $1,500.
Tune into the "X" for details
96x radio
Stereo 95.7 F.M.
WEDNESDAY EVENING SERIES
Museum of Natural History
UNDERSTANDING
ZOOS
ZOO
UNDERSTANDING
ZOOS
ZOO
APRIL 11 $1.50 7:30 p.m.
sua films
Wednesday, April 11
SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT
(1955)
Thursday, April 12
Cuban Cinema:
THE TEACHER
THE TEACHER
Dir. Ingmar Bergman, with Ulla Koehler, and Jorge Anderson. A sophisticated sexual comedy that won the Cannes Film Festival's Grand Pris for Best Comedy.
(1977)
Dir. Octavio Cortazar. Set in 1961, during Cuba's "Year of Education" when over 100,000 youngsters volunteered to join the Literary Brigade to teach it up. You can read how to write and write. Cuban publications. PLUS: "The History Book", v.7.
Friday & Saturday,
April 13 & 14
MEAN STREETS
(1973)
Dir. Martin Scorcee; with Harvey
Dir. Martin, Robert Delkro, Amy Robinson,
Cesare Danova.
*Fri.* - 3:30 & 9:30
*Saturday*
SWEPT AWAY
(1975)
Dir. Lina Wertmiller, with Giancarlo Giannini, Mangiarella Melato, Italy subtilties.
*Fetl - 7-100*
*Melato - 8/20*
Sat. — 3:30 & 9:30
Tuesday, April 17
BROADWAY MELODY OF 1940
Dir. Norman Teurog; with Fred Astaire, Eleanor Powell, George Murphy, Great dance sequences and songs.
(1940)
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission.
shows also in Woodruff at or 12 midnight unless 31.50 admission.
STRENGTH
843-3377
CRANE & Company Inc.
STATIONERS AND OFFICE OUTFITTERS
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The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts and the University Theatre • Present
THE LOVE FOR THREE ORANGES
An Opera by Prokofiev
April 7, 1973, 14:30
Institution of Theatre
Maryhill Hall, N.J., New York
Tickets on sale
in Maryhill Hall, N.J., New York
Call 800-654-1922
Interpretations
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Open Sunday 1-5
Calgaard list submitted
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor,
said yesterday that he had received a
committee's recommendation for a
recruitment plan and guard, vice
chancellor for academic affairs.
Shankel said the committee, which had been reviewing applications for several weeks, had recommended several people and ranked them in order of preference.
Calgaard has accepted the position of president at Trinity University in San An-
chancellor offices also would participate in some of the discussions.
1. plan to try to arrange in-depth discussion with the candidates as soon as I am ready to begin the interview.
If Dykes concurs with Shankel's decision, the Kansas Board of Regents will be notified of the choice and will announce Calgaard's successor.
He said several people from other vice
After meeting with the candidates,
Shankol said, he will make his recommen-
dations to the board.
Shankel said he expected to make his recommendation in a week to 10 days, depending on when the candidates could be interviewed.
Shankel had said earlier this year that the decision would be made by mid-April.
The selection committee drafted a new list of qualifications in mid-February that included a stipulation that the applicant must have demonstrated interest in faculty and student participation in decision making.
However, the selection process was delayed a month when faculty members on the selection committee expressed dissatisfaction with the qualifications listed for the position.
Because of the new qualifications, the search for Calgard'a replacement had to begin.
Suicide possible in student's death
Suicide by drug overdose may have caused the death of Richard J. Retmobl, Overland Park senior, who was found dead in afternoon, Lawrence police said yesterday.
bed at his residence, 1820 Ohio St., police said.
Calgaard's successor will start July 1.
Alan Sanders, a pathologist at Lawrence Memorial Hospital who performed an autopsy on Reimbold, reimbolted his death was caused by choking on vomit. He said yesterday afternoon that it was not known whether drugs were involved.
Investigators do not suspect the use of illegal drugs, Sutton said.
Statements made to friends, and bottles found in the residence have led police to think suicide was the possible cause of death, Sutton said.
LL. Lyle Sutton, head of the detective unit of the Lawrence Police Department, said, "There was some indication that prescription drugs were involved."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
Police said Reimbold was known to be alive around 1:30 a.m. Monday, when he had a telephone conversation with a friend. He found dead at about 1:38 p.m., police said.
—Compiled by David Edds
KU police are investigating the burglaries of four department offices on the second floor of Wescoe Hall. Police said the burglaries, which were reported Monday, had happened during the weekend. weekend.
Police said $40 in cash had been stolen from a file cabinet in the American Studies office, 2120 Wescroe; $14 in cash from the Western Civilization office, 2108 Wescroe; $12
in cash from the French and Italian office,
2061 Wescoe; and $1 from the Slavic languages
and literatures office, 2133
Wescoe.
You Have Less Than THREE Weeks to Step Up To HEWLETT PACKARD Quality And Save Up To $85.00!
Until April 30, 1979,
You Can Step up to
Any Hewlett Packard
Programmable and
Receive up to $85.00
Software Value FREE
Details at your
BEST QUALITY BEST PRICES BEST DEALS
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
A detective with the KU police said the burglaries were thought to be related.
Kansas Union Bookstores
Police think a key was used to gain entry to the offices, because there was no sign of forced entry and the doors were supposedly locked, he said.
A spokesman for D.W. Newcomer and Sons said services for Reimbold would be at 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Newcomer chapel, 8201 Mcalve Alf., Overland Park. Burial will be in Johnson County Memorial Gardens, Overland Park.
V2S4 nature charge
save energy
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
UP TO
$85 VALUE
FREE
We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with K.U. students.
KINKO'S KOPIES
Letter size (3x11) 4¢
Legal size (3x14) 5¢
Theses, collated 25% cotton-5.5¢
Resumes
Colored paper 5¢
legal size Go¢
2 sided copies:
letter 10¢ per original
legal 15¢ per original
10¢ per copy pattern
Reductions 15¢
Transparencies 7.5¢
Books, magazines, sheet music 5¢
legal 5.5¢
collation extra
stamping 10 extra
special handling 8¢-10¢ extra
Passport Photos
*5.9.5 color
*4.9.5 BW
While You Wait!
Film and Film Processing
Film and
Film Processing
Stationery Supplies
Nothing to it letters
We're open everyday
m-Th - 8:30-8:00
Friday 8:30-6:00
Saturday 10:00-5:00
Sunday 12:00-5:00
ROCHERMONT 843-8019
2 blazes strike main fire station
James McSwain, fire chief, said the most recent fire, Monday night, was caused by a fire alarm.
Fire can strike anywhere—incurring a fire station. Lawrence's No. 1 fire station, 745 Vermont St., has been struck by fire twice in the past week.
The electric heater was used to warm the sleeping dormitory and offices of the station after a fire destroyed a heating boiler at the station last week.
Monday's fire did not damage the station.
However, McSwain said the boiler probably
hadn't been checked yet.
Causes sought by arson squad
The fire caused more than $200,000 damage in the warehouse, which is now under investigation.
Five members of the nine-member Douglas County Arson Squad are investigating a fire that occurred in a barn, where James McSwain, chief, said yesterday.
"The extra investigators will allow a blitz on all evidence available," McWain said. He declined to comment on the fire, except that investigators have ruled out all accident causes.
The fire caused an estimated $200,000 in damage to rolls of paper owned by Kansas Press Inc. 2201 Haskell Ave. An additional $10,000 damage to the warehouse was reported.
Youth waives jury trial right
The trial of a 16-year-old youth charged with a series of sexual assaults and aggravated burglars in Lawrence last December will start next week.
However, the trial will take place before a judge only. The youth, Charles Hunter, 124 Tennessee St., waived his right to a jury trial Monday.
James Paddock, Douglas County District Court judge, will hear the case alone starting April 18. Paddock will make the final ruling on guilty guilt on eight charges of aggravated robbery, charges of rape and two charges of attempted rape.
JR'S
Be an active part of next years
SR. CLASS—
Apply now for 1979-1980
Standing Committees
HOPE AWARD
REGALIA &
SR. CLASS GIFT
CLASS UNIFICATION
PROMOTIONS & ADVERTISING
HOMECOMING BANNER
Deadline April 20, 1979—
Level 3 107 B Kansas Union
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 11, 197
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Alzheimer's disease, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good, good,
CLASSES OF MEMORIES
CLASSIC TRIANGULAR
CLASTIC TRIANGULAR
CLASTIC TRIANGULAR
CLASSIFIED RATES
ERRORS
one two three four five
three times four times five
15 words or less
$1.00 $2.25 $5.00 $7.50
Exponential
Additional
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 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.
864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the URN business office at 864-5635.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
DEFEND YOUR INALIENABLE RIGHTS to life,
education, and property. Students for a Liberal Society in the Right to Life Association.
Employment Opportunities
Students实习 in businesses, pre-med, pre-law,
pre-engineering. Major make $597 per month. For interview
requests, mail resume to: John S. Murray 507 621 4344.
FOR RENT
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimithi
maintains her library, which she has been the
manager of the year. Stop by and look on over
her bookshelves, filled with books she would
give you all the details and send her a note.
Naimithi HALL, 1803 Naimithi HALL, 843-939
843-939
FRONTER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT-
ABLE. A two-story apartment with uni-
titled room, from $76. Two nearby rooms
are available. On KU has room
INDOOR HEATED POOL at 328 Frontier Road. Next to
Rosslyn's End, at 328 Frontier Road. Next to
To inhabiters one bedroom, new modern, fur-
erable, air-conditioned starting May 20 - option,
contract #831-161
Christian Houghton Now and Summer. Close to
her home, 942-842-6088, between
5:00 and Keep trying.
LIVE IN LUXURY: need to assist beautiful
bedroom, 2 bath apt. 2 biceps, balconies-free
1 bedroom, 2 baths. Water pump for
cable TV (Call Jervess & Joyce for Becire
Richman 843-0221, Evenings 843-3056,
4-19
Absentments and room furnished, parked most
recently. KU and rear town. No
address. 843-5767
Summer sauna house. Completely furnished, 2 BTR, 8 bath apartment. Swimming pool, sauna, carriage. Bathroom with billiard table, table tennis and sand table. Great for summer living. Call 841-9686 evening call.
Trailside summer sublue, next year option,
3 Baths, 2 Bedrooms, Luxury Laundry Room, $400 per
room.
Jayhawk TOWER'S 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
Apt. 2 BR and efficiency. Close to campus. Utili-
paid. Clean, quiet, and comfortable. 840-759-6132
Dumbles to be auction for June AUG 15. Close to
$17,000. Auctioneer calls. Call 212-348-6790 or visit
$465 per month CALL Mark Thornberg at 212-348-6790.
**MARK K. & H. Apartments** new renting for junior housing. 218 West 59th Street, New York, NY 10017.宿舍,7㎡。7㎡。7㎡。7㎡。
Sublease 1 BB Apt available May 1 Gas & Mg
Summer rates available. Bldg #841-3126. $47 per
summer rates available. Bldg #841-3126. $47 per
Summer solubility Furried 2-bedroom $a_{30/2}$
A/C dishwasher A/C dishwasher 4-12
841-609-608 4-12
Sunline Suitcase. Two bedroom Suitcase Apartment.
2 person AC, swimming pool $250. 842-623-9200
Summer Submarine 2 BR, 17' bath; unfurried
room; built-in kitchen; Villa 854; Villa
324-month; electricity 811-853.
Luxury, 3-bedroom, 3-bath, townhouses, pools,
studio, fireplaces, balconies, courtyards.
Club, Disbath, and four, available in Mo.
Sale ends Feb. 28.
Perfect Summer sublet $13.15 for 2 bedrooms
from $100 a week, i.e. pool, remodeled, balcony.
Call 841-586-9726.
Contemporary efficiency-stability. Meadowbrook
furniture, hatchery, and ectrychnine resonant
furniture, hatchery, and ectrychnine resonant
furniture.
Hell of a Deal- Hail me one bedroom furnished
apartment Nice pool $180 uli41-806
li41-806
SUMMER SUBLUEASE Sundance Apartments 2.
New! Updated new! Infrared Available
MASTER ONLY $699.00
Summer sub-lease at Macmillan Acres; Tuesday, sub-lease at Macmillan Acres; Call 1-800-745-3222.
Business addition with option for Fall one, because of the new building. New water paid Chow to create an uncontaminated pool. New Water P
Two girls need one or two Christian counsellors to help them deal with their difficulties, attachments, during nights, beds, and meals. A girl who has been bullied by a friend must be supported.
Abortion, partially hurried; one bedroom,
doubled up; room shared; 3.50
doubled up; quiet room; 942-0744 to 3.50
942-0744
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
All new & contemporary
Visit our furnished display unit today &
you'll see why the move is to Sundance
Apartments. Computer furnished studio of
three, conveniently located at the 8 & found
just west of the Sanctuary on All Bus Route.
R415965
Bubba's for summer - one bedroom in beautiful
condo - private fireplace, large windows,
elegant suites. Fireplaces, balcony, private
patio.
8415255·842.4455
this summer, 2. Retrain. Call 813-6866. for
Eddie or Scott
Must sub-lease - 1. Br Sunday, Apk. Available.
May 1 | Mail # 743-1752; after 4. Rent a laptop: 4.20
PLEASE HELP us two fellow college kids by sub-fishing a luxurious Mall out for the summer. We have a large spacious freewood, large kitchen, and beautiful furniture, large kitchen, but Call Scott or Sandy at 843-9023
2 Female roommates to shake a 4 bed, comfy summer this and/or fall. Call 812-649-4291.
Southridge Plaza sublease available mid-May
Stadium parking $10.50 AC pool, pond,
$160 mile base, 842-0250
4-18
SENSIEMILA SEEDLESS HFBRAL SMOKE
NADIUM CLEANER INGREDIENTS
MULLED PINE INGREDIENTS OF THE
NAHVOO SMOKING MIXTURES $3.00
PER LB. OF NADIUM CLEANER
215 COTTONWOLFF AIRDROZZA 4-12
4-12
Fender Molson Mason Guitar with strings, corded picks, mandolin picks, earphones, covers. Very good condition.
Most will call, agree幼儿 home. 5 bedrooms,
2 bathrooms, parquet floor, 4 car seats.
Partially furnished $1700. Will accommodate
anyone.
FOR SALE
Sunbites--Shrimp are our specialty. Non-
Sunbites--Shrimp are our specialty.
exposed to 1621 MHz (843-3570)
1621 MHz (843-3570)
1924 Pursuit College GT Liberty 5-5m. AM-JM
108mm. ABS. Price $750.00. Condition:
Excellent condition. Cust $750.00. Mint-
Mint.
Attenuator, starter and generator. Appliances
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 825-098-3000, www.motive.electronic.com
E-BILL.
WATERPROOF MATTRESSS $39.98, 3 year guarantee.
WHITE LIGHT 794 Mass. 103-126, 15ff
Watch for trucks on Sunday selling produce
Foods, Foods & 8th and Illumina also woods
products.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make use of Western Civilization! Makes sense to you and your students in real-world settings. 21 for exam preparation. New *Australian History*. 30 for exam preparation. Calls for 300 or more copies. Calls, Mails Bookshelf, & Ordnance Bookshelf. $15
Miami, FL 33104 postmaster postmaster (212) 658-7955
Miami, FL 33104 postmaster postmaster (212) 658-7955
Baltimore, MD 212-5155 mail (812) 658-7955
Baltimore, MD 212-5155 mail (812) 658-7955
15. PT, SLOP, walls & extrus, fast & lively.
842-8722 4-12
1989 Ford Galaxie, excellent transportation, dependable air, PS, M3-6000 4-12 4-12
Mistake-toe: 1978 Yamaha 250, excellent cordion,
811-640-4380; after 5. S
4-12
TRANS-AM 1977, low note, white w gold blue bird
might options - Chair. Call: Charlotte-842-732
4-12
14 Camara LT, V6.8, air. snr. 8, pch. power with
drives.
AM- FM 3-MB track. $3,000. 604-258-8957
We have Haven City, ny; maila bookshop,
711 W. Str. 80-732 800-732 4-13
74. Marce Carbo, AT, PS, PB, AMR, Radio A
542-231-88, after 6 p.m.
4-13
1927 New York Albs Serving Machine Good condi-
tions Call evening and
afternoon 452-509
Seattle, Walt-berger. Exercise-informed new-
market dealer. $350 are needed for good grades.
$160 already available.
FENDER TWIN-REVERB Amp, Good Condition 4-13
845-3422
1972 CIDH 0000, Reliable, Tranm, new batteries,
up to best price.864-6117 4-24
Hermann G. & B. L. Leur C.V. 9,000,111 - 24,000,111
Hermann G. & B. L. Leur C.V. 9,000,111 - 24,000,111
Merkel & Schwarz - Meldung / Medien
Nürnberg Nürnberg - Media & Medien
Nürnberg Nürnberg - Media & Medien
DAILY
Most will sell this week. One morning couch
couch black and white TV TW 10/31/89
trying
SPORTS CAR 1938 TTR low mph. Mk-
h for car, neatly assembled. $250.00
to pick up from the local dealer.
Telecoms Receiver 100 watt at 60°. Never used.
400 marked in box. 843-8628. Must visit
4-13.
FOUND
Ladder II instrument watch outside, Call 842-7294 to idle.
Instrument-bound call, Call 842-7294 to idle.
Two keys marked VBS. Call 961-8504 to identify and claim
HELP WANTED
EXOTIC JOE LARIKE TAHOO, CALIFORNIA
Little expense, fantastic talent $1790-$4000
miles required. Bicycle rentals,
ranches, zimmers, river rafts, A more
S$96 for each to Lake Worth QB.
Bicycles and other equipment.
ENTERTAINMENT
GUIDE
MUSIC
G.P. LORD'S
Always
great looking ladies
Never
a cover charge
Memberships Avail.
701 Mass.
TONIGHT!
"HAMMER"
featuring
JAN HAMMER
with
Dry Jack
THURSDAY, APRIL 12th
FREE BEER!
because it's
KEGGER NITE!!
with
Camerata Band
FRI. & SAT.
APRIL 13th, 14th
FAST BREAK
The house
perma house
7th & Mass
MONDAY: 25* Draws
$1.25 Pitchers
TUES: ___ 15* Draws
80* Pitchers
WED:¹___ Same as Mon.
THUR: ___ Same as Wed.
FRI: ___ Same as Thur.
SAT: ___ Same as Fri.
day we start all o'
BEER/AMUSEMENTS
This ad worth one free draw Limit one per person.
Monday we start all over again.
Coors on Tap. Most bottle & Can Beer—55 $ ^{\circ} $
ROCKY
Js
Every Wednesday
LADIES' NIGHT!
.25' DRAWS ALL NIGHT!!
8th & Vermont
THE OTHER PLACE
1717 W.6th
MOFFET-BEERS
BAND
will be playing at
THE
BREWERY
Wed. & Thurs
9-12 pm
Fri.
Mon.
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.
BIG K's
PRIVATE CLUBS
&
FINE DINING
LAWRENCE'S 'BIG-
CITY' NIGHT CLUB
Memberships Available
The Erlidge
House
SKATING
LAWRENCE'S 'BIG-
CITY' NIGHT CLUB
Memberships Available
The
Bridge
House
WHEELS OF FUN
SKATE CENTER
EVERY WEDNESDAY
IS
KUID NITE!!
10:00-12:00 PM
$2.00—Price includes skates
Must have KUID
—SATURDAY—
Midnight - 2:00 AM
$2.50 DISCO LIGHTS—
—STEREO SOUND
COME ALINE WITH
8-WHEEL DRIVE
on S. Iowa in back of
Julie's Restaurant
TAN MAN POSERS!
Wanted: Wednesday,
April 11, 3:00
College student needed, May 1st to October 1st, to drive home major in music car race cars. Expenses include travel, meals, accommodations and experiences desirable. Reliability is in good mind. Mail resume to: Jon Smith, work on weekday, Mark Kernan, 4-13 912-457-123
2009 IN ALABAMA Summer job. High paying.
Need to be able to work 8am-6pm on weekdays
at all offices at 212-435-5000 or 212-435-5000. PO
In front of Watson.
Everyone that wants their picture in huge advertisements for Tan Man Day come 'undressed' like Tan Man & join in the fun!
Study of Research, Analytical - Project initiates in research on microbiology and immunology, interfereing bacterial growth and monitor, monitoring bacterial background absolutely required. Position will be held for three years from April to June 2018. Contact Dr. Benson Kawashima at kawashima@ucl.edu accepted until April 16, 2018. Contact Dr. Lawrence Kawashima at lawrencekawashima@ucl.edu. The University of Kansas, Lawson, Kawashima, KA 60053.
in front of Watson.
-Everyone's a Tan Man.- Dad
Position Announcement: Curriculum and instruction, survey assistance needed to distribute materials. May 9 from 9 a.m to 3 p.m and May 10 from 12 mnt to 2 p.m. Must be currently enrolled in an above bores with another student. Apply at the Battery Hall Application Rooms 12, 17, 187.
"Want to use this summer selling the Caribbean? The Panther Hunter! Cruising other parts of the world with you." Hot outfits need grower "for free information, and is the shrimp in Naxxar, 6833 Goo. Greenhouse."
Cookies position opening very soon for head cooks and grill staff. All around experience is required. Must be able to read and follow special recipes and have now been trained for special. Full part and junior positions are also available. Also needs to possess personality are absolutely needed. To apply to the San Bernardino County 4-11 office for appointment.
Mortar mould collagen cement in grad, waited 18 months. Sanding, sanding and molding roles and lots of afternoon breaks per day. Proceed to final construction in August. In position at AA X38, Baytol Torre Terraced Home. Job duties include contracting for甲醛 Enquiries. Qualified women and women with degrees in design or architecture.
The University Information Center is now
operated by the University of California,
begin May 22 and Aug. 39, 1979. Applications
are accepted from all who wish to attend.
Fri, April 15, 1979 The University of Kaiser
and the University of Oregon Alternative Action
Film Series
**DVERSEAS JOB (JDBC) maintain client stored database.**
Resume for position in:
**Dverseas Warehouse**
**Boston, MA**
**Job Code:** **DVERSEAS-JOB**
**Description:** Maintain client stored database. Resume for position in:
**Dverseas Warehouse**
**Boston, MA**
**Job Code:** **DVERSEAS-JOB**
JOKE LAKE TAHOE, CAIF. Fantastic fun!
$170-$280 Summer! Thousands still needed.
Camos, Bombaytown, Cumberland, Sylv
Nashville, Raleigh, Lakeland in LAKELAND
@ 60724 Sacramento, CA 93608
JOBS
MEN
WOMEN
SAILBOATS
CRUISE SKIPES 'No experience. High pay! See Carrinham, Hawaii, Europe, World! Summer cruise offers, plus 4-day sailboats. Box 60129, San Diego, CA, 98008
4-28
Part-time secretary wanted. Must be well organized, efficient and process initiated. Dedicate various hours to work in exchange for work 811-4144. 4-12 Now taking applications for Fountain & Gar Personnel All shifts especially room & hours only. Apply in person at Vital Restaurant, W 6th, 11F
SUMMER JOBS. Local贤能 for nuthanwise van with driver license position available to start the week. Reqs include a minimum of ten years experience. Need individuals who are not afraid of working at 8AM or 10AM and anything over 60 hours. Available at 420 N. Iowa St., Des Moines, IA 50719.
Fountain & Agnirly Grill serviced Noon hours and
Wednesday to Friday at Vita Vista Bistro
W 49; Apply to Fountain & Agnirly Grill
4-127
HELP? WANTED FULL TIME. Some mechanical
work must be done, then be sent and departs
A 1200hr A Rental for $800/mo.
DAY CARE. STAFF needed for before and after-program Care. May 3-15, 2015 will increase for services working with schoolchildren and or children aged 11-19 years to Lawrenry Extended Day Program (11-9-09) or to Lawrenry Extended Day Program (11-9-16). Lawrenry Extended Day Program requires women and girls of all race backgrounds to apply.
Need some spending money? World's Oil-Powered
Apple app lets you rent a car and a Mum through
payment. Apple is buying the car company.
POSITION: Research Assistant (DUTIES): Plan, conduct, evaluate and disseminate information, research and strategies of the Behavior Analyst position, levering their services to Projects across the traditional investments for these services, and freeware services. QUALIFICATIONS: Reqd. Master's in Psychology or related field or equivalent. QUALIFICATIONS: Reqd. Master's in psychology or related field or equivalent. PARTNER IN APPPOINTMENT ANALYSIS $250 to $1,000 monthly on an annual basis, or are motivated to apply
British Airlines Group is now accepting applications for Spring and Autumn holiday help. Apply at **423** www.britishairlines.com/careers.
SUMMER JOBS, NOW! WORLD CRUISEES!
PLEASE HAVE JOBs! No experience! Good pay! Caribbean, Hawaii. World Sea. Send $250 for a week at www.worldsea.com. Box 80123, Saratoga City, Cal 95860. W-5-8
Adult with own transportation to race for a couple of miles. Bike rental. $20 per hour. Light baskingspark $20.00.
LOST
Local women's silver watch on March 30th by
Loyal. $1,599.99. www.loyalwatches.com
4-12
85299-WRHW 85299-WRHW
Lost our coupon 4.9-29 One pair of contacts in
the coupon if found please call 610-373-1125
Led at all Hi-Fi Kiosk. Resd time (maximum 1 hour)
for rent of any item. No reservation allowed.
For rent of any item? No reservation allowed.
Please call 212-345-8700. No phone numbers.
MISCELLANEOUS
THEMS BINDING COPYING -- The Home of "Steve's Quick Copy Center" in headquarters for their binding and copying in Lawrences. Let us bind it at 830 MHz on plaf 402-300. Thank you.
NOTICE
DEATH: WHY NOTHING?
The Key to secret words: 842-3423, 841-2763
VIRTS - You are getting your Internet! Maybe
check Checkvirts! LB 10 BUN 8614-8748
Jun. 24, an important student invited Consumer
Jury in the District of Columbia to testify on the Board of Diceballers. Election
procedures were conducted by a jury of three.
PERSONAL
SAVY EXTRA INCOME $500 $1000 Insuring
Farm Workers $300 $600 Insuring
ENTERTAINMENT $250 $500 Shopping
STREETS $200 $400
RKKS BRIE SHOP is now open. 290 Raleigh,
Raleigh, NC 23647. RKKS BRIE SHOP
quick report. Vernon, VA 816-6500 IG
www.rkksbrieshop.com
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC. Abortion up to 17
pregnancy weeks; pregnancy tests; Birth Central,
Cornell University Tubal Ligation For apprentice call; 950-826-3498, tbrm@cornell.edu Overland Park Ks
JARHORH, 59231AAL, 48 Mon, Tue, Thru Fri
JARHORH, 59231AAL, 48 Mon, Tue, Thru Fri
MADS DELIGHT NIGHT, $190 gift card
MADS DELIGHT NIGHT, $190 gift card
Guy Leland, himself, reiterates new handb
ing. RISE 345, 362-366 or Hanky-panky 84-
175.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortions up to 17 weeks. Prepricing Testiny Birth, Child Counseling. Tubal Ligation. For appointment. Fetus Examination. 422-319-4000, 488 St. 10th, St. Overland Park, KA.
Wanted: Fitted jacket for canoe trip on White
Mountain in Missouri. Send email: Call 817-4952 or
739-7690.
Would you like to meet the girl who plays market-
woman in "The Princess Diaries"? Wednesday afternoon, if were not interested.
Tam Man...What is in a Tam Man? A Tam Man does nothing. He doesn't even care what people think of him. He doesn't mind what people say about him when he speaks to them. He kicks back and broaches in the conversation. Everybody wants to be a Tam Man. Everything everybody wants to be a Tam Man.
Oh, Georgetown, what do rather humanities, fundraising,
music, and the arts need to do? They don't know how to know
they'll that way. Why work in higher education and light-
fighting when they can just pay it out?
Glad to get you 3 SDRB stubs really do give a
very good result.
Glad to get you 2 first lines for GTEP
and 1 third line for TGTEP.
JUNIORS Admire now for next year's Class of
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Tues. April 17 BOOMTOWN RATS (Wagosae Inductions)
Wed. April 18 Red Willow Band-Kegger Night
Thurs. April 19 KANSAS TAM I (OM Productions)
Fri. April 10 CLARENCE "CATEMOUTH" BROWN Hot County
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642 Mass. St.
89
PETER R. MILLER
New mayor outlines priorities, concerns
By SHIRLEY SHOUP Staff Reporter
With his feet propped up on his 100-year- old roll-top desk in his fourth-floor office of Green Green Hall, Lawrence's newly elected mayor, Barkley Clark, leaned
back and talked about some of his interests and concerns for the next year.
Clark, a RU law professor, estimated the job of mayor would and five or six
"Part of the mayor's job is ceremonial—
PETER J. FISCHER
Barkley Clark
Clark, who was mayor for one year in 1975/76, said city government was more complicated now than during his first term as mayor.
open houses, kissing babies, cutting ribs
because they'll be called to city hall
for damages or protests.
"Now there are neighborhood groups, community development funds to handle
But despite the problems of city government, Clark said he preferred working in city government to state or federal government.
EVEN THOUGH THE city does have its
clerk, Clark said. "It is a good time to
be in the city."
Clark did not think the two new faces on the city commission, Marci Francisco and Robert Schumm, would change the commission very much.
"Their views will be somewhat different, but it's amazing how much consensus there is on the commission," he said.
"I'm very glad there's at least one woman," he said, and "I would have hoped there might be more. Marci has very strong ties to the University as Marnie
Clark said 95 percent of the decisions made by the commission were five-person
"Jack Rose was pragmatic and down to earth and I think Bob has many of those same qualities. I'd say the commission changed ideological makeup that much,
Argersinger did, and I think their votes might be similar.
Argeringer and Rose were on the city commission during the last term but did not run for re-election.
Clark characterized the new commission as middle-of-the-road, or slightly liberal in comparison to past commissions.
ONE OF CLARK'S priorities is completing city building projects, primarily the new city hall at Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
"I think the decision to put the city hall on the riverfront will be one of the most-reaching decisions the commission has made," he said, a catalyst to keeping downtown strong."
Clark linked another of his priorities, enforcing the city's environmental cleanup laws, with the downtown area. He said the city should get tougher in enforcing the city codes requiring people to clean up the exterior of their property.
"This includes cleaning up downtown and the riverfront park system. I see all these tying in together. With Maupinture proposing to build there, maybe others will be encouraged to develop in the downtown area.
"I'm concerned with the overall planning package. I'll do everything I can do to keep the downtown strong."
CLARK SAID THAT although he was proud of the downtown area, "I'm not prejudicial against the mall. The two may well have to coexist."
If the mail issue were voted on by the community, Clark said he thought the vote would be split down the middle.
Clark said he strongly favored the annexation of the land.
"I don't like to have developable land that close to the city not paying city taxes when they are getting all the benefits of the city," he said.
Clark also said the city should have control of the land.
He said if the developer's request to change the zoning of the proposed site south of the city from residential to commercial would have to be on solid land-use principles.
"You can't deny it because you don't like the looks of the developer or to protect the environment."
The zoning issue will be voted on in May or June.
far, city commissioners have received no information from the developers.
WITH ISSUES such as the mail, Clark and Lawrence was an interesting place to be in.
'It's just the right size. It's not too big so problems are overwhelming, yet big enough that it has some of the problems of a big city.
"There is a chemistry between the University and the town," she said. "I've never found a city anywhere with a better business community, business community and the University."
He said although there sometimes was friction between the townspeople and the University, he thought 99 out of 100 people they were glad the university was here.
"It gives the city added culture that other towns this size can't have. There is a different economic interdependence. Sales really drop in the summer and even more in August when the summer students of the university is the lifeblood of the city," he said.
Shankel recommends policy on videotaping
Lawrence, Clark said, does many things that have direct influence on the students, although most students do not vote in city elections.
"I want to emphasize the need for students to come down and try to get interested in city government," he said, while many were on their own city government some day.
By TONI WOOD Staff Reporter
Guidelines that would restrict the videotaping of campus events were recommended yesterday to the University of Texas at Austin by Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
"What we really need are some general guidelines indicate that the University has some concern and would like to see some restrictions." Shankel said.
"But we should recognize that sometimes it is a desirable thing to do," he said, and he continued.
AS GUIDELINES, Shankel suggested that:
- The University will not, in routine matters, videotape scheduled meetings.
- Videotape would be used only when it is reasonably expected that illegal activity was detected.
- All video tapes, where no illegal activity did occur, will be erased.
- They should not be used surreptitiously.
When used, they should be used openly.*
- The University police have to have the opportunity to use videotapes to verify illegal activity, but they should be used with discretion.
The concern about students' rights stemmed from a demonstration March 30 in front of Strong Hall against investments in South Africa by the KU Endowment and the protest, KU police videotaped participants from the second floor of Strong Hall.
Don Marquis, professor of philosophy and SenEx member, said he thought the com-
TWO DAYS EARLIER, a demonstration against the Egyptian-Iraeli peace treaty was videotaped by KU police. Mike Hull, a member of the KU police, was the first protest videotaped by police.
muttee did not have the competency to deal with a law-enforcement problem.
Scott said the committee should consult the traffic council, the American Civil Liberties Union president and the University Council.
Murcia said, "Are students rights being violated? If they are, I'd be happy to vote for them."
"BUT THE UNIVERSITY may have reason for videodating, for controlling the relationship."
Marquis used the Shockley incident of 1917 as an example of when poison gas was used.
William Shockley, Nobel Prize winner, was on campus for the J.A. Vickers Sr.Memorial lecture series. She was shouted down by protesters and not allowed to speak because of his theories that blacks were genetically inferior to whites.
At that time, members of the American Association of University Professors issued a letter to Dr. Shackley saying that the potential for such events as those surrounding Shackley's appearance be
SAM *ZWEIFEL*, Lawrence graduate student and SenEx member, said students were very excited to also at basketball games and football games. He said long-range lenses were used
Hill said students were not continuously taped during games, but only when a problem was cited, such as drinking, fighting or a medical emergency.
When an officer is sent to deal with the problem, he is followed by the videotape camera, Hill said. This occurs about six times during an average game, he said.
In addition to following incidents, the tapes are used for training officers or as a tool in providing training.
State considers lawsuit for unrepaired panels
By PATRICIA MANSON
The state may take legal action against a contractor who worked on the new Bell Memorial Hospital at the University of Chicago. The attorney assistant attorney general said yesterday.
Staff Reporter
Jerry Dickson, the assistant attorney general, said the contractor, Vincent DiCarlo, had not submitted an acceptable plan for repairing about 140 panels that make up the outer walls of the hospital.
Patrick Hurley, secretary of administration, has not yet decided whether the state would use DiCarlo for the county clerk's office. A lawyer in the secretary's office, said.
"I anticipate that the state of Kansas will terminate Mr. DiCarlo's contract and seek whatever legal remedies are available." Dickson said.
"I DON'T know if Mr. Hurley is going to sue anyone," Briscoe said. "We are considering the options.
The state already has withheld about $50,000 from D'Carlo on the $2.35 million contract because of the damaged panels.
Dickson, who was appointed last year to handle legal problems with Median Life, told the group whether the state would die DICarlo, but said, "We believe our damages are
"I will guarantee that Mr. Hurley will make some decision this week."
Last May, 140 cement panels on the hospital were found to be cracked and chipped. DiCarlo was told to repair or replace the panels.
DiCarlo, president of V.S. DifCarlo General Contractors, Kansas City, Mo., could not be reached for comment.
DiCarlo told state officials last week that the panels would be repaired by April 25. He said two Kansas City city governments would pay the panels at a cost of about $15,000.
Briacoe said the state also might use another company, Thomas Construction, a firm that builds construction worked on Orr-Major Hall, the basic science buildings at the Med School.
The panels have been inspected three times since then by state and University officials and have been judged unacceptable each time.
The state last month threatened to terminate DiCarlo's contract if he did not submit an acceptable plan for repairing the panels.
State officials said the building was not structurally sound. A state architect's report last winter said that the floors of the building slope excessively and that the elevators lacked adequate ventilation.
The bonding company, Travelers Indemnity of Hartford, Conn., would be responsible for any debts related to Orr-Hall Hall that Construction Thomas did construction.
BRISCOE SAID the state had not accepted DiCarlo's plan because it was too vague.
Spokesmen for Thomas Construction have denounced the state's claims. The company has asked for about $200,000 to compensate for money it says it spent because of inaccurate architectural drawings.
Briscoe said KU construction crews might do some of the repair work on Orr-Major.
Thursday, April 12, 1979
LY
Vol. 89, No.130
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
(1)
Crunched car
Laura Bedwell, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, removes some belongings from her battered
itafl Photo by ALAN ZLOTK
car, which was hit yesterday by a food delivery truck that rolled down an incline near the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. The truck damaged four cars. See story page 3.
Carlin, Stephan to inspect plant; NRC says 71 nuke designs flawed
From the Kansan's wire services
TOPEKA-Gov. John Carlin and Attorney General Robert Stephan will participate today in an inspection tour of the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant now under construction near Burlington.
Dan Watkins, Carlin's chief administrative assistant, said yesterday that the day-long trip was designed simply to provide the state's two top elected officials with more knowledge of issues surrounding the complex plant.
"It is an informational and fact-finding trip to put some perspective on the facility." Watkins said.
Both the governor's office and the attorney general's staff have been studying the controversial plant and chemical use in the region.
Interest in Kansas first nuclear power generating plant has swelled in recent weeks, since the accident at the plant in Oklahoma.
Watkins said, "We have been studying, since John came into office, the issues of quality assurance and quality control and ways to analyze any safety questions that may exist or potentially exist.
"THAT IS not to say that we are suspicious of some safety defect."
Meanwhile, the Nuclear Regulatory Agency said in Washington that the Three Mile Island accident had demonstrated the need for urgent safety corrections in nearly all of the nation's atomic power plants.
The agency reported that it had discovered a design flaw in some power plants designed by Westinghouse Corp. and
that the flaw was similar to the one found in the Three Mile island plant.
The flaw could mislead plant operators and prevent vital emergency cooling in the event of an accident, the com-
The agency said safety corrections were needed "on a priority basis for all light-water power reactor facilities." That would affect 71 of the 72 licensed nuclear power plants in the country. The exception is the Fort Saint Vrain plant at Plattville, Colo., which is a high-temperature, gas-cooled reactor.
COMMISSION SPIKESMEN did not list the corrective actions that the plant considered necessary at the plant.
Westinghouse had no immediate comment on the NRC statement.
A status report from NRC officials at the plant said that when engineers had lowered pressure in the reactor to remove gas bubbles from the coolant system, too much water had accumulated.
But NRC spokesman Tom Elsamaar said the problem should not block a cold shutdown of the reactor, the point at which the reactor could shut down.
In Washington, the NRC said it was preparing to send a
Meanwhile, technicians at the Three Mile Island plant outside Midtown Pa., reported difficulties yesterday in operating machinery.
FEDERAL OFFICIALS, who were testing residents of the Three Mile Island area, said radiation levels in the water were low.
preliminary notification of the newly discovered flaw to all reactor operators.
Westinghouse sent plant owners a notice April 7 warning them that some of the plants it had designed depended on a combination of two instrument signals by the plant company, which was not available often when there was trouble with the main cooling system.
Cooling failure could lead to a meltdown or overheating of the reactor's core and the release of large amounts of
however, builders of the Wolf Creek plant were not among owners contacted by Westinghouse regarding the design flaw, a spokesman for Kansas Gas & Electric Co. said.
The spokesman, Bob Rives, said Westinghouse's action "does not in any way affect Wolf Creek."
KG&E AND Kansas City Power & Light Co. are construct the plant.
The Wolf Creek plant was designed by Bechtel Engineering but will have a reactor vessel designed by Westinghouse. The Three Mile Island plant was designed by Westinhouse but built by Babcock and Wilcox.
Another K&G E spokesman, Lyle Koerper, said representatives of Westinghouse and K&G E had met
"The idea is that anything that is learned during investigation of the accident will be taken into account," he
2
Thursday, April 12, 1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services
Group formed to study accident
WASHINGTON—President Carter appointed 11 persons yesterday to investigate the accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear reactor, including the lead investigator.
The commission was given six months to investigate the accident. Carrier told the panel to study the role played by Metropolitan Edison Co., which operates the plant; assess the emergency preparations of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and other federal, state and local authorities; and evaluate the results of the proposed response.
On Tuesday, South Carolina closed its borders to two trucks carrying radioactive waste from the damaged Three Mile Island land with a burial site.
Hehward Shealy of the department of health and environment in Columbia, S.C., ordered the trucks to return to the Harrisburg, Pa. plant after receiving word from Chem Nuclear Systems Inc, that most of the material on one of the trucks was from the Three Mile plant's Number Two reactor that was damaged
Similarly said last week he would permit no waste from the damaged reactor in the state because of the "high probability" they would be "long-lived waste
11 ex-leaders executed in Iran
TEHRAN, Iran—Eleven generals, diplomats and politicians died before firing squads last night—the highest execution toll in the capital in one night.
The latest executions in Tehran mean that at least 101 men have been put to death since the revolutionary forces of Ayatollah Khomeini Khominei still
More trials were reported in progress yesterday, including those of three police officers suspected of torture.
*charges against the 11 executed men ranged from treason and corruption to 'acts against the people.' Nearly half of them were shot for white-collar crimes or the sanctioning of murder and torture charges that have dominated past court hearings.
U.S. welcomes Amin's defeat
KAMPAILA, Uganda - Tanzanian troops and Ugandan rebels entered Edi尹's capital in triumph yesterday after a five-month war to drive the die-off.
In Washington, U.S. officials welcomed the ousting of Amin and said the United States would move quickly to establish a normal relationship with the
Amin and what remained of his forces were last seen Tuesday as they fleed eastward toward Jinja, 50 miles away. Some reports said Amin went to Tororo,
The Tanzanian-sponsored Ugandan National Liberation Front announced that a provisional government had been established, making former Ugandan university official Yussufa K. Lale, the new Ugandan president, defense minister and armed forces chief.
NOW boycott ruling appealed
ST. LOUIS—Attorney General John Ashcroft yearned after掀 a federal district court upholding a boycott of Missouri cities by the National
Ashcroft said the petition for appeal was necessary to protect Missouri residents from continued economic harm resulting from the boycott.
NOW began its boycott of convention sites in Missouri two years ago, after the state had failed to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment.
Aschroff filed suit last year—the first such civil suit in the nation—in an effort to stop the boycott, contending it violated federal antitrust laws.
U. S. District Judge Elmo Hunter had ruled Feb. 21 in Kansas City, Mo, that the boycott did not violate antitrust laws. The judge found Missouri could properly file the suit under federal antitrust laws, but ruled against the state on the merits of the case.
Elevator explosion injures 4
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—A spinning blade in an air pollution control device sparked an explosion at a grain elevator late Tuesday that injured four
North Kansas City Fire Marshal Donald Burgeon said a second-floor device used to grind byproducts of the plant "picked up a foreign object of some type."
The spark triggered an explosion, which "iterally blew the filter wide open and shook dust loose from the whole structure which just compounded the fire."
Byproducts of plant operations are ground to dust before being fumelled to hard-floor storage bags that keep them from being released into the atmosphere.
The blast occurred two miles north of downtown Kansas City and was the third grain dust explosion in 15 months in the Kansas City area.
Occupational Safety and Health Administration officials obtained a court order yesterday to enter the elevator to investigate. OSHA issued a 20-page citation against the plant last year alleging a series of violations after an inspection.
Evans challenges Alabama law
MOBILE, Ala.—Condemned murderer John Louis Evans III, who was adamant in his desire to die in Alabama's electric chair last week, has signed a federal court appeal that postpone his electrocution for months, his lawyer said yesterday.
Roggie Stephens, a Mobile lawyer retained earlier by Evans to fight for the death sentence, said Evans signed an appeal challenging the constitutionality of the law.
The appeal was expected to be filed today with the U.S. District Court in Mobile.
An earlier appeal, filed by Evans' mother which resulted in a stay of execution by Supreme Court Justice William Rehquist last Thursday, denied Mr. Rehquist's appeal.
Evans' appeal probably would take months and perhaps a year or longer before becoming an order. Stephens said. If the challenge is unsuccessful, he could have instructed the judge.
Washington fire kills 9 patients
Fire department officials questioned whether the building met city safety codes, because there was no emergency exit for persons on the upper floor.
WASHINGTON - A fire thought to have been caused by a careless use of matches roared through a half-way house for mental patients here early this month.
Ralph A. Spencer, building and zoning regulation administrator, said the lack of a second exit would violate the city building code and mean that the occupancy levels would rise.
The fire in the two-story brick building, which did not have smoket detectors or a sprinkler system, was reported by neighbors at 1 a.m., when most of the 47 buildings were on fire.
Profs seek union's recognition
About 420 union members are striking at the university, which employs more than 800 full-time faculty members. The strike began last Thursday after the BU Board of Trustees sought clarification of a proposed faculty contract that had been agreed upon by negotiators from both sides.
**BOSTON**—Boston University faculty and administration met last night with a federal mediator in an effort to bring to an end a contract dispute that has involved the university.
It would be the faculty's first contract after a 3½-year fight in and out of the courts to gain recognition for its union.
Students carrying signs have been picketing with their professors, and Tuesday they marched to the office of John R. Silber, university president, demanding tuition reimbursement for classes missed. Silber refused to meet with them.
The university, which serves 25,000 students, said a substantial number of classes were continuing. However, the faculty union, the American Association of University Professors, claimed it had shut down 90 percent of the university's operations.
Weather...
It will be mostly cloudy today with a 30 percent chance of showers, according to the National Weather Service. The temperature should reach the low 50s; with some thunderstorms, it may be raining.
Tornadoes hit Kansas, Missouri; 16 injured
From the Kansan's wire services
Nine persons were hurt last night when a band of twisters skipped across the eastern edge of the Kansas City area, destroying a building and damaging several other buildings.
Tornadoes raged through Missouri and parts of Kansas yesterday, destroying numerous homes and buildings and injuring 16 persons.
There were no immediate reports of deaths from the wide-ranging storm system that a day earlier took at least 56 lives in Texas and Oklahoma.
Seven persons were injured in southern Missouri, authorities said.
twisters remained aloft or were in lightly
noplated areas.
THE HIGHWAY Patrol in Willow Springs,
Mo., said 33 hores between Cabool and
Houston were destroyed or heavily damaged.
A FUNNEL, cloud touched down north of topeka last might about 5 p.m. and damaged the bridge.
Tornado reports yesterday ranged from extreme northwest Kansas to Missouri's southwest.
Mike Harnibble, Shawnee county dispatch officer, said two mobile homes were overturned in the area near 62nd and 73rd streets. The wood was blown off a house about a mile south.
Hambulin said the tornado then veered
northeast, away from the Toeka area.
IN THE Kansas City area, most of the damage was confined to Liberty, Mo., where the wall was torn off a church, three doors were broken, and many homes were overturned. At least nine persons were treated for injuries, including two hurt when the windows were blown out of their buildings.
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Four houses outside Liberty also were damaged, as was a service station and three houses in the Kearney area. Power lines in the Kearney area, Liberty and parts of Liberty without electricity.
A ternado also touched down in Independence, Mo., destroying a shed, but no one was hurt.
MOST OF the damage was reported in south central Missouri, where at least five tornadoes touched down in the Ozark hills. Tornadoes moved across the Boehme area.
In Wichita Falls, Texas, city officials trying to stop people from turning a tornado disaster into a human calamity moved yesterday to baltic prftfering and to curb looting by imposing price freezes and a dusk-to-dawn curfew.
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The curfew and price freezes were announced after an emergency session in the town, which was demolished Tuesday by a tornado.
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THE TEACHER
Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, whose hometown is Wichita Falls, flew from Washington to the mile to the survey the tween hit within a half mile of his house.
THE TWISTERS dropped at sundown all along the Texas-Oklahoma border and left 56 dead in several communities and more than 80 injured. The Texas Department of Public Safety said 42 deaths occurred in Wichita Falls.
THE TEACHER
(1977)
TOWER SAID an emergency disaster declaration already had been submitted to President Carter to be signed. The declaration would set in motion machinery by which residents could borrow money at their homes and begin rebuilding their homes and businesses.
Dir. Octavio Cuba; Set in 1961, dirubing Cuba* "Year of Education" when over 100,000 youngsters volunteered to join the Literary Brigade to teach illiterate peasants how to read and write. PLUS: "The History Book," v.7.7
(1973)
The tornado was the worst disaster to strike along the Red River in a quarter of a century.
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BROADWAY MELODY OF 1940
Tuesday, April 17
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted; $1.50 admission.
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Texas Gov. Bill Clements, who flew to Wichita Falls in a National Guard helicopter to survey the scene, said the storm may be as much as $300 million in damage.
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Thursday, April 12. 1979
University Daily Kansan
---
Lease termination tricky
Rv LESLIE GUILD
Staff Renorter
As the end of the semester rapidly approaches, some student renters must face legal problem if they don't notify landlords of their rent.
Although the Kansas Landlord/Tenant Act recommends a standard notification time of 30 days before the date on which tenants plan to vacate, Susie Hanna, Consumer Affairs Association campus represent and students yesterday that the length of time can vary.
"Even though 30 days is the standard, some complexes in Lawrence have notification times of up to 90 days," she said. "Whatever is stated in the contract that both parties have agreed to is what is legal."
Local landlords indeed have varying notification time requirements.
*Park-25 Apartments*, 2410 W. 25th St., has a 96-day notification period. Ellen Bray, Park-25 spokesman, said 90 days was needed to receive the notice.
"WE ACTUALLY don't need more than 60 days," Bray said, "but we ask for 90 to ensure that we will be able to re-rent the apartment. In the case of student renters, we have to know early because other students want to rent for the following year beginning in April."
She said the office work took time to complete.
Frontier Ridge Apartments, 524 Fronter Road, and Gatehouse Apartments, 2166 W. 26th St. have no notification period in their
"It's a bureaucratic problem of sorts," she said. "By the first of May we just can't have people still telling us that they are moving out. We cannot get the things done that we need to get the apartments ready to rent again."
"It's just a matter of courtesy with us," Nelson Hall, manager for both complexes, said. "Our tenants just tell us when they are."
VILLEAGE SQUARE Apartments, 850 Avalon Road, requires a 30-day notice.
"When signing a contract, students should be leary of any automatic response. The said, 'If they don't give notice, then you will be fined.'"
HANNA SAID she had had several complaints from students who did not give notification in time.
*sand* said that with some contracts, if notification were not given then the contract automatically was renewed.
Barbara Finley, Jayhawker Towers Apartments manager, said Barbara Finley, St., did not have a notification period and bened not send notice.
"The only thing they can do is give their notification right then" *they* should give a give them a break, they should think about submitting the apartment
Joe Stroup, Village Square manager, said, "we expect 30-days just like the stater. And we send reminders to each tenant 30-days."
Hanna said a 90-day notification period caused hardships for students.
"Especially with students, it's hard for them to know three months in advance what they plan to do," she said. "But if that's what the contract calls for and the renters don't abide by it, the landlord can use for rent due for another year."
HANNA SAID, however, that the landlords had to show a monetary loss before another year 's rent could be collected.
"The loss incurred by the landlord must be proven," she said. He must show that the apartment could not rented and that a mortgage had been filed.
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Legal Aid representative Laurence Rose said most landlords could not a set year's rent by enforcing non-notification.
"The apartment complex must show the damages," he said. Without this, few can make a tenant who has forgotten to give rent a chance.
Rose said students who found themselves in this situation should seek the advice of Legal Aid or the student Legal Services lawyer.
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--tell Dobbles, Stewart and Jamie Hall, Salina junior, gave Bowie written statements saying they saw that the truck's emergency brake was set and that he had placed a brick behind the truck's rear wheel.
Deadline April 20, 1979— Level 3 107 B Kansas Union
Truck hits cars despite brake
"I will survive this as long as I get a new car," Bedwell said. "Right now I'm going to try to contact the insurance company and try to get home this weekend."
B迪斯 Dicus, Topea junior; Anne Harrington, Kansas City, KA; freshman; and Liz Jervis, Omaha, Neb., senior, other the cars involved in the accident.
Bedwell's car, which was left lying on its passenger side, with its left end lodged between the rear right wheel of the truck cab, received the most damage.
Laura Bedwell, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, whose white 1977 Chevette was one of the cars hit, was in class when the accident occurred.
By PATRICIA RICE Staff Reporter
"I wasn't a witness to the actual accident," Hall said. "I was giving him directions, and after the young lady told what had happened, we went on to check
"After we saw what had happened, he asked me to be a witness to the fact that the truck was in the right gear, that the wheel was flat, that he had placed a block behind the tire.
"I was just going in to check some addresses," Dobbs said. "Then this girl came and told me my truck had just rolled over." She could not help, I cared. I thought she was kidding at first.
Kelly Stewart, Wichita sophomore, witnessed the accident and was the first to
Staff Reporter
Dobbs, whose truck was carrying 800 pounds of groceries, attributed the accident to the low compression engine in the truck.
A food delivery truck rolled down an incline yesterday near the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and struck four cars. The officers asked sorority members for directions.
The driver of the truck, Ben Dobbs, 25, Route 1, Karnie, Mo., said he pulled into the driveway to make a delivery, put the car in low gear and set the emergency brake.
According to a police report, the cars,
belonging to four members of the sorority,
at Gower Place, received more than $300
in damages.
About 45 persons gathered to watch the tow trucks pick the vehicles apart.
"This wouldn't have happened before 1972," Dobbs said. "That's when they started installing those engines to save on pollution."
"I used to be a body mechanic," Dobbs said. "Maybe I should've stuck with that."
No one was injured or arrested as result of the accident.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
APRIL 12, 1979
ASK is not a bargain
It is too late for a cry of outrage, but a sigh of disappointment seems appropriate.
The Student Senate renewed KU's membership in the Associated Students of Kansas on Tuesday—a move that will cost each full-time equivalent student 50 cents a year, or one KU's fiscal 1980 membership.
Indeed, it seems odd that KU students suddenly required the representation of a so-called professional lobbying organization after years of successful work by university administrators and by the Senate's own lobbying group. Concerned Students for Higher Education.
IF ASK's track record during this legislative session was indicative, one must question the group's effectiveness.
Lobbying efforts failed on legislation concerning the Landlord-Tenant Act, decriminalization of marijuana and
voter registration by mail. The group succeeded only in its efforts to back a boost in the minimum wage for students and increased funding of a state scholarship program.
Although each of those issues had some effect on KU, ASK critics have rightfully noted that the group's lobbying priorities do not pertain to the goals of higher education. Student activity money is being squandered on a program that will do little, if anything, to improve the quality of education the University can offer.
ASK CANNOT lobby for programs that specifically relate to KU or any one of its member schools. Instead, the group must concentrate only on issues of general interest to member schools.
why, then, should KU pay more than $9,000 for a group that quite possibly will diminish KU's own lobbying efforts?
Americans should listen to black South Africans
Why, indeed. Yet, students have no choice to but sigh and make the best of the worst situation.
The Endowment Association and the U.S. corporate interests with investments in South Africa have been distributing the funds to the black South African chief named Gatsha Buthelezi, who holds a powerless political position given to him by the racist South African president.
To the editor:
Philip Garcia carelessly used these distributed quotes in his article on apartheid in the Kansan on April 3. Naturally, the chief is quoted as saying that American investments help South Africa's black majority.
Apparently this chief is one of the few black South Africans who supports the views of American business journals. He is the only black they ever seem to quote.
Buthelezi is a very common name in South Africa and two other black South African leaders are also named Buthelezi. Their words should be considered.
One is Bishop Manas Buthelezi, who was recently asked about the black community's response to international economic sanctions against South Africa. His reply:
"We know that there will be suffering, but realize that it is by suffering that something better may happen. We don't mind taking the consequences."
A third black leader named Buthelsa is a former head of the black student movement. He was sentenced to nine years in prison in 1974, his "crime"? The courts found him guilty and sentenced him for the wielded awl of American investments! That, in South Africa today, is a crime.
A great many of South Africa's black leaders have risked arrest for that crime. Steve Biko, the internationally known leader who died in prison in 1977, called our investments in South Africa "America's sin."
The Nobel Peace Prize winner, the late Chief Albert Luthulh, supported an economic boycott of South Africa as "a method which is more effective than any other institution of South Africa, the most important voice of white conscience in South Africa, called in 1979 for a cessation of intolerance."
1. Strong economic pressure is of vital importance in bringing about as peaceful a peace as possible.
2. Peaceful relations are essential.
3. Attempts to change the situation through pressure by investors have proved inadequate.
2. Investment in South Africa is investment in aparthood, and is immoral, under the circumstances of the day.
4. Arguments that economic growth can produce fundamental change has proved false. Many black organizations have opposed foreign investment in South Africa and this would be the opinion of the majority to be seen black if their voices could be heard."
These people risk imprisonment for calling to us. I think we should listen.
Jonathon Unger.
Assistant professor of East Asian cultures And five students
Sullivan Principles
Sullivan Principles can't end apartheid To the editor:
I was surprised to see the tattered old Sotvan Principes dragged out of my room. I thought about it all.
KANSAN letters
as a plausible answer to the South African problem. One need scarcely glance beyond Garcia's own text to cast serious doubt on the relevance of this report by expert advisers in South Africa.
Leon Sullivan, that "member of the board of General Motors" as Garcia refers to him, came up with his famous principles as a reaction to the mounting outrage against American investments in racist South Africa.
The principles call for American companies to promote fair employment practices.
Apparently, the "lone cry" of one black South African supporter of the Sultan Principes is about all the persuasion Garcia needs. This is especially curious in light of the fact that Gatsha Buthelezi heads one of the most homelands for Garcia, right-module.
Buthelez is, in fact, one of several African puppets trapped out by the white minority government. As for the Sullivan Principles, he claims there is more than gorified corporate advertising.
What does it matter if American businesses express a belief in equal and integrated employment when South African law prohibits fair employment practices?
As a member of South Africa Caltex Ltd, put it, "My company doesn't want me to do that."
Even if the principles were fully legalized what difference would it make when the American firms employ a mere one percent of the workforce? The principals say nothing about majority rule, nothing about the Bantusians or rule, nothing about South African law or providing quality education—nothing, in fact, about the realities of apartheid.
It's not hiring practices, but Western technology, commodities and capital that prop up apartheid. For example, this country supplies assorted weaponry to South Africa through licensed foreign manufacturers. IBM computers are extensively used in military operations and transportation. General Motors vehicles go to the South African police and military.
Both IBM and GM adhere to the Sullivan Principles. The whole structure of Western trade and investment has underwritten the economic success story of the nationalist regime. The white elite's political power is derived from this economic strength.
I certainly don't want to give the impression that the Sullivan Principles are useless. They are useful public relations for corporatism and convey an image of social responsibility.
And they provide a smokescreen of soothing phrases invoked by the Endowment Association to mask the harsh truth of life in South Africa is investment in apartheid.
They may dispel whatever doubts individual investors have about the consequences of their acts. They are useful to academics looking for something to write about.
Lawrence graduate student
Laird Okie
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USPS 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and September, published monthly. Date and price vary by day. Second-date publication just paid; date and price vary by month. Seconds-date publication may be paid for $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a year in county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity menu.
S: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence. KS 60453
General Manager
Riek Musser
Editor
Barry Massey
A shortage. That's the situation for energy-hungry Americans with a low income.
Tax on excess oil profits needed
In an attempt to increase our domestic supply of fuel and to decrease our dependence on foreign oil—Middle Eastern oil—President Carter decided last month to raise the price of imported oil increase to world market prices beginning June 1 and ending in mid-1981.
The logic of decontrolling prices is to reduce consumption and to provide oil companies with more profits to sink back which, for, and production of, domestic oil.
To ensure that oil companies do not escape with "huge and undeserved windfall profits", Carter proposed an excess of $50 million that could be placed in an Energy Security Fund.
This fund would provide money for rebates to poor families to help them meet higher fuel prices and for development of mass transit and alternative energy
Initial reaction to the decontrol of domestic crude oil prices might be condemnation of Carter and his plan, which seemingly makes richer—at the expense of consumers, of course—an already wealthy industry.
FURTHERMORE, IT SEEMS an
think that the excess profits tax in itself
will bring about increased production by
consumers or that profits be reverted to
consumers.
This may happen, but it depends on the oil industry and Congress.
Philip Garcia
Carter did not need Congress' approval to decontrol prices; he does need its approval to impose and effect the excess profits tax.
While one may condemn Carter, Congress must be scrutinized at the same time. It does not take much probing to reveal that Congress shares the blame for our current vulnerability in the energy arena.
Two years ago, Carter presented Congress with an energy plan that might have established a long-range energy policy. Granted, there were serious flaws in Carter's original proposal and he failed to adequately confer with lawmakers, but without无尽懈怠 squabble, and wounded for 18 months before agreeing on an energy plan.
NO DOUBT. A major obstacle to completing an energy policy was the lobbying efforts of the oil industry. But more important were the congressmen whose constituents have a vital interest in the industry.
And that's the complaint; legislators putting local interests before national interests. Carter holds the highest public office in the country and his role is to provide leadership. But Congress must also lead.
Congressmen have continually taken part in anti-president rhetoric rallies. And though they may be belligerent Carter out of office, they had better look at their own interests to connect them to local interests that interfere with other interests helps legislators get re-elected.
As J. William Fullbright said in a recent issue of Foreign Affairs, "The modern legislator, with some admirable exceptions, has discarded the role of educator in favor of performing services for his constituents—and not really his funders but the best organized, best funded and most politically active interest groups."
PRESIDENT CARTER laid it on the line for consumers: higher prices for less oil.
As a result of decontrol, the price of a newly produced barrel of oil will increase to $12.50 this year, compared to the current price of $10.80. The price of a new barrel of oil will be about $16.
The price of gasoline is expected to increase by four or five cents a gallon by 1982; a second estimate places the increase at 15 cents a gallon.
Inflation is expected increase by only 1 to 0.3 of a percentage point as a result of
On the other hand, the White House estimates that dependence on foreign oil will decrease by 200,000 barrels a day in 1800 and to 1.1 million barrels a day in 1900. The State Department's 8.7 million a day and our imports total 7.8 million barrels a day.
Severity-five percent of the decrease in foreign consumption would result from increased domestic production and 25 percent from a drop in consumption.
CONGRESS MUST now make it clear to the oil industry that the tax is coming.
Democrats, especially those from the energy dependent Northeast, rightfully complain that consumers will be paying outrageous prices without any real assurances of rebates. James Flug, director of a consumer lobbying group, Energy Act said in a letter to the industry activist Press that America "would have to pay down prices for huge amounts of oil which would have been produced anyway."
But there are skeptics on the value of a tax.
Adds Sen. Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo,
"Prospects for an effective windfall profitas tax are near zero. Even if such a tax could be maneuvered past the opposition of oil state senators, it would be almost impossible to administer."
Indeed, the oil industry is opposed to any excess tax. It says existing taxes would take 60 percent of any windfall profits. Despite itself has defeated a similar oil tax.
This is a critical time for U.S. energy policy, and there is no room for politicking. On the contrary, Congress—especially all of the Republicans—has the reality of the tenuous energy situation.
The excess profits tax must be passed; this action would be the least sort of justification for decontrolling oil prices.
MACNEY THE RICHMOND NEWS LEADER. © KIM BUSHAGO TRENCLE.
WALK?!...
FROM HERE?
AMERICA
COSTS
ENERGY
$1.30 gas would buy independence
By HARRISON BROWN
By HARRISON BROWN N.Y. Times Feature
HONOLULU—Those who were unconvinced at the time of the Arab oil crisis in 2015, should dramatically decrease its dependence upon imported crude oil may now feel differently in light of the loss of $79 billion per year from oil-exporting Middle Eastern countries.
If we had the political will, we could become completely self-sufficient in energy and phosphorus resources by expressly adopting a serious threat to national security than any of the alleged imbalances in strategic power between the United States and the Soviet Union.
The greatest barrier to our replacing imported crude oil with alternative indigenous fuels on a substantial scale is the cost. All alternatives to natural crude oil for liquid fuels will be more expensive for years. A 1977 study by the National Academy of Sciences suggested that synthetic lubricants could reduce coal using tried processes at $20 to $30 a barrel. (All the figures here are in 1967 dollars.)
The problems of expanding coal production far above current levels suggest that this estimate should be $25 to $40. Even considering the increases in oil prices by members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, it is unrealistic to expect that the cost of drilling a gas pipeline drop beneath natural crude's very soon.
By that time, it will too late for the major oil-importing countries to accumulate the necessary capital and build infrastructure. The production of synthetic crude oil will be large and expensive. The capital cost of a plant capable of producing 50,000 barrels of synthetic crude a day from coal would be about five years to construct.
Thus, capital accumulation, research and development, design and construction of the first generation of synthetic crude oil plants would have to be started immediately if we are to achieve some self-sufficiency by the year 2000.
This is unlikely to happen in the absence of substantial government involvement. It is unlikely, too, that there is a solution to the problem through "the free play of the market place."
Recent study suggests that even if synthetic crude oil costing $4 a barrel were fed to American refineries, gasoline untaxed would cost about $1.30 a gallon—still substantially less than the price paid in 1978 in Europe and Japan.
This suggests that the capital necessary for construction of synthetic crude oil wells is not limited to a fraction of a graduated gasoline tax that would lead eventually to a price of gasoline in America that would be comparable to the price paid elsewhere in the world, about $200.
The capital needed for the development of a synthetic crude oil capacity of 3 billion barrels a year is estimated at about $165 billion.
If the 110 billion gallons of gasoline sold each year were taxed progressively to bring the price to world levels and if the tax were placed in a federal energy fund, the necessary capital could be accumulated by paying taxes but would not increase in the demand for gasoline.
The accumulated capital in excess of that needed for building the synthetic rubber industry.
other alternative liquid fuels into use, including alcohol.
The important conclusion is that once we reconcile ourselves to paying about $1.3 a gallon, many possibilities emerge for achieving energy independence within two years.
Other sources of liquid fuel would emerge. The greatly increased price of gasoline and other refinery products would result in the adoption of intensive conservation practices and an accelerated shift to alternative fuel sources to fill needs other than transportation. Such changes reduce the demand on balance-payments situations would partly offset the inflationary forces of the price increases.
We must face the fact that we have been spoiled by inexpensive crude oil and have fallen into a deep trap. We can extricate ourselves—if we pay a price that will be uncomfortable but will not kill us. Our failure to pay could lead to catastrophe.
Harrison Brown directs the Resource Systems Institute at the East-West Center in Honolulu, a culture and technical center of research author of "The Human Future Revisited."
South Africa not only rights violator
To the editor:
Professor Edward P. Dutton, not surprisingly a professor of social welfare, calls on the KU Endowment Association to divest corporations that do business in South Africa
For good measure he adds a number of countries which, under right-wing governments, U.S.-based corporations do or did not have the most cooperation in corporations do business in the Soviet Union.
KANSAN letters
Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Poland and the People's Republic of China.
One wonders if Dutton is familiar with the human rights violations in these countries and why there are so many of them.
be part of the "avant-garde" trend to oppose South Africa in general.
Andy Warren Mission senior
Conscription of elite could prevent war
To the editor:
In response to Richard Cram's letter of
April 1, I don't favor the draft. However, if
the college-educated children of the "more intelligent elements of society" (congressman, doctors, lawyers, newspaper publishers, business executives and university administrators), were sent to the battlefield, where they learned how much this country would be less inclined to waste young people's lives in another war.
Vennie White Boston, Mass.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 12, 1979
100%
KU staff to be cut by 8
Rv JOHN LOGAN
Staff Reporter
KU administrators must decide next week where to cut eight positions from next year's KU payroll, Del Shankel, executive vice president.
Shankel told a meeting of the University Senate executive committee yesterday that six unclassified and two classified positions would have to be cut as a result of a decision made Saturday by a Kansas Legislature conference committee.
Classified positions are those defined by the state civil service and include secretaries and laborers. Unclassified positions include all faculty and most administrators whose jobs are not defined by the civil service.
However, Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said that most of the cuts would be made by letting the positions of those professors and administrators leave.
THE CONFERENCE committee met last week to work out differences between the two houses on the budgets of the seven colleges.
The Senate had recommended paying for half the positions that the Regent's institutions would lose because of failing enrollments. The number of positions the Legislature pays for is based on the number of students enrolled.
Three Regents institutions would lose positions because of drops in enrollment or failures to reach the projected enrollment increase that had been budgeted. Kansas State University would lose 22 of its enrollment. State University would lose 16 because of enrollment decreases.
KU must trim eight positions from its payroll because actual enrolment figures did not meet the projected figures that were provided.
BOTH SHANKEL and Dykes minimized the committee's decision and said the cuts could be made by reallocating funds in
*Eight positions is a small amount when you look at the 1,000 unclassified and 2,000 classified positions KU has.* Dykes said that the amount of effort is up.
Shankel said some of KU's funds would have to be reallocated to till vacated positions that must be filled, while leaving vacant those in other positions.
Sankhalek said the only problem would be trying to make all the budget changes and turning in a final operating budget to the Board.
"It's not a big thing." Shankel said. "We just have to look at the options to figure out the adjustments."
However, some KU faculty members said they were concerned about the consequences of the decision for other schools, especially at Emporia State, where tenured faculty members will have to be cut.
Ambrose Saricks, professor of history and president of the Kansas Chapter of the American Association of University Professors, said the decision would force Emporia State to cut the faculty with only a few months notice.
Saricks said that the Regents institutions followed AAUP guidelines which call for a year's notice before the termination of a doctorate.
The firing of the faculty on short notice sets a dangerous precedent, he said.
Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum instruction and chairman of SenEx, agreed with Saricks.
"that the tenured faculty will not have been given timely notice is most regrettable," Swartt said, "the implications and the consequences."
25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA
"NEW MILE STORE"
KIEF'S
DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
GRAHAM
PARKER
Squeezing
Out Sparks
mfg. list
7.98
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INCLUDES WRITING FOR THE U.E.D.
LOCAL LIVE SATURDAY NET IS DEAD
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BETTER
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SPRING SUIT SALE!!!
exclusively at Mister Guy of Lawrence
new spring suits . . . . .
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UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
15TH # IOWA STREETS * LAWRENCE,KS.
PASTOR MARK HOELTER,LCM5 - PASTOR DON CONRAD,NLCM
HOLY WEEK EVENTS
APRIL 12
MAUNDY THURSDAY
WE WILL SPONSOR A SPECIAL
SPECIAL SERVICE (WITH FOOT WASHING)
AT UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN AT 7:30 PM WITH
MEMBERS OF THE ROMAN CATHOLIC
COMMUNITY. LUTHERAN WILL BE
RECEIVED BY THE CATHOLIC OR
DERMON GIVEN BY A LUTHERAN-LORDS
SUPPRIER FOR BOTH GROUPS
SERVICE AT 12:30 AT DANFORTH CHAPEL
APRIL 13
GOOD FRIDAY
APRIL 15
EASTER
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SON
8 10 AM
7 30 AM
6 30 AM
9 45 AM
11 00 AM
SERVICE
SUNRISE WORSHIP - OUTDOORS
EASTER CAROLING - NURSING HOMES
BREAKFAST AT ULLC.
WORSHIP - "WESTON PRIVORY"
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SPRING CASUALS at BRITCHES CORNER
BRIAN & JONATHAN
Spring Fashions will have a contemporary look for the lifestyles of today. Fabrics are natural, the shapes loose, and the mood definitely relaxed. Ideal for an afternoon stroll is the 100% silk shirt from Calvin Klein. Here, worn over his all cotton T-Shirt and pleated linen slack. Her dress is from cotton works. Cotton Works. See Them Today Only at
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Quality Contemporary Clothing for Men and Women
843 Massachusetts, Lawrence, KS
6
Thursday, April 12, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Athletic hosting group to go coed
The Sunflower girls will wither away this summer and a new bunch of KU students, male and female, will be selected next fall to attend.
The Sunflower girls have helped the department in recruiting, but Bruce Mays, assistant men's athletic director, said yesterday that they are planning to open a club.
"We need a variety of students to show our prospective athletes around campus," Mays said. "There are some places girls can't take guys, like into the locker room after a game or to a fraternity."
In 1977, the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation was required to change an advertisement requesting applications for the Sunflower hostesses because it was in violation of Title IX, that campus organizations may not discriminate on the basis of sex.
KUAC revised the ad to read "hosts and hostesses," but no men applied.
Mays said the group probably would comprise from 24 to 30 students, half of them men and half of them women.
“in recruiting, it’s important to know our prospect,” he said. “There are some things he might say to another student but not to a
Mays also said it was important to be honest with the athletes while recruiting.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"Sometimes recruiting gets to be too superficial because you're trying to influence the athlete," he said. "We want the students to be honest with them and tell them about our problems. But they can sell the campus and academics, which are probably more important anyway because athletics are only a small part of college life."
Mays said that the guidelines for the group had not been completed, but that students would be required to be available during classes. She added that the guidelines were being revised.
After a merger of the men's and women's athletic departments, the group, which has not yet been named, could help in recruiting new players.
On Campus
TODAY: The UNIVERSITY COUNCIL meets at 3:00 p.m. in 105 Blake Hall. REX MARTIN, professor of philosophy, will speak on "Recent Theories of Economic Justice," at 3:30 in Room 112-C, Summerfield Hall.
TONIGHT: SUA BRIDGE CLUB will meet at 7 in Paterson A of the Kansas Union. SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 in the Oread Room of the Union Latinin "THE NATIONALIST," a film about Puerto Rican independence, at 7 in the Jayhawk
Room of the Union, "FARM SONG," a new film on Japan, will be presented and discussed at 7:30 in 205 Fint Hall. FREED MAYER, a professor in the union organizer, will give an eyewitness account of the Pennsylvania nuclear disaster at 8 in the Big Eight Room of the University Library, with a contemporary writer and poet, will give a presentation and 8 in the Forum Room of the Union. Valerie Nystrom, mezzo-soprano, will give a STUDENT RECITAL at 8 in Swarthout Hall. A dramatic collage of women's ideas, will be performed at 8 in Oliver Hall by visiting
actresses Twila Thompson and Barbara Annsdater.
TOMORROW: THE UNIVERSITY
SENATE will meet at 2 p.m. in Woodriff
Auditorium in the Union, VOLUNTEER
INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be
available from 2 o'4 p.m. in the Legal Aid
Office in new Green Hall. The BIOLOGY
TB will meet at 11 in the Sunflower Room of
THE FOUNDATION FOLD DANCE. TB will
meet at the Lawrence Public Library, Tbh
and Vernont streets, at 7:30. Jazz com-
positions will be presented in a STUDENT
RECTAL at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall in
Murphy Hall.
1970
Take a Short Break
in our cotton knit and terry tops and shorts.
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Shorts-$8-$10
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Tonite: Jam Session—No Cover!
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Admission only *6.00—Includes FREE Beer, Peanuts, Popcorn and Soft Drinks
Bring this Ad. in for *2.00 OFF!* Call 843-2644 for Reservations.
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1/2 Slab Small End $4.75
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No Coupons Accepted
The Downtown Eating Establishments
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BETTER DAYS
724 Mass.
KU India Club Presents:
a night of
Classical Dance of India
featuring:
Hema Rajagopalan
with
Vocal solo by Bahrat Trivedi
Instrumental music by Krishna & Menon
April 14 7:00 pm
Hoch Auditorium
$1^{00} KU students
$1 $^{50} General public
tickets at SUA
and at door
SAMSUNG
For further information call 864-3477
Partially funded by International Club, Student Activity Fee, and SUA
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---
Thursday, April 12, 1979
University Daily Kansan
7
Despite the asbestos, dryers will still blow
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
Some KU students haven't stopped using blow dryers that contain asbestos and have said they wouldn't even if the dryers were recalled.
However, it will be at least two weeks before the U.S. Product Safety Commission will release its findings on whether hand-washing causes causing dangerous levels of asbestos fibers.
The safety commission learned recently that some dryers manufactured in the United States are made which are considered a cause of lung cancer. The findings came from tests commissioned by WRCT-VI in Washington, D.C. The results were presented at Associates Inc.: Laboratory in Rockville, Md.
One KU student, William Weissbeck,
Topea senior, said that after he had heard
the initial report, he checked whether his
dryer was made with asbestos.
“All the guys in my house rushed to get their dryers and check the brand name.” Weibsck said. “Ironically enough, the last time I went to a restaurant asbestos is the house's heaviest smoker.
We'll probably all die of lung cancer anu he'll live."
CONSUMERS CAN tell whether their dryers contain asbestos by looking through the nozzle. If there is a gray lining material in the dryer, it will nuzzle the nozzle; the dryer probably contains asbestos.
Weissbeck said that although the dryers at his house were made with asbestos, the walls of the kitchen were also made with asbestos.
"Most of us are still using the dryers even though they might be dangerous," he said.
Another KU student, Sarah Partridge,
Wichita state and that she had not stopped
until her first semester.
"I haven't even had time to check to see whether my driver is made with asbestos," she said. "I guess I'm just not that worried about it."
Partridge said that she thought about 75 residents in her house used blow dryers.
that she had noticed little concern about the dryers' potential hazards.
Paula Oldehoef, manager of Headmasters Hair Salon, 809 Vermont St., said
"We haven't had many customers ask us about the dryers," she said. "We did check our dryers by looking down the nozzles to whether they contained asbestos. Ours do not."
Oldoebet said she thought consumers were not concerned about the potential damage.
"The credibility of some tests are so low with the public that most people don't believe a danger with the use of dryers exists," she said. "It seems everything these days causes cancer, so the dryers are not a bit deal."
But despite the feelings of consumers, the safety commission began safety hearings last week into the potential dangers of the dryers.
Dryer manufacturers were ordered by the commission to submit data on dryers made by Henkel, Siemens, Motorola and others.
mission's Kansas City office, said that although most data received were incomplete, the majority of the manufactured supplied data and attended the hearings.
THE COMMISSION received the following reports:
- Conair Corp. said it had stopped manufacturing models containing asbestos in 1978. The company said models 0991, 140V and 095 contained asbestos.
- Rovettes Inc. said it was still selling some 1,200-watt and 1,400-watt models made with asbestos. The company said three models had the HA-224 and HA-1214, "probably have it."
North American Phillips Corp. said, its Noreico models HR-1700, HP-2600, HP-3600, HP-3600-1 and HC-1107 made before 1975 assembled asbestos.
+ Schick Inc. said no current models were made with asbestos; but models 1001-0A1 were manufactured.
volved have already begun refunding or substitution for old dryers," Baxter said. "Other companies have installed hot lines that connect the dryer and out if their dryer does contain asbestos."
"BUCK ROGERS IN THE 25th CENTURY"
Eve 7:30 & 8:30 PG Varsity
Sat-Sun 9:30
Those with hotlines include Conair, whose number is 800-431-3511 and General Electric Co., whose number is 800-241-9982. The phone number responds consumer questions at 812-697-3600.
JACK LEA ... E FONDA
MICHAEL DOUGLAS
"THE CHINA SYNDROME"
Eve 7:30 & 9:45
Sat-Sun Mat 2:30
Granada
BUCK ROGERS IN THE 25th CENTURY
Eve 7:30 & 9:30
Sat-Sun Mat 2:30
Varsity
Cinema Twin
JON VoIGHT FAYE DUNAWAY A FRANCO ZEFFIRLIELI FILM
THE CHAMP
Eve at 7:20 & 9:35
Sat-Sun Mat 2:30
IT'S BACK:
"ANIMAL HOUSE" & "F.M." R Sunset Drive-In
Showtime is dusk
FRIDAY THRU TUES. AT the
ENDS TONIGHT
Shows at 7:35 & 9:40
SEAN CONNERY
DONALD SUTHERLAND
THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY PG
- Gillette Co. and Sunbeam Corp. sued that they had stopped selling models made with asbestos. General Electric said it had manufactured dryers made with the fiber
Baxter said that consumers should be cautions about acting too swiftly.
- Clairel said that it had used a reimpregnated, asbestos-based paper in the rear of its dryers, but the paper was used by a molded plastic component in 1974.
- Montgomery Ward and Co., J. C. Penny Co. and Sears, Roebuck and Co. said that they had suspended sales of all models that had been shown to contain asbestos.
Numbers for Conair and General Electric
worked throughout the day. Norcelo
reported several injuries.
THE
GREAT TRAIN
ROBBERY
PG
ENDS TONIGHT
Shows at 17:35
& 9:40
SEAN
CONNERY
DONALD
SUTHERLAND
THE
GREAT TRAIN
ROBBERY
Cinema Twin
BAXTER SAID that even though companies had not been asked to begin recalls and exchange programs, some companies had begun them.
From the director of "THE EMIGRANTS" and "THE NEW LAND"
Cinema
Twin
9
HURRICANE There is outside safe place, in each other's arms.
AN EPIC FILM OF STRUGGLE AGAINST NATURE'S FURY.
COMING
ON FILM PRODUCTIONS
DINNER AND LUNCHING
BUTTER KNEES
TRAIN HEAVY DAYS
BUTTER KNEE
sua films
Presents
"THE TEACHER"
Cuban Cinema:
"THE TEACHER"
plus—
"The History Book, v. 8"
Thursday, April 12
Woodruff Auditorium
7:30 pm ADM. $1.00
"Our investigation is not to be seen as an endorsement of the original findings," Baxter said. "It is simply to alert the consumers that we are investigating."
- Rescheduled from April 5.
Who is "Numero Uno"? Bud Greenspan
Producer of "The Olympiad" "Wilma" and widely recognized writer, director, andlympic expert presents the first public showing of Numero A. A series of thirteen hour documentaries on legendary world sports will will lend commentary and offer his opinion as to who is "Numero Uno."
Admission: Free
SUA
Forums
Admission: Free Wednesday, April 18, 1979 8:00 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom
ND
Pam Lathrop Hays, Kansas Junior
"My favorite thing at Naismith is dishing up all the ice cream I can eat!"
Naismith
Hall
1800 Naismith
843-857
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
NATIVE AMERICAN ALLIANCE PRESENTS
DISTRIBUTED BY CENTRAL MARKETING GROUP
MARKETING & SYSTEMS CO., LTD.
The Third AnnualUniversity of Kansas
POW WOW
Lawrence Community Building
115 W. 11th St.
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
April 13-14, 1979 6:00-12:00 P.M.
Gourd Dance:12:00 Noon Sat.
ALSO:
1st Annual Men's and Women's All-Indian
1st Annual Men's and Women's All-Basketball Tournament West Junior High School 900 Yale Road
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Friday 4:30-11:00 P.M. April 13-14,
Saturday 7:30-10:00 P.M. 1979
Sponsored by:
Native American Alliance Office of Minority Affairs Student Senate
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8
Thursday, April 12. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Coach's drive is crew's asset
By BRETT CONLEY
Sports Writer
If Don Rose gets his way, the University of Kansas could become as well known for its crew teams as it is for its basketball teams.
Rose started a rowing program at KU three semesters ago, and said recently that he was determined to raise KU from its current "have-not" status.
"I don't see why Kansas can be one of the major rowing powers in the United States," Rose said. "It is a large school, we do it all, and body we have good rowing water."
Rose, 48, was first involved in rowing
However, with a lack of equipment, money and experienced rowers, the best thing the KU crew program has going for it is the experience of Rose.
JOHN W. CAMPBELL
Staff photo by STEPHAN SPECTOR
Crew coach
The KU crew lacks top-of-the-line equipment but it does not lack an experienced coach. Don Romo, who has been an active college coach for the past 16 years, started the KU crew with three guards and two goalies.
a coxwain, a person who steers a racing shell, for the University of Wisconsin student crew teams. From there, he moved on to be the coach the lightweight crews at Princeton and the head coach for Columbia University.
HE CAME TO the Midwest in 183 when he started a crew program at Kansas State University. He stayed at K-State until three years ago.
"I am interested in the development of the sport around the country, rather than in the stadium," he said. " east and west courts," he said. "When I started crew at Kansas State our nearest competitor was over 500 miles away. Now there are a number of schools that offer this sport."
"However, when I felt that Kansas State was not taking care of me in a way that I thought was right, after years of devoted effort to the school and the sport, I decided I would coach somewhere else."
AFTER HE left K-State, Rose went to a program at a school in Springfield, IL, but after two years there he decided the program was in "too long-term of a situation." It was then he decided to come to Kansas.
"I would describe our program here as making very distinct progress every semester so far," he said. "Our main problem is a lack of equipment."
KU has two used eight-oar shells and
one four-oar shell. One of the eights was donated by Nebraska and the other two shells were purchased by crew members with money from fund-raising projects. A new eight-oar shell costs at least $6,000. Rose said.
"The boats that we have are tailenders of the last of the Mohicans. They're very old and very ancient," he said.
WILL BE a long time before KU will be able to afford new equipment, he said, because of the expense and the fact that the program costs $2 million in funding comes from gifts and donations.
"I would say that at the present time we are not expecting anything from the company, so we don't offer official support, then you have people that decision-making processes really don't come down."
"That is one of the problems I felt we had at Kansas State. We had people who didn't want to play with the sport and, therefore, they could not really make good value judgments on them."
This spring is the first time KU has rowed a varsity crew. In the team's first meeting, against Washburn University, KU had lost by 10 points and said he was pleased with what he saw.
TYPICAL OF the KU program, however, the shells used for the races were rented from K-State. But this does not seem to bother Rose too much.
KU to battle for Big 8 net title this weekend
By DAVID COLBURN
Sports Writer
Sports Writer
The Big Eight Conference women's tennis champion will be decided this weekend, and KU coach Tom Kivisto said yesterday that the crown was in the Jawahir's grasp.
The tournament will be tomorrow and Saturday on the Allen Field House courts.
an injury that prevented her from participating, Kivisto said.
"I think we've got a good shot as anybody to come out on ton." Kiviste said.
The Jayhawk mentor said Okahama and Colorado were favored to be share the title, and KU and Missouri were picked to tie for first. Oklahoma was the top pick if its No. 1 player had not suffered
Team scoring will be based on a descending scale.
KIVISTO SAID he thought a team would
Softball postponed
The KU softball team's scheduled games with Emporia State University yesterday were postponed because of wet weather. They have been rescheduled for May 1.
The Jayhawks' next action comes this weekend in the Big Eight tournament in Indiana.
have to score at least 55 points to be in the running, and score in the 60s to win.
For the Jayhawks to win, Kivisto said they would need four players in the singles finals, and all three doubles teams would have to reach the semifinals.
Player seedling will play an important role in the Javhawks' chances. Kvisto said.
"Once you're seeded in the top four, it's almost automatic you'll finish in that top row."
Carrie Fotopolos and Val Block, KU's No. 1 and 2 players, should receive upper-division bites in singles and as a doubles partner when the war was worried about the rest of his lineup.
"THEIR'S NO guarantee our No. 3, 4, 5 and 6 singles players will get that top-four
Seeding will be done by a vote of the coaches at a meeting tonight.
If bad weather occurs the tournament will be moved to Alvamar Racquet Club. If this happens, Kivisto said, one change would be made in the format.
"If we do have bad weather, it looks as though we're going to be playing no-add tennis, which will put a lot of extra pressure on some of the girls." Kivisto said.
In no-add tennis, the first player to win four points wins a game. The tie score for win is 6-5.
Kelly Knight, a 64, 225-pound center from Salina South High School, signed a letter of intent at his home in Salina during a conference. KU Coach Ted Owens and coach Norwood were present to serve the brave team in Knight's Knight, who also played basketball at KI.
By JOHN P. THARP Associate Sports Editor
KU signs 2 recruits
Art House, a 6-10, 230-pound center from Tyler Junior College, Tyler, Texas, signed a letter in New York City to play his collegiate basketball at KU.
Owens had said earlier that although yesterday was the first day national letters of intent could be signed, KU wouldn't announce any signes until all were complete. KU can sign a maximum of five recruits under NCAA rules.
SOURCES IN Wichita said yesterday that a member of the KU staff, probably assistant Bob Hill, had intercepted House on the plane to get his signature, while recruiters from Wichita State University waited at Housey's home in the Bronx.
Sources in Texas said that House, who is the largest player in the nine-tteam Texas Eastern Conference, was flying home to New York for spring break.
KU is still hot after Ricky Ross, one of the most highly recruited players in the nation. Ross said this week that he probably wouldn't announce his selection until the
weekend, after the Kansas-Illinois all-star game. However, a Wichita source said yesterday that Ross might sign with KU before then. The 8-5 All-American guard averaged 32 points a game. He said his team would play Arkansas, where he visited last weekend.
KNIGHT, WHO averaged 22 points, 13 rebounds, three blocked shots and four assists a game, had planned to visit the University of Nevada-Reno this weekend but instead signed with Kansas. He also was recruited by Iowa State.
Housey, who had visited KU early this week, was only recently caught by Kansas. He attended Wetlint Clinton High School, the same Bronx school where Nate Archibald and Butch Lee played prep basketball. He and his team played six and six blocked shots a game for '94, playing the entire conference season with a broken finger on his shooting hand.
Just before Tyler began league play, Housey broke a finger on his left hand during practice when he jammed the finger on the bottom of a backboard. As a result, he was shot in the neck by the finger protector. He had been recruited by WSU Baylor, Purdue and Michigan State.
Owens said Knight had the strength to be effective inside but still had a good咩.
"We didn't have good physical strength on the boards outside of (Paul) Mokesi. Owens said yesterday. "Most of our front liners are skinny and we did get knocked around. Kelly has good size and good tough hands."
NAIA power is baseball opponent
The Missouri Southern State College Tigers, runners-up to Emporia State University, in last fall, hosted AIA baseball tournament, and scheduled a doubleheader against KU this afternoon.
KU coach Flydy Temple said yesterday that the chances of the games being played "didn't look good" because of field conditions and they were scheduled for 1:30 at Quigley Field.
Missouri Southern is 18-13 and ranked 17th in the NAIA national poll. The team has lost to Oklahoma State University, 2-8 and 4-5 in the conference, University of Illinois, 11-18 and 3-13. Kansas is 19-5-1.
Temple said he did not know who would start as pitcher for KU. Earlier in the week, the team traded his pitching job to
pitchers get some action to help him decide on a third and fourth starter to go with Dan. The two other options are not good.
Rovals beat Detroit
n the Koncon's Wire Serviices
The Russan's Wire Services
KANSAS
B凯斯 and Hal McRae lashed consecutive doubles as Kansas City rallied for seven last nine innings and beat Detroit 10-3 last night.
Patek, capping a 4-four night, doubled
the number of Brett and McFaase
followed with two-base hats.
The Royals out-tail the Tigers 13-8. Detroit reliever Bruce Taylor, 0-1, took the defeat.
NEW GRADUATE R.N.'S
at
can move into Specialty Nursing
TRINITY LUTHERAN HOSPITAL,
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become a Nursing Specialist at Trinity Lutheran Hospital
MINISTRY OF EDUCATION
31st and Wyandotte Kansas City, MO 64108
Denise Barb, R.N.
Nurse Recruiter
316 753-4600, ext. 256
A Gathering of Jazz Greats
WICHITA jazz8 FESTIVAL
Century II Sunday, April 22
EOE
Count Basie, Sarah Vaughn, Dexter Gordon,
Clark Terry, Carl Fontana, Major Holley,
Mundell Lowe, Alan Dawson, Roland Hanna,
Chris Woods, Jerry Hahn
Also
Dianne Reeves with Karita Baskin, Reed Arvin & Bill Perkins
Winners of the College Big Band and Combo Competitions
ADDED ATTRACTIONS
Friday, April 20
College Competition for Big Bands and Combos
at Wichita State University. 9:00 a.m., $2.00
Saturday, April 21
Jazz Clinics at Wichita State University. 9:00 a.m., $2.00
Saturday, April 21
Jazz Party at Hotel Broadway
from 8:30 to 11:30 $6.00 at the door
Advance ticket sale for Sunday Concert only
Central Ticket Agency, Century II, 225 West Douglas, (316) 263-4717
General Admission $8.00 in advance — $9.00 at door
Reserved seats $10.00 in advance — $11.00 at door
This program is presented in part by the Kansas Arts Commission, the National Endowment for the Arts and the Metropolitan Arts Board.
The flower of the season
The lily. Part of the Easter tradition. Let it bring the warmth and spirit of the season into your home.
Just stop by or call Easter, April 16. Flowers and plants are for Easter. Naturally.
Make an arrangement with:
PARKER HOUSE
Owens
FLOWER SHOP
9th & Indiana 843-6111
We send flowers world wide thru FTD
presents
sua films
MEAN STREETS
MEAN STREETS
Welcome to
the neighborhood ...
where they take care
of their own
...and take care
of the rest.
where they take care of their own ...and take care of the rest.
Friday April 13, 3:30 and 9:30 Saturday April 14, 7:00
Woodruff Auditorium
Admission $1.50
Maupintour travel service
- AIRLINE TICKETS
- HOTEL RESERVATIONS
- CAR RENTAL
- BAIL BAR
- TRAVEL INSURANCE
- ESCORTED TOURS
- CALL TODAY!
travel service
900 MASS.
THE MALLS
KANSAS UNION
843-1211
First Jump Coat $50.00
First Jump Pants & Boots $150.00
Price includes: leggings, bootie skirt,
half sleeve top, dress and dummy hi-top card
and dummy hi-top card
prepared prior of age.
Located in west wells of West
Maine. Phone 608-274-6300.
P
SKY DIVING Come Fly With Us
Greene County Sport Parachute Center Wellsville, Kansas Student Training Classes 10 a.m. Tuos.-Sun. Dawn-Dusk
1-35 KC
883-4210 or 883-2535
$15800*
mexicana
KANSAS CITY — MEXICO CITY
ROUND TRIP
Beginning April 24th, Mexico Airlines will offer substantial discounts for travel to Mexico City. This airfare can up to you at 134.00 off the normal roundtrip fare (Acapulco can be added for only 834.00 additional). To qualify for this special fare you must remain in Mexico for at least five days and travel by car or bus from our low cost hotel and sightseeing packages. We have prepared a colorful 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, Ceramics, Ceramica, Folk Dances, History of Mexico, International Business, Journalism, Latin American Politics and Economics, Psychology, Sociology, Psychology, Spanish Language and Literature, and Theatre.
We will also be happy to send you information on these schools.
Please send your my brochure describing this fantastic $158.00 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.
Airlines information only
1101 Walnut * Kansas City. Mo. 64108
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 12. 1979
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kantan are to be delivered to a nationally without regard to sex. All classes are to be attended by nationals. ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FILM HALL.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five six seven eight nine
15 words or less
English or
International
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.40
01 02 03 04 05
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These ads can be placed in person or delivered to the UDK business office at 864-1258.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
DEFEND YOUR NAILSALSALE RIGHT TO
DEFEND YOUR FABRIC SOCIETY in the fight
for a laborers' society in the fight
for a workers' society.
Enroll now for *When Wives wise classes* beginers
and beginners, *The Art of Decorating*
Arts 72-1052 & 94-2053 New Hampshire.
Employment Opportunities
Students majoring in history, pre-med, pre- law,
pre- medicine, pre- nursing or pre- education
major "Make $997 per month. For interview
requests call 800-261-3555."
FOR RENT
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimhill is a great option. Stay in the master of the year. Stay by and look on over your favorite chef, Mr. Mason, to give you all the details and send you your reservation. **Naimhill HALL, 1800 Naimhill Road, 913-5330**. 1800 Naimhill Road, 913-5330.
FRIENDR RIGE APARTMENTS NOW MENTHRO
unfurnished from $170. Two roomy baths, large
living space. On KU bus route.
INDOOR HOTEL POOL
$844 or pay at $25. Front Door, next
room.
To inhabit one bedroom, new, brought far-
ther. Starting May 20, captain room:
843-161-303.
Sublease 1 BAR Avail. available May 1. Gas &
Beverage 2 BAR Avail. available May 1.
Summer rates available. 841-387-692,
www.baravail.com
Christian Hammond Now and Summer. Close to
his dad, Noah. no. 842-8892 between
5:000. Keep trying.
LIVE IN LUXURY: need to suche beautiful 2
l bedroom, 2 bath apt. 2 balconies, fireplace- free
firewood and cable video. Water pond for
bathroom. Bedrooms 10.5x8.5. Richie R.
Richman. 843-1021. Evenings 843-3066. 4-19
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking, most rooms, 805-613-7092 and RU over town. Phone: 843-527-5071.
1805 WEST 75TH
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
Summer sublease. Completely furnished. 2 BR. 1½ bath apartment. Swimming pool, sauna, caravan, balcony, patio and fireplace. Bilboard table, table tents and laundry facilities. Great for summer living. Call 844-0986-0085.
Jayhawker TOWERS Apartments 1603 West 15th
Apt. 2 BBR and efficiency Close to campus. Utilities paid. Clean, quiet, and comfortable. BDR.
MARAK I & II Apartment new renting for summer
rentals in East Village, New York. Large
luxury apartments. 7 min. with campus. 1
bedroom balcony off-street parking. Disney,
disposal. Parking available. Phone: (212) 569-3840.
Website: 1015 Maps. Apt. 21, 842-903-3112, 842-903-3115
Summer-shrubbery. Furried, 23-drum. Aid.
Cold-tolerant. A C. dish-cream, excrease
condition. 811-609-6
Subway Subway 2 28, 1½ bath, unfurnished
Room, 325 sq ft. Village Villa $499.
month's charge. 811-868-8000
Summer Slidecase Two bedroom Appleport Apartment 2 person AC, swimming pool $250 Appleton Apt. 361
LORIKEY 3-dowym, 3-białym, Torwienny Polearny
LORIKEY 4-dowym, 3-białym, Torwienny Polearny
LORIKEY 5-dowym, 2-białym, Torwienny Polearny
Available in Avail. to:
LORIKEY 1-DOMETRY-1024-8000 MHz
LORIKEY 2-DOMETRY-1024-8000 MHz
Contemporary efficiency (shag) • Mallow-back bench
furniture, high-gloss finish • Mallow-back bench
furniture, hardy, and 'extremely' durable
furniture, high-gloss finish
Perfect Summer submit! $21.75 for 2 bedrooms (i.e., a pool, remodeled, bachelor's degree). Call 811-388-9680.
SUMMER SUELLEASE Sundae Aquarelants, 2
bright room, brand new, furnished. Available.
No credit check.
DAILY
ENTERTAINMENT
GUIDE
PRIVATE CLUBS
&
FINE DINING
MINGLES DISCO
SEE YOU THERE THIS WEEKEND!
Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th 842-7030
Tonight
Beef Wellington
8 25
John Roose
Fork Guests
Thursday, Fr., & Sa
The Eldridge House
(914) 222-7030
BEER
AMUSEMENTS
MOFFET-BEERS
BAND
will be playing at
THE
BREWERY
Wed. & Thurs.
9-12 pm
LOUISÉ'S
EVERY FRIDAY & TERMONDAY 2-5
80 SCHOOLHOLDERS
$1 PITCHERS
1008 Mass
BIG K'S
MON-THURS 7-9:00
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7-9:00
.50" Schoolholders & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1-7:00
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
MUSIC
LOUSE'S
EVERY FRIDAY AT 8PM
60 SCHOONERS
$1 PITCHERS
1009 Mass
MOFFET-BEERS
BAND
will be playing at
THE
BREWERY
Wed & Thurs.
9-12 pm
714
Mass
PAUL GRAYS
Jax Place
JAM SESSION
NO Cover
- 920 Mass. 843-6575 *
*******************************************************
TONIGHT!
FREE BEER!
CARNE IT'S
KEGGER NITE!!
featuring
CAMERATA BAND
Ladies $2.00 Doors $3.00
Doors Open 6.00 Shows $5.00
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
FAST BREAK
April 17th—Boontown Rats
April 20th—"Gatemouth"
Brown
The Lawrence
Opera house
17th & Mass
Sport Club
--this summer. 2. Idbm. Call 842-6866, ask for Eddie or Scott. 4-18
Hell of a Deal-Hue, on bedroom furnished
apartment. Nice $180; on room 841-0500
Two girls need one or two Christian mornings at a time. Three girls need three. Three bedroom, kitchen, dining rooms, baths. All are clean and ready to use.
Apartment, partially furnished; one bedroom;
studio; living room; dining room;
dquiet quiet room. #827049 after $30. 4-12
$45. 60.
Summer sub-lease at Meadowbrook Apt. Two
542-766-800, summer townhouse; 4-18
4-18 766-800, after 6 p.m.
Solutions for summer one bedroom in beautiful
architecture. Flat-rated, private environs and fixtures. Balcony, private
garage.
Must sub-lease -1. Br. Sundance Apt. Available 4-20
Call 843-7532.5 after 4. Rent negotiated 4-20
2 Female roommates to share a bathroom
491; the summer this and/or fall.
491; 4-18
4-18
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
All new & Contemporary
Visit our furnished display unit today &
you'll see why the move to Sundance
Apartmentes. Completely furnished studio on
4th, conveniently located on 7th & Franklin
just west of the Sanctuary on KU Bus Route.
941-805-7163
8415255·842.4455
PLEASE USE out two fellow college kids by nus-aising a fortresskay Mlt apt for the num-ber of bedrooms you need. Large, free wood, large kitchen and beautiful furniture. First price, to Call Sculf or Sand at 800-239-7561.
Northside Plaza midweek available mid-May
accommodation at AC pool, ac on滩,
$160 per room $85 per night
$160 per room $85 per night
Subclass: Shortcuts two bedroom apartment, partner,
owner. Address: 1234567890; phone number: 812-3472
4-19
$20 will charge. *nugget* $139
2. BR duplex with garage. All conveniences
quite neighborhood. Available May 15. $129-$169
per unit.
Most subsides for summer 2 kibra housewares at
age right $720.00 call Call536
8246
SOUTHBIRDIE PLAZA Apt. 1 BR, CA on KU
SOUTHBIRDIE PLAZA Apt. 2 BR, CA on KU
June 14, 2017 - 8:57pm each -- 6-19
Summer suburbia. Pursued Bedroom Meadow
Sleeping room. May 15 till Aug 15.
4-19
83-114-114
83-114-114
Assume Applecraft laptop May-Jan 2, BR AU-
$240, Paid $412, else BAI-5172 after 6:38
Sublease for **number** 2 bedrooms *agt* 2 beds,
from Union. Option to lease for Fall 843,7588.
Summer suburb 2 2fkm unfurnished Meadow-
side location by formal location C1-841-8551
Submarine sublease. Nier 1 BR unfurnished up-
sided bridge. Plain AC pool $390 mn. electric
plumbing.
Fonder Mustang Big Gear Basket with straps, cords,
sockets, cards and covers. Very good condition.
Suitable for all weather.
FOR SALE
Batteries 1.30
Watch for truck on Sunday selling produce-
Foods for 8th, 10th & Illinois. Also wood-
crates
WATERBED MATTRESSS $39.86 3 year guard
WHITE LIGHT 704, Man. 812-366 12ft
Sun-Super Sun-flags are our specialty. Non-prescription sun-flags are selection, reasonably priced. 813-524-7060.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization Notes to make sense out of radiation 3. For exam preparation. *New Analysis*. Critic, Mali Bookstore, or Oread Bookstore, *u*
SAVE! on
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
All with
$24.30
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
THE BATTERY SHOP
842-2922
Hawey 40 N. Lawrence
Across from townb
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
in MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-960-2900, 900 W, 80 F,
or 110 V.
Blank: CT-3280 computer controlled console.
Blank: CT-3280 computer controlled console.
Blank: CT-3280 computer controlled console.
Blank: CT-3280 computer controlled console.
Blank: CT-3280 computer controlled console.
15. PT, SLOOP w/ anals & extran, fast & lively.
842-9722
4-12
1969 Ford Galaxie a excellent transportation,
dependable, air, PS. 841-6480 after 4
4-12
many options Call Chris. 843-2572 4-12
Motorsport. 1973 Yamaha 250, excellent control
Motocross. 1974 Honda 125, excellent control
74 Camara LV L V-8, air, p.a. p.b. power,
AM-FM FM 3车, track $, 6000, 864-2699, 4-13
pendale; air, PS; 841-6490 after 5' 4-12
TRAN-SAM ANT. 1977, low miles, black w/gird, wild
many options, Call Chris; 841-2572 4-12
Motorcycle; 1977, Yamaha; 841-2572
74 Monte Carlo-AT, PS, PH, AM Radio, AC 125
542-323-198 after 6 p.m.
4-15
We have Weaver Civ.讯, malls Malls Bookshop,
711 W. 23rd St. 842-7125.
4-13
Sears
Sears_Watcher_Jaguar
Excavator--good for-keep new-
moused wrist, 175d. $260.
Welders' Tool Kit
1972 Nesch Alto Seeing Searer Good condition with
pink interior. Call evening
inquiries: 842-5019.
1972 CUSO Honda, Reliable, Tram, new battery,
upst. best. Upf. Repair #846-6117
4:34
PENDER TWIN-REVERB Amp. Good Condition 4-13
643-502
Mint sell this week. One more miracle sunshade
Black & White + TV. W 31-787-3690
Keep out of reach of children.
SPORTS CAR 1970-1973 TR-low loadauge. Much
higher run, mechanically expensive $2500
6428
Mix *and* Match
Bone-like
Combs & Bracelets
4 for $100
at your
Technology Rooms 100 watt at 85°. Never used,
still packed in box. 843-6257. Misc. Cell. 4,123
Kansas Union Bookstores
1989 Postal Grand Prix Model - M2A Juno V60
401 - 750cc with 4-speed manual transmission
641 - 750cc between 6.20 and 7.50 km/h
417 - 750cc between 6.20 and 7.50 km/h
Taxon A-3280 RX Reel to Reel 3-meter 4-132 auto reverse. Never Used Use. 845-709-688 4-132
For sale by owner, 1622 W. 22nd Terrace. For sale in a house equipped with approximately 1,000 square feet. Expense required for construction cost. Requirement for tuition or graduate study or, if not required, Excellent financing possibilities. Call 811-8674.
Magnavox Composite stereo, small-adult Anki 10k
speed. Whites x-ray-sig recording machine, wood
knife bench, Call shuttle, after 8:00
p.m., week of Saturday, 8:30-9:45,
trying!
Set of bicycle wheels, with Sunshine tails and
Ariara frame 459, #82-4743
Golf clubs, full set: Putter, 2-9 iron, 1-3 wood.
Calls evenness: 842-5299. 4-19
FOUND
Two keys marked YBS. Call 651-8056 to identify
and claim
Precision glues in grease case. Found at stairs on east side of Wescoe. 841-458 4-17
Radio: calculators, books, übertrages, watchers
Radio: former Four Class at Kawaui University
German descendant
Orange bone-tinned tatar cat with brown eyes
Oliver Twist - Oliwianne Word Call 417
Keep trying
**EXOTIC JOBS** LYKE TAHOE, CALIFORNIA
Little expense. Fantastic time! $1700-$4900 (unm
tioned). Travel to San Diego, ranches, river rafts, & more.
$3500-$6000 (unmited). 60128, San Bernardino,
CALIFORNIA 65860 4-25
60129, Sacramento, CALIFORNIA 65860 4-25
Position Announcement: Curriculum and instruction survey assistance needed to distribute information to applicants. May 9 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., and May 18 from 12 noon to 2 p.m. Must be currently enrolled in the position. Apply above hours with another applicant. Apply at www.curricularandinstruction.com Application deadline is April 13, 1979. 4-13
The University Information Center is now open.
Begin May 22 and Aug. 19, 1996. Application
must be received by August 19, 1996.
Friday, April 13, 1997 The University of
Maryland's Open Opportunity Alternative. Action
Employee
OVERSEAS JOBS - Number-year Europe, Canada S. Argentina, Australia, Asia. Ete All Fields: £630 $1200 Expenses: paid sight seeing. Free Travel LBC, Box 55-KA, London Decker 426 CA 82825
JOB'S MEN WOMEN NAILBOATS
CRUISE SHIPS! No experience! High pay! See
Caribbean, Hawaii, Europe, World! Business can
charge $300-$1000 a month!
601298, Box 601298, Caernarfón, CA 95806 4-23
Portraiture wanted. Must be well articulated.
Preferred hourly salary: $3000. Preferred portrai-
ture hourly salary: $4500. Preferred portrai-
ture hourly salary: $6000.
Now show application for Fordmilani & Grillin
applicant. Apply in person at Vesterholm, 260
Vestergade, Nørresund, Norway.
Fountain & Grill personal Noon juice and
Wake up in Vienna of Vienna Tea
W 461, 913-2087, 913-2085, 913-2084
141
Britches Corner is now creating applications
for Spring and on Summer help. Apply
12-15
SUMMER JOBS. NOW! WOILD CRUISERS!
PLEASURE BARGES! Boat Experience! Good pay!
Hawaii, Hawaii. World Serid $350 for APLICIO,
PLACA. Box 6029, Sarasota, Cal. 92586. 5-8
@6029, Sarasota, Cal. 92586.
Need some spending money? Wendy's, Old Fashioned
Apples, The Grill, and More. People
apply between 2 and 8 months before the
threshold.
POSITION Research Analyst(s) DUTIES Planning, conducting and evaluating dissemination,shops and strategies of the Behavior Analysis services, and strategies of the Behavior Analysis services, and levering these services to Projects across the functional agreements for these services, and freeway services. QUALIFICATIONS. Registered-Master's profile in applied Behavior Analysis good writing and administration, training and knowledge experience with policy relations and other data management. Appointments to apply APPOINTMENT TITLE $750 to $1,000 monthly on percent of base salary Line MAY 1979 at 9 a.m. in POOLE Williams, Associate Director, Follow Through, Lawrence, KANSAS; AOFFMIFICATION AQALIED MEN AND WOMEN OF ALL RACES QALIED MEN AND WOMEN OF ALL RACES UNIFIED DISABILITYS AND COURAGED TO APPLY
4-12
JOBS IN ALASKA. Summer jobs help paying,
working with teachers in Alaska to support
students in AP Biology. Welcome to APA PEO.
Visit www.aparep.org for job opportunities.
Student Research, Assistant. Project entails initial research on the generation and modulator interfacing BCI hardware and computer systems. Hardware absolutely required. Position can be held in various locations as soon as possible. Angle-aware longer learning i
Mature-minded college student or grad, wanted
male volunteer with family and friends,
molding up date and after-hours care, his day
of work. Bachelor's degree in social work,
Apologia in person at AA 318, branded Peterson
Hospital, in New York City. Apply to
Qualified Employer, qualified women and men
who are 25 and older.
College study in need. May 1st to October 1st.
to drive medium hours in major sports race
weeks. Call for private transportation.
excellence desirable. Reliability is a must. Maint.
work on weekday. Mark Simpson
832-192-4523
JOBS! LAKE TAKER, CALF. *Fantastic tie.* $170-$189 annuity! Thousands still needed.
HostaTreasures. Rancho Vista. Cruises. Saved $300. 60129. San Diego. Cruises. Saved $60129. Santa Cruz. CA 70580
DAY CARE STAFF needed for before- and after-school program. Hours 3:15 to 7:30 a.m. Daily, five days a week, and two days a week working with school-age children and or adult students from 11:00 a.m. to Lawrence Extended Day Program days (11:00 a.m. to Lawrence Extended Day Program days) at Lawrence. Lawrence Equal Opportunity employed-qualified and women of all races encouraged to apply.
Adult with other transportation to care for 8 hours
or more. Prices vary by location. Household
housekeeping service. £260.
Call 021-354-1211.
an important student contact. Communicate
membership on the Board of Directors, Election
committees, and to the board of Trustees.
For more information, visit www.auburn.edu.
LOST
Lost, women's silver watch on March 20th by
Meredith McGrath of Fountainhead place
135, B2-9280 WAIMD. Thank you.
***
PU19 uses both the fireWire line block LadderRack. It has
two USB ports, a serial port, and two microphone lines.
Available: Ctrl 814-7680
Lost at the Bldg. Bed 104 court with Mukky
Court is closed. Please call (866) 273-8540 for
recovery of anything. No questions asked.
Please contact us at info@thebldg.org
Lost on campus. 4.9-72 Two pair of contacts in
car case. If found please call 841-721-2771.
LOST Bite, whitewasher, tucket, but in the vicinity of aircraft fld. f22 just south of Watkins Street, band norton of indeet bridge, ARRC UTY ATT YAY 10435, HQA, UTAU mutual value. If found plausible call 841-9825. 4-13
Pair of plans in eyes, in Haworth Friday morning.
Inquirer 841-7077
4-17
MISCELLANEOUS
THENIS BINDING COPYING - The House of
Tahir's Quick Copy Center in Headquarters, for
thems to bind and copy in Lawsuits. Let us
bind at $85 MPa or plenum $92.300. Thank you.
NOTICE
DEATH: WHY HYPOTHER? ICKANAR
The Key to Knowledge, world 842.342, 841-2763
VETS. Are you getting your benefits? Maybe not. Check vetus Rampus 15h II Union 86-447-128
PERSONAL
RCKN BREK SMP to new open 200 Ralphie
Avenue, Bronxville, NY 11223
port mount reqs: 0022 Vernon Avenue, 814-6622
111
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC. Abortion up to 18 weeks. Pregnancy tests, Birth Control, Consulting. Tubal Ligation for abortion patients (call 212-560-3799; Gerald Park, 430-490-3409; Overland Park, Xx).
BARGON SPECIALS 4-8am Mon. Tuesday through Saturday
MAGIC NIGHT 'NIGHT' $199 mall ticket
MAGIC NIGHT 'NIGHT' $199 mall ticket
Hillel presents
an ALL YOU CAN EAT
Fred Matzo Brunch
12 30 am Sun. April 15
Buffet at Community Center
$5 from indirect
$15 from indirect
$5 for each member
include:
food items
Gey Leroy contacting referral, new handset
into KIU into 864-256 or Headphone 864-
131.
FOX HILLE SURGERY CLINIC Abortion up to 12 weeks. Pregnancy Testing. Birth Control. Cardiology. CPR training. For appointment call 9 to 3 p.m. (913) 482-3806. For appointment 10 to 33, Overland Park, KS.
Would you be to meet the girl who plays, play with,
and interact with her in a special way? Wednesday afternoon, 2 wks
from 11am to 5pm.
Tam Man—What is a Tam Man? A Tam Man does what he can. He doesn't care what people think of him. He doesn't care what people think of him either
JENOIS Agree now for next year's Class of
1985 Committee Deadline 10-29-10 - 1BAT
www.jenois.org
Kim, Kudu, Brian, Boones and Everybody —
we were there when I needed them.
Love, Love. 4-12
Oh, George, what do rufous ibiscus, folgolphins, and foxes do with bows? I don't know. But those who know it that way are wise and right. But they don't know that way. It was love and light and freedom.
Reserving for special people: Rampage's Hotel,
Bronxville, NY; City of Brooklyn; The Mansion
Boyer May 14-Labor Day. Members may not
reserve. Please call (212) 356-9720.
You've got to be good food to take these ECKANAK
Foods! Come to a cake or dessert and discover
the flavors of Indian cuisine.
A very shores thanks to the following young guests on Friday night. The girl on the left sat on the floor. Just east of the fairy. Friday is a family day.
HAVE YOUR FACE PACE CREATE portraits taken in your own way, with a wide range of backgrounds. Postcards of 'imagery' created with your face can be sent to us.
Next year's Husband women needed somewhere to sleep. A couple in a small wall-mur near Al. 156-856-3625. 4-12
adult photos. Your beautiful contribution to
leavever. Headshot was fantastic. Might please
be seen in a gallery.
HEY BOY, you caught my iyel ! I'm interested—are you? You's seem like I always enwined when you're always going. Slow down on Monday, maybe? Maybe, Friday. May 18 will be lucky number. 4-17
SERVICES.OFFERED
Academic Interest The Lawrenn Quen School
Research and Writing Call callwr.811-456-0300,
and Mindful Reading Call callrw.811-456-0300.
MATH TUTOR MLA, in math, patient, three years professional training experience. 842-3411.
Need help in math or C57 Get a tutor who can
help you with your math or C57 problem. Be
brought to 841-737-6279.
Bee 841-737-6279.
PRINTING. WHILE YOU WANT is available with Alice at the House of Uher/Quick Copy Center. Alice is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m. Mass.
EXPERT TUTORIALS, MATH 009-125, cell 864-5777
TUTORIALS, COMPUTER SCIENCE 100-209, cell
864-5777
COMPUTER SCIENCE 100-209, cell
864-5777
TUTORIALS, cell 864-5777
QUALIFICATIONS. B.S. in
Computer Programming for General Problem
causes. For general problem causes
cell 864-5777
REWRITING EDITING. Your manuscript, thesis or two pages long called into an efficient grammar, should be written to think with precision and smoothness. Outlines, proofs and articles also available. EVERY-823-7351
Tried of feeding yourself? Naimish Hall is offering for the first time over a boarding plan. You can stay in your room and be cared for as much as you can be given if you choose this plan. SHAPE NAMISH HALL 1060 Naimish Drive 843-8529 NAMISH HALL 1060 Naimish Drive 843-8529
Lawrence, Open School, Exciting Summer programs, and tutoring. Study and hive learning, fine art graphic gardening, international classics in Languegie Math, Art, and Behavioral Science, 3-4 hours of teaching ledale. Call now.
Cordless office. Quality work, reasonable rates,
Biltmore (the) Lainwood Buildings Cat-6
2004
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476.
TYPING
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4590 tl
7 years experience. Quality work, guaranteed.
Ittihad law firm, law papers, term papers, Mrs.
Sarah Kyle, lawyer, LLP.
Typed/Editor: IBM PCM Elite. Quality work.
Type: Desertization. welcome
Mail 842-912-9
Experimented hybrid threes, distortions, term
difference, and electronic selectivity.
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Thursday, April 12, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Committee on South Africa explains investment stand
The KU Committee on South Africa presented information to about 25 persons last night in support of its stand on American investments in South Africa.
According to material introduced at the meeting, black South Africans are not allowed to vote, are ineligible for many jobs that are reserved for whites and must carry a passport at all times or be subject to arrest.
Tony Hunter, a member of the Committee on South Africa, said, "Currently, the United States has $1.8 billion invested in corporations and banks in South Africa.
Recent United Nations Assembly reports indicated that the United States, Britain and France are the largest investors in South Africa.
"if we were not in South Africa, the reine would crumble," he said.
At last night's meeting committee members called for the divestiture of U.S. money in the spartan city of Kansas, a statewide commission members said that the Kansas University Endowment Association, which invests in the university, will only to "trow on the regime in South Africa."
In recent statements concerning its investment policies, the Endowment Association said that U.S. investments could bring about a positive change in South Africa by promoting equality for South African blacks.
However, Ed Dutton, associate professor of social welfare and a member of the committee, said the Endowment Association's investments in South Africa have funded the University to be funded partially by riding on the backs of applause."
Students for Libertarian Society plan rally to protest draft revival
By TOM ZIND Staff Reporter
Gen. Alexander M. Haig Jr., former allied commander in Europe, will give a A. V. Aickers Sr. Memorial Lecture at Saturday, April 18, at the University of Kansas.
A member of Students for a Libertarian society has announced tentative plans for a major reform program.
Haig to speak at KU April 26
Haig, who has since served as supreme allied commander since December 1974, will speak on "NATO and our Future security" during Ruudruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
While serving as deputy assistant to former president Nixon, Haig made 14 trips to southeast Asia to help negotiate the peace deal and the return of U.S. prisoners of war.
The lecture will be free and open to the public.
Kansas May 1. That date has been set by the society's national organization for a concerted campaign throughout the country against a return to the draft.
Detre Coltman, Bonner Springs senior, the group member, said yesterday that speakers and musicians probably would be at the rally.
Students for a Libertarian Society, a national student organization, has initiated a petition drive to stop legislation now that would rewrite the draft.
"I'd like to get a few speakers and make it a show of resistance to the draft," she said.
The group says it is opposed to the draft because it is a violation of individual freedom.
Colgan said she would check with the University Events Committee and the KU Police to clear plans for the rally, which she said probably would be in front of Strong
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On Thursday, April 26 students who are interested in Medicine and the paramedical sciences will have an opportunity to view the Cancer Research and Patient Care facilities at the University of Kansas Medical Center and to discuss their own career possibilities with several of the research and clinical faculty at the Medical Center. A chartered bus will pick up the parachute from the campus in the late morning and will return them to the campus in the late afternoon. There will be no charge for the transportation.
Margaret Berlin, student body president, reversed an earlier opinion and decided to postpone the Student Senate budget hearings until next week.
Several senators expressed concern during Tuesday's budget hearings that meetings this week would interfere with the observance of religious holidays.
Cancer Careers Day
Yesterday marked the beginning of the Jewish holiday, Passover, and several senators said they had to attend religious services.
Students who would like to participate in this program should call Airline Blenner, 864-4021. A detailed itinerary is available in the program's brochure.
“IT WAS A CHANGE ofcircumstances,” she said. “I'm trying to be sensitive to the decision of the Senate; 31-31 was a close vote.”
The vote on recessing the hearings until next week was tied, 31-31, and George Gomez, student body vice president of the meetings would continue tonight.
Budget hearing delayed until after Jewish holiday
However, she said she found out yesterday that the budget did not have to be in until April 20, giving the Senate a chance of time to consider the budget request.
Mark Bernstein, holdover senator, initiated a process that led to Berlin's decision.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, told Bernstein at a meeting of the University Senate executive committee yesterday that he had issued a statement concerning meetings on religious holidays.
Berlin said her main objection to postponing the hearings until next week was that she thought the budget had to be in the chancellor's office on April 15.
Yesterday morning he filed a complaint with the Affirmative Action office,
Berlin said the Senate did not legally have to postpone the hearings.
"MARGARET HAS been railroading things through and I'm going to derail her train," he said.
Berlin said the budget hearings probably would continue Tuesday night,
"I asked the University to be sensitive to religious holidays and to avoid scheduling meetings on those holidays," he said. "We don't have something that says they can't hold a meeting, we just ask that they avoid having a meeting."
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The Graduate Student Council's funding was on the agenda for tonight, and Berstein is a graduate student.
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Bernstein also said that if the budget hearings had continued tonight, he would have filed a class-action suit in 2016 against them that were allocated at the meeting.
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Steve Ruddick, legal services attorney, said he and two law students could advise students on any legal matter as long as it did not lead to litigation.
The Legal Services office will open its doors to clients today at noon in 212 Carruthers.
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"Someone can come to see us if they have received a summons," he said. "But we were not summoned."
The legal services program provides KU students with pre-paid legal advice. Courtroom representation will not be provided for at least six months, Ruddick said.
KU Legal Services office to open today for business
Ruddick said his office would be able to negotiate with another attorney if a student was sued. Then, he said, he might refer the student to a private lawyer.
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"We will not send them to a particular lawyer," he said. "We'll just refer them to us."
Saturday, April 14, 3:30 and 9:30
He said the office also would be able to draft legal documents, except those concerned with estate planning. It also can incorporate student groups that are nonprofit, and there will be a notary public in the office.
Woodruff Auditorium
The office will be open today from 12 p.m.
to 4 p.m. and tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 4
presents
The legal services can only serve KU students, and it cannot serve members of a student's family or the faculty. As legal services attorney, Ruddick cannot represent one student against another student, or a student against the University.
Ruddick has already seen about 15 clients since he moved into his office last month, he said. So far there has been a diversity of questions and legal problems. He said that he had expected to deal with a lot of landlord-tenant problems.
Ruddick said that if students wanted legal advice they should call the office and make an appointment. They come to the office, they should have their KU identification cards with them. Ruddick said he would not give advice over the phone.
Admission $1.50
Regular office hours will start next week and will be: Monday: 1:30 p.m; to 4:30 p.m; Tuesday: 6:30 p.m; to 9 p.m. in the morning, Friday: 9:30 p.m; to 1:4 p.m on Friday; 9 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Ruddick will be available Monday,
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THE DOCTOR BROTHERS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas Vol. 89, No. 131 Friday, April 13, 1979 Lawrence, Kansas
Even in mid-afternoon, little sunlight reaches the inside of the new GSP-Corbin parking garage, where workers hope to finish construction within three weeks.
State to end panel repair contract
By PATRICIA MANSON
Staff Renorter
The state will terminate the contract of a construction company that failed to make adequate repairs on the new Bell Memorial Hospital at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Jerry Dickson, an assistant attorney general, said yesterday.
Dickson said the company, V.D. S.Carlo General Contractors, Kansas City, Mo., had not submitted an acceptable plan for the contract but panels that make up the outer hospital walls
Dickson, who was appointed last year to handle legal problems concerning Med Center buildings, said, "I have advised the Court to out a notice to terminate the contract."
Dickson also said, however, that the state might reconsider its action if V.S. D'Arcoitar
"The state of Kansas will listen to any plan they come up with," he said. "You can
Ernest Freemont Jr., a lawyer representing the construction company, said he had not heard of the state's plan to reject the contract and refused to comment.
DICKSON SAID earlier this week that the state might take other legal actions against the company and its president, Vincent DiCarlo.
The state already has withdrawn about $800,000 from Dulce's $1.25 million contributions.
Last May, 140 outliers panels were cracked and broken. DiCiclo was told to
The panels have been inspected three times since then by state and University officials and judged unacceptable each time.
The state last month threatened to terminate DiCario's contract if he did not submit an acceptable plan for repairing the panels.
DiCarlo told state officials last week the
panels would be repaired by April 25. He said he had hired two Kansas City, Mo., construction companies to repair the panels at a cost of about $15,000.
PATRICK HURLEY, Kansas secretary of administration, said the repair plan was not completed.
"We weren't satisfied with their response to our demands at all." Hurley said. "The plan was vague. That's why we considered terminating the contract."
Dicarlo said yesterday that his company had been working on the panels "continually," but that rain had slowed the repairs would be finished on time.
But Warren Corman, director of facilities planning for the Kansas Board of Regents, said he did not think DiCarlo would finish the job.
"He's been so alow we've asked the attorney general either to fire him or make him pay for it."
Committee kills literature policy
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
A controversial literature distribution policy that sparked a series of demonstrations earlier this semester was dropped by the University Events Committee this week after an extensive review.
Ann Eversole, chairman of the events committee, said yesterday that the review had found that the literature distribution guidelines became exacting guidelines were adequate.
The literature distribution policy, passed by the committee last October, was suspended in January by Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, after protesters charged that the policy violated the right to free expression.
The policy outlined how literature could be distributed on the Lawrence campus.
Protesters were upset about a section of the policy that prohibited the distribution of literature in campus buildings. Members of a protest group, the Academic Action Coalition, deliberately violated the policy by handing out leaflets in several buildings.
UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS, admitted that the policy had been a mistake. Eversele said the events committee had tried to condense several existing policies and that they had made some interpretations of the rules that were overly restrictive, she said.
Tim Miller, assistant professor of religious studies who helped organize the Academic Freedom Action Coalition, said he was pleased by the decision.
Eversole also said the events committee could not directly act on the literature distribution policies of other University agencies.
signals a renewed commitment by the administration to free speech."
"I'm happy that they came around to our position," Miller said. "I hope it
HOWEVER, THE EVENT committee plans to organize the existing guidelines into an informational packet. The packet will be made available to students, faculty and staff through the office of student organizations and activities.
The packet will include the literature distribution guidelines of the Kansas Board of Regents, the Faculty and Student Senate executive committees, the Association of University Residence Halls and other University agencies.
Eversole said an open meeting to discuss the packet would be held at 3:20 p.m. April 18 in the International Room of the Kansas Union.
Carlin, Stephan inspect Wolf Creek
BY LYNN BYCZYNSKI
Staff Reporter
BURINGTON-Go. Gov. Carlin and Attorney General Robert Stephan got to the office to discuss power plant yesterday when they toured the Wolf Creek construction site near
Carlin said that the trip "was not a witch hunt" and that he had found nothing amiss at the nuclear plant, which is about 30 percent completed.
"We wanted to get acquainted with the facility so that we can objectively look at any questions that are raised." Carim said.
President Carter appointed an 11-member committee Wednesday to study the accident in Harrisonburg, which released in the release of radioactive gases.
SINCE THE MARCH 28 accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Harrisburg, Pa., government officials say there is concern about the safety of nuclear plants.
And last week, the Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee asked that a special committee be formed to study the safety of the Wolf Creek plant.
Carlin and Stephan, dressed in cowboy boots, blue jeans and windbreakers, toured the noisy construction site and questioned their tour guides. Officials of Kansas Gas and Electric and Kansas City Power and Light, owners of the plant, and Daniels International, the construction firm, led the inspection.
Carlin seemed especially concerned
about the 3.5-to-7-foot-thick concrete walls in the reactor building.
ALL CONCRETE construction in the reactor building was halted in January when samples of the concrete that form base of the reactor failed strength tests.
Carlin and Stephan were joined on the tour by State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, and Joseph King, chief of Carlin's new Energy Office.
CARLIN SAID HE was considering hiring a nuclear expert to monitor construction of the Wolf Creek plant in Colorado, concerns about the sales of the facility.
KG&E and KCP&L say that the tests, not the concrete, were faulty.
Further testing of the concrete has been done since then by the American Portland Cement Association. The tests of those tests are expected next month.
"The people of Kansas should be assured that what we're doing is correct," Carlin said.
King said that he would like to see a nuclear consultant fired but that it would be a difficult position to fill.
"We'd need not only a nuclear expert but a construction engineer and safety engineer. I don't know if you can find all that in one individual." King said.
"It can't be a total re-evaluation of nuclear safety. We could only deal with the key issues at this plant," he said.
Because of cost, a study of Wolf Creek would be limited, King added.
See NUCLEAR page three
City to get plan for proposed mall
By PAM MANSON and JAKE THOMPSON
Staff Reporters
A massive promotional plan for "Lawrence Square," a proposed million dollar shopping mall in south Atlanta, is underway.
"It's a bit volume, about two and three inches thick," said Donald N. Jones, assistant vice president of Jacobs, Viscosai and Jacobs Co., a Cleveland development firm that has proposed building the mall.
"The package that we're submitting includes photographs of some of our other mails, a rendering of Lawrence Square, an aerial photography showing the center of campus," she wrote. "We are in the engineering reports and a cost-benefit analysis," he said.
"Our local attorney, Dick Zinn, will bring it to them." Jones said yesterday.
Richard Zinn, a Lawrence attorney who is representing Jacobs, Viscusini and Jacobs and the landowners of the mall's proposed site, said he would be giving the materials to the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission staff.
"THESE ARE materials the planning commission has requested for its staff to use in preparing a report," Zinn
The mall, to be built on 61 acres at 318 Street and Arm-强 Road, which is about a half mile south of K Mart, will cost $11 million to $20 million and will be 400,000 square feet. It will be the first of three major department stores and about 80 smaller shops.
Zinn said the staff would take about 60 days to prepare its report.
He said the mall probably would be completed by spring or fall 1982.
Jones said major department stores had told the company they were interested in having branches in Lawrence.
"Lawrence is a strong market in terms of population and income and education," Jones said. "The department stores we're working with recognized it as a valuable market for their purposes."
"AS A N SAR AS sarning of the department stores at this appartment. I'm not at liberty to do that. We will at this appartment."
Jacobs, Vincasini and Jacobs came to Lawrence in September or October 1577 and chose 13 prospective sites for a small, according to Jones. After site studies, all but the present site were ruled out.
The site, now a field of corn stubble, is owned by Richard A. Armstrong and Betty Grisham.
On February 28, the planning commission recommended that the city among the land. The Lawrence City Com-
Because it annexed the land from the county, the city commission now has the final voice on any rezoning.
Jacobs, Viscusi and Jacobs filed a reasoning request March 7, requesting that the land be rezoned from RS-1, or single family residential, to C-4, the broadest commercial zoning.
Annexation and rezoning have been controversial because opponents have said the mail would harm down-
AN ATTORNEY for the Downtown Lawrence Association has fled a report with the planning commission saying that building a mail would be in conflict with Plan '56, the city's comprehensive growth plan.
The attorney, Jane Eldredge, said in the report, "Our southern boundaries need to be expanded. But these boundaries should not be extended in a piece-meal fashion and we need to have a clear violation of the basic purpose and goals of Plan 56."
However, Jones said the mall would benefit the whole community.
She and other people have said the city could not support two large shopping areas.
"WE DO everything within our own company in terms of the development process, including the construction of the
"In terms of opposition to the mail and how we will persuade the community to accept it, we're simply going to believe that, once the public is aware of what we're talking about, we'll have to tell them, that information in itself will persuade them," he said.
Jacobs, Viscorsi and Jacobs, which has built 19 malls in nine Nine Midwestern and Southern states, will "pretty well control every part of the process" of building the mall, Jones said.
centers." Jones said. "We have our own construction company called Jacob's Brothers Company and we act as a general contractor. All of the work is subcontracted with local contractors and people in the general area."
Jones said the company also would manage the mall itself.
"We operate our malls ourselves," he said. "We have a staff of management, public relations, maintenance and security in each of our centers. Those people live in the community, are part of the community."
Jones said financing for the mall would not be difficult because "our financial ability is extraordinary."
He said, "We would go through conventional bank financing for the construction loan and probably through one of the major insurance companies for the permanent loan.
"AT THE appropriate time we are able and would be happy torench references to the city and people that work there."
Some local people already have approached the company, Jones said, but the company has not decided which
"We don't usually get into conversations on the so-called smaller stores until the project is pretty well along," he said. "But there will be the normal assortment of ready-to-wear, service, food shops typically found in this type of city." He added that he would ready-to-wear—men's and women's clothes, jewelry, and all kinds of specialty shops that complement clothing.
Jones said he had been in Lawrence frequently since pamelling for the mail begin. He said he would be back soon.
Kansan applications available
Applications are now available for editor and business manager of the University Daily Kansas for the fall semester and the summer session. Forms are available in the School of Journalism office, 105 Flint Hall; the Student Information Center, 220 Strong Hall; organizations and activities, 220 Strong Hall. Completed applications are due by p. 5月. April 20 in 105 Flint Hall.
2
Friday, April 13, 1979
University Daily Kansan
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansas's Wire Services
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wichita Falls named disaster
WICHITA FALLS, Texas-President Carlo Wichita Falls a disaster area yesterday and city officials continued to clean up after Tuesday
A dusk-to-dawn curfew and freezes have been instituted in the city. Rescue workers recover the body of the 44th victim in Wichita Falls and Norman, Oklahoma.
City and state officials have asked for donations of mobile homes, campers and tents to provide shelter for thousands of people left homeless.
To aid rescue workers, a satellite over Christina Island along the equator is being used to relay conversations of workers, instead of using telephones.
While recovery work was continuing in Texas, new tornadoes yesterday damaged several homes at Steens, Miss., and the National Weather Service office near Rockville.
The storm that caused the tornadoes yesterday caused flooding which was blamed for three deaths near Louisville, Miss. two in Missouri and one in Ohio.
Floods kill 3 after downpour
KANAS CITY, Mo.—Three persons were killed in floods after a storm Wednesday night that dumped several inches of rain and caused 10 tornadoes in
Destruction by the storm resulted in millions of dollars of damage and Gov. Joseph Teastadla said emergency aid was available to any of the Mounts town
Tornadoes were reported in or near the town of Liberty, Bakersfield, Independence, Springville, Chaffee, Needyville, Crystal City, Fort Osage.
Liberty was hit worse than any area in the state. Ten people were hospitalized after two tornadoes hit the city. Because of the quick-developing storm, residents of Liberty, north of Kansas City, were given only a few minutes to take cover.
Study indicates dam could fail
KANNS CITY, Mo.—An Army Corps of Engineers expert said yesterday that heavy rains could result in the failure of the Old Winwood Lake Dam on
City, state and federal officials inspected the dam yesterday to determine whether emergency steps should be taken to protect residences and businesses
During Kansas City's floods in September 1977, some of the area downstream from the dam was evacuated when an eight-foot hole opened near the top of the dam.
The dam was inspected for the first time Monday by an engineering team that said the dam was not safe.
The dam inspection was part of the National Dam Inspection Program ordered by President Carter more than one year ago after several dam failures in
Atomic workers aet auidelines
WASHINGTON - The Nuclear Regulatory Commission told operators of 34 atomic power plants yesterday to watch for the kinds of mistakes and break-ins that occur at them.
The NRC said, for the first time, that all 43 pressurized water reactors in the United States might be vulnerable to the same kinds of mishaps that damaged them.
The NRC told operators not to override automatic safety features before they fully understood the problem with the unit.
The commission had learned that operators at Three Mile Island manually turned off an emergency cooling system when no other cooling system was
The operators were told to be alert to the previously discounted possibility that a gas bubble could form and could hamper the circulation of cooling water. They also were told to figure out in advance what steps could be taken if a gas bubble developed.
S. Africa says U.S. spuing
CAPETOWN, South Africa—The South African government announced yesterday that it had uncovered an American spy ring inside the country and that several American diplomats were being ordered to leave within the next week.
Foreign Minister "Pik" Botha said the spy ring was a reprehensible action of the United States. The United States has diplomatic relations with South Africa. There were no further details available from the South African government yesterday.
Florida courts allow cameras
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The Florida Supreme Court yesterday opened the state's courts to cameras and recording equipment permanently.
The Florida ruling gave photographers and electronic media the broadest access to local proceedings of any state in the union.
a unanimous ruling, the court said that cameras would be allowed in all Florida courtrooms, unless the presiding judge found that the cameras and camera lenses were not used.
In a related development, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled yesterday that broadcasting and cameras would be allowed in courtrooms for one year on a
Ruling on airline drinks upheld
TOPEKA-Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan will uphold former Attorney General Vern Miller's ruling that ketamine cannot be used on air travel.
The network said the ruling probably would not be issued until after the state legislature completed its session later this month.
The sale of drinks in airplanes over Kansas has been prohibited as a violation of the state's constitutional prohibition against open saloons.
Air strikes used in Nicaragua
Witnesses said the heavily-armed guerrillas of the Sandinista National Liberation Front were holding out behind stone barricades and in deep trenches.
MANAGUA, Nicaragua—National guard troops used air strikes and armored vehicles yesterday to try to remove Sandia guerrillas from positions in the mountains.
The national guard, which is President Anastasio Somóza's 10,000-military and police force, launched the attack against the guerrillas, who seized
The Sandinistas' last major uprising was last September, when four weeks of fighting left about 1,500 people dead.
Dioxin contaminates workers
However, Joseph Seifter, a health expert with the Environmental Protection Agency, said he did not think the levels of dioxin were significant.
STURGEON, Mo. — Traces of the toxic chemical dioxin have been found in the blood of two workers who helped clean up chemicals spilled in a train station.
The EFA has known of the test results for three weeks, but Mike Sanford, the County health director, said he was not aware of the findings until he was told by it.
One of the workers said he was not informed about the results and other state and local officials said they had not known.
Walter Kidwell, one of the exposed workers, was exposed to dioxin when he fell on the chemically-contaminated ground at the spill site Jan. 11.
It will be mostly sunny today with a high in the mid 50s, according to the National Weather Service. Winds will be westerly, for a 15 mph. The low tonight will be near 40. It will be clear to partly cloudy tomorrow with a high in the mid 60s.
KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) - A freeway of looting sweep Kampala yesterday and thousands of joyous Ugandans rallied in a city sounce to cheer the fall of Idi Amin.
Frenzied looting sweeps Kampala
But the defended dictator, broadcasting from somewhere in eastern India, intends to take over the airwaves.
"We have got our soldiers controlling the country," Amin declared.
His troops were reported streaming toward the Kenyan border in a chaotic rout, however, fleeing the Tanzanian forces and the rebels who captured Kampala late Tuesday.
Residents of town cost the capital said the ragged soldiers were loading and unloading their equipment.
a gunfight at a Jinja bus station reportedly left 15 soldiers dead.
"ALL UGANDANS who love their motherland must from now on help find Idi Amin wherever he is. He deserves the awards in command of Kampala radio declared.
It accused Amin, whose eight-year rule was marked by vain boasting, of being "afraid to say where he is," and it gave his son a legal right "or they will be dealt with accordingly."
The Ugandan strongman was believed to be transmitting his broadcasts through equipment at Soroti, 200 miles northeast of Kampala.
Much of Uganda, including all of Amin's
IN THE capital, residents said Tanzanian troops joined Kampalaams in plumding that shifted from already stripped shops to residential areas and government offices.
home territory in the north, was still beyond Tanzanian lines. The invaders did not mount an immediate military operation to hunt down Amin and any remaining loyal
An estimated 10,000 Kampalams—toting looted paperwork their writers on, sitting in stolen office chairs and holding baskets of newspapers to prevent theft—are Uganda Parliament for five hours of denunciation of Amir and praise for Tariq Abdulrazak, the government announced Wednesday.
30 Ugandan soldiers and no Tanzanians were killed in the final assault on Kampala
Tanzanian forces were reported to have freed at least some prisoners from Kampala jails. They claimed to have let 3,000 people out of one prison.
THE TANZANIANS estimated that about
International human rights groups say tens of thousands of Ugandans were killed during the conflict.
Judge upholds EPA ban
BAY CITY, Mich. (UP1) - A U.S. District Court judge yesterday uphold an emergency order banning the use of agricultural chemicals that may be linked to high rates of miscarriages and cancer.
Judge James Harvey rejected arguments by Dow Chemical Co., the primary manufacturer of the herbicides 2,4,5-T and Silvex, that the ban was "arbitrary and capricious and an example of government at its worst."
Dow officials were not available for comment on a possible appeal of the ruling. Dow and 20 other companies seeking to overturn
In issuing its emergency order March 1, the Environmental Protection Agency cited a study that showed probable links between the spraying of 2,4,5-T and miscarriages among women living in the Alsae Basin area of Oregon.
There have been 17 children born with birth defects since 1975 in Rolla, a small town in southwest Kansas. However, the health officials later said they found no link between the chemicals and the birth defects.
Last month, Kansas health officials investigated the number of birth defects in Rolla and the use of 4.5-5 T in that area.
The herbicide 2,4,5-T has been used on forest land, railroad and utility company rights-of-way and pastures, and Silvex is a common ingredient of "weed-and-feed" lawn and golf course preparations. The chemicals are considered hazardous because they contain dioxin, a toxic but virtually unavoidable byproduct of their manufacture.
Researchers consider dioxin to be deadly, and have linked it to cancer and other medical problems.
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Dow officials say that potential dioxin contamination from the proper use of the herbicides is "toxicologically insignificant."
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"In the 30-year use history, there is no documented case of human injury resulting from 2,45-T or Silvex," said Gary G. Jones, public affairs manager for Dow's agricultural products department.
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EPA Deputy Administrator Barbara Blum said the ruling meant Americans would "not be exposed to spring to what we consider the potential dangers."
The EPA had invoked a rarely used emergency power to immediately ban both herbicides, citing an "alarming correlation" between their use and cancer risk.
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University Daily Kansan
Fridav. Anril 13. 1979
3
KONA
Governor John Carlin
Staff photo by CHRIS TODD
By DAVID SIMPSON Staff Reporter
Housing for handicapped scarce
Nuclear...
Four quadrapheic students are planning to attend the University of Kansas next fall, but KU is having trouble finding housing for them, Robert Turvey, assistant director of the Student Assistance Center, said recently.
KU now has one quadriangle student. Two of the other students will come to KU for the first time and the other two will be returning to the University.
Coleen MacLeanan, Alququerque, N.M., said the Student Assistance Center had been searching unsuccessfully for housing for her and had told them she planned to come to KU.
From page one
"People aren't used to having hand-dicapped persons rent their apartments." MacLennan said. "They get freaked out when I say that I need to remove the cabinets underneath a shelf so my wheelcair can fit underneath."
Survey said that although no housing had been found, he hoped that Prairie Ridge Place, a new apartment complex at 2424 South High Street, is apartments available for the new students.
GOLDIE HARMON, the manager of Prairie Ridge Place, said the apartments were privately owned, but were constructed with funds from a Federal Housing and Urban Development grant. She said she and her apartments to be ready for use by September.
"The 100 apartments were built for people over 82 years of age and the handicapped," Harmon said. "Eleven of the 100 apartments are available. They will be available for the handicapped."
There are other complexes like Prairie Ridge Place in Lawrence, Turvey said. Handicapped students can live in nursing homes, he said, but they do not have the independence they would enjoy by living in an apartment.
ONE ISSUE AT THE Wolf Creek plant concerns the reactor vessel, which is lying outside, awaiting completion of the 300-foot bich. dored reactor building.
The 28-inch-thick steel wafered reactor vessel was designed by Westinhouse Corp.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced Wednesday that it had discovered a design flaw in some power plants designed by Westinghouse and that the flaw was similar to the one found in the Three Mile Island plant.
The flaw could mislead plant operators
and prevent vital emergency cooling in the event of an accident, the NRC said.
But KGGE® officials repeated yesterday the flaw did not affect the Wolf Creek fault.
The $1.1 billion electric generating plant is expected to be operational in 1983.
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The Prairie Ridge apartments will have such features as easily accessible entrances and bathrooms modified for wheelchairs, he said.
Macklem said she hoped病房 could be found, but if not she would still come to town. "She's going to stay here," he said.
"I MIGHT either have to rent an apartment where I could make the necessary renovations or buy a house and make the renovations in it." Macleman said.
Turvey said that KU had facilities in Joseph R. Pearson and Hallows for balls.
students with disabilities but that many or the students interested in coming to RU should be included.
"There are a lot of social-related problems with the residence halls." Turvey said. "The quadraplegic students coming to KU are often older and like to lead somewhat of an independent life. They also have a lot of equipment for wheelchairs."
Turkey said the quadruple students who were coming to KU did not make their decision because they had heard of the new curriculum and its focus on disabilities. The bus began service this
semester and takes students with disabilities to and from classes.
"When students hear of the bus service we expect that even more students with mobility impairments attend."
MacLeanman said she had not heard of the bus service before she made her decision to come to KU. She said she made her decision to stay at KU, where she works in its programs for students with disabilities.
"I'm kind of worried about the snow," she said. "Otherwise I've heard KU is fairly progressive and in tune with the needs of its handicapped students."
Landscaping awaits warmer days
A few days of warm weather will be needed before KU land-scaping crews can continue work on projects planned for the campus this spring, Jim Mathes, assistant director of Landscaping, said recently.
Work on various projects began March 20, Mathes said, but it was stopped because new trees and shrubs were not available from the nursery.
Mathes said that although the rain slowed landscaping plans, the weather had been good for fertilizing the grass on campus. All plants were watered and mulched.
"The dark green color of the grass is a result of the rain, and the grass all over campus is ready to show," he said.
"The nurseries cannot dig up new trees to send to us when the weather is this wet," he said. "As soon as the ground dries up, it will take a day or two to get the new plants here and landscaping will continue."
Mathes said that KU would spend $1,000 to $1,800 for land-scaping projects and that much of this money was obtained through grants from the US Department of Agriculture.
"People at KU recognize the value of landscaping and money is set aside for it. In comparing the landscaping at KU to that done at Kansas State University it's like comparing a Cadillac to a Honda." Chancellor Denean Mahtai and its tradition was started by former Chancellor Denean Mahtai and its
"I gardening was a hobby for the Malotts and they set a trend that has been followed. Even this spring we'll be planting trees on our backyard."
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
sex perversions, rampant all around in the day, excused by many instead of being fought to the death, make a mock of God's Law and Commandments for the protection and creation. To the first man created in His own image, God said: "THOU HAD FATHER AND MOTHER AND CLEAVE UNTO HIS WIFE, AND THEY SHALL BE ONE FLEESH." What God hath joined together, let not man put asunder. Thou shall not commit adultery, and he that looketh on a woman toust after her, let not man put asunder in heart—and Christ advised plucking out the eye rather than taking the risk of having the whole body cast into hell fire!
In the 16th chapter of Luke Christ draws back the curtain hiding the unseen and tells of a man who died, was buried, and lifted up his eyes in hell, tormented in the flame, where he is now, and then left to die. He is told for his brothers and others to stay out of his abode was by hearing and taking heed to Moses and the Prophets. Woe unto us when the churches ceased preaching God’s Ten Commandments, and demanding obedience to them of Jesus Christ. The gospel proclaims the baptism of social and political anarchy—all are here today.
When a man asked Jesus what he must do to enter life, He replied: Keep God’s Commandments. We are saved by the sacrifice of Jesus.
perfect obedience to them in our place; secondly, by the work of God's Holy Spirit writing them in the new heart, and by the prayer of Jesus that he forgives the Bible, Revelation 22:14 'BLESSED ARE THE THEY THAT HIS COMMANDMENTS, THAT THEY MAY HAVE A RIGHT TO HIDE BEHIND THEM, AND THERE GATES INTO THE CITY.' If you don't have a right to the tree of life, and can't enter in the gates into the city your father will give to you.
You do mock and score at the revelations of God's Word concerning eternal judgment and hell fire. Well, so did Lot's sons-in-law, friends, and the people of Sodom, and next to them, Jesus Christ, who is the only mocker will agree with us in one point, that they are on the way to their grave, and will die, even though they reject the judgment and eternal punishment in the fires of God's wrath. Let me explain why you should be for you to the cemetery! Consider the great number of names every day in the obituary notices! It won't be long, it might be soon when you will be there! "It is appointed unto you that you may hear from the Lord we 9:27. We urge you: 'PREPARE TO MEET THE GOD'
Stand Before The Lord, plead in the Saviour's Name, and deliver souls from the "wrath to come." The soul you save and deliver may be your own, a loved one, kinsmen, and others.
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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.
APRIL 13,1979
Legislators stall relief
Politicians have never been known to be the most agreeable individuals around. Put 10 of them to work on a problem and you likely will come up with 10 solutions.
Unfortunately, this inherent characteristic may have cost the people of Kansas a good tax-relief package for this year.
the problem all started from an unlikely source—the state found itself with a surplus of more than $98 million anticipated for the next budget year.
Spurred on by this overflow of cash, a Kansas House-Senate conference committee did what any good legislative body should do—it put together a $79 million tax-relief package. The House loved it.
BUT UNDERSTANDABLY, the Senate was concerned that the $39 million in tax credits planned for the package would benefit the rich, who need it the least, as much as the poor, who need it the most.
So the Senate voted for a $117 million tax-reliable proposal the state couldn't
afford—a proposal that the House obviously could not approve. Compromise, the lifeblood of politics, was momentarily forgotten, and the Legislature adjourned without approving any tax relief.
Of course, that can't last. When the Legislature reconvenes April 25, a tax-trelief package will have to be found. The taxpayers won't approve of the state allowing that extra $98 million to stay buried in the vaults.
AND THE Senate will probably be forced to approve the House's bill—a bill with obvious flaws. But all of that could so easily have been avoided.
When petty politics and personal preferences become so powerful that the needs of the people of Kansas are overlooked, it is obviously time for the Legislature to reflect for a moment on what it should be doing.
The taxpayers of Kansas need relief, and it is imperative that the Legislature provides it. An excuse of political and personal differences will be little solace to those Kansans hoping the Legislature will look out for their needs.
Child's Easter puzzle pieced together by age
This weekend has extra meaning for millions of people.
For myself, the significance of today and this coming Sunday began to develop in the mid-1960s during my grade school years.
The short walk to the church for the class was a break from school work and a chance to go outside—another recess of sorts.
But the mood soon would change.
And once inside the church, the most immediate concerns were who to sit next to and how loudly one of us could pop the hat clip behind the new.
By then, all six grades of the school had assembled and we began the Stations of the Cross in observance of Christ's passion.
The slow, Gregorian-like chants sung by the group made me feel a little more solemn; such music made one feel sainty.
And I didn't really quite understand another big change on Friday: no eating of meat.
BUT MY ATTENTION always seemed to wander and I usually gazed at the stained glass windows and the 12 ceramic sculptures, each depicting a moment of Christ's last hours. I didn't see scenes in the sculptures had scenes, but they did.
The regular staple of hot Mexican food was flavored with tuna sandwiches for lunch and fish sticks for supper. That was some flavoring.
My sacrifice for Lent usually was candy. I doubt that I gave up this treasure to ensure my entrance into heavens as much as because of a desire to do as most everyone else did and give up something I enjoyed.
N. A. BHADRA
Perhaps the one event during those years that made me seriously contemplate the crucifixion was when I saw a show about the passion.
Philip Garcia
I REMEMBER at the time I saw "the Robe" how the movie captured my emotions. I wanted to do something for the victim. I wanted to save Jesus from all that suffering and pain. I did not like to him mocked, and at fitted
I did not like to see the good guy fall three times; I wondered why the good guy died in this story.
As the years have passed the questions are no longer about why such a tragedy happened but whether I can believe in and act on the message of the event.
Can I believe that patience, kindness and perseverance are desirable in a society where people too often triumph over another in search of materiality?
I can I forgive those who ridicule me, and refrain from striking back at those who strike at me?
WILL I COMPLETE a task for the sake of love even though I may be scared and have no guarantee of receiving the same treatment?
Will I accept suffering and humiliation in order that success will have meaning and bring ioy?
I will catch myself running from tasks that are threatening and burdensome? How often will I turn my back on those in charge of someone else during my time of need?
Good Friday and Easter pose such challenges.
it seems the challenge is to give of myself when I would prefer not to and to believe such efforts are not in vain. It seems one can appreciate the peak of joy by remembering the valley of sadness. Today, for me, is a reminder that the valley can be crossed.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USPS $60-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and may be read during Thursday June and July except Saturday, September and Sunday holidays. Students receive a $10 discount on purchases of $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, paid through the student account.
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Dumping clearly is illegal as stated by U.S. laws. However, the Carter administration, like the Ford and Nixon administrations, is flagrantly ignoring that law.
American manufacturers, while not always the most ethical in the world, have a less
Congressman Vanik's subcommittee is conducting investigations this month. Hopefully, it will expose enough evidence to force the government to enforce the dumping regulations and levy penalties against offenders.
Such actions by one department of the federal government against another department, which was performing a much needed dutv. are totally inexcusable.
It is vital, moreover, that the U.S. government not only protect American businesses by restricting the number of inexpensive imports coming into this country, but that it realizes what its state is enforcing tariff laws means to U.S. citizens.
General Manager Advertising Adviser
Rick Muster Check Changes
Japanese import taxes long overdue
Late last month, the U.S. Treasury Department moved to collect more than $400 million in back tariff dues on Japanese television coverage and financed a limited program eighty years ago.
At trust glance, that action to indicate a government commitment to the collection of back tariff duties on imports is not unreasonable, or 'old at prices much cheaper in Japan.
But the Treasury Department acted only when it had to—after tremendous pressure was exerted by American businesses, the department said. Indeed, for nearly 10 years, the government has been particularly inactive in collecting duties on these "dumped" imports, which American TV manufacturers have claimed as part of last year—nearly 40 percent of the market.
Rep. Charles Vank, D-Ohio and chairman of a House subcommittee on trade, has suggested that the Senate should
The tariffs first were imposed in March 1971, yet no assessments have been conducted since April 1972. Only $1 million had been spent on the discontinuation a reason for the discontinuation was
PRESSURE, however, finally is being put on the Carter administration to do something about the obviously ignored problem.
The government must realize that this passiveness does, in fact, mean only one of its powers.
And federal grand juries in New York City, Norfolk, Va., and Los Angeles, as well as a Justice Department task force in Chicago, Cincinnati, and New York, large retailers, including Sears, Roebuck and Co. Montgomery Ward and Co. J. C. Penney Co., have accepted illegal Japan C
Mary
Ernst
The kickbacks are said to have been paid by the Japanese manufacturers to the U.S. retailers in exchange for the retailers' agreement to quote high wholesale prices.
Whether evidence to confirm such a secret deal is found, there is plenty of evidence that the government has been very diligent in collecting and imposing penalties.
Indeed, there is growing evidence that the Carter administration may have made a secret deal in 1977 to drop both investigations and pending damping penalties in exchange for a Japanese "voluntary" limit on television exports.
The payments may have allowed Japanese manufacturers to undercut the retail price of each American-made television by as much as $100.
NEARLY ALL Japanese importers except Sony are implicated in the allegations, government lawyers and customs officials say.
The problem is serious. Yet the fact that the last three administrations have ignored it and may have even made secret deals is Japanese is the really serious problem.
LAST YEAR, the Treasury Department, for the second time in two years, blocked an anti-dumping action. Customs agents were preparing "Project Orme安娜," an attempt to collect $400 million in back differences, when the Treasury pulled the plug on the operation.
ARE WE THAT DESPERATE FOR CUSTOMERS?
ZIGGIE AND IRMA'S TRUCK STOP
Diner
10. (1) $ \frac { 1 } { 2 } x - 1 > 3 - \frac { 3 } { 2 } x $
(2) $ \frac { 1 } { 2 } x + 1 < 4 - \frac { 3 } { 2 } x $
(3) $ \frac { 1 } { 2 } x - 1 < 3 - \frac { 3 } { 2 } x $
(4) $ \frac { 1 } { 2 } x + 1 > 4 - \frac { 3 } { 2 } x $
JRP group condones room checks
To the editor:
As concerned residents of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, we feel the time has come to express the views of those people whose families are affected by support of residence hall policy. We are particularly concerned with the biased, derogatory reporting of the incident(s) by residents.
Kenneth C. Kempf
St. Louis senior
And 11 others
Draft's usefulness shouldn't be slighted
To the editor:
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
I have been keeping up with the recent flurry of stories in the Kansas concerning the draft. As an Army ROTC senior, I feel it necessary to interject some bias but hopefully reasonable thought into this emotion-charged subject.
To begin with, a room-to-room safety check of the entire residence hall has been conducted. In JHP Everyone seems to overlook, despite numerous explanations, that the safety check was initiated after two possible fires had been reported to the residence director.
What shocks and surprises us is the lack of support being shown by the office of the programs in backing its decision and the status of the director says, "I would say that Rich Frolk would say that he made a mistake," it says that the office of residential programs is being fitted for the board and Rich Frolk is being fitted for the barn. The director doesn't feel he made a mistake and neither do we. If anybody does, they're in Strong Hall in the office of residence.
When the rooms in question were entered, violations of the contract as well as state and federal laws were observed. These violations included plain sight and at no time did a search occur.
The resident director then contacted the office of residential programs, informing the office of his intention to make a check of the complaints against any other violations. It must be made clear that at no time did the staff specifically look for violations of hall contract. Because of the lateness of the complaints, there was no way to notify all the residents in time.
Some of the quotes from NOTC students in your March 28 edition are regrettable. The generalization that military service makes men from boys bounds on the absurd. I am confident that most NOTC students do not understand that an enlisted person, enlistment can be a very rewarding experience. For others, it can be pure hell. The military has a nasty habit of not always being able to satisfy its employees. Consequently, this mission, this failing is easily understandable.
Most individuals responding to the article, however, risk overlooking the utility of the draft while expressing their animosity against the military. The plain truth is that the militarists want to provide the national cross-section of the population we are supposed to have in the military. Not only is it misrepresentative, it is cost-infeffensive. To compete for personnel from the militarist forces been forced to lower its standards and raise its salaries. The Department of Defense spends most of its revenue paying its employees. The result of this is that the salaries cannot be expected to meet the defense requirements of the United States.
From my limited experience with the military, I can safely say that the overwhelming majority of servicemen dread the concept of war, but realize that they are needed and should be prepared. To those who intend to do their best (or what they do), they are trained in the draft bills, or to evade the call to arms if and when it does come, I can only say that they do so solely by the grace of those who have answered the call in the past and who will,
The major draft bills do not advocate mandatory military service, but rather the refurbishment of the Selective Service system and registration so that in the event of an active duty deployment mechanisms to employ it will be responsive and effective. This makes sense to me.
A fundamental premise of citizenship is the responsibility we have to serve in the defense of the nation. Many argue about that exactly entails, as well they should.
grudgingly, sorrowfully and unhappily,
answer it in the future.
Kevin D. Johnson
Kansas City, Kan. senior
Mile should be trod in Palestinian shoes
The recent Arab protests of the Midestay peace treaty and threats by Yasser Arafat of the PLO to attack U.S. targets have been widely reported. However, few of the people repulsed by Palestinian actions and threats have taken any concrete action in such a seemingly irrational manner.
To the editor:
Assume for a moment that the Palestinians are human beings like you. Then ask yourself, what would you do if a group of persecuted people flooded into your country and used their sufferings as justification to seize control?
What would you do if when you tried to resist this takeover by foreigners from Miami Beach, New York and Northern Europe, they exiled you from the home of your forefathers and cast your national identity to the wind?
What would you do if it is a homeless people you have no forum from which to state your grievances and when you politely ask for information about how you feel they were politely ignored? And when you
What would you do when, out of desperation, you wantonly killed and the world realized it could no longer ignore you? And history has taught you that as a result of violence that has made the world sit up and take notice, you will once again be ignored!
harshly asked for their attention, you were harshly ignored?
And finally, what would you do when three men—a foreign occupier who worships a golden calf named Israel, a former ally and a man whose interest in you extends as far as the political influence you exert—sign up as your destination your destiny one step closer to oblivion?
Unfortunately, most Americans have not had an opportunity to think about the Palestinians in this way because media and social interests have not treated them fairly.
Perhaps an ingenious attorney could use the equal time laws of political broadcasting for the Palestinians to gain control of NBC for one year.
Then maybe we would see a heart-rending drama entitled "Holocaust II." It would portray the exiled Palestinian prisoners in camps in several countries. It also would show the Palestinians that remained in their homeland at the cost of neo-slavery to their ancestors.
Or maybe we would see a suspense rhaid called "Raired On Der Yassin." The star of the show is the argu gunn man. He would lead a group of terrorists into the village of Der Yassin on an April night in 1948 and kill 254 men, women and children proud enough to create a Palestinian state.
Tom Ramstack
1978 KU graduate
Salina, Kansas
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters; should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is after school, they should include the writer's class and home office or faculty or staff position. The Kansas reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
Friday, April 13, 1979
University Daily Kansan
5
Abnormally high water bills unexplained
Staff Reporter
By ROBIN SMITH
Last month, a KU student received a water bill for $118. His normal monthly bill
Another KU student said that her water bill six months ago was $11 but that last month her bill, which she refuses to pay, was $43.
The situations of both of these students have three common elements.
first, they both live in Stouffer Place, a married student housing complex owned by the University, on the corner of 19th and Iowa streets.
Second, they have both gone through the "run-around" between the water department and Stouffer Place in trying to explain the high water bills.
And third, neither has solved the problem of the unusual excess of water into their
Rasat Ansari, Karachi, Pakistan,
graduate student, who received the water
bill of $118, said yesterday that he was
involved and surprised" when he opened his
bill.
"I CALLED THE maintenance man at Stouffer right away," he said. "He told me to call the water department. The water department told me to call someone at Stouffe and then Stouffier referred me back to the water department.
"No one is taking the responsibility that there has been a mistake."
According to the water bill, Asari used 120,000 gallons of water between February 6 and March 5. That would mean more than 4,000 gallons of water a day or almost three
gallons of water a minute passed through his apartment.
Asari said he thought his high water bill could be the fault of a leaky toilet or a faulty toilet.
But employees at Stouffor Place said there was no leak in the apartment and they checked the water department said they chewed on the water and found it in proper working order.
JOE MATER, the Stouffer maintenance man who checked Ansari's apartment, rented a room.
However, J.J. Wilson, director of housing, said, "I have been told that we have run some checks on the apartment in question and there were no leaks reported.
Gene Vogt, director of utilities, said, "The meter was checked and the test proved that the system is working."
"But we have had some occasional meter problems."
However, it is possible that a lock in a toilet will pass more than 119,400 gallons of water.
Voit said the meter would be tested again next week and that Ansari would be asked, in accordance with a water department policy, to collect data. Ansari was unable to witness the first test.
Dean Milroy, supervisor for Stouffer maintenance, said there had been four other complaints concerning high water bills and leaking toilets.
“OUT OF THE TWO who called we only found oneOUND that had a leak,” he said. “And the leak was between the two buildings.” He checked that possibility also, but no leak.
Asnari asked, "What can I do now?" That water bill is higher than one month of my rent and no one is finding an answer. I don't have a car with this without letting my students slip."
Papa Holland, the other student, Topika
junior, said she felt as helpss as Ansari
Junior, said she felt as helpss as Ansari.
"MY SITUATION IS NOT as extreme as Ansari's, but it all adds up," she said.
After my first water bill, the cost that I am to pay kept rising. It started at a range of between $11 and $15. Then a bill came for $24 and for $31. That's when I started to wonder.
Holland said she got the same "run-around" as Ansari did when she tried to contact Stouffer maintenance and the water department. Holland said there also was nothing apparently wrong with her meter and no leak was found in her apartment.
"What upsets me is that I was forced to pay the $31 bill or they would turn off my water," Holland said. "Now if I don't pay for $43 then will turn off my water May 1."
"I've had enough of this place and I'm leaving shortly. So if they turn off my water, it won't bother me. I just feel sorry for the people who live here after me."
Both Ansari and Holland said they
planned to take legal action to resolve their situations.
Vogt said the water department would try to solve the problem as soon as possible.
"We are trying to determine what the problem is," he said. "Ansari is not going to be an innocent victim." But Ancestor驳倒ed.
"Both Stoufler and the water department tell me that I am not at fault, but I feel so bad."
PARTY?
MAKE IT WITH
JUAREZ
TEQUILA
JUAREZ
TEQUILA
MINTED & BOTTLED BY JUAREZ & ALCOLIOS
917 LESSON, MO. 60438
"Negotiating Life Changes"
Dr. Paul Friedman
A program about working with strain in relationships and developing creative arrangements suited to individuals' changing situations.
Wednesday, April 11
3:00 to 5:00 P.M.
International Room, Kansas Union
Sponsored by the Non-Traditional Student Organization, partially funded by the Student Activity fee.
Tax deadline near for W-4s
Those claiming exemption withholding taxes this year should file a new W-4 Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate before April 28. The form must be filed in the KU Payroll Office by then for employees to remain tax-exempt through next year.
Information concerning eligibility for exemption can be obtained from the Internal Revenue Service or the Payroll Office.
sua films
{1973}
Friday & Saturday
April 13 & 14
MEAN STREETS
Dir. Martin Scorsee; with Harvey
Keillet, Robert Deniro, Amy Robinson,
Cesare Danova.
Fri.-Sat. -3:30 8:30
Sat.-7:00
SWEPT AWAY
Dir. Lina Wurtmüller, with Giancarlo
Gianniell, Mariangela Melago, Italy's
tishttitles.
Fri - 7:00
Sat - 8:30 & 9:30
Tuesday, April 17
BROADWAY MELODY OF 1940
(1940)
Dir. Norman Taurug; with Fred Astaire, Eleanor Powell, George Murphy,
dance great sequences and songs.
Wednesday, April 18
Shakespeare:
BICUARD III
(1955)
Dir. Laurence Olivier with Laurence Olivier, Ralph Richardson, John Gielgud, Clarie Bloom, Cedric Hardwick. Considered by many to be the best filmed version of any of Shakespeare's plays.
Friday & Saturday April 20 & 21
Midnight Movie
SUPERVIXENS
Dlr. Fred Zinnmann; with Jane Fonda, Vanessa Redgrave, Jason Robbards. Based on a story by Lillian Awards. *No Friday matinee*
JULIA (1977)
Dir. Ruers Meyer; with Shari Eubank, Charles Kajper Buy your tickets early and enter the AT THE DOOR. BE CHECKED AT THE DOOR, SO BE BRUNG TO BRING THEM TO THE FILM.
(1975)
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud. at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00 admission.
You were down
to half a jar of peanut butter.
Then Dad's check arrived.
Now comes Miller time.
© 1978 Moer Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis.
s Miller time.
Miller
THE CHAMPION OF BEER
WILL SHORT
AND WILL APPLY.COM!
485 WILLE
6
Friday, April 13, 1979
University Daily Kansan
FIRMS RESPONSIBLE
FOR THIS DIRECTORY
Lawrence
Bank and Trust Co., N.A.
647 Massachusetts
841-5555
Lawrence Savings Association
901 Vermont
843-0460
Attend Church
This Sunday
SIBLE
TORY
Border Bandido
1528 W. 23rd
842-8861
Bay Real Estate
1031 Vermont
842-5570
W. C.
Pulliam House of Music
2601 Iowa
843-3007
Raney Plaza Drug Store
1800 Massachusetts
843-0684
Owens Flower Shop corner 9th & Indiana Sts. 843-611-7
Rumsay Funeral Home
601 Indiana
843-5111
Fred L. Thompson
140 W. 27th St.
Rusty's Food Centers
23rd and Louisiana
901 Iowa
600 Idaho
843-7848
Russell's East 3400 W. 6th 841-3530
Henry's Drive In
6th & Missouri
843-2139
Briman's Leading Jewelers 743 Massachusetts 843-4366
Gabriel's Restaurant
2449 Iowa
842-5824
Royal Peking Restaurant
711 W. 23rd
841-4599
RELIGIOUS DIRECTORY
LAWRENCE, KANSAS You are welcome to participate in these groups or churches.
W. C. and Me, Family Restaurant
544 W. 23rd
841-6181
Jan's Mini Mansions
715 New Jersey
842-5621
Douglas Bank Bank
23rd & Louisiana
9th & Kentucky
843-7474
Sunflower Surplus
804 Massachusetts
843-5009
Gibson's Discount Center
2525 Iowa
842-7810
Harwood's Wholesale Meats
3103 Iowa
843-2311
Lawrence Launders and
&Dry Cleaners
1029 New Hampshire
843-3711
Bucky's Drive In
2120 W. 9th
842-2930
Lawrence Lumber
& Supply Company
1846 Massachusetts
843-1341
Independent Coin Op
900 Mississippi
843-5304
Campus Hideaway
106 W. North Park
843-9111
The Castle Tea Room
1307 Massachusetts
843-1151
Grampy's
Pancake House & Restaurant
3520 W. 6th
842-6162
Open 6 to 9 Easter Sunday
Acme Dry Cleaners, Inc.
Downtown 1109 Mass. 843-5156
Hillcrest 843-0928
Mails 843-0895
Kansas Public Service Gas Co
733 Massachusetts
843-7842
ADVENTIST
Seventh Day Adventist
1000 Connecticut Street
Suburban School
Worship Service
3 000 p.m.
3 000 p.m.
AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL
SI. JAMES APRAKTHIAN METHODIST
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
7th & 8th Avenue Street
Washington, DC
Worship Service
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
9.45 a.m
11:00 a.m
ST. LUKE African METHODIST
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Sunday School
Worship
LAMBERT ASSISTANCE OF GOD
124 Massachusetts Ave.
9:30-11am
Morning Work
9:30-11am
Midday Work
10:30am
Moderate Work Meeting (MWD)
7:30am
Total
Please enter the above information.
American
BAPTIST-
Bible
FIRST BATCH CHURCH CURSE
841.16292
Morning Service 841.16292
Late Morning Service
Church School 9.0300
Church School 9.0300
Late Morning Service 11.0000
Late Morning Service 11.0000
Work & Study (Men) 9.0300
Work & Study (Men) 9.0300
Women & Flower (Men) 9.0300
Women & Flower (Men) 9.0300
BIBLE BAPSTH CHURCH
Sunday School
Saturday school
10:00 a.m.
11:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
Sunday Youth Program
8:30 a.m.
7:00 a.m.
Book Study & Play (wed.)
7:00 a.m.
LAWRENCE BAPTIST TEMPLE
1564 New Hampshire
New Hampshire 1 Carroll Ave.
842-703-1077
Living Service
Living Service
Wednesday High Home Meeting
6:00 p.m.
Wednesday High Home Meeting
6:00 p.m.
G.A.R.B.
LAWRENCE BAPTIST CHURCH
445 Yours Street 842-3260
P. Urbana Dr. Pinter Street 842-7873
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
Wednesday 11:00 a.m. and 4:30
Western Service Day 7:30 a.m.
W
National Baptist USA Inc
FIRST REGULAR MISSIONARY BAPTIST
CINEMA
843-2581
Brooklyn Street
Jayne B. Johnson
Bryan J. Johnson
843-2581
1200 Mile Killen
1200 Mile Killen
0.45 m
Working space
0.15 m
11 m
15 m
NORTH STREET BAPTIST
843 5628
No. Barbie Lee
843 5628
Sunday School
9:30 a.m.
11:00 a.m.
Wednesday Prereg Meeting
Southern
ANTIQUE MARY CHURCH
843 0192
1171 street S.
Broomfield, CO 80213
Working Services
1100 m. W. of E.
Brief Studies and Poetry Meeting
7:30 a.m.
EAST HIGH SCHOOL & PATRICIA CURRY
Baltimore, MD 81704 632.942.6422
New York, NY 10015 842.204.9422
West Palm Beach, FL 856.204.9422
Milwaukee, WI 105.35 mm
Chicago, IL 100.35 mm
Evening Workshops
Evening Workshops
Evening Workshops
The Water Service Week (WKS)
OUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH
SOUTHERN MORTGAGE BATCH CENTER
421-853-1530 422-853-1530
R. F. Sullivan & Johnson 402-854-1614
Wednesday Sunday 11:00 a.m. 7:00 a.m.
Sunday Wake-up 11:00 a.m. 7:00 a.m.
Weekend Payment Meaning
FIRST SOUTHERN BATISTE CHAPEL
Chapel of Christ the Savior
1917 Newman
Sunday School
8:00 a.m. 9:45 a.m.
Wednesday School
8:30 a.m. 10:00 a.m.
Wendy Rose School
HANDLE HILTON MISSION
(316) 295-7800
Ron Glassman. Patient
(618) 11731
Ron Glassman. Patient
(MASS) 10:48 PM
Loving Workshop
(MASS) 10:30 PM
Loving Workshop
(MASS) 10:30 PM
Loving Workshop
(MASS) 10:30 PM
**LUNAR BIRTH CHAPEL**
IOU17148080 - BA 4206271
J.R. Schmitt Correspondent
J.R. Schmitt - 9:30 am
Bunche Shinohara - 10:30 am
Patterson - 9:30 am
Louis S. Moore - 10:30 am
CATHOLIC
1239 Visitors
843 10139
Barbecue
Bar: 7 am
7:00 pm
Tee House:
7 am 7:00 pm
Sun Bar:
7 a.m 8 a.m 10 a.m
12 noon
Dae Mission
CHRISTIAN-
BIBLF
MOSTLY SELL FELLOWSHIP
No Bed Rent 230 $189
Bed Rent Warehouse 845 $189
Workers' Sundays (Sundays)
at 10:00 a.m.
and 7:00 a.m.
ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST CATHOLIC
CHARISMATIC
LAMBERTIE MIDDLE CHURCH CChristian
Elegant Home Master 814 364-2844
Royal Home Master 814 364-2845
School Shelter 814 364-2845
School Shelter 814 364-2845
Family Room 800 600 - Suite
Family Room 800 600 - Suite
NORTH LAWRENCE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Akmon Missioner 841 8735
641 Tir S. 841 8735
Court St. 841 8735
Workshop 841 8735
Working 841 8735
Disciples
BETHANY PARK CHRISTIAN CHURCH sharing the facades of the
1625 West Riv. Park 843-845-7500
Rice Rd. Riv. Park 843-845-7500
Celebration of Worship and
Ceremony of Worship and
Ceremony of Worship
10:15 am 10:15 pm
Children's Learning Fair
10:15 am 10:15 pm
1000 XMASS
1000 XMASS
483 967 19
483 967 19
Member of the
Member of the
Sunday Service
9:00 am
Wednesday
10:30 am
Monday Service
10:30 am
SECOND CHRISTIAN CHURCH
843 9405
Dagee Baptist Church
843 1280
Worship
11. 9 am
Wearinr
11. 9 am
Young Trout
12. 3 pm
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
FIRST CUMBER OF CHRIST SCIENTISTS
Saturday School 10 a.m.
Sunday School 12 p.m.
Wednesday Leaving Meeting
Thursday Leaving Meeting
127 Eighth Avenue House
143 Ninth Avenue
CHURCH OF CHRIST
DINNER'S CHURCH
802 4892
Emergencies
1545 Ear 230
Baby School
Practicing
Preaching
10:30 a.m and 7:00 a.m
CHURCH OF CHRIST, CLINTON PARMANY
44 WAV 2910 (817) 451-8386
Worship Services 10:30 a.m. & 8:00 p.m.
Women's Services 10:30 a.m. & 8:00 p.m.
Lunch/Tavern 12:00 p.m. & 4:00 p.m.
Little Turtle Café & A Coorouning
Banquet 12:00 p.m.
19th and Senior
843 897 842 830
Bell School
Writing Services
Wed Service
11:00 a.m. & 8:00 a.m.
David | Pastor Peter
Sunday | 8:30 AM
Burwood | Sunday
Sunday | 10:45 AM
Milwaukee | Sunday
Washington | Church of God
Denver | Church of God
Milwaukee | 6:15 AM
Pastor Brett Brabantian
Sunday | 9:30 AM
SOUTH DUMBO CHURCH OF CHRIST
842 2433 7600
212 & MUSIC
843 0170 8700
Bible School
8:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m & 8:00 a.m
West Service
F. D. Galloway, Pastor
Boston Circ
Rentals 841.4719
Workshops 10.000 x
Worship Services
11.30 x 7.000
Wednesdays
CARNIVAL OF GODS HOLIDAYS 892 1259
Palace of Fine Arts 9.45 m
Worship Services 10.45 m
E. B. Cafe 9.30 m
R. E. Book 8.30 m
B. E. Study 8.30 m
CHURCH OF GOD
CHURCH OF GOD (HOLINESS)
CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST
INDIAN HILLS CHURCH OF GOD
CHURCH OF GOD (WOUNDED)
PACIFIC WESTERN GLOBE INSTITUTE
925 S. 10TH ST.
San Francisco, CA 94103
Arizona State University
863 S. 10TH ST.
Arizona Springs, AZ
Alabama State University
863 S. 10TH ST.
Alabama Birmingham, AL
Sunday School
863 S. 10TH ST.
12.00 noon (morning)
Monday School
863 S. 10TH ST.
12.00 noon (morning)
Bachelor Study Center
863 S. 10TH ST.
8:00 am
OVERCROWN CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST
814-7979
Evelyn W. J. Estrand JW
641-7979
Working Service
9:30 am 8:00 pm 10:00 am
Wake and Prayer and Bale Room
8:00 am 10:00 pm
CHURCH OF JESUS
CATHERINE
LATTER DAY SAINTS
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CATHERINES OF LATTER
DAY (SUN) 8:45 AM - 10:45 AM
9 Ward Ave. Yonkers, NY 842 7893
Buffalo West Home Renting
842 8118
Sunday School
10:30 am - 12:00 pm
Saturday School
EPISCOPAL
VIRTUAL PRESCHOOL
843-516-0100
The Roy Rehm Preschool
The Roy Rehm Preschool
Holy Communion: 8:00 a.m and
10:00 a.m
Sunday: 3:00 p.m
Tuesday: 9:00 a.m
JOHNSTOWN CHURCH
802 West Ave. 842 2343
Hibernation Park
845 7357
Bible South Hour
8:10 10:00 & 7:00
8:00 10:00
Farming Ridge
7:00 m
FREE METHODIST
LAWRENCE PETERSLEIGH ENCLOUR
841 3181 1841
Baird Airplane Rental
841 3181 1840
Babo Boat Rental
841 3181 1850
Beehive Services
841 3181 1700
Friend (front) Upholstery
841 3181 1700
1631 Concord Road
Marketing for Working
John Hayes
841 5673
841 5673
Mailing Address
1007 2649
FRIENDS
Computer Number
10124736
Wardrobe and Closet Number
10124736
Height 10' 8"
Width 10' 8"
Patent Number (Class)
10124736
Patent Date
1995-01-21
Basis Date
1995-01-21
Basis Price
$399.00
FULL GOSPEL
JEWISH
FULL DOSPEL CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY
1901 New Hampshire 84 1903
1902 Vermont 84 1903
ULL GOSPEL CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY
DENTAL CENTER LUMBER COMPANY
843 965-3050
Sunday - Monday
Boston, MA 02214
843 4308
Boston, MA 02214
843 1894
Boston, MA 02214
Logan Square, Fairfield
843 4308
Boston, MA 02214
Nassau Beach, Nassau
843 4308
Nassau Beach, Nassau
LUTHERAN
JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER
GOOD BETWEEN LUTHERAN CHURCH AUC 3123 Harrington Ave, Boca Raton FL 34487 Christian Education 9:15 a.m. 9:15 a.m. Team Building 12:00 a.m. Kid's Sunday Services
IMANUATE LUTHERAN CHURCH (LGB)
17 & Wervent
Ravite Wah Lhur Pastor
Renate Hunt Lust Pastor
Working Service
0.15 m
BENEZIUM MEGYDON
3446 - 3448; 8450
Clayton Bancroft * T. P.
Chapman * B. T.
Bolus Sculpe
Bolus Sculpe
0 : 00am
Louisian-Lafayette's league
Louisian-Lafayette's league
7 : 00am
843 800
Emily T. Storm, Associate Pater
392 New Macdonalds 843-1500 843-4154
New New Hampshire All Ages 843-1500 843-4154
Workings 843-1500 843-4154
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
15th and 19th
Sunday Evening
LILG HOUSE Master
843.6626
842.4888
841.6000
ALLO GLO Dairy Donor Cured
Working Services
9.45 & 10.45 & AU$
MENNONITE
LAWRENCE MENMONITE FELLOWSHIP
LAWRENCE & NEMOSE MELLWOPH
workshop for homeworks for homework and pellock lunch. For exact meeting time and place click.
642-8272
jansen 653-0011
NAZARENE
084 Massachusetts
Bri. Riley James Pastor
843 3940
Bri. Riley James Pastor
843 3940
Morning Worship
0.45 m
Early Worship
6.00 m
Lunch Service
HOLIDAY HILLS CHURCH OF THE
N23247
Orchard Dr 841-7345
River Gardens 842-7358
Church Street 846-934
Oxford St OXD 834
Worldwide Press Proje
cctv.com
PENTECOSTAL
120 PENTESTON HOLLOW CHURCH
Penteston Island House
843 45488
Bakersfield College
Sunday School
Washington School
Weathering Services
1:10 a.m - 6:30 a.m
PENTECOSTAL
CHURCH OF GOD
CALVIN SLOPE
Burberry House 642 642 6831
Burberry Hill 642 642 7051
Burberry Giltwood 642 642 7901
Brooklyn Court School 9:45 am
Brooklyn Court School 12:45 pm
Town and Country 7:00 am
Town and Country 12:00 pm
PRESRYTERIAN
FINAL PRESTERIAN CHURCH
2415 West 23rd 843-4171
On Black week of midterm tests,
Mr. Grey's office is filled with
recruiting staff. Mr. Gray will
drive Dr. Alexander to meet
Mr. Dawson Admiral Dr. Devi
Coffman Education
Department to discuss
new academic requirements.
Mr. Dawson Admiral Dr. Devi
Coffman Education
Department to discuss
new academic requirements.
Mr. Dawson Admiral Dr. Devi
Coffman Education
Department to discuss
new academic requirements.
WILLIAM BRISTOL PRESBYTERIAN CATHOLIC
841 6540
Robert F. Passerius
862 6448
Christ Church School
984 8 mm
Youth Meeting (Thurs)
730 2 pm
PRESBYTERIAN—
REFERRED PREBERTIAN CHURCH
842-365-9120
Ron Stagel Press
842-365-9120
Book Club & Study Classes
11:00 a.m. 10:00 a.m.
Workshop Services
10:00 a.m. ~ 10:30 a.m.
IANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
R.L.D.S.
RECONGESTED CHURCH OF JESUS CHESTER
843 8427
1094 Church Street
1904 Church Street
Pastor
Church Building
9:30 a.m.
Church Building
7:30 a.m.
Worship Services
Worship Services
SALVATION ARMY
UNITARIAN
Team and New Members
Team and New Members
Passport
864 74516
Passport
Male Joseph Jonee
Male Joseph Jonee
Morning Meeting
10:00 a.m.
Morning Meeting
10:00 a.m.
UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP
Pavilion Rise II S-Size 949 | 843 335
Pavilion Rise III S-Size 949 | 843 4018
Meeting (Nurse Provided) 1.00 a.m.
Sunday School
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
H. Holmes & Braden, G. O. Brantley
B. Driver & O. Bower
Christian Church
Christian School
Workshop Church
10:00 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
Working with
Students
UNITED METHODIST
CENTENARY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
150 West 32nd Street
Briar, New Jersey 07620
Briar, New Jersey 07620
Church School (W)
18:32 am
900 feet
0:00 pm
Christ Church (Dunlap)
CENTRAL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
101 MAJESTIC STREET
845-7064
*WALKING UNIVERSITY CHURCH*
100 Minutes
Miniature Museum
847 7064
Gendry School
East Church Member Ministry
The Church at St. Mary's
9:30 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
846 Sculpture
Boston Porter
Patrick R. Kishman
Rita Kishman
C教堂 Education for all ages
9:30 a.m.
Nursery Education for all ages
10:30 a.m.
Youth Learning Group
5:00 p.m.
Smart Kids Club
5:00 p.m.
SMART KIDS CLUB
LAWRENCE INDIAN UNITED
BOS East 21st St
800 East 21st St
44.500 84.100
School Bus
Sunday School
10:30am 10:00am
Teacher Meeting
Earlyning Meeting
6:30am 6:20am
Lunch Meeting
8:30am 7:30am
WESLEYAN
WEST COUNTY MASSACHUSETTS
842 8236
Don Michel Paterno
842 8236
Washing Service
10 a.m. & 8 a.m.
Workshop Services
10 a.m. & 8 a.m.
Wine Hour Breakfast
10 a.m.
WORD OF LIFE CHURCH
1502 Hawthorne
School
Patriary Way Bedside
sunday school
Wake Forest
Wednesday
Evening service
7:00 a.m. Sunday
5:24 - 32:28
WORD OF LIFE
STUDENT MINISTRIES
BAPTIST AMERICAN
1023 W 18th St
802 W 19th St
BAPTIST EGEDONIAN
1023 W 18th St
BAPTIST EGEDONIAN
1023 W 18th St
Yvonne Kadee, Division
Gar Arena
Gar Arena
CAMPUS ADVANCE FOR CHRIST
CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
Campus Life Talks & Soil Talks
Dan Smith
842-1571
Yelena Hosken
1217 Tennessee St.
862 8491
1217 Tennessee St.
862 8490
Asia and Charlotte Hosken
862 8492
Bake Studies, Counseling and Discipline
Bake Studies, Counseling and Discipline
St. Lawrence Catholic Center
1631 Crane Road
843 0357
Fr. Lawrence Abbesson
Virginia College
Fr. Alfred Baker
Fr. Alfred Baker
HRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION
AU
Eleanor OuOyom Adviser
Maestros Danish Chaget
Tundsaed (Sat) (Wed) (Mon)
8:30 p.m.
SOUTHBIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST
Willa W. Cheetham 843 2433
25th & Mission 843 0770
CHURCH OF GOD
Indiana Hills Church of God
Fred Jacksonen
Louisiana & 29th Terrace
843 5188
843 5655
843 6000
ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRY
(Formed Ministers in Higher Education)
Church of the Barrham.
United Church of Christ
United Methodist Church
United Christian Church, U.S.A.
1204 Gate
EMERGENCIES
Canterbury House
1116 Louisville
The Episcopal Church at Kansas University
Baininton Botanical Councillorship
864 2948
10 Kissan Kansas Garden
843 4038
Saturday Fruity Advice
843 4038
Friday Night Sabbath Advisor
7:30 pm
Louisiana Lutheran Chapel and School Center
Town & Lake
Berkshire 842 6715
Mississippi 842 6715
LC MS Papa Mosher House
842 6898
Baltimore 842 6898
Beach Bermuda 5:30 p.m.
Beach Bermuda (Sunday)
Friday, April 13, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Spare Time
Nightlife
Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachu setst. S.
- Fast Break, April 13 and 14.
- Deadline Date, April 14.
- Boomtown Hats, April 17.
* Red Willow Band, April 18.
- Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts St.
- Claude "Fiddler" Williams, April 13.
* Tommy Johnson, April 14.
Concerts
- Classical Dance of India, 7 p.m., April 14,
Hoch Aud.
- Royal Music, 8.p.m., April 13, One Block West, Kansas City.
- KU Varsity Band, 8 p.m., April 19,
Lawrence High School.
*Janice Saffir*, painter, Visiting Artist
Hall, 8 p.m., April 16, Beach
Holiday.
Theatre
- The Love for Three Oranges, by Prok洛ley, 8 p.m., April 13 and 14, University of California.
- The Fianights by Rene Marques, 8 p.m.
April 17 to 21, William Ingate Theatre.
Recitals
Student Jazz Compositions, 8 p.m., April 13
Jazz Quintet, 8 p.m., April 14.
Sean Murphy, soprano, 8 p.m. April 17
Susan Shumway, violin, and Jennifer Cole
2044 W. 39th St.
man, piano, o.p.m., April 15
recitals are held in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Films
SUA
- Mean Streets, dir. by Martin Scorsese
* 9:30 a.m. at Theater, 9:30 a.m. at 9:30 p.m. on 7, 13, 7 p.m. on 14, and Swept Away, dir. by Walt Lerwinter with Giancarlo Gannini, 7 p.m. on 13, 13, 3:30 and 6:30 p.m.
- Broadway of 1948, dir. by Nor-
tauog, with Fred A仕aire, 7:30 p.m.
April.
- Shakespeare's *Richard III*, dir. by
Richard Gleaves; 7:30 pm, April 18
Ralph Robbins; 7:30 pm, April 18
MICHAEL BROWN
Staff photo by CHRIS TODD
Jan Hammer put on a bellavita show Wednesday night at the Lawrence Opera Hall.
By MARK W, GATES
Hammer electrifies futuristic jazz
Reviewer
Hammer is a keyboard player who specializes in a brand of electronic music.
He is most widely known for his work with Jeff Beck, Stanley Clarke and John Coltrane.
In an interview last Sunday, he said he had become bored with his earlier fusion jazz-oriented work. He explained to me that he felt he outworked that sort of stuff.
"I think that jazz is now too structured and strict," he said. "What is termed rock is wide-open and improvisational. Rock is a promise that has yet to be fulfilled."
Which leads back to his concert Wednesday night.
It was sensational.
Hammer plays a portable synthesizer called a Probe. It is a prototype built by an electronics company in Boston. Jan said he had two of them in case one broke down. He said these space-age instruments had space-gigabyte memory and sent back to Boston every week for repairs.
The Probe looks like a cross between an accordion and a slim futuristic guitar without the strings. It has a keyboard and numerous switches, buttons and gadgets that produce a virtually limitless variety of sounds and has band, he fashions future rock.
The band, which is called Hammer, consists of Colin Hodgkinson, bass and vocals; Gregg Gaya Carter, drums and synthesizer; Jack Tidman, keyboardists, synthesizers and vocalist; Jan Hammer, originally from Czechoslovakia, also plays and plays electric piano. But primarily, he plays the synthesizer. And that synthesizer is the Probe.
"Jimi Hendrix is big my influence," he said. "My synthesizer takes the place of a guitar. It is communication beyond words. I don't need to astound or astonish with blinding speed or technique, I used to feel that need but I've grown out of it."
The show was opened by Dry Jack, a local jazz/rock/fusion act. Their first album, Magical Elements, has broken into Billboard's Top 50 jazz album chart.
Nevertheless, he did just that Wednesday night.
The crowd gave each of the four members ovations after almost every solo. Their one and only song was "It's Time"
flawlessly. Their lack of showmanship focused attention on their unique, intense
They will not remain a local phenomenon for long.
After about 45 minutes of stage preparation, Hammer took the stage.
The band opened with a cacophony of electronic noise, which sequested into a Robert Hammond-like composition.
As Jan had said in the interview, there was very little in the set that resembled jazz. It sounded more like 21st-century blues.
He combined foot pedals and a large control board to make the Probe sound like the lead guitar of Jeff Beck or Jimi Hendrix, starting close on many occasions.
Hammer, who says he is 30, has a dynamic stage presence.
The vocals from both Christianson and Hodgkinken were expressive and ocarina-like. The vocals were strong on key, proving that the human voice is still the most unique and versatile instrument of all.
I am a man, I am a man, through throwing
me into the fire, I am a man, through
into "Heavy Love," also from Black Sheep.
Then the problems with the equipment started. The band slowed down and played softly to avoid the buzzes and rumblers that came out of the speaker turned up the volume loud enough to drown them out. The show came to a sudden halt as the band became and crewnet tried to correct the problem.
The noises disappeared as suddenly as they had come and the band closed the set with "Manic Depression," a Jimi Hendrix classic.
The previously sedate and apparently awe-struck crowd came to their feet and broke loose.
Hammer returned to the stage and set the crowd wild with a song from the Jeff Beck album.
The band brought the show to a close with a second encore, "Jetstream," that left the audience in stunned.
Backstage after the show, Hammer said that some of his best work was that which he had done with Jeff Beck recently. He said he was in the process of writing a feature which features several songs that he wrote.
Between Hammer and Beck, they are coming as close as anyone to fulfilling the mission.
Boomtown Rats to invade Lawrence music scene
Dancing in the aisles isn't quite good enough for the Boomtown Tails. They've requested that the floor of the Lawrence Opera House be cleared of all tables and chairs during their performance next Tuesday night to give people more room to dance.
"We're not a sitting down band," leader Bob Geldorf said.
It's a bit harder to say exactly what the band is, though. The Rats' style of rock and roll has prompted accusations that the musicians are punks and pop stars. The truth probably lies somewhere in the middle, because the Nats, along with artists like the Velvet Revolver and Fabulous Poodles, bridge the gap between the new wave and more traditional sounds.
"They're saying, 'No more of this business where you sit and watch and judge us.' The audience is there every bit as much as their enjoyment. It's a two-way interaction."
What makes the band unique, according to promoter Daniel Scolof of Neospace Productions, is the energy level of a Rats show.
The Rats, all of whom are Irish, have earned a large following in England. Their single, "Rat Trap," was No. 1 in Great Britain for several weeks in 1978.
the bank's record company, Columbia Records Inc., is convinced that the Rats can duplicate that success in the United State. They did just that when they sent the Rats on their first american tour.
Scolocel said the Opera House got the date over a Kansas City show because Lawrence is a "big-time scene for new wave." He said the show will have its own area, area, but that "little has been done about it."
The Boontown Rats show is an attempt to change that, he said.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Arts & Leisure
'Deer Hunter' vivid war story
Reviewer
Not since the newcasts of the 90s has
the horror of the Vietnam War been brought
home.
By DOUG HITCHCOCK
The film begins shortly before they are to be inducted into the army.
This powerful film doesn't pull any punches as it tells the story of three American soldiers before, during and after experiences as prisoners of war in Vietnam.
Director Michael Cimino, winner of this year's Oscar for his direction of "The Deer Hunter," meshes seemingly unrelated scenes into a fast-paced introduction to the life of a detective. Michael (Robert DNeiro), Nick (Christopher Walken) and Steven (John Savage).
The opening scenes include sequences at the steel mill where the three men work, glimpses of a cathedral interior and a nervous bride preparing for her wedding.
CIMNO QUICKLY shuffles the audience through the scenes until all of the characters introduced are guests at Steven's wedding to the nervous bride.
The film remains light and comedic through the ceremony, but during the reception, signs of a grim future for Michael, Nick and Steven are brought forth. A crying nun, a reticulated Green Beret and drops of spilled wine symbolize the nightly revelation.
KANSAN Review
After the reception, the men go on a deer hunting trip with a few of their friends.
Although they hunt together often, Michael is the leader of the group and the man in charge.
He tells the rest of the group they should be able to bring down a deer with one shot.
The next morning, he gets up, goes out alone and kills a buck with one shot.
THE SCENE abruptly changes to a term battlefield in Vietnam. The ominous overtures presented at the film's opening scene are played by Ben Michael, Nick and Steven are captured.
Besides effectively portraying the deplorable conditions of the prisoners-of-war case, the prisoners are forced to endure $a^2$ the prisons are forced to endure $a^2$ the hps.
The war scenes, shot in Thailand rather than Vietnam, combine the primitive beat of the war with the elegance of the movie.
Realism is the keynote of this film. The photography, directed by Vilmos Zaugmunt.
with the overwhelming grandeur of the gift interior of the cathedral.
Zsigmond works with interesting colors, clean composition and excellent lighting, giving the film visual beauty, despite the occasionally gruesome subject matter.
The film's opening scenes contrast the gritty feel of an east coast industrial town
ACTUAL FOOTING of the evacuation of American troops and equipment from Vietnam at the war's end, is spliced into Zsigmond's work.
The spikes are immediately evident, because of the noticeable lack of technical support.
DeNiro is another asset to the film. His acting is tremendous. The rest of the cast also is super. Walken was awarded an Oscar for his performance.
However, the emotional charge warped worksite logs well for "The Deer Hunter"
Also, the music occasionally swelled, overpowering the limn's realism with its bleakness. These problems could stem from the quality of the particular print that is being shown.
The film's soundtrack caused problems, however. At the beginning, the dialogue was hard to hear.
But, the Films' weaknesses are minor
their own. The Deer Hunter" is a strongly moving film.
Don't miss it.
Bridge more than 'card game'
Bv JULIA GOPLERUD
To some people, playing bridge means getting together with friends on a Thursday afternoon and socializing, but to many it is a game is a serious intellectual challenge.
Michael McGheybe, Topeka graduate student, one member of a team that won $500 for the University of Kansas at the 1979 Intercollegiate Bridge Championships, said he had trouble adjusting to playing bridge casually.
Staff Reporter
"It's a matter of getting involved in the game instead of considering it just a pastime," he said. "I like bridge because it is so challenging to try to get the car out of the hand. I must for me enjoy myself out of it, I have to be serious about it."
McGheeish said he frequently diagrammed bridge hands on paper and occasionally laid cards out to study the patterns. He said he had about 40 books on the subject.
HE SAID HE frequently skipped classes his freshman and sophomore years to play cards.
"It was not unusual for us to start playing about noon, break for dinner and then play until breakfast," he said. "The last time I played the earliest was when I'd been playing cards."
He said he had difficulty teaching other people to play bridge.
"I have difficulty starting at the beginning because I've been playing for 10 years," he said.
McGheebey said he played three times a week. He is the manager and director of the SDA Duplication Bridge Club, which he started in 1977.
In duplicate bridge, players play a
Weber likes to keep conversation at a minimum during a hand.
William W. Weber, Wintha junior and the other member of the winning bridge team, said he got angry when other players made errors, but would not show his anger.
Weber said that a few years ago he taught bridge through the Free University. But teaching beginners was hard for him because they were impatient and wanted to be good players immediately.
"I USED TO play three to four times a week and go to tournaments every two or three weeks in high school. Now I'm kind of retired from tournament play. The competition took too much of the fun out there," said Aaron Lerner. "I wouldn't consider me a serious player."
"Spades or hearts you don't have to think about, you just play the game," he said. "But if I ever stop enjoying bridge, I'll quit playing."
"Once the cards are dealt and when they're being played, it is serious. Between hands, there is small talk about bridge," he said.
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McGheehsa said other players' mistakes made him angry if they were beginners' mistakes made by experienced players.
He said he had always enjoyed playing cards and liked bridge the most because it was so challenging.
THE KIND OF bridge that most people play is rubber bridge, he said.
He plays about once a week with the Lawrence Duplicate Bridge Club, but he said he was not as serious about bridge as he used to be.
28
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hand and record the score on a carrying board, which then moves to another table. More hands are played and scores recorded until the game is over, when the player who has accumulated the most points wins, he said.
Men & Women Interested in being The KU mascot for the 1979-80 school year
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University Daily Kansan
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Bud Greenspan
Producer of "The Olympiad," "Wilma," and widely recognized writer, director, andlymp expert presents the first public showing of Numero Uno. A series of thirteenth hall hour documentaries on legendary world war II events will lend commentary and offer his opinion as to who is "Numero Uno."
Admission: Free Wednesday, April 18, 1979 8:00 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom
SUA
Forums
JRP action halted; notice rule planned
Disciplinary action has been dropped against Joseph R. Pearson Hall residents in whose rooms marrijuana plants were found during a spring break safety check at the University, associate director of the office of residential programs, said yesterday.
In a letter from Fred McElhene, director of the office, to George Gomez, student body vice president, McElhenebody who said Gomez that it would not happen again.
The Student Rights committee of the Student Senate had approved a resolution March 29 stating that the room check was a violation of students' rights
"Based solely on the fact that no notice was given prior to the room safety check in Joseph R. Pearson Hall, we have decided that the warning given to the residents will be rescinded and precautions under their disciplinary action in this situation.
A part of the letter said:
"In the future, however, if violations of state, local, University or residence hall regulations are found in the normal course of learning, an appropriate corrective action will be taken.
"Finally, I wish to set the record straight. The procedure pursued by the
directors of Joseph R. Pearson Hall was a safety check (underlined) and not a search (underlined) as alleged in line 22 of the resolution. Violation of regulations were in line of sight, etc., no drawers were in cases, cases, etc., were opened."
McEhnie said in the letter that the room safety check was made to protect the property of the residents and was the result of reports to Richard Foulk, JRP director, and Bub Nutger, JRP assistant director, of possible safety hazards.
The letter also said that McEhline and the Association of University Residence Halls were drafting a standardized notice to be posted and placed in the residence hall not less than 24 hours before room safety checks during vacation closings.
He said the check was made in good faith.
AURH approved a resolution Monday asking that charges against JRP residents be dropped. Mikkelson said the decision to drop charges was made before the AURH resolution was received.
Mikkelsen said that the drafting of the standardized notice was nearly completed and that that action would end the operation of the office of residential programs.
1980 parking budget new rules approved
By TONI WOOD Staff Reporter
A 1980 budget of $660,425 for the Parking and Traffic Board and several changes in traffic rules were approved yesterday by the University Council.
"The have been excessive violations during the day, but particularly during the evening," Krone said. "Parking spaces are not filled by people who should not be in them."
In presenting the board's annual report, Ralph W. Krone, chairman, said excessive parking violations were the biggest complaint to the board.
Krone said that approximately 400 tickets were issued daily, but that the staff of officers was not large enough to deal with all the violations.
GRANT GOODMAN, professor of history and a council member, said, "I feel very dissatisfied about continuing to teach in the evening. It's frustrating to be late to one's course because of an inability to find a parking place."
Goodman said he thought the extra tuition received because of an increase in evening students should have been applied to the parking and traffic budget.
But Krore said only money collected from permit fees and parking fines could be used.
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The council also considered a proposed budget of $729,659 for fiscal 1981, which must be approved by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and the Kansas Board of Regents. The budget would include funds for a new patrol officer and a half-time programmer.
A written statement distributed to council members by the Parking and Traffic Board said, "The two officers now on duty simply cannot police the parking lots, assure that fire lanes are kept open and attend to all the vehicles which such informed officers only can perform."
The 1981 budget also called for an increase from $60 to $75 for Universal permits. The blue and red parking zone fees would be increased from $40 to $23.
- Backing into a parking stall would be a
* Group I Violation, with a fine of $7.50.
- The council approved the following changes in rules and regulations, which will take effect on June 1, 2015.
- The control booths would be open from 7 a.m. to 4:38 p.m. They would also be open from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
- The council also approved regulation changes that will take effect September 19th.
- Group III or Group IV violations (parking in a driveway, next to a fire hydrant, in a stall for the handcapped, etc.) when driving through an area by a wheel lock rather than by rhamnus.
- Certain lots would be restricted from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 7 a.m. to noon on Saturday. At other times, the lots, B-1, E-1, V, C, D, G and T. would be open only to staff and faculty with permits.
- Payment of fines would be mandatory within seven days instead of 14 days.
- Parts of zone S would be available at a reduced rate of $20 annually. Zone S is southwest and west of Memorial Stadium. The apparatus procedure would be revised.
KANSAN On Campus
TONIGHT: THE FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 at the Lawrence Public Library, 2th and Vermont streets. Jazz compositions will be presented in a STUDENT RECITAL at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
TODAY: THE KANSAS ASSOCIATION OF BROADCASTERS will meet all day in the Council Room in the Union. The LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY will meet at 2 o'clock. The UNIVERSITY SENATE will meet at 2 o'clock. WOODRUFF Auditorium in the Union. VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be available from 2 to 4 o'clock in the Legal Aid New Green Hall. THE BLOGGY CLUB will meet at 4 in the Sandflower Room in the Union.
TOMORROW: THE KANSAS ASSOCIATION OF BROADCASTERS will meet all day in the Council Room of the Union. The KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 8 a.m. in VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be available from 10 a.m. to noon in the Legal Aid office in new Green Hall. The INDIA CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Union Building. A JAZZ CONDO AT LEARNING a Jazz Combo will be at 8 p.m. Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
SUNDAY: A SUNRISE SERVICE will be at 7 a.m. on the hillside northeast of the building.
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The weekly feature page of the University Daily Kansan April 13. 1979
STUDIO 385
Becky Johnson, of the Lawrence School of Ballet, teaches preparatory ballet twice a week to children between the ages of 4 and 6. The class works on basic movement and several ballet steps
During the hour, the arabesques wobbled, the plies went against the beat and the gazes shifted out the window instead of on the teacher, but the dancers were still . . .
Budding Ballerinas
1
Stephanie Crupper is the youngest ballet student in Johnson's class. The energetic ballet dancer has an interest in music.
Many spend more time sticing their tongues out at the wall mirror and making faces at each other across the dusty dance floor than concentrating on each pointed toe and poised
But nearly all the members of Becky Johnson's beginning ballet classes at the Lawrence School of Ballet, 2001, W. Eighth St., have spent in tights and dance slippers could be fun.
"I like it," said 8-year-old Kimberly Harvey
"it's fun."
"I like it," 11 and 11-year-old Alisha Washburn. "I do it because I want to dance disco舞."
"It's OK, but I get bored," said one tiny dancer, who scurried off to return her teacher's bed.
Whatever their reason, Johnson works with them all, three times a week, sustaining sticky
fingers, forgotten dance slippers, fallen hair clips and a thousand questions, to teach two classes of preparatory ballet students and one class of beginners.
"Becky, how come your shoes don't have a how?" asked one budding ballerina.
"Will you show me where the bathroom is?" asked another.
"Becky, my hair is in my eyes," said another little dancer. "Do you have a rubber band to fix
And another said, "I'm too squinched. Will you make me 'move'?"
Despite the time she spends meeting their demands, Johnson, who lives in Baldwin, said that "it's hard to believe" that.
"I enjoy working with children," she said.
"It is a different kind of challenge than teaching
One girl in black beards burst into tears and asked Johnson to escort her from the room.
"Just a time or two more and we'll be finished," she said to comfort the squirring
"Quit making faces in the mirror, girls," she said later.
With the twenty-six 5- and 6-year-olds in her preparatory classes, she works on basic movement and a few ballet moves, all in quick succession to hold their short attention spans.
"Keep your hands to yourself, Susie. "Johnson warned when she returned to the floor
In the 13-member beginning class, made up of 6- to 11-year-olds, the session started with warm-up stretches, progressed through basic exercises and then moved on to danced with an attempt to learn a new folk dance.
"Becky, Becky," the first time I ever leaped, "exclaimed one young balerina after a horrible fall on the horse's arms flapping in a horse gallop, got carried away and looked as if they were dashing to frost."
During the hour, the arabes abrashed wobbled, the plies went against the beat and the gazes shifted out the window instead of focusing on the teacher, but the energy never stoned.
The mothers, who were asked to wait out of view of the young ones, offered different
reasons for bringing their daughters to ballet school.
"They're not very serious about it," said the mother of 6-year-old Rebecca and 7-year-old Jennifer Nelson. "I think they'd rather sit at them, but it's good for them. It's good for their bodies."
Randa Zakaryk, 8. asked to start ballet and
enjoys it, her mother said.
"She wanted to join and she dances all the time around the house," she said.
"We were watching television one night and he saw 'The Turning Point' and thought it was really beautiful," Foster said. "He asked if he could enter it."
But Bucky Cox, Lawrence's celebrated 16-year marathon runner, is showing that you don't have to be a girl to be interested in dance. Cox is enrolled in the Monday afternoon preparatory classes at his own request. Ray Foster, his trainer, said.
Foster said Bucky loved his class and often demonstrated the steps he had learned for his mother, Joni Maxwell, and Foster. Foster said Bucky never had thought of dance as being just for girls until a friend at school razzed him about it.
"This kid he plays with at school really gave him a hard time when Bucky told him he was in ballet," Foster said. "I reminded him that in the Turning Point' all the men spoke with foreign accent and that in this country you're not going to dance ballet. Bucky thought it was hilarious."
Johnson said that whether the young dancers were male or female, her soars were the same.
"You try to teach body armor, if nothing else," she said, as the toy dancers trailed off to
"The main objective is not only to introduce them to the dance but to build an enjoyment and appreciation of it at a time. I mean if they want to go on," then they probably won't want to go on."
Story by Rhonda Holman
Photos by Trish Lewis
STUDIO
Julia Hiert and Monique Mitchell mix some serious ballet with a little fun before class begins
10
Friday, April 13, 1979
University Dally Kansan
Athletic board overruled
Bv BARBARA JENSEN
Staff Reporter
The search for an assistant men's athletic director will continue, according to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, even though he will be violating affirmative action guidelines.
"The search will continue because the process is too far along to re-do it," Shankel said. "I'll talk to Charlie Oldfather (chairman of the women's athletic advisory board) soon, I don't have any other comment."
The women's adviser board requested last week that the search to replace Jerry Worrell be completed.
Waugh resigned March 15 as an assistant men's athletic director.
Elizabeth Banks, an advisory board member, had said the job description, did not state that the assistant director would work with women's athletics after a memorial of the men's and women's departments would discourage women from applying.
BANKS SAID YESTERDAY that a complaint could be filed against the University for not readvertising the position.
"The job description stated that applicants must be familiar with NCAA rules and that they must ride raft and put dhit't mention AIAW (Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women)," she said. "And there hasn't been a decision where women would join the NCAA after the merger."
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes is expected to announce a merger of the athletic departments within the next week. The merger would become effective July 1.
Banks and Anne Levinson, Winchester, Mass., junior, filed complaints last year with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services about discrimination between the men's and women's athletic programs in coaches, salaries, team cuts, facilities, training and supervision.
Banks said she received a letter yesterday from HEW stating that it would not rule on any complaints until an interpretation of Title IX had been finalized.
"THAT JUST LEAVES us in the situation that exists for another year," Banks said. "There's no immediate threat of HEW appearing on the scene."
Joseph Califano, secretary of HEW,
released a statement in December
describing how HEW would interpret the
funding requirements of Title IX, which
states that equal athletic opportunities for
members of both sexes must be provided.
The HEW interpretation states that a university has provided equal opportunity is "substantially equal average per capita of female athletes and female athletes for financial assistance awarded on the basis of athletic ability, recruitment and all other readily financible factors."
But universities and colleges said they could not fund athletics on an equal per capita basis.
THE BIG EIGHT athletic conference contributed at least $15,000 to oppose the interpretation. Schools are arguing that football should be exempted from the interpretation because it is the largest pre-production sport at most universities.
HEW will finalize the interpretation sometime next fall.
But Banks said she thought scholarships for women would have to be funded on an equal basis, regardless of the interpretation.
Dykes also has said that full scholarship would have to be provided for women attending
films sua
presents
SWEPT AWAY BY AN UNUSUAL DESTINY IN THE BLUE SEA OF AUGUST A film by Lina Wertmuller Friday, April 13, 7:00 Saturday, April 14, 3:30 and 9:30
Under a five-year fund with the Williams Educational Fund, the women were to receive $100,000 in scholarship funds for 1978-80, and $150,000, the amount approximately equal to scholarships awarded to his non-revenue sports, the following year.
BUT THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas Athletic Corporation voted last week to increase the scholarship amount next year to $120,000.
Staff photo by CHRIST TOOD
Woodruff Auditorium
Admission $1.50
However, if KU is to comply with TITLE IX, the women should receive $276,130 in scholarships, the full amount allowed under guidelines of the AIAW. The amount was figured for one-half of the scholarship for state tuition and the remaining institute.
HAPPY BIRTHDAYS
HAPPY BIRTHDAYS
HAPPY BIRTHDAYS
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Anti-nuke speaker gives warning
By RON BAIN Staff Reporter
Every nuclear power plant operating in the United States should be shut down immediately. Fred Halstead, an eyewitness to the Three Mile Island nuclear accident in Pennsylvania, told about 150 people in the Right Room of the Kansas Union last night.
Halstead, a former organizer of the movement against the Vietnam war, said he was lecturing in the East when the accident was announced. His interest in the anti-
nuclear energy movement took him to Harrisonburg, Pa. to see what was happening.
Hairstad said the United States could do without the 13 percent supply of electricity furnished by the nation's 71 functioning power plants. The power plants aren't working at full capacity, he said.
An anti-nuclear energy movement with the power to stop nuclear energy is beginning to grow in the United States and the world, he said.
"IT HAS to be a worldwide movement of
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Everything inside the plant is now radioactive for hundreds or thousands of years. Halstead said, including the reactor building, the walls and floors of the reactor building.
ordinary people who say, 'We're not going to be the generation to leave this to the future,' Haaland said, indicating with a gesture that he would radiation produced by nuclear power plants.
If those pieces of the plant that are radioactive are not disposed of safely, then the radiation could harm future generations. he said.
"I am concerned with people who will live long after I am dead, yes—especially my grandfather."
"How can I be a mystic?" he asked. "I'm not even religious."
Halstead said he was once called a mystic by a supporter of nuclear power because he worried about people who would not be born for thousands of years.
The amounts of radiation leaked by the
Three Mile Island plant, which were called insignificant by Nuclear Regulatory Commission will increase the risk of leukemia and cancer in Pennsylvania, Halstead said.
"THERE IS no threshold of safety for radiation. All amounts of radiation are bad for you."
Radiation accumulates in the human body, Halstead said, and never goes away.
"It's like adding salt to your food. Pretty soon it gets reddy," he said.
People exposed to radiation released by the accident received an amount of radiation equivalent to a chest X-ray over 6 months, and were for the duration of the crisis, Halstead said.
Halstead's speech was sponsored by the Kansas Natural Guard, the Sunflower Alliance and the Young Socialist Alliance. Those groups will hold a rally against nuclear energy at 12:00 today in front of Watson Library.
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University Dally Kansan
Friday, April 13, 1971
11
Baker alum leads track revival
By BRETT CONLEY Sports Writer
When Larry Smith threw the discus in the last track meet of the 1975 season, he thought he was through with track at Baker University. The program was disbanded after that season.
But now Smith is builer than he ever was throwing the disc, because he has been given the job of resurrecting the Baker track team.
Smith. 23. is a Baker alumnus and a
graduate student and part-time teaching assistant in physical education at KU.
The Baker job will not be permanent. Smith was hired only to start the program again. A full-time coach had already been hired for next year.
"I didn't even get to apply for the permanent position," the Smith said, "because they told me they already had the job, and year I took the job to gain experience."
THE JOB has made him busier than he expected, because he teaches physical education classes at KU in the morning.
Larry Smith
travels to Baker to coach the track team in the afternoon and then tries to study in the evenings.
"We only have a men's team right now," Smith said, "because that's all the sponsors wanted to fund. The reason it even got started again was because he had a few individuals, some alumni who were pledged money to reinstall it."
SMITH SAID he didn't know whether his team would make it to the Kansas Relays because it didn't had a chance to prove itself. The Relays are April 18-21
"The weather has been our main problem," he said. "We have a cinder track and when it's wet you can't run on it too well."
Most of the 15 people on the team compete in another sport, he said. The only events that don't have someone on the team long jump, triple tum and two-mile run.
"Almost everyone out and they aren't competed in at least two years and they ain't just trying to pick it up again," he saun. "We have a few people who will stack up very well against other schools, but we need our practice to see how everyone stacks up."
Smith said a problem with the program in the past had been a lack of any scholarships offered for track.
"They didn't recruit for track, just the other sports," he said. "I am sure the new coach will get out and recruit some new people."
The only recruiting Smith did this year was to put up signs saying men's track would be starting on again.
"There were quite a few people who heard that track was coming around again," he said. "We more or less had intrasubraccording."
After this spring Smith's college track coaching days will be over, at least for a while. He will graduate this summer and try to get a job teaching physical education and math at a Shawnee Mission school, he said.
"Right now I want to be a teacher and a coach," he said. "Eventually, I would like to be a college coach again."
KANSAN Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE EXCT
| | W | L | Pct. | Gld |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Boston | 3 | 1 | .600 | — |
| Milwaukee | 3 | 1 | .600 | — |
| Minnesota | 3 | 1 | .592 | ½ |
| New York | 3 | 1 | .500 | ½ |
| Seattle | 3 | 1 | .498 | ½ |
| Detroit | 3 | 1 | .332 | 1 |
| Cleveland | 3 | 1 | .327 | 1 |
WEIGHT
Texas 4 1 0.1000
Kalamazoo City 4 1 860 %
Minneapolis 4 1 600 %
Seattle 3 3 623 %
California 3 3 623 %
Chicago 4 1 100 %
Houston 4 1 100 %
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Toronto, Chicago? Chiquita?
Boston, Seattle? Bellevue?
Washington, Washington?
Toronto, Cleveland?
California, Minnesota?
Texas.
W L L Pct. GB
Montreal 4 1 160
St. Louis 4 1 176
Philadelphia 3 2 600
Pittsburgh 4 2 433
Chicago 4 3 334
WEST
Houston 3 1 833
San Francisco 0 2 714
Los Angeles 4 1 694
Cincinnati 3 4 129
San Diego 3 4 256
San Antonio 2 4 286
**Yesterday's Games**
New York 8, Philadelphia 2
San Francisco 4, San Diego 5
Pittsburgh 3, St. Louis 4
Atlanta 10. Los Angeles 9
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Four teams need victories as NBA playoffs resume
By The Associated Press
The National Basketball Association playoffs resume today with four teams facing elimination unless they can reverse opening game defeats.
New Jersey, Houston, Los Angeles and Portland, all losers in the opening games of their best-of-three preliminary round games, cannot afford to lose another game.
New Jersey dropped a 122-114 decision to Philadelphia and Houston lost to Atlanta 108-106 on Wednesday night. Tuesday, Denver got the jump on Los Angeles, winning 110-105; and Phoenix shaded Portland 107-103.
IN TODAY'S GAMES the 76ers will try to finish off the Nets in New Jersey, the Hawks will enjoy the home court advantage in a game that could prove to try to get even with Denver at the Forum in Los Angeles, and Portland hopes its home team Blazer Trail Buzzes tie the against Phoenix.
Four division winners are awaiting the outcome of the preliminary playoffs. San Antonio will play the New Jersey Philadelphia winner; defending champion Washington will go against the Houston-Atlanta survivor; Seattle will meet the
DenverLos Angeles winner; and Kansas City will oppose the winner of Phoenix
NBA Playoffs First Round
Best of Three Series Eastern Conference Wednesday's Game
Wednesday's Game
Philadelphia 122. New Jersey 114
delphia 122, New Jersey 114
Friday's Game
Sunday's Game
University of Philadelphia Law School
Wednesday's Game
Atlanta 109, Houston 106
Feldman's Center
By TONY FITTS
Houston at Atlanta Friday
Atlanta at Houston, if necessary
Wexler & Brady game
Tuesday's Game
Western Conference
Friday's Game
Home run sparks victory
Sunday's Game
Live Around the House for Sportsmen
Tuesday x Game
Denver 110, Los Angeles 100
Snorts Writer
Friday's Game
Denver at Los Angeles
Friday's Game
Sunday & Game
Portland at Phoenix, if necessary
Tuesday's Game
Phoenix-Portland winner vs. Kansas CR)
Denver-Los Angeles winner vs. Seattle.
Second Round
Between the West and East
Date and times to be announced
Philadelphia New Jersey winners vs. San Antonio
Alabama Atlanta winners
Western Conference
'ortland at Phoenix, if necessary'
Brian Gray, who started at first base for Kansas most of last year, got a chance to return to that position yesterday when Matt Gundelfinger injured his ankle in the second innning of yesterday's baseball game against Missouri Southern State College.
Gray had to replace Gundinger, KU's leading home run hitter, at the plate as well, and he could not handle it. KU ran in the bottom of the eighth inning gave KU its first lead in the game. The Jayhawks
Gundelfinger twisted his ankle sliding into second base and the preliminary diagnosis of a broken leg came last night. Gundelfinger's ankle was to be X-ray this morning. He probably will
Gray went two for four for the day, with a double in the fifth addition to his homer. He struck out in the sixth, but came back with a venomance.
"I MESSED up in the sixth," Gray said, and I wanted to prove I could hit him. I
Gray has been the "Hawks designated hitter for most of this season, and his 303 average is second on the team to John Sportwell's. 416. Gray is satisfied with his
"I'd like to play more at first," he said, but "DB is great."
-KANSAN
His lack of playing time at first was
Sports
evident yesterday. Two of KU's three errors were on throws from third base manager Riger Riley to Gray at first. They were in the dirt, bux playable.
"I was a little tense." Gray said, "maybe because I didn't expect to play today."
The Jayhawks had to come from behind to beat Missouri Southern, the 17th-ranked NIAA team. Kansas was down 7-4 going into the fifth, but scored five runs in that inning on Gray's homer, a single by Steve Jelzet and an error by Missouri Southern. Missouri Southern added two runs in the top of the sixth, hitting two home runs in the sixth and two in the seventh to set the stage for Gray's two-run blast which put Kansas ahead to stay.
MISSOURI SOUTHERN got its lead early in the game, scoring three runs in the first innning off Dave Hicks. Hickes walked two, threw three wild pitches and struck out one before being relieved by Galen Worley. The strike-out by Hicks didn't count as an out. The third strike was one of the wild pitches that allowed base when the catcher dropped the ball.
Kansas used five more pitchers, with Kevin Kerschen getting the victory, and Terry Sutcliffe a save. But pitching wasn't the key to victory for the 'Hawks.
"The hitters today carried the contest," Temple said after the game.
Of KU's 13 hits, nine were for extra bases. In addition to Gayer's老商和大, Bob Halastik hit a home run, John Spottwood hit three doubles, and Roger Riley, Steve Jeltz and Monty Marlin each added two-base hits.
JELTZ, WHO went two for four in the game, has hit with consistency in KUPS past season. The offense was too good.
"I don't know why I've been hitting better," Jellid said, "it's been there, and I haven't been worrying about it. Before, we were been catching them, but now they out."
Missouri Southern also hit well, with two doubles and two home runs, one of them by two triplets.
Missouri | Southern | 212 | 101 | 98 — | 11 | 13 |
Kansas | 801 | 661 | 235 — | 12 | 13 |
"They have a good hitting club," I temple said, "and they played well in the
Missouri Southern is 18-14, Kansas, 20-5-1,
meet Oklahoma tomorrow at Quailfield Bay
in a Big Eight conference game. Terry
Brown and Dan St. Clair will pitch for the
Jayhawks.
nackern, Thiemer J., 4) Morse B. (8) and Allen, Heck, Worley I. (5) Fleeman J. (10) Walker K. (28) Skidleffe D. (37) Krug J. (39) Staley S. (40) Spettinoland G. Gray, Joyce Jeltz, Marlin, KU, HR-Adulta, Adams, Missouri Schatz, Halianze J. 2, 8, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 23, 24, 26, 28
Tracksters hope to forget Texas
Tomorrow's Arkansas State invitational a critical meet for the KU men's track team.
With the Kansas Relays just a week away, KU will in Jonesboro ready to make up for a dailymoin showing in the Texas Relays weekend. The Kansas Relays are April 18-21.
KU locked something in Texas. The 1,000-meter relay was the only event that had been run.
"Everybody was let down after what happened in Texas," head coach Bob Timmons said. "But we just have to get it right." The team, which because its reluctants are not that far off,
The bright spot in the Texas meet was the relay team's finish. The team of Kevin Newell, Mickey McCall, Stan Whitaker and Lester Mickens qualified for the NCAA
Outdoor Championships on May 31 in Champaign, IL. KU's other qualifiers are Mickens in the 406-meters (46.5) and Jef Bucknichman in the pole vault (17-6.5).
KU probably couldn't have hoped for a better chance than the Arkansas meet to regain its momentum. The 'Hawks have won 19 of their last State Meet states and are favored to win an inn.
Besides KU, the competition includes Arkansas State, Phoria, Memphis State and Texas.
"This is a team meet," Timmons said. "There are just the two standard relays (1,600- and 400-meters). That's a format we like, because it's like our conference meet."
In the past down there, we've really enjoyed it. It haven't been a pressure meet yet.
The Jayhawks hope to be relaxed this weekend and qualify more athletes for the
NCAA championships. Several team members already hold the best marks in the tournament.
Buckingham's vault is easily the best in the Big Eight this season, surpassing the second-place vaulter by almost 13 inches and the third-place vaulter by two feet.
Sanya Owolabi, the 1,600-meter relay team and the 400-meter relay team have recorded the best marks in the Big Eight in each of their events. Owolabi leads Missouri's Ajay Agbeebo to three matches through both marks are several feet烈 of their best efforts.
Billy Washington, Anthony Coleman,
David Bluchter and Neil Lead Oklahoma
State by four-tenths of a second in the 400-
meter relay. KU's 1,600-meter team has a six-second advantage on the rest of the Big Eight.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Weekend Sports Roundup Women's golf not Nancy's Hers just went deeper into the trees." Women's track
While the rest of her teams take this weekend off to work on their games, Nancy Hoinis will be competing in the Sooner Invitational golf tournament in Norman Okla. The tournament will begin Sunday and last three days.
Houis, who has been KU's most consistent gopher for the past two seasons, has led the squad in most of its tournaments this season. Kansas coach S沙马贝 said Houis had a good chance of placing well at the Sooner Invitational.
"Nancy's chances of doing well are excellent," Bahad said, "but it's a matter of putting it all together. She's down on herself, but she's just had some bad breaks."
Bahan said that in the recent Lady Cardinal tournament in Texas, Heins played a good game, but didn't score as well as she could have.
"The course we played on was a good one, but it was real tight," she said. "It seemed that a lot of balls bounced out into the fairway when they went into the trees, but
Hoins led the Jayhawks in the tournament with a 54-14 hole total of 247.
The Sooner Invitational also will be a 54-hole tournament, and though team totals will be kept, Heins will compete only for individual honors.
Softball
Kansas will try to better last year's third-place finish in the Big Eight softball tournament, when action starts today in Fort Dodge, Iowa.
Town State is the pre-tournament favorite. The Cyclones have won two of the past three games.
The opening game for KU in the double-elimination tournament is against Kansas State at 11 a.m. today. KU will rely on pitcher Shelly Stainclair and third base player Jake Stevens to lead coach StoneStallt. Both were named to the All-Big Eight team last year.
Although the University of Kansas is expected to win the team title easily, the women's track team will face tough individual competition today at the Wichita
The meet originally was planned to be a state collegiate meet with KU and Kansas State University fighting it out for the team title. But KState decided to pull out of the meet and compete instead in the Oklahoma Relays in Norman, OK, this weekend.
KU coach Tert Anderson said she expected the team to do well in the distance and relay events. In the 3,000-meter run, Jayhawk competitors will be Michelle Brown, Marissa Moore, Louise Murphy, Jane Brock and Tazla Shiller to compete in the 5,000.
Maupintour travel service
Two relay events, the 400-meter relay and the mile relay are scheduled. Lori Lowry, Lori Green, Gwen Poss and Claire Overstake are on the 400-meter relay team and Dense Homa, Deb Hertzog, Vici Simpson and Lowrey are on the mile relay.
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Copyright 1979
12
Friday, April 13, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Good Friday the 13th crosses wary fingers
Bv LESLIE GUILD
By LESLIE GUILLE Staff Reporter
For some, today means trouble.
Not only are the traditional superstitions of Friday the 13th in effect, but today also is observed as the Christian holy day of Good Friday.
According to Christian mythology, the misfortune and bad luck associated with Friday the 18th originated from the first week of crucifixion, which occurred on the 13th.
Oliver Phillips, associate professor of classics, said Fridays traditionally had been considered bad luck.
"Any Friday can be considered bad, in that the crucifixion took place on a Friday," he said. "On top of that, the crucifixion must have always been associated with bad luck."
PHILLIPS SAID Friday also had other religious implications.
"Friday had been the day that some followers of the Christian religion had fasted," she said. "This definitely implies that the crucifixion occurred on a Friday."
Mark Hoelker, pastor at University Lutheran Church, 2014 W. 18th St., said he was not aware of a connection between him and the superstitions of Friday the 13th.
"In what I've read, nothing like that appears," he said. "And I don't think
that a genuine connection can be drawn between the two. Thirteens are just, thought of as unlucky."
Elizabeth Banks, assistant professor of history and art history, said no one really could be sure whether the crucifixion took place on a Friday the
"We can't know the original date," Banks said. "It could be, but no concrete evidence exists."
HOWEVER, BANKS said most students still associated Friday the 13th with bad things.
However, several students said they were not superstitious.
"It's strictly a tradition of superstition to most," she said. "Things like ladders, cats and bad luck are what occur to most."
"I'm really not that superstitious," Donna Connell, Leavenworth junior, said. "I did notice that it was Friday the 13th and I didn't associate with Good-Friend."
Kim Schrag, McPherson junior, said,
"I just pass it off as another day. I guess
I'm not superstitious at all."
Another student, Pat McAnany, Kansas City, Kan., junior, said he tried to ignore superstitions.
"I wouldn't even think twice about walking under a ladder if I saw one," he said.
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Saturday Aaril 14. 7:00
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From the director of "THE NEW WARRIORS" and "THE NEW MADAMS," an EPIC FILM OF STRUGGLE AND NATURE'S HURTS.
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Dzurella said a head man dancer, Tommy Chaino, from Owasso, Okla, said the powow.
"There is a certain amount of prestige in be a head dancer anywhere," he said, "and our head in bead drum hasn't danced anywhere in four years. He more or less retired, but he is going to dance for us."
"It would be an experience for the non-indian. Maybe they could gain some respect and awareness of Indian perceptions."
He said the 200-member Native American Alliance was based on the assumption that non-Idiots and the Indians are not part of the United States.
THE HEAD DANCER opens the powwow by dancing the first dance.
Dzurella said there were 85 Indian students at KU. The organization is open to anyone on campus, he said.
BUCK
ROGERS
IN THE 25th CENTURY
Eve 7:30 & 8:30
Sat-Sun Mat 2:30
PG
Varsity
"He is the focal point. Everyone looks to him to lead them."
"We try to choose people who will bring a lot of people with them," he said.
Staff Reporter
Dzurella said the public was welcome to attend the powwow.
By SHIRLEY SHOUP
Dancing to highlight KU Powwow
"This is the time of year when people are having a lot of powwow's," he said. "We just want to let Lawrence and KU know we are here. We can't go around dressed in traditional dress every day."
Dzurella said the guest dancers probably would bring many friends and family members.
The third annual KU Powwow will start tonight as the Native American Alliance hosts Indian dancers.
Dana Dzurella, the alliance's treasurer, said the powwow was a celebration of spring and a way to publicize the work.
Dzurella said the head woman dancer would be Dee Gutterez, from Horton.
In conjunction with the powwow there will be booths for Indian craftsmans at the community center.
TONIGHT ONLY—4 FEATURE MARATHON AT THE
“HARPER VALLEY P.T.A.”
“The POM POM GIRLS”
“GONE IN 60 SECONDS”
“SWAMP GIRL”
Sunset
Brown time at dusk
Browtime is an hour
Saturday the Tuesday
“HARPER VALLEY P.T.A.” and
“THE POM POM GIRLS” will be shown
Campus to adjust for hot weather
The alliance also is sponsoring a basketball tournament of Indian teams at West Junior High School. KU and Haskell Indian Junior College are among the 16 teams entered in the tournament.
Dizurella told those who were too old to do the faster fancy dancing often danced the Gourd Dance.
Durella said the pownw clock was very loose, but generally would be from 10 to 11 tonight and from room 5 to room 6.
"We want to try to educate the non-Indian community about our people and traditions," he said.
Gourd dancing originated in the southern plains but now has spread through all the tribal grounds, he said.
Perkins said a four-man crew would be turning room thermostats from the winter setting of 68 degrees to the summer setting of 78 degrees. The crew also will be turning off steam-heating systems in the buildings that use steam for heat.
At night, Indian "fancy" dancing will be featured. A Gaurd Court will be held tomorrow afternoon.
The heat in most KU buildings will be turned off and the air-conditioning systems will be turned on next week. Richard Perkins, associate director of plant maintenance, said yesterday.
"The Gourd Dance involves a different style of dancing than the fancy dancing," he said. "The costumes are different."
"A powwow is usually unstructured and just flows," he said.
“If the weather remains cold we might wait a few days before we begin work.”
"Indians aren't looking at each other as tribes so much now. It's gotten to the point where it doesn't matter. Indians just get together and participate in each other's celebrations," he said.
DIFFERENT INDians have different dancing styles and different dancers, he said but most Indians see them as "uncomfortable."
materials to repair the air conditioners use spring. However, he said the contract work would save the University a lot of money in repairs this summer.
"In the past we had to go through a bidding system for any work that had to be done on the air conditioners," he said. "Now the service work is done on a nearly basis."
"We get labor at a lower cost per hour and there is a one-year warranty on all service work done." Perkins said. "Two summers ago, Waworth Hill's air conditioning unit broke and we have to repair it. It costs a lot of money to keep the machines going and the spring repairs help."
Perkins said, "Otherwise, work will begin next week."
Perkins said Facilities Operations wanted to have most of the campus' air-conditioning systems ready for operation by Sunday. The new facility would be filled by Blake Halls it would not be ready by then.
"The two units at Learned are being put back in the air conditioner to be going next," Perkins said. The part of the air conditioner at Snow Hall just came in and we'll be finishing it and starting work on it.
and the parts inspected. The work done on air conditioners was so extensive that KU let the work out on a service contract this week to Bubeck Trane, from Kansas City, Mo.
Perkins said that every three to five years KU's air conditioners had to be torn down
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts and the University Theatre • Present
THE LOVE FOR THREE ORANGES An Opera by Dreyfus
THE LOVE FOR THREE ORANGES
An Operent by Prokofiev
April 7th 13 H. PST
University Theater at
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Tickets on sale
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Call 415-806-3922
Lecture series
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DATSUN
82
DATSUN
Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
KU Black Student Union to host interschool council
Representatives of black student organizations from Big Eight conference schools will be on the KU campus this week. The Black Student Union, hosted by the KU Black Student Union.
One resolution, Ivory said, would have students draft a letter to the major
The school's representatives will discuss resolutions brought up at the big Eight Council meeting, which will inform which their organizations attended in February in Norman, Oklaho, according to the department's official website.
television networks protesting television shows on the air about bovines. Ivory said the network was "not responsible."
A resolution concerning the rate of retention of black students in universities affords support.
The council representatives will meet from 8:30 to 11 today in the Regionalist Hotel Room and from 11:30 to 12:30 in the International Room. They will meet again at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow in the In-
The conference is open to all students.
Bo
$2500
LOW Prices on Redken, RK Jhirmak, Natural Women cosmetics &
Special on Perms and Body Waves!
*25°00 includes
cut and dry.
FOR MEN ONLY!!
skin care products
Thru April 30th
Prime Cut Hair Co.
13 E. 8th 841-4488
Open late Thurs.
Mon-Sat 9-5
Introducing:
Cathy Church &
Linda Yowell
Jan Sanders—OWNER
HELP WANTED CONSTRUCTION WORKERS & TRUCKERS
A jobs referral office has been established in Wichita, Kansas by Contractors and Truckers who work in the Central Kansas area.
These are open shop employers engaged in heavy, highway bridge utility building, & hauling jobs.
The purpose of this registry is to provide employment referrals to the Associations members who have job openings.
There is NO CHARGE to the applicant. For INFORMATION and to REGISTER CALL (316)942-8178
CENTRAL KANSAS CONSTRUCTION AND TRUCKING ASS'N. JOBS REGISTRY 2430 SO. HOOVER RD.
WICHTIA, KS. P.O. BOX 9172 67277
clip and mail
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY STATE ZIP
PHONE
PHONE
V
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 13, 1979
13
KANSAN WANT ADS
Assocations/domains, goods/services and employment
Agencies
Certification/Validation
CLASSIFICATION AND VALIDATION MARKING
MARINA
CLASSIFICATION AND VALIDATION MARKING
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
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.
one two three four five
time times time times times
15 words or
fewer $3.00 $2.25 $2.50 $7.00 $4.00
Each additional
01 02 03 04 05
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Thursday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online using the KDK business office at 864-1558.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
DEFEND YOUR INALIABLE RIGHTS to life,
property, andadember. Students for
students for students in the fight
for our freedom 911-805-3256
811-905-3256
Enroll now for Wetland Arts class beginners! Decorate a 724-355-1006 New Hampshire 4-19
872-355-1005 New Hampshire 4-19
Employment Opportunities
Students majoring in business, pre-med, pre- law,
pre- education, or related majors may major "Make 897 per month. For interview requests, call 822-450-3711."
FOR RENT
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimahm
walking into the gym, where she will be the
master of the year. Stop by and look on over
your schedule. Stay on hand and we will be
give you all the information you need to
FRONTER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT:
Studio 1 and 2 bedrooms, furnished and
walk-in closets, simple painting. OK KU bus route.
Includes parking. Located at 524 Forder Road. Next door.
Rosenleaf Est.
To subdue one bedroom, new modern, farnished apartment starting May 20 - option 4.
LIVE IN LUXURY: need to subtle beautiful 3
bedroom, 2 bath apt. 2 balconies, fireplace-free
firewood and laundry paid for by师
and Jacqueline & Jillian.
Richman 843-0221. Evenings 843-5656. 4-19
Christian Hostess. Now and Summer. Close to
Christian Hostess. No. 842-560 between 2-
5:30 - Keep trying.
Apartments and rooms furnished, most utilities付租金 KU and near town. No room for pets.
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
All new & contemporary
Visit our furnished display unit today &
you'll see why the move is to Sundance
Applications. Company is located at 163 Concrete Square, within the A&B complex west of the Sundance on All this house.
8415265 - 841 4455
MARK K. II, H apartments now renting for summer occupancy at 2160 E. 47th St., home office, junior living quarters. 7 min. walk to campus. 1教室 balconies off the street,
Summer sublease. Completely furnished. 2 BR, 1½ bath apartment. Swimming pool, aman, curtain, basketball court, and kitchen. Luxury laundry facilities. Great for summer living. Call 841-8046/8086 nights.
Apt. 2 BHR and efficiency. Clouse to campus UJI-
ruin. Clean, quiet, and comfortable at
Clean.
8415255·842·4455
Perfect Summer sable! $12.15 for 2 bedroom
room, remodeled, bedding, bas-
tels B41-1858, evenings
Contemporary efficiency studio. Miawakbrook
furniture, a laundry room, kitchen,
farmhouse, balcony and externally reasonable
spaces.
SUMERF SUMBERLSE SUNDANCE Sandware, Apertures, 2
8920 $220 BANK FURNISHED Available
8920 $343-7881
Hell of a Deal-Haul one bedroom furnished
apartment Nice pool $180 utilities B41-060
Summer suite-lease at Meadowbrook Apt. Two
243-766-1858, two-bathroom townhouse
482-766-1858, 4418
www.meadowbrook.com
Two prize tree one or two Christian remembrance
magnets. Three kitchen bedding, dining table,
bathroom rugs. Twelve bedroom furniture.
2 Female roommates to share a bed.
3 Display this summer and of fall. Call 4-888-
4091.
May sub-lease-1, B - Sundance Apt. Available
May Call 843-7835 after 4. Rent it secured. 4-20
phone.
this summer, 2 Bdmr. Call 843-6866, ask for
Eddin or Scott.
PLEASE HELP out two fellow college kids to
so-leave a luxurious Mall apt. for the sum-
mer, find one in the heart of a new, free
wood, large kitchen and beautiful furniture.
wine bar, call Kai Saul or Sandy 4-18
9053
Northside Plaza subway available mid-May.
Accommodation: AC pool, on site,
$701 room; $620 room.
Hotel address:
$161 room.
DAILY
ENTERTAINMENT
GUIDE
Always
great looking ladies
Never
a cover charge
Memberships Avail.
701 Mass.
PRIVATE CLUBS
MINGLES DISCO
SEE YOU THERE THIS WEEKEND!
Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th 842-7030
MUSIC
G.P. LORDS Always great looking ladies Never a cover charge Memberships Avail
...
FRIDAY & SATURDAY!
PAUL GRAY'S
Aztec Inn
LUNCHEON MENUS
American and Mexican Food
802 Vermont
842-9455
FAST BREAK
Doors at 8:00
April 17th—Boontown Rats
April 20th—Gatemouth Brown
DINING
MONTH THURS 7:9:00
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7:9:00
.50 Schooners & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1:7:00
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
AMUSEMENTS
GRAND OPENING!
TONIGHT!
QUANTRILLS
SALOON
$1.50 PITCHERS
ALL DAY—ALL NIGHT
715 Mass
.Clip Out for Weekend Reference.---------------------------
BEER
Sublime: Spacius two bedroom apartment, private balcony close to campus, 10th & Mitsui University. Free Wi-Fi.
Most suitcase for summer 2 18mm townhouse at
sale. netschaps $790.00 more. Ultility Cushion
$926.00
2 BIR duplex with garage. All conveniences
neighborhood. Available May 15, 1842.
900 N. FOXBORO ST.
SOUTHBURDE LAPLA AJAZ 1. HR, CA on 10
r. bush, r. nubes, r. alba, r. oro, r. 4-19
r. 43-237 anytime
Summer sublease: Furmilded 2 bedroom Meadow
Lake; Furmilded May 15 to Aug. 30.
453-114-1144
453-114-1146
Jayhauber 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
Summer sublease. New 1 BH unfurnished apt.
approx. $390-$425; new 2 BH unfurnished apt.
approx. $817-$859.
Sublease for summer 2 bedroom apt. 2 beds from Union, Option to leave for Fall. 841-5785.
Summer suburban 2 dbkm. unfurnished Meadow.
Location: location by tennis court.
Call: M141-B513
Assume Applebrook lease May-Jan 2 BR. ACR.
Pool, $240; eleave $81-5732 for 4-18
PRIVATE BIGMEN has an established student residence for all of our staff. Bachelor's from any university, Lawrence, from any state, or including a foreign degree.
Sulblease luxury 3 pool 2 B bathrooms, partially
covered pool, 3B pool, rex negotiated.
842-9231.
Summer sublease. Excellent complex Mall Apt.
Call 842-7580 at 5:00 p.m.
4-26
Rooms available for summer luxury town
houses. BDAF members can rent a central
basketball club Rent nongoodl call
Most stubbed furnished one bedroom apartment
for 3 adults at $1950.00 - utility, $418.68) morning,
$1479.00 - afternoon, $1629.00 - evening.
Nice 3 bedroom townhouse: 2 baths, full kitchen,
available anytime in May. For information call
(618) 590-7471.
FOR SALE
Fender Maddison Rang Guitar with strings, cords,
caps, guitars, covers and cases. Very good condition.
Cords, covers and cases. Very good condition.
WATERBED MATHESSURES $59.99, 3 year guarantee
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. 13836, ttf
(225) 270-8000
Watch for truck on Sundays selling produce.
Llacava Foods, 9th & Illinois. Also wood-roofed.
SunSpec - thin glasses are our speciality. Non-Spec
- thin glasses are our selection. recommended
1021. Masson 841-570-7
1021. Masson 841-570-7
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
for motor & electric motors. MOTIVE ELECTRIC,
433-969-2000, 2000 W, 4th H.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 433-969-2000, 2000 W, 4th H.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to read in this text: 3) The rationrion 31 For exam preparation. *New Analysis* 2) The rationrion 30, *Making sense* 3) Mall Bookstore, *Oread Books* Store, U
Alarm: CT-250B computer controlled control arm
Seers Walker-Walker Exeterwear—new
accented Walker-150r or trade for
goody-bear 3610
used 1610
1922 Niech Ales Saving Machine Good condi-
tions afternoons 825-5019 Callings 4-13
afternoons 825-5019
74 Camara LT, VL.8, alt. p.5, p.b. power wi-
nders, AM-FM FF, track $3, 6000, 4-13
4-13
We have. Western City, Malla Bookshop,
711 W. Slidell St, 849-7250.
FENDER TWIN-REVERB Amp. Good Condition.
435-3623
**4-12**
74 Monte Carlo-AT, BP, PS, AM Radio, AC
64-123-5218 at 6 p.m.
4-13
Must weil this week. One marathon couch conch
is black & white TV's V.I. 816-760-7455
www.vibesun.com
1969 Portland Grand Prize-Model 1 Auto Vrph RD.
843-725-8000 between 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. 4-17
643-725-8000 between 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. 4-17
Technics Recharge 100 watts at 04%. Never used,
still packed in box 843-6528. Must 4-13
5-13
SPORTS CAR 195-198 TRB - low mileage Mich.
66ch. mechanically excellent, $2500
66ch.
1972 CCS500 Honda, Reliance, New battery, tune up help. Best offer,844-6117 4-24
wheatmilk 8,61 g. Iv in Gas oil 24,90 mL
whipping cream 8,61 g. Iv in Gas oil 24,90 mL
naphtha 8,61 g. Iv in Gas oil 24,90 mL
naphtha 8,61 g. Iv in Gas oil 24,90 mL
naphtha 8,61 g. Iv in Gas oil 24,90 mL
Ta A3500 SX Reel to Reel, 3-motor, 4-steps
auto reverse. Need not. Jeep, 843-7078. 4-12
Macintosh, MacBook, smart-phone, small-adjust, Apple iPad
Macbook Air, Macbook Pro, touchscreen, black with lights and backlight, M5-6466, M5-6467
For sale by owner-1622. W. 22nd Terrace: A
fairly large, three-bedroom apartment,
square feet, carpet and hardwood. Good
investment for law or graduate student, or young
graduate. Excellent financing possibilities.
4-20
0674
Golf clubs, full set: Putter, 2-9 irons, 1-3 woods
Earnings evenly 822-5290
4-19
Set of bicycle wheels with Sunshine hubs and
Araires rings. 842, 642-472
4-20
PHOTOGRAPHIES)—Due to an ordering error, the image is cropped. You are ages 20-29, 28-36, and 25-29 years old.
I have about 427 sheets of Kodak Elektraatee photos in a folder. I need 535.
$39 Call Bob, 864-619. Keep looking. 4-19
Ford Motor捷星 M47, V6. automatico, afr.
Motor modem, AM radio; M1-165/618-098
3550
1077 4 mm, C驼; Camerot: 41,906 mm, AC, Ph. AT
872 5 mm, C驼; Camerot: 41,906 mm, AC, Ph. AT
422 Theehn: 850000bps 6 month old DVD,
6 month old USB
FOUND
Procsilce lignes in green pass. Found at stairs on east side of Wiscoteen 841-4588 4-17
Nadols, calculators, books, understates
Dorsey, research. Claims at Kastanian University
Download Book 4-10
Found set of keys in park near Hilleer. Call
murals 441-502.
Two keys marked VBS. Call 864-6056 to identify and chkm
Orange home-hated tuxedo cat with brown eyes.
Orange home-hated tuxedo cat with brown eyes.
Crownverdure. Wood. Call 4-17
4-17
Found prescription glasses on 4th floor of Sum-
ma College. Clams from night jacket at Summer
field.
HELP WANTED
EXOTIC JOY! LATE TAIHOE, CALIFORNIA!
Late expense, fantastic tipe $1700-$4,000 aum-
mium. Ships up to 80' long. Incl. tariffs,
ranches, cruises, river rafts, & more.
60129, Sacramento. Capital $5800. 4-24
60129, Sacramento. Capital $5800. 4-24
Position Announcement. Certification and instructor positions for the Bachelor of Science in Stormwater Harbor Administration for Santa Monica Bay are available as a student and be able to share the responsibilities of a student and be able to share the responsibilities of an Office of International Resources or Hall of Fame.
The University Information Center is now active and will be open until May 22 and August 18, 1979. Applications may begin May 22 and August 18, 1979, at 10 a.m. on Friday, April 13, 1979. The University has an opportunity Affirmative Action Employees
OVERSEAS JOBS: Shooter game aired. Foreign-born only.
Job location: New York, NY.
Job description:
Written by: Jeff Gorin, 2014-2015 ACE, LLC.
Email: jeffgorin@ace.com
Website: www.ace.com/jobs
JOBS:
MEN . WOMEN NAILBOATS!
CRUSSE SHIPWRESTER . experience. high pay! See
opportunities.
CRUSSE SHIPWRESTER, Worldwide Summer
Job. Send $95 for a week.
Box 60129, Sacramento, CA, 95860
4-24
Now lining application for Fountaina & Gillie
Abbey, April 19th, 2014, Applicant in person at Vestiaire Houston,
715 W. Broadway, New York, NY 10016.
Football & Grill restaurant. Neon hours:
Monday 10am-5pm, In-person at Vita Restaurant.
W 4th, W 7th, 4:30pm
Need more spending money? Words: Old Fashioned
Applies. Apply between 2 and 4 Months through
October. Apply by calling (800) 652-3700.
SUMMER JOBS, NOW! WOILD CHURSEES/
PLEASE HAUNT: HOAX? No experience! Good pay!
Caribbean, Hawaii, WorldWide and $35 for AEP.
Worldwide travel required. WORLDWIDE-$8
6012925 San Antonio, California, 96308
JOBS IN ALASKA
jobinfo.librarians.baidu.com
Job Information:
Baidu job info.librarians.baidu.com
22 % of the total P.O. Box 15708, Anchorage, AK 99603-15708
email: job_info.librarians.baidu.com
Student Research, Assistant Professor, contribute in teaching and research to computer science, including the character generator and another, integrating the character generation into a computer programming language. absolutely required. Position is on U51-114 hardware. absolutely required. Position is for three months on a permanent position beginning in April 1929. Postdoctoral position offered by William J. Hall 352 S. Oakland Blvd., Kernville, California, 90686. The University of Chicago Graduate School of Computer Science.
College student needed. May 1st to October 1st.
To drive motor home to major quarrels taxi services.
To negotiate with bus company for experience desirable. Retainability is a must. Mature job on workweek. Mark Simpson, 932-743-1243.
JOHN LAKE TAHOE CALIF. Firmware that
works with 100+ devices, supports
specific firmware, and works in LANDWARE
or other environments.
DAIRY STAFF needed for before, and after school problems. Nurses 3 to 15 yrs old, with increase in work experience, were needed once working with school-children and or with children between 11:00 a.m. to Lawrence Extended Day Program days (11:00 a.m. to Lawrence Extended Day Program days) at Lawrence Lawrences. Lawrence Youth Opportunity employed-quilted and women of all races encouraged to apply.
Adult with own transportation to care for 8 min.
Adult with own transportation to care for 8 min.
Adult with own family home housing ($2,900)
Adult with own family home housing ($2,900)
HELP WANTED FULL TIME. Some mechanical knowledge helpful. Must be heat and dependable.
LOST
Led at Big Bub. Hbd Hill road with Michael
Felix. On way to Leeds airport. Return for
return of anything. No question asked.
We're going to be very busy.
Last woman's silver watch on March 3rd by
Christine L. Burke, found placed in
plastic bag.
REWARD. Thank you.
Last on campus 4.9/7.8 One pair of cushions in
cloak room if found please call 312-5771 4-
ward 12
LOBST windbreaker jacket; lost in the vicinity of selfafflicted JBJ 23 just south of Watkins. Front left hand-position of jack racks: AARK 8426, LACB 8427, SCHLUCK 8428, mental value: If found please call 841-6255 - 4023.
Please help me find this black Labrador. He has very small ears and eyes. He very much needs and needed. Call 841-769-2350.
Pairs of glues in case in Haworth Friday morning. Insquire 641-7077 4-17
TREASURES BINIMING COVINGY "The House of
Wine and Spirits," 27th Avenue at 85th Street,
66-year old at 83rd Street, house #84-31. Thanks to
their generous contributions.
MISCELLANEOUS
VETS—Are you selling your benefit? Maybe
check Campus Check 118 B IU Bombardier 864-1478
DEATH: WHY BOTHER? ECKANAR
J. HOOD BOOKSELLER - The finestschool press and paper bookstore in all of mainstreet and 1st floor, price wraps in all mainstreet condition. We maintain a full stock of new books from our printers, including "True-Bot" p. m. p. (mom), "Cloudy" p. m. p. (pam).
PERSONAL
Hotel
first floor
on ALL YOU CAN EAT
Fried Mushroom
12:30 pm Sun. April 15
Lawrence Jewish
Community Center
817 Highland Dr.
$1 for members
Ackley Street
$1 for each member
Shopping Centre
will hold after
RCKS BIKE SHOP is now open. 208 Raleigh
Drive, Greenville, SC 29641. Call 314-533-7400,
quick check 5653 Vernier, 810-641-112
or email rckshops@rcks.com
NOTICE
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC. Abortion up to 12 weeks. pregnancy tests. Birth Control, Counseling. Tailgate Ligation. For appointment call: 988-653-4026 or 400-193-4001. In Park, Ks
Gay Leland counseling referrals now handled high KV IU #84-206 or Headquarters 844-234.
Join an important student service! Customer
membership on the Board of Directors Election
membership on the Board of Directors Election
HARVARD SPECIALS • 6-10 Mon, Tues, and Fri
HARVARD SPECIALS • 6-10 Mon, Tues, and Fri
MAINTAIN NIGHT • Wed. $150 gift card
MAINTAIN NIGHT • Wed. $150 gift card
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortion up to
17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing, Birth Control,
Counseling, Tubal Ligation. For appointment:
800-645-3411, 490-645-3411, 490-645-3411,
St. Overland Park, KS.
Would love to meet you who plays tender,
sweet, lyrical roles. We are a close-knit
fellow women. Wednesday afternoon, 2
women. 8am to 10am.
Tam Man. What is a Tam Man? A tam Man does not have a name, but he knows what people think of him. He doesn't know what people think of him or how to reinforce it. He键盘上 and broaches in on it
JUNOHS Apply now for next year's Class of
2019. Application April 20th - 10:27 BK.
University Level (U.S.)
Belonging for special purpose business, Business Bail,
and Emergency Medical Services. Do Not travel on
Organ May Vacation (Unless) Members no longer in
service. Please check with us at *www.harvard.edu*.
SAVE YOUR PACE FACE creating portraits taken in
the garden, at the beach, at the wedding,
at the park. A Portfolio of guest
portraits will be available.
HEY BOB, you caught my eye! I'm interested--are you ever? You seem like I always come when we're always going. Show down on Mondays, show up on Fridays. Maybe 10:30 or bumpy number
4-17
Next year's Haitian women needed someone with beautiful body. We will talk to a beautiful body wall. Our April 15 wedding is on Saturday at the Montreux Opera House.
STVX and STONES break my knees, but DECODES
keep for "Mating alive" - BINO 4:13
Dear Rinky, Happy 21st Birthday, Love and
Wish, WHIC 6-13
A very thankful thanks to the young women swimming at the annual NCAA meet, which she had just part of Judge's Friday evening. D. Patterson was the captain.
TAN MAN LIVES!-Dad 4:13
SERVICES OFFERED
Academic Affairs, The Lawyer Open-Based
Academic Internship. The Lawyer Open-Based
Academic Internship. Residency and Real Estate Call. 841-640-3295.
MATH TUTOR MA in math, patient, three years professional experience; BSM-311.
Need help in math or CSG but a tutor who
knows how to teach math or CS problems. B
814-4737
www.csgmath.com
**ALIRAPS** Online Visit VOL WAAP is available with
the following conditions:
1. Purchase a license to use the VOL WAAP for 20 minutes or 1 hour at alirap.social.com.
2. Register an account with VOL WAAP.
REMITTING EDITING. Your manuscript, two or three paper edited into an effective, grammatical text that is clearly fluent in thinking with precision and mindfulness. Outlining of manuscripts and articles also available. E-mail: rbhitman@udx.edu (423) 321-8760
EXPERT TUOPRS. MATH 000-700. PHYSCH 000-800. STATISTICS 000-900.
INSTRY 100-700. STATISTICS 643-000-800 or 643-070-800.
QUALIFICATIONS: B.S. in Physchat,
2 years of experience in computer
programming.
Tireal of feeding yourself? Naimath Hall is offering a day camp for children in the boarding plan. Children prepared and包了 week can be yours if you choose this plan. Stop at MISMALL Hall, 180 Naimath Road, 843-859. bldg
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4475.
Garden-fillning Quality work, reasonable rates.
Tiny-Built the Lawnware. Lawdrey Call 617-459-8230
Lawrence Oyun School. Exciting Summer programs include music, art, biology and hiking. We are organic, gardening, charitable organizations. Children in Language Arts, Math, and English classes will be taught in our 7:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m., and 5:30 p.m. slideshake. Call now to register.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980 1f
Quality typing guaranteed- IBM Select, Term-
ment thesis, dissertations, masters, Carote Cd
Cd.
Now accepting term papers for quality typing.
Lynn, 841-266 after 5.30 ff
Experienced Typist-term paper, mice, mite.
Experienced Typist-term paper, spelling corrector,
843-555-0344, Mrs. Wright
Typhal/Editor; IBM Pix/Elec; Quality work.
Typical assignment: dissertation welcome
Mail #42-91227.
Experimented typhus-theses, dissertations, term
dissertations, selective elective
842-311, 842-321
842-311, 842-321
TPVING for 30,000 pages served. Quality work.
We can provide high-quality line
861-959. We type it all for you.
www.yourwebsite.com
Tapping on Blite Electric Typewriter by expert-
drips. Triple Compress servo. Proofreading Mfts.
843-117-177
Accurate, experienced typed -term papers, briefs,
reports, resumes. 24 hr/day service. Tpz per page 842-844. DSN:
mssqldb.ibm.com
TYPING Over 30,000 pages served Quality work. Contact Vince on (855) 267-9100 or Linda on (855) 267-9100.
821-9100 Wts. All You Need is
I do demand quick typing. Under 20 pads, I
do 12.5-60 hrs a day. I work 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and weekend
days. S+D-GIEH $3 a.p.
I can carried quick tyres. 20 ppl. & under.
night service Call Rush: 843-638-15 per 5 p.m.-5
11 a.m.
Expert testing all kinds of right service
ability, editing available. Call 814-4712 evening-
5-1.
Reports, descriptions, resumes, legal forms,
forms for employment, selective telecast, Call
or Jonason, 841-217-2730
Cheap, quick, professional typing. Please call
Tom, 841-7971.
WANTED
2 roommates wanted to share older home for
rent, or fall for $81.25 1 utility 4
852-3068
Female roommate to share 1 bedroom meadow-
roommate to rent summer only 1Rent negotiable
Call RM720-685-8999
We need roommates at 1019 Maine starting this week. We'll offer a bill for 600 or shop at the house.
Wanted-quiet Christian to make to share 2 BR
wanting to May I Call 841-4128 after
him. Aik. For him: Aik.
KU empire would like to form a team from
Oliver to Lawrence. You call 643-3489
from 1-800-723-5676.
Female roommate for summer luxury apt, own
$125/month. Call 800-764-2345 or email info@me-
lady.com
Rominate for summer and or fall in 3 bdm
Apt. 811 pts. ufl incl. Bullet 841-161l 4-18
Information from women, who have had abscesses at RU MIDC. All names are provided with patient's information.
April or studio wanted available for a month
from May 19, Gilm Kim after 6:84 - 6:5755
4-13
Need 3 trimmings for diameter $d$; diameters $d$, $2d$, and $3d$; diameters $d^2$, $2d^2$, and $3d^2$;
diameters $4d^2$, $6d^2$, and $8d^2$; diameters $10d^2$, $16d^2$, and $24d^2$;
diameters $20d^2$, $32d^2$, and $44d^2$. Note: Diameter on base would be
divided by 4.
Rennovations to share Meadowbrook apts. Next
Call 644-8630 at 6:00
4-17
Resident wanted for summer luxury town
hall. Interested in renting or hosting a
northeast basketball club. Rent equivalent.
Call 1-800-326-4757.
Nintendo fortunate that can play at 16 RPM. 843-
8153-Frank
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT 20,550 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
SELL IT!
If you've got it. Kansan
CLASSIFIEDS
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If you've got it, Kansan Classifieds sells it. Just mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flt Howell, you do so to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
AD DEADLINES
Morning
Tuesday . Thursday 5 pm
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Friday . Tuesday 5 pm
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KANSAN CLASSIFIED--EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
14
Friday, April 13, 1979
University Daily Kansan
The LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE PRESENTS TONIGHT & TOMORROW NIGHT FAST BREAK
$2.50 general admission
BILDEY AXR
ONLY LAWRENCE APPEARANCE!!
Wednesday, April 18 KEGGER NIGHT with The RED WILLOW KEGGER BAND
. . . Friday, April 20 . . CLARENCE "GATEMOUTH" BROWN
FREE BEER from 8:00-10:00
POTT COUNTY PORK and BEAN BAND
THE BOOMTOWN RATS
"LOW RENT ROCK"
A TONIC FOR THE TROOPS
ON COLUMBIA RECORDS, CASSETTES AND 8-TRACK TAPES.
THE LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE 106 MUSIC STATION, AND NEO-SPACE INC.
are throwing a parade to support Live Entertainment in Lawrence. "THE BOOMTOWN DOWNTOWN COMMUNITY PARADE"
In honor of Lawrence's guests from Ireland, THE BOOMTOWN RATS on their national tour of America, we are throwing a parade for everyone in Lawrence to participate in. Everyone is welcome to be in the parade. Come in costume, come to represent an organization, or come just to get crazy and have fun. There will be free balloons, T-shirts, tickets, records, mousetraps, posters, etc.
The parade will begin at 4 pm Monday, April 16 in South Park and will proceed north on Mass. to 7th and Mass., take a left on 7th and conclude at the Train Central Park, 7th and Tenn. Come out, support, and be part of Live Entertainment.
DO THE RAT, APRIL 16.
Calendar of Events
F-S. April 31st Fast Break
April 13 1944 Just Breath
*Tues April 18 BOOMTOWN FAMIS (Japanese Productions)
*Wed April 18 Red Yellow Band-Kager Night
*Thurs April 18 KANSAS FAM I JAMAICA Productions
*Fri April 20 CARNENCE "GATEMALTON" BROWN-Port County
Sat April 20 Beth Country Park-Bean BANK "Southern Fried"
aed April 25 The Lancaster Crustin Band-Kager Night
Come see THE BOOMTOWN RATS at the Lawrence Opera House, April 17, 9:00.
+Wed May 2 EARL SCROLLS REVIEW "Sunk Valley Boys"
Thurs May 3 IWEGGER NITE!!
+Fri. May 4 SPYRO GYMA (Johan Mackart Apparatus) Ultimate Warrior Period
+Sat. May 5 DAVID GRISMAN QUINTET
Fri. May 6 Plain Stone
Sat. May 12 JASSEED AT THE DUNEEX
Lud. May 14 DAVID SALEN COE
T-S. May 18 FIRESETT COUNTS BULKS TRANT
Available at:
Lancaster Teacher Training B.C. C. Edwards College Düsseldorf
Laurentius Teacher Training B.C. C. Edwards College Cornwall Center Tapsiha Teacher Training B.C.
Every Tuesday Right!
$10,000 Grand Prize Pool Tournament!
Listings subject to change: call us for information.
Tickets available at Better Days & the 7th Spirit
Doors Open at 8:00 Show at 9:00
The Lawrence Opera House 7th Spirit Club
---
(1)
Staff photo by STEPHAN SPECTOR
Rat rally
susan Urich, lawrentry freshman, dressed as a rat in a parade down Massachusetts Street to show her support for the rock group, The Boomtown Rats. The group, which is from Ireland, will perform here tonight. The parade was sponsored by Neospace Productions and the Opera House.
Relays start tomorrow
The Kansas Relays return to Lawrence for the 54th year beginning at 8 a.m. tomorrow with the first portion of the memorial in Memorial Stadium.
For a schedule of events tomorrow and Thursday and ticket information, see page 7.
The Relays run through Saturday with
AAUP plans ethics inquiry
By BILL RIGGINS Staff Reporter
The KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors asked its committee on academic freedom and tenure to establish a new anthropology professor engaged in unethical conduct while conducting human research in 1978. The charges were made by two colleagues.
Ambrose Saricks, AALP president, said yesterday that the AALP had agreed to investigate the matter to determine whether any alleged activities by Michael Crawford, professor of anthropology, had violated laws on professional ethics and student rights.
The students who brought the charges, Elizabeth Murray and Nancy Sempolski, contend that Crawford misinformed research subjects and misused funds while conducting research on stoke cell anemia in a patient of Alzheimers Disease of Belize, which is east of Guatemala.
Murray, who was助企 to Belzel with Cowford a research assistant, said subjec- tives for the course were:
SHE SAID the sickle cell trait was a barren state with virtually no symptoms. In the research subjects, who were volunteers, we understand the purpose of the research.
trait were told they had "a mild illness, a mild form of anemia."
"No attempt was made to sit down and explain things to each individual," she said. "The people there didn't know quite what we were doing."
Most of the subjects were literate and spoke English. Murray said.
Murray also said subjects did not fill out consent forms and that a large number of children participated in the project without parental consent.
In addition to the alleged research violations, Murray said there was a possibility that funds that were supposed to be used for project were not used for research purposes.
But Murray said the bribe system was not used in Belize and that she was not aware of any expenses for which receipts were not obtained.
SHE SAID a "slush fund" was to be used for expenses for which receipts would not be obtained and to "bribe" subjects to take the money. The project participants were common practice
in some Central and South American countries.
However, Crawford said the allegations were "groundless" and were an attempt at discrediting him.
It's strictly a matter of students with a windex against me trying to fin a way of the game.
Crawford said that vendetta resulted because one member of the research team had engaged in "metrical conduct" in Belize and had to be disciplined.
"ONE OF them got in a lot of trouble in the field and they got together and figured out how to ax Crawford—and I can document this." Crawford said.
Crawford said the two students had made allegations to the U.S. State Department, the American Anthropological Association and a University ethics committee.
"They want you to publish this and tarman my name any way possible," he said.
The complaints gone through, University channels, he said, and had been found to be false.
Crawford said the students had brought up the charges before.
MURRAY SAID the reason the charges had been dismissed when they were first raised was that all the evidence had not been brought out at the hearings.
She said she had asked that the testimony of three witnesses and also several documents be introduced as evidence but that her request had been refused.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"It was just a case of my word against Dr. Crawford's," Murray said. "But it wasn't fair because they didn't have all the evidence."
"We didn't get due process," she said. But Crawford disregarded.
"The committees evaluated honestly and judged what happened," he said.
Murray denied there was any personal vendetta involved in the matter but said she and Semopolus had been subjected to abuse that they first filed the charges two years ago.
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.89, No.132
Tuesday, April 17, 1979
Bill's constitutionality questioned
Local Democrats filed a brief yesterday urging the Kansas Supreme Court to declare the Kansas House reapportionment law, which says that it gerrymandering the KU student vote.
"The reappointment of districts 44 and 46 is a classic case of political gerrymandering designed to discriminate against a politically cohesive, identifiable voting group," the brief stated, referring to KU students as a voting group.
section Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, the brief said.
The House bill would move the 44th District from East to West Lawrence and would create a new East Lawrence district, the 46th. The new district would extend the boundaries of the city to include the UCU campus and Oral Heights Beach, areas that had been in the 44th District.
The bill reduces the value of the votes of KU students in violation of the Equal Pro-
THIS MOVE WAS designed by the House Republican majority to endanger the reelection chances of 44th District State Rep. Paul Ryan, a former gilting the KU student vote, the brief says.
Attorney General Robert T. Stephen sent the bill house to the Court two weeks ago with the comment that the 44th and 46th states were under a ransomder because of their strange shapes.
Douglas County Democratic Central Committee Chairman David Berkowitz said yesterday that there was case law that could lead the Court to strike down the bill if the Court determined that districts had been gerrymandered.
Berkowitz said he would present an oral argument before the Court tomorrow morning.
THE COURT IS ruling on the constitutionality of house reapportionment in accordance with the 1974 constitutional law, and the reapportionment of the Legislature.
The Court will rule on the case by May 5. Berkowitz said if the Court did not declare the charges against him, he would face the case to the Federal District Court. He said the chances of getting the litigation struck out were small.
"The Supreme Court of Kansas could be more reluctant to overturn what traditionally has been a legislative prerogative," he said.
Med Center contractor submits repair plan
The state might revert its decision to terminate the contract of a construction company that failed to make adequate repairs on the new Bell Memorial Hospital at the University of Kansas Medical Center, an assistant attorney general said yesterday.
The construction company's president submitted a plan for repairing the cement panels that make up the outer walls of the hospital after the contract was terminated
Friday, Jerry Dickson, the assistant attorney general, said.
Presentation of a specific plan means that the state could reconsider its position.
"He's come up with an itemized list," Dickson said. "It is a detailed list."
Dickson saw the Clinical Facilities Executive Committee, which oversees Med Center buildings, would discuss the plan this week. He said he and the committee
would make the final decision on the contract.
The committee consists of Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning; Warren Corman, director of facilities planning for the Kansas Board of Regents; and Vincent Cool, state architect, Vincent Cool, state architect.
The construction company, V.D. Sifarlo-
General Contractors, Kansas City, Mo.
or Springfield, Illinois.
replaced by April 25. The state, however,
said the repair plan was too vague and ter-
rible.
Vincent DiCarlo, president of V.S.
DiCarlo, said yesterday that he still planning to run.
Last May, 140 panels on the hospital were found to be cracked and chipped. D'Arco was hospitalized.
Powwow unites Indians in dance
Wiechert last week that 94 of the panels had not yet been repaired.
By ELLEN IWAMOTO Staff Reporter
The floor vibrated with drumbeats and the pounding of mochaed feet as Indian fancy dancers dipped and twirled, their bodies bobbing wildly in time to the music.
Bells attached to the dancers' calves rang out with every step they took, and the weaving, hopping steps seemed almost to hypnotize the more than 200 people at the third annual KU Powwow Friday and Saturday night.
The fancy dancers stood outside the ring of other dancers performing the slower-
Straight dancing is the more traditional way of dancing, according to Dee Gupti-reez, head female dancer at the powwow, said.
The women take short, lifting steps that make the long fringe on their sailsway to the music. Their feet are encased in beaded, soft suede moccasins or boots with fur trimming and their dresses are all colors of the rainbow, made of velvet, cloth or satin material.
Another dancer, from South Dakota, said he picked the colors of his outfit because it was more appropriate.
"The blue is for the sky and the white for the clouds" he said.
outfitted to his love for stars, he said. The children got in on the fun, too. Dressed they tried in similar to those of the adults, they tried a few dance steps on their own. But some children were content to be caricatured, and some on their father's laps in the drum group.
GUPTIERREZ, FROM Horton, said she spent three years making her dance outfit, a black velvet dress, half of which is covered with intricate beadwork.
Guptierrez said most Idiates learned to dance about the same time they learned to walk. Children pick up dancing by watching others dance or their mothers teach them,
"That's our future," Guijterzien said,
"teaching the little children how to dance.
seeing my daughter and grandchildren out there dancing."
After the Flag Song, which is the Indian National Anthem, was played, the head male and female dancers led off a dance. The group then moved as many as the others took their cues from them.
“It’s an honor to be asked to be the head dancer,” Guptierez said.
Dancing and singing at the powwow gave most of the Indians a good feeling of being with their own people and renewing friendships.
TOMMY CHAIN, male dancer
from Owasso, Ohio, said he had to know all
the music.
The chanting and the drumbeats from the singing group guided the dancers' feet over the floor. The drum beats intensified and faded away as the six or more men around the drum worked together to produce the throbbing music.
The master of ceremonies, Chewers Coe-
lawrence, said there was a natural high
GOURD DANCING is a new concept from the old Peyote religion, Guijerrez said. Some Indians had gotten away from the traditions and formed gourd dancing about 15 years ago.
A special feature at the porkwow was gourd dancing, a slower-paced dance. The men were the main dancers, wearing long sleeves and dresses. Benders and shaking gourds to the drumbeat.
"It doesn't matter what tribe," he said,
if someone calls and asks for help I try to
Gutjezerne said that she always would be a cowboy if a friend or related asked her.
Steve Knife Chief, head singer, said that most of the singers were dancers before they started to sing. They picked up the microphone and sang. Although Knife Chief was not the scheduling was one of the events featured at an Indian powwow held Friday and Saturday at the Lawrence Community Building, 115 W.
Although Knife Chief was not the scheduled head singer at the powwow, he said he
SANTA FE, COLORADO - AUGUST 15, 1978 - JAMES BAYER AND HIS WIFE JULIE MAYER AT THE 1978 COTTON BELL RACE.
Indian ceremonu
Steve Knife Chief, 219 Talio St., chants during a round dance while 6-year-old Shawn Talio watches the dances. Dance
Staff photo by CHRIS TODC
Banks files ad complaint
A complaint was filed yesterday with the office of affirmative action requesting that a search for an assistant men's athletic coach be conducted, that a hold be placed on the hiring process.
Elizabeth Banks, a member of the women's athletic advisory board, filed the
"My informal complaint failed, so I filed a formal complaint," she said yesterday.
Members of the board said that the job description did not mention that the assistant director would be working with women's athletics after a merger of the men and women's athletic departments or gently discouraged women from applying.
The women's advisory board had requested at its April 5 meeting that the search to replace Jerry Waugh, who resigns as director, March 15, be advertised again.
Under the merger, which Chancellor Archie R. Dykes approved Friday, Bob Marcum, men's athletic director, will be director of men's and women's athletics. Marian Washington, women's athletic director, will be the associate director.
But Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said last week that the job was being cut.
"Marian Washington wasn't even involved in the job search," Banks said, "yet the assistant director will probably report to her after the merger."
After the merger, Washington will be in charge of a sports medicine program and develop its sports teams.
Personnel with the athletic business office, the sports information office, and the Williams Educational Fund, special pro-credit basketball and球球 will report to Marcum.
Banks said the job description required that applicants be familiar with the guidelines of the National College Athletic Association, but did not mention the need for familiarity with the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women. The theory, mediation facilitator for the offering, said it would take place within 25 days to determine whether there was probable cause for the complaint.
2
Tuesday, April 17, 1979
University Daily Kansar
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services
Miss. flood forces evacuation
JACKSON, Miss. - Water reached the eaves of some houses in Jackson and city officials sent a boat down town area after the worst Pearl River disaster.
About 17,000 people were evacuated from their homes and flood waters reached almost 43 feet, almost 25 feet above flood stage.
Officials said yesterday that the Pearl River could have crested at 43 feet by last night.
Gov. Cliff Fink asked President Carter to declare much of Mississippi a federal disaster area.
Airport bombing injures eleven
BRUSSELS, Belgium-Palestinian terrorists throw a gasoline bomb and a fire in the crowded lobby of the airport in Brussels yesterday after they made an attempt to set it on fire.
failed to capture the gun and a subsequent shotgun injured 11 persons. Two of the terrorists were captured after the gun battle but one or two others bundled themselves up.
in private airport authorities identified the terrorists as members of a new group called "Hick March," named for the month the Egyptian-Israeli peace
into law. The law required the captured terrorists as saying that they were from the Palestinian Liberation Organization and that the airliner was then intended to be deported.
Rhodesia feels election violence
ALBURY, Rhodesia - Nationalist guerrilla blew up oil storage tanks and launched attacks on at least five polling places yesterday as Rhodesians prepared to vote in today's election for the nation's first black-majority government.
The military reported that 1 million gallons of diesel fuel and thousands of gallons of gasoline were destroyed. One piling place was slightly damaged.
The guerrillas oppose the elections because whites are promised continued control of the police, security forces, judiciary and civil administration, and they have been a threat to many institutions.
Bilingual education to get aid
TOPERA—A bill that would establish a new state aid program for bilingual education was signed into law vesterday by Gov. John Carlin,
School boards would be authorized to enter into shared-cost cooperative agreements or to form separate legal entities to provide programs of bill payment.
The bill defines educationally deprived students as those who, because of their inability to speak and understand English, are excluded from effective schooling.
State aid would be paid at the rate of $150 for each participating educationally deprived student.
Economy could affect benefits
WASHINGTON - A recession this year could jeopardize the Social Security system's ability to pay retirement benefits. In the wake of a federal budget decision yesterday by the system's trustees.
However, any problems could clear up by 1992 because of the higher payroll taxes taking effect automatically through the 1980s, the report said.
The system's trustees said the cash flow problem beginning in 1983 could be avoided if legislation were passed to allow the shifting of some Disability Incentive Funds. A law would also require that the funds be held by the
Coal feasibility study requested
TOPEKA - The Kansas Corporation Commission was asked yesterday to consider the economic feasibility of converting existing gas-fired generating units to coal as an alternative to proceeding with construction of the Wolf Creek natural power plant.
Bill Ward, a representative of the Mid-America Coalition for Energy Alternatives, rude the request as the commission completed a bearing on a conference call.
Ward asked that the commission study the conversion of existing Kansas Gas and Electric Co. gas-fired units to coal.
Ward said KG&E plants had been built with the capability for being converted to coal since 1948.
But Ward said that when the decision was made to construct the Wolf Creek Plant, it was proposed that existing generating units only would be used to supply electricity.
Pulitzer winners announced
NEW YORK—The Point Reyes, Calif., Light won the 1979 Pulitzer Prize for public service for its investigation of Sionan, a clinic for the addiction of addicts.
The Philadelphia Inquirer won its fifth straight international reporting Pulitzer for the Middle East work of Richard Ben Cramer.
Pulitzer Prize Book of the Year
Herbert L. Block, of the Washington Post, won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing
John Cheever's collection of 61 short stories, "The Stories of John Cheever," won the prize for fiction.
The drama prize went to Sam Shepard for his play, "Buried Child," a study of a disinterested family in rural Illinois.
Robert Pern Warren won in the poetry classification for "Now and Then: Poems 1976-1978."
Franklin of the Baltimore Evening Sun.
The San Diego Evening Tribune won the prize for general local reportin. $ ^2 $
coverage of the in-flight collision of two airplanes last September.
The prize for national reporting went to James Risser, Washington.
"appears in the New York Times."
"or history went to Don E. Fehringer for his book," The Dred
The feature photography prize went to the staff photographers of the Boston, Herald American for the coverage of a February 1978 snowstorm.
Leonard Baker's "Days of Sorrow and Pain: Leo Baeck and the Berlin Jews"
wrote the biography prize.
The editorial writing award went to Edwin M. Yoder Jr., the editorial page editor of the Washington Star.
Paul Gapp, of the Chicago Tribune, won a Pulitzer for his work in architectural criticism.
Thomas J. Kelly III, a photographer for the Potts塘庄, Pa., Mercury, won the spot news photography award.
Iranians protest family's arrest
The demonstrators, most of whom were teen-agers, stopped downtown traffic as they protested last week's arrest of the family of Ayatollah Mahmoud Khatami.
TEHIAN, Iran—Thousands of demonstrators marched through Tehran day after protesting the arrest of the family of a Moslem leader by the gov-
ernor.
Islamic revolutionary firing squads executed seven officials from the former government of Sultan Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, bringing the total number of executions to 129.
A tew of the demonstrators were heard to call for the death of the Ayatollah Robohil Khomeini, spiritual leader of the revolution.
The government of Prime Minister Mebi Bazargan had its first Cabinet resignation when Karim Sanjabi, a respected elder statesman and leader of the National Front Party, resigned as foreign minister. Bazargan was told to let the elder statesman quit for fear his government would collapse.
Weather ...
Skies today will be partly cloudy with temperatures near 80, according to the U.S. Weather Bureau. There is a slight chance of thunderstorms.
WICHITA (AP) — Wichita Police Chief Richard LaMunyon said yesterday that there were "some allegations" that concerned him but that he thought his men acted properly during the early stages of a raid that resulted in 64 injuries and 88 arrests.
Charges mount in Wichita riot
"The situation was very chaotic," he said during a news conference. "No one in the park saw everything that happened. But let me make the mistake. The moment of moment is not
The chief said it was too early to determine the validity of complaints about allegation.
People have complained that they were ordered out of restaurants and were arraigned.
LAMUNYON SAID the riot began when police asked people, including some members of a motorcycle gang, to move cars that were parked illegally.
The chief said that the park was inadequate to handle the 3,500 people who attended the concert and that too much alcohol, drugs and beer were being consumed. He also said law enforcement agencies lacked an officerpower to handle such a disturbance.
At least 60 complaints were filed with the police department by early yesterday after officers identified the plaintiffs were general allegations concerning officers from law enforcement agencies.
ABOUT 500 police officers, 300 of them from the city, were called in to handle the three-hour disturbance that a veteran officer termed the worst rioting in the city's history. Sedgwick County deputies and Patrolmen also were called to the scene.
Figures released by LaMunayon showed that 30 officers and 25 concert goers were killed in a terrorist attack.
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
4x6
sua films
Tuesday. April 17
BROADWAY MELODY OF 1940
Dir. Norman Taurog; with Fred Astaire, Eleanor Powell, George Murphy, dance great songs and songs.
(1940)
were hospitalized, but none was in serious condition.
Thirty others were taken into custody at the scene but released later Sunday evening.
Wednesday, April 18
Shakespeare:
RICHARD III
Dir. Laurence Olivier; with Laurence Richardson, John Gleidau, Claire Blake and wicke. Considered by many to be the best filmed version of any of Shakee's films.
(1955)
Dir. Fred Zinnemann; with Jane Fonda, Vanna Redgrave, Jason Robbins. Based on a story by aILLION Awards. "No Friday matinee!
POLICE ARRESTED a total of 88 persons, including 54 adults who were cited for such offenses as disorderly conduct and assault. Twenty-vengey jenkenies also were arrested.
Friday & Saturday
April 20 & 21
JULIA (1977)
Dr. Ruse Mayer, with Shani Eubank,
Charles Napier, Buy your tickets early
when you arrive at the door.
BE CHECKED AT THE DOOR, SO BE
SURE TO BRING THE TOM OF
Midnight Movie SUPERVIXENS
The Festival will include 12 short animations by Susan Pillar Kraning, Rose May, Maria Mayer Laughlin and Sally Crushkahn (in including her latest scifi" epic) QUACI
(1975)
Monday, April 23
WOMEN'S ANIMATION FESTIVAL
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. $15.15 admission
Bike to sell?
Advertise it
in the Kansan.
Call 864-4358.
Sedgwick County Undersheriff Sam Davison said yesterday that he fired two shots from his revolver into the ground to kill a man, who was estimated at between 100 and 150 people.
SUCH AN action would violate city police department policy, LaMunyon said, adding that he had no knowledge of any of his offenses in a shot or even drawing a weapon.
Sheriff Johnne Darr said that if an officer felt his life was in danger, then such an action would be warranted under his department's policy.
LaMuynon did not estimate how long his department's investigation would take. But he said that he would recommend to the city and other place he found for outdoor concerts.
25
FOR MEN ONLY!!
Special on Perms and Body Waves!
$^{125}$00 includes cut and dry.
LOW Prices on Redken, RK Jhirmak, Natural Women cosmetics & skin care products
Thru April 30th
Prime Cut Hair Co.
skin care products
13 E. 8th 841-4488
Open late Thurs.
Mon-Sat 9-5
Introducing:
Cathy Church &
Jan Sanders—OWNER
Linda Yowell
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
American Housewares Corporation has openings for students in Lawrence, Topeka and Kansas City.
Earn $825 Monthly
Neat appearance
Opportunity to travel
For more information come to the
Student Union Parlor A Tuesday
April 17 at 3:00,5:00 or 7:00 p.m.
Hewlett Packard & The Kansas Union Bookstores
Present:
HEWLETT PACKARD DAY
April 17th ONLY 9:00 am-5:00 pm
Save 10% on H.P.33E & 38E Models Plus-
Receive *10^00 Software FREE!
Save 10-60% on other selected models and accessories.
—And—
Register for the Hewlett Packard Give-Away on May 1st.
HP-38E
BANKNOTE
$120
- A Hewlett Packard expert will be in the store to demonstrate your favorite H.P. model and answer all your questions.
- HEWLETT PACKARD is the student's choice, the professional's
choice and the logical choice.
We are the ONLY bookstore that shares its profits with K.U. students.
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master charge
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YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
Tuesday, April 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
3
Hall residents to get IDs
A decision to issue residence hall IDs in addition to KU IDs was made Friday at a meeting in the office of residential programs, Fred McElhene, director of the office of residential programs, said yesterday.
McEhennie said that a separate card would be the "most manageable" system that could be used to identify hall residents.
A plan to place a sticker on the KU ID card to prove a student was a hall resident once was proposed. McElleban said, but a sticker is transferable, thus defeating its purpose.
McEhennie said the hall ID would be used with the KU ID to prevent non-hall residents from parking in hall lots and use hall equipment.
The ID also would be used for security purposes, he said.
City to discuss annexing, letter
The Lawrence City Commission will consider an ordinance that would annex 100 acres belonging to the Lawrence Municipal Airport at its meeting at 7 tonight.
The commission also will receive a letter from the Lawrence Residents for a Radioactive-Free Kansas that calls for a ban on radioactive materials within the city limits. Rezoning items approved March 16 will be considered by the Commission also will be considered.
The meeting will be on the fourth floor of
the Trinity National Bank Building at Ninth
and Third Avenues.
"Persons who don't belong in a hall can be challenged by security."
If they do not have a ball ID card, they may be asked to leave, he said.
McEibie also said the card would be made "as versatile as possible."
If a student wants to use dark room equipment, for example, he may be required to attend a seminar to make sure he knows how to use it properly. McEilien said.
"The equipment will stay where it belongs and in good shape," he said.
Then, he said, an emblem may be punched into the card to show that the resident is proficient in the use of the specified equipment.
Bill Candlin, administrative officer for
bouncing, said that the separate card system
would be installed.
Candiann said the cards would be paid for
for housing funds, but he could not estimate
the cost.
He explained that if a student used equipment without proving he was a hall wailer, the judge would allow him to
The office of residential programs will prepare cards and probably will distribute them as part of a hall check-in packet in the fall, McElbieen said.
Entry deadline tomorrow
Local artists have until tomorrow to enter their works in the 18th annual Art in the Park exhibition.
Interested artists can pick up entry forms at room 300 of the Visual Arts Building; the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets; the South Park
or the Conservation Center, 1141 Massachusetts St.;
R recreation Library, Public Library, 707 Ver-
sus Drive.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
On Campus
TONIGHT:STEPHEN J. GOULD, from Harvard University, will speak on "The Spandrels of St. Marks and the Front Lages of Tyrannosaurus A: Critique of the Adaptation Mechanism for Survival." The morphology Lecture at 8 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. SEAN MURPHY, Topkena senior, will present a vocal student recital at 8 in Swarthout Recall Hall in Murphy Hall. LAMBDA SIGMA will meet at 15 in the International Room of the University.
TOMORROW: ROBERT FLUKER will speak on "Multinational Corporations—A Threat to the Free Enterprise System" at The University of Chicago's 1204 Orca. THE UNIVERSITY EVENTS
COMMITTEE will have an open meeting at 3:30 in the International Room of the Union. THE PSYCHOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 in Frozen. The KANSAS ASSOCIATION OF MEDICAL AFFAIRS Area I will hold its spring meeting at 4:45 in the Jayhawk and Karares Rooms of the Union. The KU HONORS STUDENTS will meet at 7 in the Pine Room of the Union. The KU HONORS STUDENTS will meet at the Union Parlors. JOIN DEFRIES will give an anthropology lecture on "Genetics of Reading Disability," at 7 in the Council Room of the Union. The KU TUBA ENEMESM will attend a lecture on student recital at in Spooner Hall, ADOLF SEILACHER will speak on "Origin of
Bituminous Slashes: Laissez Example from Southern Germany," at 7 in 428 Lindley Hall. The SIERRA CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the International Room in the Union. In 179, it will meet again at 173 Robinson. THE CENTER FOR HUMANISTIC STUDIES "Signs, Symbols and Communications" lecture will be given by Professor Twatan Todovor at 8 in the Library of the University of FIR, pianist, will perform in a Fine Arts Visiting Artists Series Percival at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. ROBERT BAIRD will speak on "Religious Religious" T.M. and Krishna Consciousness Courts," at 8 in room 100 of Smith Hall.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of other sources.
APRIL 17, 1979
Drop the host program
While it was not the sort of news that would rock Strong Hall, the announcement last week of the dermis of the Sunflower girls was a small but encouraging sign that the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation is slowly beginning to recognize the realities of the 1970s, not to mention Title IX.
Bruce Mays, assistant men's athletic director, bore the good news that the Sunflower Girls, a group of female KU students designed to escort athletic recruits about campus and induce them to sign with KU, no longer would exist as before.
UNFORTUNATELY, that announcement was tempered by the news that a similar group would still function at KU, but would involve men as well as women.
"We need a variety of students to show our prospective athletes around the campus," Mays said. "There are
some places girls can't take guys, like into the locker room after a game or to a fraternity."
While that undoubtedly is true, it remains questionable whether hosts or hostesses are needed to lure high school students to KU. The idea of super-hyped hucksters out hawking for college courses on what new repellent at what some prefer to consider an academic institution.
And the host program costs money. Given the questionable value of the program in the first place, it is almost unbelievable that the KUAC would find a place for it in its budget. Despite the fact that much of KUAC's money comes from private sources, it seems likely that there could be more beneficial uses for it.
In fact, the most beneficial thing KU could do would be to end the hosting program entirely.
The verdict read as follows: The Cavalier Daily is guilty as charged for failing to bow to the University of Virginia and refusing to recognize the University Media Board's
The sentencing came immediately after the verdict: Permission to use university records was granted.
Students defend Constitutional right
Such was the fate of the Cavallier Daily, the student newspaper at the University of Pittsburgh, where we were forced to pack clusters of supplies, leave their Newcomb Hall residence and head across Charlottesville to a new location where they hoped to continue publishing.
THE EXPULSION had come after weeks of controversy concerning the Cavalier daily editors' refusal to recognize a Media Board established by the university to oversee student publications and radio media but not the Cavalier Daily had agreed.
The Media Board, established in 1976 by the university's Board of Visitors, comprises 13 students and has the authority to require all materials published require the paper to publish corrections, retractions and letters to the editor. The Board of Visual Arts also students saw that authority as censorship.
The Cavalier Daily only had to be printed away from home for one day. The editors invited students to attend a workshop allow the paper back on campus. But the questions raised by the university actions
Sold the American Civil Liberties Union, several Washington lawyers and Virginia graduates from around the country. Also, some students went to a stratification against the action and there was talk of boycotting classes at the time of the agreement. Before the agreement, the
Mary
Ernst
editors had said they might have gone to court to seek an order restoring the copyright.
HOWEVER, WILLIAM L. Zummer,
chairman of the Board of Visitors, was
content to let the paper stay off campus
indefinitely.
"If they can publish a private newspaper, that's their prerogative," he said. "There wasn't any intention at all to control it. It was intended as proper supervision."
The proper supervision that Zimmer and the Board of Visitors called for, he said, required the Cavalier Daily to "correct ethics" and by a code of journalistic ethics.
The student-run newspaper has been "somewhat irritant in refusing to recognize the authority of the university," Zimmer added.
While Zimmer accurately described the editors as "irritant" in their refusal to respect the university's authority, he was understanding why they so were irritated.
WHAT THE student editors were refusing
to respect was the right of any group—not just the University of Virginia—to dictate what would be taught.
Stephen Retherford', deputy director of the Virginia chapter of the ACLU, said, "There is a First Amendment issue, but it's not clear cut. If the Media Board was set up to harass or intimidate the editorial staff, there may be a First Amendment issue."
Other legal services also came to the aid of the Cavalier Daily, Attorney Mike Simpson of the Reporters' Committee for Freedom of the Press in Washington called the Cavalier Daily "one of the best student newspapers in the country.
"The question of how fully a university can control a student newspaper has not been litigated," Simpson said. "This could be attest case."
INDEED, THE powers that the Media board were given may not have been inducted into the group. Staff very likely would have been intimidated who they chosen to recognize the powers.
And that is just what the student editors did in their agreement with the university, to use the office space and equipment, the technology to recognize the authority of the Media Board—but only until August 30, 1979, at which point the Daily Will be free of university control.
The students said they thought they won. They will have editorial independence next
fall after agreeing to begin payments on the equipment.
But there are still questions left unanswered.
FEW NEWSPAPERS would agree to have such an authority over them if they could avoid it. However, student newspapers, faced with an economic dependency on a university, often face pressures to allow such a board to govern which letters they publish, and how they make corrections and who is to remain on their editorial board.
The Cavalier Daily, in a brave move that could have canceled publication for the first time in the paper's 89-year history, chose to stand up, at least initially, to the authority of Mr. Gates with the board for several months, the Cavalier Daily may have indeed won its battle.
But in rejecting the Media Board's authority, the editors of the Cavalier Day were perhaps揭穿 the Board of Visitors' role in disseminating the nalistic code of ethics—one that stated they would do their best to provide the public information that is free of any outside
And the actions of the Cavalier Daily editors also showed that they, more than anyone else involved, believed in the validity of the rights of freedom of the press as guaranteed by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
South African investments deplorable
To the editor:
The KU Endowment Association presently owns more than $7 million worth of shares in companies that operate face-to-face with the community. The total value is probably considerably higher than $7 million; we have had access thus far to only a partial listing of the Endowment Association's corporate holdings. The KU Endowment Association has many millions of dollars in banks that have made massive loans to the white-dominated South African regime. KU Endowment Association money has indvertently helped racialism has racist economy and a brutal police state.
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
In response to pressures from American campuses, many of the U.S. corporations in South Africa have recently begun to desegregate their factories' restroom facilities and other spaces symbols of racism that have proven embarrassing to them back in the United States. But the basic structure of racist exploitation in these factories remains unaltered. These companies continue to employ African-Americans close to slavery, with their poorly paid workers chained to them by the pass laws and other repressive government edicts. These corporations, in turn, help prop up the South African economy by providing the industrial infrastructure that South Africa needs but cannot erect on its own.
South Africa presents an especially shocking case of exploitation of man by man. Its government's political philosophy is comparable in many respects to Nazism. It has been accused of the majority of the population are inferior beings who are to be ruled over and exploited for the benefit of the master race. it is little wonder that many of the most prominent leaders of South Africa spent billions II in prison as active Nazi supporters.
In South Africa today, millions of Africans have been forced to live in barbed-wire compounds, manhole covers and railway crossings. Any and all resistance, even if entirely peaceable, has been met by imprisonment, exile, and frequently (according to the United Nations) reports by officially sanctioned torture.
Several dozen universities have already decided they can no longer profit from such a viciously exploitative system. They have decided they can no longer in good faith hold stocks in corporations with factories in South Africa or hold deposits in the banks that lend money to the South African states, Massachusetts, Michigan State University, the Ohio Oregon, the University of Illinois, Columbia lengthening list of universities and colleges that have divested. We strongly urge the KU Endowment Association to join them.
Though repression exists in many other countries, the policies of South Africa provide for the systematic destruction of human rights on a particularly massive scale and in an abnormally racist form unique in the world today. The United States formally declared South Africa's aparthat a "Crime Against Humanity."
Yet American corporations participate in this crime. Their activities in South Africa have invariably contributed to and profited from apartheid. All companies there are provided with a black labor force that can be jailed for organizing fraternity groups or restricting their rights as workers. Even more insidiously, the vast black majority of the people must at all times carry passes and if they try resigning from their jobs their passes become invalid, and they consequently risk arrest and enforced banishment to a barren reserve in the deserts. There, without any possibilities they may and their families face slow starvation.
Claude S. Hunter
Chairman, KU Committee
on South Africa
Everybody loses if KU divests holding
To the editor:
In reference to all of the anti-South African investment people, we feel we must put in a word or two for the Endowment Association.
First off, it must be made very clear that we are totally against apartheid, and all types of racial discrimination. The present government in South Africa is unjust and promotes apartheid. We can see that this is true and cannot be denied. But this is not the only way to prevent it. The point is: what to do with KU's $ million investment in South Africa?
The anti-investment people want KU to pull its $7 million out of American business operating in South Africa. For the majority of investors, the situation is insane. There are many people who could care less about any "social responsibility" to the people in South Africa at all, and KU's investment would quickly be on the market by those who desire profit.
The investments in South Africa are basically high-risk and high-return investments, and many people and businesses are kept alive by such investments. So why should KU throw away this high-return investment? So that all the whining ant-investors can sleep better? KU dvigesture is better than acquaintance, accomplish nothing but that. And we will lose a high-return on investment that is hard to find in other corporations.
We will lose a return on investment that produces scholarships, provides loans, builds special-purpose buildings and adds collections to our libraries and museums. So what is the point of divesting? All KU will be lose money, so that the campus “does not matter” (in fact, it maximally responsible) will be happy. And this is not enough reason to divest, to save the least.
And in response to the March 29 letter of Veronica Cruz, we must say that if the "boy" (her words) doesn't like his $84 a day she would not hand it over not handcuffed and chained to home and can leave if he wants. There are many jobless people who live on less than that, and would be more happy to have his job, but they don't need her." She doesn't need him, he needs her.
Ask him where he'll work if she fires him. And ask all the corporate-employees blacks where and what they do when and if the corporations pull out. Nothing! The corporations pull out, and all our little-investors will be happy. Their final goal would be accomplished.
No changes will occur in South Africa when KU pulls its paltry $7 million out. If KU's investment was held in one corporation that promoted apartheid—to whose end KU's money was vital—the story would be different. But this is not the case.
But now, blacks will starve, riot, murder, etc., because there will be no jobs or money to hire them as employees. If this is the result of unequal treatment of everyone loses; from the corporations to KU to the now-employed black. Is economic collapse what the anti-environment people believe?
But of course not! The anti-investors will claim, "This is not what we wanted! We want an end to apartheid, with no other consequences." Unfortunately, that is not the way he be. And the anti-investors will try to keep the only natural end to their brother cause.
they base their arguments on and carry them to their fullest consequences. Since they seem to be unable to see beyond the moment, we felt he had to do it for them.
Perhaps they should check the premises
Doug Gentile
Olathe junior
Tom Wayne
Prairie Village
Governor continues breaking promises
To the editor:
If any of the citizens of Kansas are keeping score, they can put another check mark under the John Carlin he column. For the second time in the governor's short term he has broken another promise to the residents of Kansas. Although he stated he was against it, he still stands in the way of the bill if it were passed by both the House and the Senate. Well, the bill was passed by them both, and he did stand in the way.
His first lie came when he said he was going to control or even stop the rising temperature in those words, but he made the people think he could do this. Soon after Carlin took office his head was made to be unmovable and should be no way to control the utility sales tax.
The point is not whether the death penalty is right or wrong, the point is that Carlin is saying one thing to the public and doing the other. Carlin is the ideal governor for Kansas. His mind is like the weather, it changes day by day.
Why should the residents waste their time going to the polls electing representatives and senators when the governor does not have a voice in the state government. Gov. Carlin desires to return to his dairy farm instead of returning to the governor's office. Perhaps if the governor keeps going at the rate he is now, the Republicans, come together for a single vote. Then the governor's office with a write-in vote.
In the 1976 elections, the Democrats called for their party to unite on both the national and state levels. It seems that they have done that, for both levels seem to be seeing how many promises they can make and then see if they can keep from meeting any of them. They are trying to see how many leaders they can get into only term. But perhaps that is the whole Democratic platform, promise a lot and deliver little, if anything at all.
If Gov. Carlin continues to change his mind, the citizens will be able to exercise their blessful right to change their minds, in a successful process change governers in the next election.
Chad Williams Kingman freshman
Prof's name used without his consent
To the editor:
Some announcements have been done on campus at the University of the Sponsors in Island's lecture. My name was used without my knowledge or consent. I am in no way a sponsor of that
Richard T. DeGeorge professor of philosophy
I.H.P.
RIP
WHEN
ADMINISTRATION
MARTIN
THE DAILY RANKAN
Radiation suggestive of atomic blasts
By FRED C. ESPLIN N.Y. Times Feature
HERSHEY, Pa.—I have a sense of deja vow about what is happening southwest of me at Three Mile Island. When I was very young and lived 2,200 miles away in southern Utah, something similar happened. The Nevada desert 100 miles south of Cedar Falls, Utah, had a site of atmospheric nuclear tests during the 1959s. Children and parents watched the flashes in the sky and felt the ground tremble. It was a show, close enough to enjoy but far enough to let us feel safe. What we didn't know was that winds carried radioactive particles that settled on our gardens, in our water supplies and on the grass our cattle grazed
We were told that there was no danger. And we believed it. Any birth defects, sickness or death in the years that followed, would have been missed. When the tests went underground, we missed the shows but didn't think much about it. Having to face the leukemia death of a schoolmate was a childhood trauma, so I had to bring my parents or I connected with the tests.
11. **WASN'T** until I read recently about a government report on the unusually high number of migrants.
my homeetown that things began to add up. A Public Health Service study in 1965, never released until this January because it was too soon. The number of an unusually high number of leukemia deaths was occurring among Utah residents exposed to radioactive fallout from atomic reactors.
I think the fallout we experienced endangered all of us, and may have killed some of us. Now we understand the risks of such exposure to radiation, and the kind of incident that happened in southern Utah 30 years ago is unthinkable. But again I find myself, now with children—sons, 5 and 3 years old and 11 months old —on the edge of a disaster. We are assured that there that is no need to panic or to evacuate. We are asked to trust. Can we? Maybe it is a minor incident. Maybe not.
IF LIVING this close to a nuclear power plant is a hazard, I begin to think, maybe I ought to job a elsewhere. But where? When we left Washington, D.C., central Pennsylvania seemed an attractive alternative to the hassle of the city.
These past weeks have taken the edge off the attraction. Where do you go to escape the threat of an environment polluted with nuclear refuse? Farther east, farther west,
The Midwest? Or, do you learn to put up with it as the price for living in an industrial society becoming increasingly dependent on nuclear energy?
YES, YES, NASTY STUFF THAT RADIATION SKORES BUT IF YOU DON'T FRY THIS OVERDUE BILL NOW I'M AFRAID WE'RE GOING TO HAVE TO CUT OFF YOUR POWER...
What happened at Three Mile Island is a grim reminder that we haven't left behind us the risk of repeating the tragedy in southern Utah. It is still with us. What is to be done? The vast expanses apparently we still do not know as much as we think we do about safety harnessing nuclear power. I also ponder the irony of being at the sites of both of the biggest nuclear accidents to occur in America. Then it's time to look further, as we escaped the residue of the mishap. But these are not issues I expect to resolve in my own mind for a long time.
Fred C. Esplin directs program development for $ \mathbf{f q} $ WITF-TV and WITF-FM, Hershey, Pa.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
USPS $65-649 Published at the University of Kentucky for use in Kentucky Monday through Thursday during June and July. Second class payable at Lawrence, Kansas $69-849 Subscriptions year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $1 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $1 a year in Douglas County and $1 a semester. $2 a semester, paid through the student acce
Bord changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence. KS 66453.
Editor
Barry Massley
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
Deputy Principal John Whitteen
Dire Stettner
Campus Editor
Assistant Campus Editors
Associate Campus Editors
Graphics Editor
Special Sections Editor
Editor
Editor
John Whitesteads
Mary Housen
John Housen
Carol Hunter
Kevin
Dryden Olson
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Sandy Hood
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Grand Runner
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Rice Muster
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Grand Runner
Tuesday. April 17. 1979
5
University Daily Kansan
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Protest features anti-nuclear skits
By RON BAIN Staff Reporter
Friday's protest against nuclear power seemed to draw more people than previous demonstrations, Gary Thompson, president of the KU Ecology Club, said yesterday.
"I think the momentum is growing," he said.
About 200 persons gathered in front of Watson library to protest nuclear energy and the construction of the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant near Burlington.
Members of the Kansas Natural Guard presented a "Guerilla Theatre," a series of cameras that captured energy's effects on people. Protesters drums as a memo pad and pencil, a crocodile, a Nikon camera and a little girl roamed around the theater with ping-pong balls for onlooker
IN ONE LENGTH ski, narrated by an anonymous reporter, the University of Kansas campus was radioactive after auming a stream of fluoride even Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
IN THE SKIT Dykes reached "critical mass" and "exploded." Later, a protester dressed in a scientist's smock appeared and said he was the spirit of Albert Einstein
Other protesters sang the public protest songs, such as "This land is Your Land" and "Will the Circle be Unbroken," as well as "Women Are Not Wrong," such as "Swing Low, Sweet Cherry Power."
returned to Earth to apologize for discovering the theory behind nuclear energy.
Alan Nelson, a facilities Operations employee who sold T-shirts at the rally, reported that a large number of
NELISON SAID HE thought more people had become interested in the anti-nuclear movement since the Three Mile Island nuclear accident occurred.
An observer at the rally, Sean Santoro, Lawrence special student, said his mind was not made up about the safety of nuclear weapons in case the accident had not changed that indication.
The protester dressed as a Nikon camera, Marshall Fittler, Overland Park said his contempt had nothing to do with the arrests he held at KU by the KU Police Department.
"But the burden of proof rests with those who promote it," Santoro said.
"Nikson doesn't make video-tape nikon, do they?" Fleitman asked, loudly.
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Who is "Numero Uno"? Bud Greenspan
Producer of "The Olympiad," *Wilma*, and widely recognized writer, director, and Olympic expert presents the first public showing of Numero Uno. A series of thirteen hall hour documentaries on legendary world sports will lend documentary and offer his opinion as to who is "Numero Uno."
Admission: Free Wednesday, April 18, 1979 8:00 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom
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The Manhattan Psychiatric Clinic Presents A Day With Dr. William Glasser Featuring A Seminar On "Reality Therapy" Monday and Tuesday-April 23 and 24
Monday and Tuesday—April 23 and 24
The Manhattan Psychiatric Clinic is pleased to bring Dr Glasser to our area. His outstanding work in Reality Therapy has proved successful in all areas.
The seminar consists of an evening session beginning at 7:00 p.m.
April 23 which will be held at the First United Methodist Church at Sixth
and Poyntz, and all day session 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., April 24, to be held
at the same location
Both sessions will be personally conducted by Dr. Glasser
The price of admission is $6.00 per session both hours
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
It is not advisable to attend the all day session without attending the evening session as well.
Additional information is available by calling Dr. Bruce M. Burdick, Director, or Mrs. Lee Fieldson, Administrative Assistant of the Manhattan Psychiatric Clinic, Area Code 9137-736-9411
Registration will begin at 6:15 a.m. for April 20th.
24 Registration will begin at 6:15 p.m. for April 23 and at 8:00 a.m. for April
Continuing Education Credits are being required
Graduation Announcements & Ring Day Special
The Life and Times
Pick up or Order your graduation announcements NOW at the Kansas Union Bookstore
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Tuesday, April 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Weekend one of baseball's best
Sports Writer
Bv TONY FITTS
The Kansas baseball team completed one of its most successful weekends in history last night by splitting a doubleheader with the Oklahoma City victory, the 13th-ranked team in the nation.
On Saturday, the Jayhawks won both games of a doubleheader with Oklahoma. It was the first time KU had swept the Sooners in seven straight games and had won any game from OU since 1973.
"I can't be unhappy with three out of four against the two Oklahoma schools," KU coach Floyd Temple said last night, "because they're fine ballclubs."
Terry Sutcliffe was the star for KU in the
first Oklahoma game, pitching a three-hitter in a 4-6 victory. In the second game, Monty Martin knocked in the go-ahead run and hit the final score as well as wall in the fourth innings. RUW, won 6-2.
Yesterday, KU ralled from a two-run deficit with a three-run seventh inning to defeat Oklahoma State 4-3 in the first game. There were two out when Brian Gray struck a double to the fence, scoring two to tie the game. St. Louis had single-hit the game.
KEVIN KERSCHEN got the victory for Kansas, allowing six hits and one earned run in the game.
It was GSU's turn to rally in the second game, Kansas was ahead 4-1 until the fifth.
when KU let the Cowboys score on an error.
OSU tied it up in the sixth with a two-run
homer by Duane Evans, who leads the Big
Eight in home runs with 12.
The game went into extra innings. KU had a chance to win it in the eighth with the bases loaded, but the Jayhawks could not get a run across. Bruce Kastle batted in the winning run with a triple in the ninth. OSU won 5-4.
"When you've got a 4-1 lead in the fourth, you would think you could put in your defensive players and hold them." Temple said. "But we just didn't make the play."
Netters win conference tourney
The KU women's tennis team scored 63 points, four more than favorite Oklahoma, to win the Big Eight Conference championship on Saturday weekend on the Allen Field House courts.
The Jayhawks won three singles championships and one doubles championship. In No. 1 singles, Katie Fopotoupis beat Kristensen, K-Sarie, 6-2, 6-4; lost to Robbins (OU), 6-1, 24-6; and lost to Cunningham (US), 6-3, 6-2. Fopotoupis placed fourth.
'Hawks win Big 8
KU's closest game was in the semifinals of NCAA Tournament, held off Iowa State University to win 3-2.
Kansas went 4-0 this weekend and won the Big Eight softball championship in Fort Dodge.
Pitcher Shelley Sinclair paced Puckas with three victories, including a one-hitter. She was named to the all-tournament team along with shortstop Kelly Phipps, third baseman Jill Larson and second baseman Jalie Snodgrass.
Kansas plays Kansas State University to day in Manhattan.
LOVE RECORDS AND TAPES
Paraphernalia
842-3059 15 W. 9th St.
Admiral Car Rental
Toyota
Firebird
Buick Regal
Monte Carlo
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Mark
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2340 Alabama
843 2931
KAW RIVER RIVALRY
K. U. vs. K. State CANOE RACE April 28th & 29th Details at the HAWK
2.
Great Morners
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEM
Cheese Emporium
Eat In or Carry Out
Sandwiches
Meats
Soups
Cheeses
Holiday Plaza - 23th & Iowa
Clay Christiansen, now 12, pitched most of the game for Kansas. He said he felt like he was better than anyone.
In No. 2 singles, Val Block won the championship with victories over Pavekla, NU, 6-1; 6-1; Moreland, UO, 7-6; 6-2; and Chase, CU, 6-4; 7-6, 6-2.
In No. 3 simples, Mary Staffer bed Edwards, ISU, 6-2; BU, shields, ISU, 6-3; 5-2; 6-2; McPhail, CU, 6-3, 6-2, to win that bracket.
IN NO. 4 SINGLES, Shari Schruffer schreut Cohn, KSU, 6-2; 6-10, Wilson, MU, 6-1-4; and lost to Brennen, OU, 6-2; 6-1, to place second.
In No. 5 singles, Kathy Merrion beat Schmitz, NU, 6-1; NU, 6-0; lost to O'Bryan, UU, 6-4; 2-6, 7-4; and beat Guilfoil, MU, 6-2; 6-4 for third
In No. 6 singles, Lissa Leonard beat Dankle, IU 5-2; K-2-6, beat INU, OM 4, 6-2; and beat Krupnick, beU 6-1, 3-6, 2-4, for the championship.
Fotopoulos and blocked team to win the No. 1 doubles bracket. The team of Stauffer and Schrufer placed second in No. 2 division and No. 3. Merrion-Leonard finished third.
Tigers rout Royals
KU plays the Kansas City Royals in an exhibition game at Royals Stadium tomorrow at 1 p.m. There will be no admission charge, and the stadium gates open at 12:30. Marty Pattin will start on the mound for the Royals. Terry Sutcliffe will start for KU.
From the Kansas's Wire Services
DETREXTON
Rodriguez and Alan Trammell drove in two runs each yesterday to lead the Detroit Tigers to a 10-4 win over the Kansas City
From the Kensan's Wire Services
Larry Gura was pounded for eight hits and nine runs, five of them earned, and five walks in 1 to 13 innings. Both teams had 16 hits, and the catcher Darrell Porter who went 3 for 4.
Temple said, "I was really pleased with Clav. He deserved a better fate."
"WE SHOULD HAVE beat them," Christian斯 said after the game. "I made one bad pitch and he (Evan) yanked it on me. I've been a little upsight in the past few weeks, but today I felt really loose. It was because we won the first game."
FREE Airform!
SHEAR DIMENSIONS
4' KOPIES
"No minimum"
kinko's
504 Vermont
842 391-7400
with every Haircut at
Office Hours
Monday 1:30pm-4:30pm/211 Carruth-O'Leary
Don't Forget
Thursday 1:00-4:00pm/211 Carruth-O'Leary
Friday 9:00am-12:00pm/211 Carruth'O'Leary
Tuesday 6:30pm-9:00pm/Senate office
Deadline April 20,1979— Level 3 107 B Kansas Union
Appointment only Monday, Thursday, Friday
Phone 864-5665
Student Legal Services are available
REGALIA & SR. CLASS GIFT
Auditions for the Town/Gown Production of South Pacific
Cruce to the auditions with music prepared to sing selections from *Broadway*
The University of Kansas Theatre Announcements
mindset. An accompaniment will be provided. Please wear clothing comfortable to dance in as dance mindsets may be included.
For further details, contact Dr. Tom Rea University Theatre/864-3944
Saturday, April 21 1:00-400 p.m.
(Callbacks: Sunday, April 22 1:00-4:00 p.m.
102 Murphy Hall (Band Room)
South Pacific will be performed during July
with selections in the cinémas in June
Be an active part
Standing Committees HOPE AWARD
CLASS UNIFICATION
PROMOTIONS &
ADVERTISING
SR. CLASS—
Apply now for 1979-1980
JR'S
HOMECOMING BANNER
of next years
SUA
ACADEMY AWARDS CONTEST WINNERS
1st Prize (10 movie passes & GWTW poster):
Doug Levine
3rd Prize (4 movie passes & poster):
Howard Baulek
2nd Prize (6. movie passes & poster):
Ken Jones
4th-12th Prizes (2 movie passes & poster):
Chuck Carpenter
Lisa Hoerath
Rick Quinlan
Carla Labunski
Lisa Hoerath
Rick Quinley
David Dart
Dana Richardson
Chris Shields
Kimberly Williams
Julie Van Pelt
NOTE: If you won a prize,
please pick it up at the
SUA Office in the Kansas
Union as soon as possible.
Poster choice is limited.
. . Direct From Ireland . .
sua films
--with
. . present . . . In concert . . .
TONIGHT!!! LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE and NEO-SPACE, INC.
EUROPE'S HOTTEST ROCK GROUP-
THE BOOMTOWN RATS
A TONIC FOR THE TROOPS
ON COLUMBIA RECORDS, CASSETTES AND 8-TRACK TAPES.
... Wednesday, April 18th ...
Lost Record Recording Artists RED WILLOW BAND
FREE BEER KEGGER NIGHT free beer & texas setups from 8:00-12:00
Women $2.00 Men $3.00
. . . Friday, April 20th . . .
"GATEMOUTH"
BROWN
THE MUSIC OF RYAN GREEN
Pett County
Pork Bean
Band
Tickets on sale now for:
tickets on sale now for:
EARL SCRUGGS
SPIRO GYRA
DAVID GRISMAN
ASLEEP at the WHEEL
Tickets available at Better Days & the 7th Spirit Club.
Doors open at 8:00 Show at 9:00
The Lawrence Opera House 7th Spirit Club
842-6930 1042 Mass.
Tuesday, April 17. 1979
7
Kansas Relays set 54th start for tomorrow
The 54th Kansas Relays begin tomorrow in Memorial Stadium with the first half of the race on Sunday.
For Friday's events, KU students will be admitted to the stadium for $1.50 with identification. General admission will be $2.50 and high school admission will be $1.50.
There is no admission charge for tomorrow's and Thursday's events. Junior college events will be Thursday at Haskell Indian Junior College.
on Saturday, the next day. NO students will be admitted for $2 with identification.
8:00 100-meter dash
9:00 Long jump
10:00 Shot put
12:00 High jump
13:00 Jump high
14:00 Jump down
15:00 Jump down
and general admission will be $3. Grade
and high school students will be admitted
ORDER OF EVENTS
Wednesday, April 18
attività/at-KU
8:00 10-meter hurdle
9:00 Duck throw
10:00 Pole vault
11:30 Javelin throw
Thursday, April 19
Decathlon-Invitational-at KU
1. 60,000m run - decathlon
2. 50,000m run - decathlon
3. 80,000m run - col leg fin - men finish
4. Half Marathon 60,000m run - finish - female finish
5. Decathlon medal relay - decathlon - female finish
6. Decathlon medal relay - decathlon - female finish
7. One mile run - high school final - female finish
8. One mile run - high school final - female finish
1:00 Long jump—jr col. men→prelims and finals
1:00 Lazevin throw—jr col. women→prelims and finals
Field events - at Haskell Indian Junior College 1354
Track events-atKU
2. 00 Javelin throw—pr.col.men—prelims and finals
0 00 Haugh jump -j -col men -finals
0 00 Long jump -j -col women -premium -finals
1.00 Tissue throw – j-p col men– prelums and finals
2.00 Shot put – j-p col women– peelings and finals
3.00 High jump – i-p col men– finals
300 High jump - jr. col. women - finals
300 High jump - jr. col. men - prelims and finals
University Daily Kansan
Trackevents-at Haskell
1.200 10,000 mate run - jr-col men-finale
1.201 10,000 mate run - jr-col men-prelims
1.202 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.203 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.204 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.205 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.206 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.207 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.208 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.209 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.210 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.211 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.212 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.213 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.214 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.215 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.216 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.217 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.218 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.219 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.220 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.221 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.222 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.223 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.224 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.225 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.226 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.227 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.228 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.229 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.230 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.231 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.232 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.233 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.234 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.235 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.236 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.237 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.238 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.239 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.240 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.241 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.242 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.243 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.244 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.245 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.246 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.247 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.248 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.249 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.250 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.251 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.252 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.253 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.254 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.255 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.256 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.257 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.258 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.259 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.260 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.261 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.262 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.263 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.264 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.265 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.266 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.267 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.268 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.269 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.270 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.271 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.272 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.273 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.274 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.275 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.276 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.277 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.278 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.279 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.280 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.281 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.282 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.283 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.284 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.285 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.286 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.287 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.288 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.289 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.290 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.291 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.292 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.293 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.294 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.295 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.296 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.297 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.298 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.299 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.300 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.301 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.302 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.303 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.304 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.305 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.306 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.307 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.308 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.309 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.310 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.311 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.312 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.313 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.314 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.315 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.316 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.317 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.318 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.319 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.320 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.321 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.322 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.323 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.324 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.325 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.326 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.327 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.328 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.329 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.330 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.331 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.332 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.333 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.334 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.335 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.336 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.337 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.338 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.339 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.340 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.341 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.342 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.343 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.344 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.345 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.346 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.347 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.348 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.349 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.350 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.351 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.352 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.353 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.354 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.355 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.356 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.357 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.358 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.359 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.360 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.361 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.362 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.363 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.364 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.365 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.366 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.367 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.368 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.369 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.370 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.371 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.372 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.373 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.374 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.375 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.376 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.377 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.378 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.379 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.380 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.381 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.382 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.383 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.384 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.385 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.386 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.387 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.388 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.389 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.390 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.391 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.392 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.393 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.394 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.395 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.396 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.397 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.398 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.399 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.400 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.401 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.402 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.403 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.404 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.405 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.406 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.407 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.408 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.409 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.410 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.411 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.412 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.413 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.414 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.415 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.416 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.417 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.418 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.419 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.420 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.421 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.422 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.423 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.424 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.425 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.426 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.427 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.428 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.429 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.430 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.431 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.432 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.433 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.434 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.435 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.436 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.437 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.438 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.439 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.440 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.441 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.442 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.443 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.444 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.445 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.446 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.447 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.448 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.449 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.450 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.451 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.452 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.453 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.454 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.455 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.456 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.457 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.458 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.459 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.460 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.461 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.462 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.463 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.464 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.465 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.466 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.467 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.468 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.469 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.470 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.471 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.472 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.473 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.474 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.475 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.476 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.477 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.478 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.479 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.480 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.481 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.482 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.483 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.484 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.485 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.486 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.487 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.488 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.489 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.490 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.491 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.492 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.493 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.494 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.495 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.496 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.497 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.498 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.499 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.500 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.501 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.502 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.503 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.504 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.505 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.506 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.507 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.508 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.509 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.510 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.511 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.512 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.513 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.514 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.515 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.516 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.517 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.518 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.519 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.520 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.521 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.522 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.523 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.524 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.525 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.526 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.527 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.528 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.529 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.530 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.531 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.532 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.533 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.534 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.535 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.536 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.537 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.538 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.539 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.540 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.541 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.542 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.543 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.544 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.545 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.546 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.547 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.548 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.549 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.550 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.551 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.552 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.553 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.554 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.555 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.556 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.557 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.558 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.559 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.560 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.561 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.562 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.563 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.564 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.565 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.566 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.567 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.568 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.569 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.570 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.571 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.572 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.573 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.574 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.575 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.576 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.577 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.578 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.579 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.580 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.581 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.582 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.583 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.584 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.585 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.586 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.587 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.588 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.589 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.590 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.591 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.592 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.593 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.594 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.595 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.596 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.597 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.598 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.599 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.600 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.601 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.602 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.603 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.604 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.605 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.606 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.607 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.608 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.609 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.610 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.611 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.612 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.613 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.614 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.615 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.616 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.617 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.618 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.619 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.620 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.621 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.622 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.623 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.624 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.625 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.626 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.627 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.628 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.629 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.630 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.631 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.632 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.633 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.634 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.635 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.636 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.637 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.638 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.639 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.640 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.641 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.642 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.643 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.644 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.645 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.646 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.647 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.648 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.649 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.650 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.651 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.652 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.653 10,000 mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.654 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.655 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.656 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.657 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.658 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.659 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.660 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.661 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.662 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.663 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.664 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.665 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.666 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.667 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.668 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.669 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.670 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.671 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.672 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.673 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.674 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.675 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.676 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.677 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.678 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.679 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.680 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.681 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.682 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.683 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.684 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.685 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.686 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.687 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.688 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.689 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.690 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.691 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.692 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.693 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.694 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.695 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.696 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.697 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.698 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.699 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.700 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.701 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.702 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.703 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.704 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.705 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.706 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.707 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.708 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.709 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.710 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.711 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.712 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.713 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.714 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.715 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.716 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.717 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.718 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.719 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.720 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.721 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.722 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.723 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.724 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.725 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.726 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.727 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.728 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.729 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.730 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.731 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.732 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.733 10,000mate run - jr-col women-prelims
1.734
4.00 Discus throw -jr col women-prelims and
h=1...k=8
4:00 Shot put - j-r col, men - pretems and finals
4:00 High jump - i-r col, warpemen - finals
7.00 Spend relayy delay - jr .col men-prelim-
7.01 Spend relayy delay - jr .col men-prelim-
7.02 148 mech run - jr .col men-finals
7.03 148 mech run - jr .col men-finals
7.04 100 mech durab - jr .col men-finals
7.05 100 mech durab - jr .col men-finals
7.06 100 mech durab - jr .col men-finals
7.07 100 mech durab - jr .col men-finals
7.08 100 mech durab - jr .col men-finals
7.09 100 mech durab - jr .col men-finals
7.10 118 mech burial - jr .col men-finals
7.11 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.12 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.13 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.14 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.15 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.16 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.17 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.18 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.19 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.20 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.21 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.22 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.23 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.24 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.25 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.26 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.27 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.28 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.29 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.30 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.31 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.32 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.33 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.34 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.35 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.36 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.37 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.38 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.39 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.40 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.41 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.42 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.43 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.44 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.45 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.46 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.47 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.48 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.49 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.50 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.51 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.52 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.53 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.54 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.55 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.56 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.57 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.58 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.59 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.60 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.61 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.62 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.63 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.64 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.65 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.66 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.67 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.68 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.69 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.70 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.71 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.72 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.73 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.74 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.75 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.76 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.77 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.78 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.79 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.80 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.81 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.82 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.83 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.84 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.85 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.86 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.87 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.88 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.89 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.90 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.91 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.92 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.93 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.94 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.95 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.96 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.97 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.98 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
7.99 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.00 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.01 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.02 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.03 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.04 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.05 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.06 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.07 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.08 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.09 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.10 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.11 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.12 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.13 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.14 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.15 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.16 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.17 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.18 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.19 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.20 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.21 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.22 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.23 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.24 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.25 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.26 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.27 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.28 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.29 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.30 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.31 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.32 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.33 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.34 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.35 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.36 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.37 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.38 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.39 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.40 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.41 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.42 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.43 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.44 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.45 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.46 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.47 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.48 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.49 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.50 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.51 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.52 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.53 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.54 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.55 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.56 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.57 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.58 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.59 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.60 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.61 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.62 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.63 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.64 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.65 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.66 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.67 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.68 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.69 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.70 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.71 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.72 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.73 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.74 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.75 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.76 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.77 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.78 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.79 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.80 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.81 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.82 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.83 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.84 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.85 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.86 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.87 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.88 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.89 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.90 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.91 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.92 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.93 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.94 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.95 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.96 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.97 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.98 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
8.99 200 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
900 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
901 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
902 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
903 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
904 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
905 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
906 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
907 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
908 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
909 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
910 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
911 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
912 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
913 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
914 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
915 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
916 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
917 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
918 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
919 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
920 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
921 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
922 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
923 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
924 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
925 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
926 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
927 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
928 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
929 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
930 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
931 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
932 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
933 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
934 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
935 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
936 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
937 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
938 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
939 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
940 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
941 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
942 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
943 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
944 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
945 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
946 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
947 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
948 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
949 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
950 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
951 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
952 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
953 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
954 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
955 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
956 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
957 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
958 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
959 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
960 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
961 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
962 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
963 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
964 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
965 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
966 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
967 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
968 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
969 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
970 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
971 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
972 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
973 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
974 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
975 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
976 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
977 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
978 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
979 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
980 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
981 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
982 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
983 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
984 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
985 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
986 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
987 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
988 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
989 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
990 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
991 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
992 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
993 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
994 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
995 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
996 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
997 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
998 mech durab - jr .col women-prelim-
99
Track events-at Haskell
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodate them, grind their surfaces and employ
them as tools or in preparation for the manufacture of
products from their materials.
CLASSIFIED RATES
| | time (hours) time (hours) time |
| :--- | :--- |
| 15 words or fewer word | $2.00 $2.55 $2.75 $3.00 |
| Extraordinarily word | 61 62 63 64 65 |
Most suitable for summer 2 barn townhouse at
Prattville apts $279/month Call 841-
636-2544
2 IBR tarmac with garage. All renovation-
Quiet installation. Available May 15 & 16 MONTHS
- Prices vary based on location.
The UIDK 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 Friday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Friday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online by calling the UDK information office.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
Nikolaus: Sparneck, two bedroom apartment, spacious hallways, three closets. 11B and Mitron Kitchen. $399-$499.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
DEFEND YOUR INALIENABLE RIGHTS to life,
property, liberty and security. You are not
safely housed in a building on the flight
island. If you are found dead in a building,
you may be charged with murder.
Enroll now for Wheedle wearing classes beginners-
1-24, 3-45, 5-60, 7-80, Prep Decorate,
19-19, 823-755, New Hampshire.
FOR RENT
Nantucket Plaza sublease available mid-May
with a pool and a private deck. A pool on
elevation $161 to $182-$232.
For more information, call 547-292-6200.
To inhabit one bedroom, new modern, fur-
rished apartment starting in May 20-epiion with
843-861-7644
Still banking for a place to call home? Nathaniel will be on the way to join his family this month of the year. Sion by and by will book an overnight at the Jaffrey Inn, located in St. Louis to give you the details and send you an email with your reservation. USMISH HALL, 869 Nathaniel Street, 812-535-6400.
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NEW NOW INTEGRATED AND MODIFIED. Includes furnished, rented, and maintained; from $179 Two bedroom suite on Oku KU this code includes INDOOR HEATED POOL 432-443 or 524-244 Front Door Next door to WATERPROOF BATHROOM.
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
At New & Contemporary,
visit our furnished display unit today &
you'll see why the move is to Sundance
Apartments. Our agency will provide Studio
1B, Conveniently located at 7th & Rounds
just west of the Sanctuary on KU Bus Route
9456 FOE
8415255·842.4455
Christian Hospital New York and Summer. Close to
city享 639.19 per person, $42-625 between 2pm-7pm.
Midday hours: 10am-4pm.
LIVE IN LUXURY need to submit beautiful 3
bedrooms 2 baths 2 hotte. balconies fireplace-free
floors and radiant color. Water paid for infor-
mation. Bookings online at "homestay.com"
843-823-8833 Evertures 843-823-8833 4-19
Apartments and rooms furnished, parking most
identities, pool cabins, KD and coarse looms. Our
wife is available 24/7.
PLEASE HLP out two fellow college kids by sublimation in a linenstone Mall and for the same reason. Please bring your favorite tree, wood, large kitchen and beautiful furniture. Excellent price! Two call Scott or Sandy at x548302.
Apr 2 8H and 10Fcyce. Close to campus. Utsl
the most Quick, simple, and convenient. 843-27
678-6561
This summer, 2 Bdmin. Call 843-6066, ask for
id or Scott. 4-18
MAUK, A. A. H. Awashimura was writing for summer school courses on the island. 7 min with to campus. 6 min with to campus. 3 min with to campus. 2 min with to campus. 1 min with to campus. diagonal bathtub - interior bath; diagonal bathtub - exterior bath. 1955 May. Apr. 7. 842-903, 841-913, 841-935
2. Frequently促使您 to share a bed in
double this summer and on fall. Call 812-640-3125.
Summer suburb at Madowbrook Abbey Two
thirty-seven years old.
Brownfield townhouse, CBL M842,
756-760.
SOUTHHIDE PLAZA APLA 1. BHI CA ON KU
647-857-3799
Avon June 1, 2014 - 847-587-3799
L10
Summer jubilee. Parturient 2 bedrooms Mimosa.
Bedroom 15 tall 35 fall 14 - 19.
Bedroom 8-14-11
**Assume:** Appleprotect ihome Max-Jan 2 III. AC.
**Pool:** $240 #813-7522 over 6-18
4-18
Sibbleau for summer 2 bedrooms gt 2 locks from Union. Option to leave for Fulli 81-73-77
Summer subroutine 2. Infertion infertilized Mouse-
box location by location to tenera cell
C81 641538
Summer subscriptions. New 1 BR unimproved unit with 2BR living room and $199 payout.
841-673-0555 6-19
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 TALL '179
*Bubbles!* luxury 3' TH, 2 bathrooms, partially
insulated, waiting pool, seating (red, reg)
-9231
PRIVATE DOOMS - In an established stable community, the town of Lawrences will receive $50 if the town's Lawrence Bank will receive $50 if the bank receives $50.
Rainbow wanted for summer luxury trainees.
The team has 25 members and co-curricular club Rent available. Call
013 497 6838.
Summer ambulance. Excellent complex Mali Aqil.
842-7580 - 7:50 p.m. - 4:20
p.m.
Most adult farmed one hundred square feet
are available for $45,000 - official
price: $45,000 - official price: $41,981 - monthly;
discounts apply.
Summer Student needed. Share 2 HRI appl. 184-569 campus camps $60 required) paid fees 841-886-5686 4-23
Nice 2 kids tonight! two kids; 2 hoths. full kitchen.
Any anytime in May for information, call
414-6871
Summer submarine 2 bedroom Applepot Apartment A1, 2.
swimming pool 4 swimming A, C Pencil rags; desig-
nment 843-4276
2 BRs of 4 BR Condominiums at Traillridge for
the comfort and comfort of 4 BR-614-TIDS anhydrine 4-23
**PHOTOGRAPHERS:** Due to an ordering error, I am stock with 42 rolls of 30 mm, 120 res, 250 res. I have about 475 sheets of Kodak Electra Tape. I have about 649 sheets of Cobol. Cal Boh 684-667 | Keep track ... 4-19
Summer, x586, one hydro umber infiltrated airtight
umbrella in swimming pool. Available from 20- Cali.
$458.95
Mustang M4 model, 74, V6 automatic,
36.5000 mAh, AM radio Call 1-101-6989
4-68
4-68
For more information call 1-800-269-4534 or visit
www.airbnb.com. A bedroom display, patio,
parking near 8th & Riverside & Kissel 811-6663
& Kissel 811-6664.
SURCELEAR . IHR and possibility of full hire
Responsible for customer needs. Excellent
Location &联系电话 Call Me 8127877 aft
fax 8127877
FOR SALE
Watch for traxx on Sunday sales produce
jayhawk Foods, 30, & Illinois. Also wood-
based products.
Fender Multiplier Dual Guitar with strings, straps, covers and covers. Very good condition. $89.50 US.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to read in this book. Includes 30 for exam preparation. *New Analysis*. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill; Clerk, Matsuku Books; & Oread Books. © 1997.
SPORTS CAR-1978 TI6 - low mileage
Machines ceil. mechanically excised £250, 813
£142, 943
WATERED MATTRESSS $59.99 3 year guarantee
WHITE LIGHT 704 Mass. 13836.1386
(See back for sizes.)
Set of bicycle wheels with summer tires nuno
Araguas rings 45* $42-$47-473
Mangang Group seeks a Consultant Assistant in Asia,
China & Australia to support the business of
the group with skill and expertise. 809-841-5631,
www.manganggroup.com.
78 Ramsey 4,5 G U La Ce 3,000 kcal 28,000 kcal
18 GM STM heat insulation melts. Mid GTX Stm
18 GM STM heat insulation melts. Mid GTX Stm
1969 Pontiac Grand Prix-Model A Javelin V8 5.0L
$24,750; 800hp; 65,000 rpm; late off 20th
grade; 425/525 hp; 355/400 lb-ft
For sale by sales house—1622 W. 22nd Terrace. A three bedroom home with approximately 2,300 square feet of investment for law or graduate student, or young graduate. Excellent financing possibilities. 4-207 0674
Alligator, starter and generator. Specialty
MOTIVE. Battery charger. MOTIVE. MOTIVE.
MOTIVE. 843-909-2000. 2000 W. 6th. $18.
Sunflower-Sun glam are our specialty. Non-professional project resale, seasonally renewed 2021 Project Number: 641-579-3000
Email: info@sunflowers.com Phone: 641-579-3000
1972 CENEW Honda, Reliance, new battery,
CENEW turn up. Hot offer 864-6117
4-24
Golf clubs, full set, Putter, 2-9 irons, 1-3 woods.
Eat nights 842-5309 4-10
1075 6.29, Carreras, 41,000 miles, AC, PS, AT
1075 6.30, Carreras, 41,000 miles, AC, PS, AT
Austin Travis Shipman 5,600 miles; 6 month lease
Austin Travis Shipman 5,600 miles; 6 month lease
Residential Recepter. Partner $25-$25, cost $60 will
be charged. Prices may vary depending on location.
Prices may range up to $140 per month. Condi-
tion conditions are subject to change.
Stoves charitable speakers, and AM-FM stereo
radio new needles, $100; call 643-5610
4-23
Koenner's 18 speed bike 197' fully lined frame
Savannah specification $499 more. Akiyo 420 C
Foxing for sale at $2,500.
Hospital Corner Drug Store will offer you a free
pill from the drug store that is designed for
their liquid medicine line. 601 Mass W.
8th St, New York, NY 10024
Tightle your body with a Bolt-Puff Back Scribber for $4.95 from the Downtown Crescent Drivej $80.95 Mass.
Prescription glues in green case. Point at stakes on east side of Wescott. 861-4528 4-17
FOUND
Found set of keys in park near Hillebrand. Call
morning: 811-2002
Radios, calculators, books, underwear, watches,
cooking tools, clothes. Claims at Kamaas for
forklift damage. 8/19
Orange-brown hair-toned fabrics贴上 brown eyes.
Oceanine boarded indigo earpads with brown eyes.
Wonderland hat. Wonderland card. Call 4-7-17
Nexus keynote session.
Found overglazed glassets on 4th floor of Sunny
Cliff. Glass set high right upper corner at
9:18AM
HELP WANTED
EXOTIC JOE LAKE TAHOE, CALIFORNIA
Little expense, familel inami at 410-620-4400; summe
tamarano, ramelea, erisuree, river rafts; & more.
Sacramento, Sacramento 5056; 4-21
Sucatrona, Sacramento 5056; 4-21
OVERSEAN JOBB - Supplement year round. Butterfly
careers, flexible working schedule. Job in
Washington, DC or San Diego, CA or D.C., Mt.
Shasta, CA or San Jose, CA or Mt. Shasta,
CA or San Diego, CA or D.C.,
JOBS MEN WOMEN SALBATS! CRUISE SHIPS? No experience. High pay! Go Caribou, Hawaii, Europe, World! Summer camp! Cruise ship! 60129, Barbados, CA, 59500 4-24
60129, Box292, Ca, Cambridge, CA, 59500
Now taking applications for Foundation & Guild
Assistants in the Region, please visit www.nasa.gov/
Agripe for position of Nasa Biostatistics.
Fountain & Grill personnel Nana beauty and
applies. Apply in person at Vela Bedfordshire
108, 72-73 King Street, London W1E 5QW
TAN MAN
DAY!
—MAY 2nd—
"Undress" like Tan Man
Shorts & T-Shirt
Watch Personals
for details. —Dad
Student Research Assistant - Project entails initial research on a particular character and monitor, interfacing bit board parameter generator and monitor. Position will be based on hardware absolutely required. Position can be half or three month time for Mine six months or full year time. Applicants must be accepted April 16, 1979. Contact Dr. James Furze, Computer Systems Manager, Kansas Lawyers, R. 6005. The University of Kansas Lawyer, R. 6005.
Career Opportunity for person to train with broad tanker and become established as a long term partner in the tanker management year round position with full benefits while training salary to augment with training experience. K. U. - 844-1641, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Mem. Manager. Equity Opportunity for Action Engineer
4-20
JOBS IN ALASKA Summer jobs (half payment,
full salary) in Alaska:
3. Warehouse manager ($25,000 PO)
4. Office assistant ($25,000 PO)
PSYCHIATRIC NURSES WANT FOR ALL ADULTS WITH MEDICAL SPECIALIZATIONS AND ADULT WANDS. Apply at the office of services of nursing. Topeka Stauffer Hospital, 720 W. 7th, Topeka, KS 73076. Phone 915-282-4268. Equal Opportunity Employer.
JOBS:
LAKE TAHOE CALIF. Familiasite in
lake Tahoe, CA.
APPLICATION IN LAKERWEE
FOR LAKE TAHOE CALIF. FAMILIASITE
POSITIONS, ANNOUNCEMENTS. The Office of Residential Programs has two Program Coordination teams in the Northwest. One position is in Oliver Hall, the other is in Hammett Hall. Both require aachelor's degree and experience in education and educational programs. In Hammett, a knowledge of theater production and management, as well as job descriptions are available in the Office of Residential Programs. 123 Strong Hall Deadline.
SUMMER JOB, NOW WORLD CRUISING
COURTNEY ROSS, JR. JEFFREY CENTER
PUBLICATIONS - Performing Arts WORLD
CRUISING - PERFORMANCE DEVICES
Adult with own grandparent to care for 8 to 16
weeks, with 2 adult children to care for 4 to
8 weeks, light box guarding. $200.00 per
ship. Call (312) 571-1012.
HELP WANTED FULL TIME. Some mechanical:
Job will be meal and depot shift.
A+ I-1200, Hotel 2100.
Assistant to the Dean, reporting to Associate Director of Academic Affairs, will be an unified faculty position. This is an unqualified position that requires a Bachelor's degree and no lower than August 19th birth date or a college diploma. Prior experience in academic programming, background education and financial planning, leadership, employment and financial training. Experience in curriculum development, instruction and supervision of several well-member groups. Qualification is a postgraduate degree. Education required is a bachelor's degree. Education required is a postgraduate degree. The application deadline is October 3rd. The application process is observed. The application deadline is October 3rd. The application process is observed.
Affirmative Action Employer. Application is open for positions in the College of Business, University of Texas at Austin, School of Business, University of Texas at Austin, School of Business, University of Texas at Austin, Affirmative Action Employer. Application is open for positions in the College of Business, University of Texas at Austin, School of Business, University of Texas at Austin, Affirmative Action Employer. Application is open for positions in the College of Business, University of Texas at Austin, School of Business, University of Texas at Austin, Affirmative Action Employer. Application is open for positions in the College of Business, University of Texas at Austin, School of Business, University of Texas at Austin, Affirmative Action Employer. Application is open for positions in the College of Business, University of Texas at Austin, School of Business, University of Texas at Austin, Affirmative Action Employer.
Expertise of painter, interior & exterior, ballet,
ballet dancers,穿透艺术家. Apply to 10 positions.
Email: info@nagaracreative.com
Lawyer. Owen School is working a certified education teacher to work in protective programs, curricula and curriculum development assistance. Must have MS in Law or related field or 600 hours of experience at C22 Owl. An avid performer. Employer will accept any qualifying background.
Secretary Program assistant for busy office offering to large numbers of college students, business leaders and professionals. Experience in student personnel support, experience in position promotion, full-time position. Salary commensurate with ability. Experience pre-fit full-time position. Full-time position. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Office: 216-743-0000; Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
MENTAL HEALTH TECHNICIANS, LUNAED
MONDAYS FROM 9AM TO 5PM
VIRTUAL MIDWEEK, HEALTH SERVICE WORKERS
Australia and New Zealand experience of providing nursing care
Places to work in Australia and New Zealand
Main government agencies - 19
Applicants are those eligible for Bank Check. Please submit your application by the deadline of April 19, 2018, with proof of grade and qualification to be accompanied with organized materials from the applicant's office and knowledge of Bank Check. (1) Department of Commerce, U.S. Government, V P.O. Box 13754, Washington, D.C. 20006. (2) Department of Agriculture, U.S. Government, V P.O. Box 13754, Washington, D.C. 20006.
Audiations are now available for Book Clocks. Audiences can be placed by telephone or by computer, water organza or other materials may be used to be a student. Knowledge of Book Clocks KU109 KU109. Union Audiations are also April 3rd at the Union Auditorium.
Code to work, part-time, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mon-
day; 12-18 p.m. Every hour. Requires 5 mos.
passport valid for the country in which you live.
person must wait standing off of Christmas Spring
Hall, etc. will not wait until KC is out of service.
Personnel Other - 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monthly Pa-
ersonal Offer - 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monthly Pa-
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The recruitment of mathematics will have importance in the 1928 Fall requirements. Among mathematics teachers in Georgia, can be considered DENIS (Dennis) BEEFORD, who was born in Georgia and was recruited by an institution in SAN MIGUEL. He initially enrolled a four year university period, after which he joined the office of the chancellor of Multimathrometry on April 27, 1929. The department of Mathematics offered qualified two and three women of all rank to students.
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4-17
Bimaximum awarded for summer luxury tour
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country club basketball. Hent negligible
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OFFICIAL TAN MAN
LIMERICK CONTEST FORM
Novo burnable that can play at 16 TPM K83
4-28
Frank
- Mail in this form with check
3rd female rominate for summer Mails 2 bed-
room furnished 1-8 electric Meters 1-8
or money order to
111 Flint Hall or just come by.
- $3.50 per Limerick
Write
ALL LIMERICKS
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PUBLISHED ON
Contest Judge is Chancellor Dykesl
TAN MAN DAY,
WED, MAY 2nd.
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ADDRESS:
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Tuesday, April 17, 1979
University Daily Kansan
CSHE may survive despite critics, ASK
By CAROL BEIER Staff Reporter
Student lobby organizations evidently die hard, and opponents of Concerned Students for Higher Education are about to find that out.
Although GSE has been upstaged by KU's membership in the Associated Students of Kansas during the past year, several students have said KU still has a need for GSE's representation in the Kansas Legislature.
ASK has seven member schools, six of the Regents institutions and Washburn University. After two nights of heated debate last week, the Senate renamed KU's membership in ASK at a cost of $9,150. The membership dues are 25 cents a student. The senate is responsible for representing KU on student issues specifically related to this University.
ACCORDING TO Steve Young, KU member of the ASK board of directors, KU must get permission from representatives of all the other ASK schools before the lobby group can take an official position on an issue specifically related to KU.
For instance, there was no official ASK action on the controversial House reappropriation bill.
KANSAN Analysis
Young said, however, that he doubted the effectiveness of CSHE. Other ASK supporters have referred to a poll conducted by Mike Harper, former student body president, that indicated that more state legislators were familiar with ASK than with CSHE.
ROB GREEN, former chairman of CSHE, said the poll was not indicative of CSHE's effectiveness because the two organizations operated under different philosophies.
legislative session. The bill re-drew district lips and split the KU student vote.
"The poll was so idiotic," Green said. "There is a contrast in styles, CSHE is not a name-recognition lobby. The reasoning is that people name, so we must be doing some good."
Green said CSHE encouraged student contact with home legislators on an individual and personal basis, whereas ASK worked through an executive director in Topoka the director, Green said, professors were more than 70,000 Kansas college students.
say that for ASK," Green said, "because most students don't even know what ASK is. The big thing is that someone cares, because he is getting a salary.
"The best lobby is enlightened self-esteem. The most effective contacts are adults."
But Green spoke in favor of ASK membership at last week in his Student Senate meeting. He said the lobby organizations could coexist at KU without CSHE's straining. Some student senators were not so optimistic.
"ESSENTIALLY THAT'S a lie when you
"The people who represent ASK here will wind up with their feet on CSHE's throat," trust.
TOMLINSON SAID Friday that he intended to continue his support of CSHE and that he had been working on a proposal that would govern Senate governance over both lobby groups.
Bob Tomlinson, education senator, said last week.
The breakdown of interest in CSHE resulted in removal of funding for fiscal 1980 by Keith Maib, Student Senate treasurer. Maib described the organization as defunct$. The said CSHED had not spent on the $57.7 that was allocated to it last year.
When CSHE was founded in 1971, it did not
receive Student Senate money. The group was allocated Student Senate funds for the first time during the 1977-78 administration, and continued covering from its first period of inactivity.
ITS PRESENT DECLINE is attributed by some critics to a lack of leadership. Ron Allen, CSHE chairman, left school after he enrolled in the student body president, race in February.
"Once Ron ran for president," Green said, "that was that."
Allen said Friday that he thought CSHE should be revived as a part of ASK.
"I'd like to see CSHE work under the ban.
per of RU but united with the overall lobby effort." Allen said.
George Gomez, student body vice president, said members of CSHE would be appointed after budget hearings were completed this week.
"I think the sentiment is and we will keep it alive. We may incorporate it into our curriculum."
Mark McClannah, Nunemaker 2 senator, has applied for CSHE chairman. During last week's debates he also said, "KU needs two lobby groups."
In fact, it seems KU is going to have two lobby groups, needed or not.
200
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EVERYONE'S A TAN MAN!
---
BLOODY SUNSHINE
Enter the TAN MAN LIMERICK CONTEST!
All entries will be judged by Chancellor Dykesl—And published on TAN MAN DAY Wed. May 2nd.
Deadline: Monday, April 30----5 pm
What's a Limerick?
A limerick is 5 lines with a rhyme scheme aabba
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2. Bring limerick to 111 Flint Hall or use Official Tan Man Limerick Contest form in classifieds.
1. Entry cost per limerick $3.50. All limericks published in UDK on Tan Man Day, May 2nd.
4. Winners to be announced at a later date.
5. Deadline: Monday, April 30, 5:00 pm
6. Enter as often as you like.
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Herbicide exposure haunts Vietnam vets
By LYNN BYCZYNSKI
Staff Reporter
Bill Moore left Vietnam more than 10 years ago. He came home to Great Bend stiff and missed, missing an awful job.
louisy, Moore and thousands of other Vietnam veterans like him find themselves caught in another war.
For Moore, this struggle began with a stiffness in his joints and worries about his children's health.
These ever-increasing and unexplained health problems, ranging from skin rashes to cancer, have caused Moore and the Vietnam veterans to accuse—and the Veterans. Administration to defend—the common factor in the veterans' pasts: Aerent Orange.
Agent Orange was the Pentagon's code name for a herbicide sprayed over five million acres of South Vietnam between 1962 and 1971. Orange, one of seven color-coded defoliants used by the U.S. military to destroy Viet Cong jung cover, was a 50-60 mixture of the chemicals 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T.
were traces of TCDD, a type of dioxin. Dioxin may be one of the deadliest chemicals ever developed.
Contaminating the already hazardous herbicide
THE ENVIRONMENTAL Protection Agency has temporarily hanned 2,4,5-T widespread use in U.S. agriculture and forestry. The fate of 2,4,5-T, blaimed for a large number of miscarriages and birth defects among women exposed to it in Oregon, will be decided by the EPA this year.
Despite the controversy that surrounds 2.4.5-T, the weight of scientific evidence leans heavily against it.
So far, veterans have only the support of their numbers. But those numbers are growing rapidly.
At the Topeka Veterans Administration hospital, 10 veterans have been examined for suspected herbicide-related problems this year. At the Kansas City VA hospital, the number is 32.
PROBLEMS THAT Vietnam veterans frequently complain of are sexual impotence, digestive problems, skin rashes, nervous disorders, sensitivity to light—and cancer.
Researchers know that TCDD can be absorbed through the skin, but are not sure if it can be ingested.
"We've found nothing wrong with them," Carroll Doll, chief medical administrator of the Kansas City VA Hospital, said last week. "But five years from now, we know what we need, so we're conducting extensive examinations now."
Nationally, several thousand veterans have been examined, and about 1,000 of them have filed claims
And, since the American Legion included information about Agent Orange in its April newsletter, American Legion representatives in Kansas report fielding questions daily from concerned veterans.
MOORE, THE American Legion representative for Kansas' main VA office in Wichita, has been urging all veterans with symptoms to file for disability payments.
It is a tactic that many veterans' organizations are urging their members to take. KU Campus Veterans president Mike Hake sent that advice last month to the University of Kansas era who are attending the University of Kansas.
"OUR POSITION is that if they had to go over and get exposed to this, they should be compensated for it."
Campus Veterans also is warning its members that, because Agent Orange was sprayed around all U.S. base camps, most of the 3.5 million Americans who served in Vietnam may have been exposed.
payments will be retroactive to the time of their claim," Hand said.
That warming is what led Moore to wonder if the stiffness in his joints was really caused by the pressure under the base of the foot.
It also has caused fears that his children may be plagued with ill health because of a war he thought to have been imagined.
His youngest child was born with a heart murmur and anemia. His oldest boy suffers from severe chest pain.
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
"I really makes me angry," Moore said. "Not only did I have to go over there and get shot up, but I had to be able to make it happen."
MOORE, 31, said tracing the medical histories of both his and his wife's families had turned up one more detail. "They were trying to find a cure."
This charge, that Agent Orange may cause birth defects, is the most serious leveled against Agent Orange.
A medical survey of Vietnam veterans conducted by the American Health Foundation, a private research agency in New York, listed 72 birth defects in the children of the first 363 veterans surveyed.
Those results are not yet conclusive because the survey was conducted so that veterans with problems tended to respond more often than others, Jeanne Stellman, director of the survey, said.
"This makes our survey quite different from one in which people are randomly selected from the general population."
HOWEVER, THE claim that exposure to Agent Orange more than a decade ago can be causing birth defects.
Terry Mulcahy, Overland Park school, found this hilly country road to be the perfect place to jog a few miles yesterday afternoon.
Richard Lebinson, the physician heading the VA's own study of the problem, said there was no evidence that TCDD could cause birth defects when the father had been exposed to the herbicide.
"Any birth defects in their progeny must be attributed to other causes." . "J. leibniz said,
The VA's denial of a connection between Agent Orange and birth defects is baseless on reams of records.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Z
PLEASANT
See AGENT ORANGE back page
KANSAN
Wednesday, April 18, 1979
Vol.89.No.133
Lawrence, Kansas
KU plays Royals today in exhibition
HUCKABEE
See story page seven
Road runner
City to study radioactive matter
By TAMMI HARBERT
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission last night decided that the use of radioactive material in research activities that used for research activities at the University of Kansas, needs further inthe proposals came in the form of two amendments to city codes, along with a
It referred the matter to the city staff for further study.
The action was prompted by the Lawrence Residents for a Radioactive-free Kansas, which presented the community with radioactive materials in Lawrence.
Michael Almon, spokesman for the group, said the main purpose of the group's proposal was to get city government to take preventive measures.
But Russell Mesler, director of the KU nuclear reactor, said yesterday afternoon that such an amendment would have a devastating effect.
"IF THEY have such a thing, we'd be out of business," he said.
According to Ben Prisen, KU radiation safety officer, about 100 KU research projects would have to be terminated under such a ban.
Commissioner Donald Binns said it would be difficult to enforce*couch a ban.
"For us to ban it there would be silly," he said. "If we are going to ban it, we should ban it nationally."
"I agree with you about the dangers, but if there's one thing that needed, it is research," he said.
Binns also expressed concern for University projects.
Almon said the group intended the proposals to apply to the city of Lawrence, and hadn't considered how they might affect the University.
"This is one area of cloudiness that we are concerned with," he said.
Mayor Burkley Clark said the commission needed to get more information concerning the city's jurisdiction over the University and current traffic of radioactive materials in the city before action could be taken.
Commissioner Marci Francisco suggested that the commission look into state laws or radioactive waste handling.
letter explaining the reasons for the organization's concern.
The letter stated, "Kansas has about 100 shipments per day of radioactive materials according to the State Radiological Officer, most of which are radiologic pharmaceuticals. Some of these shipments travel on highways 70, 59 and 10, and therefore come through Lawrence." The authors have Lawrence as their destination."
THE LETTER cited studies of John Goffman, a former Atomic Energy Commission scientist. Gelfmann contends that the number of cancer exposures," and that 19,000 extra cancer deaths and between $8,000 and $80,000 genetics diseases each year are attributable to the cancer.
Radioactive wastes cross area
BY RON BAIN and BRUCE THOMAS Staff Reporters
By RON BAIN
Radioactive material passes through Douglas County an average of six to eight times a day, Leon Mannell, state police spokesman, said in an emergency preparedness, and recently.
Part of that radioactive material is produced at the University of Kansas. However, the radioactive material produced at KU, like most of that transported through the county, contains small amounts of low-level radiation, Mannel said.
Most of the radioactive wastes produced at KU are residues from biological tracers, radioactive chemicals that can be detected in the environment. Friesen, KU radiation safety officer, said.
"On a scale of one to 10, the dangers of radioactive material would be very low."
Tracers are used in radiation biophysics experiments and other experiments on the KU campus, Friesen said, as well as for biomedical research. The University of Kansas Medical Center.
"MOST OF this stuff is radioactive pharmaceuticals that are intended for human use," Mannel said. "There are a lot more life-threatening things that pass through Douglas County than radioactive material, like life hazardous chemicals."
KU's radioactive wastes are transported to a disposal site about four miles south of De Soto to be buried, Jack Price, an employee of KU's Radiation Safety service, said.
Wastes buried there long ago as 1965 have remained safely within the borders of the disposal site, according to a 1978 thesis by a graduate student. The land is owned by KI.
THE STUDY, conducted by Emory Lairmon, who received a master's degree in radiation biophysics from KU last semester, focused on two radioactive ions, hydrogen-3 or tritium, and carbon-14. He wastes most commonly buried at the site.
Price said the wastes posed no danger to employees who work at the site or to people who live nearby.
A half-life is the amount of time it takes for a radioactive substance to decay to half its original amount. A half-life is finished, a radioactive substance will emit no significant amounts of radiation.
"Much of the material buried there has a short half-life, and is gone in a matter of days or weeks," Price said.
Radioactive isotopes such as the biological tracers used by KU are shipped to the nuclear medicine department at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine
St. Because of the short half-lives of the isotopes, they must be flown to Kansas City International Airport and then brought to Lawrence by car.
LAWRENCE MEMORIAL received three shipments of the isotopes each week from a commercial delivery company. Bankers Dispatch, Mannell said the isotopes were transported in boxes about 18 inches square.
One of the main types of radioactive material passing through the county, as in this case, is preparedness coordinator, is yellowake, a low-grade ornium ore. It is shipped to the local nuclear power plant.
SHIPMENTS OF yellowcake in semi-trailer trucks pass through the county three to four times a week, Brann said.
Braun said people coming in contact with the yellowwake would experience no long-term harm as long as they were properly decontaminated.
Bram said yellowcake was a component of nuclear fuel. It is shipped by semi-trailer truck from Shirley Basin, Wyo., where the ore is mined.
Some Douglas County firemen have been trained to monitor radioactive material. Currently, eight policemen are going through similar training sessions. Brann said state highway patrol carry in their cars devices that detect radiation.
Senate budget hearings go on without quorum
Although a quorum was not present at last night's Student Senate hearing earpings, one called for the one and the Senate proceeded to allocate funds to 31 more organizations.
Last night's was the first meeting of this spring's budget hearings in which a quorum was not called. Only 58 senators were there, three fewer than the required quorum of 61.
The senators present passed a bill that allocated an additional $1,831.50 to the
The organizations that received Senate funds were:
University Concert Series and $966.30 to the Chamber Music Series.
Alpha RhoGamma, $1,090; American Institute of Astronautics & Aeronautics;
$395; Architecture Student Council, $1,010; Astronomy Associates of Lawrence, $675.
Association of Students Interested in
Academic Assistants, 1501. KU German Club, $66.
KU English Club, $29.
Students Association, $55; Counseling
Student Organization, $135; Engineering
University Association for the Advancement of Women Engineers, $83; Student American Pharmaceutical Association, $102; Student Association for the Education Department, $200; Student Bar Association, $59; Undergraduate Philosophy Club, $300.
KU Bands, $10,989; Forensics, $3,663;
Chamber Music Series, $4,029.30;
University Concert Series, $29,303.50;
University Theatre, $29,304; Operation
Music Hall, Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble
$1,433.10
Arab Student Association, $65; African Students Association, $85; Chinese Student Association, $45; KU India Club, $50; Iranian Student Association, $55; Latin Student Association, $75; Mackenzie Student Association, $31; Thai Student Association, $46; International Club, $3.395.
Wichita star signs letter of intent
By JOHN P. THARP
Associate Sports Editor
Associate Sports Editor
Ted Owens' golden Eastern egg finally has made it to his basket.
Ricky Ross, All-America preguard, signed a national letter of intent last night to play collegiate basketball with the University of Kansas and coach Owen Owens.
Ross, the leading high school scorer in Kansas last season, was one of the nation's most highly sought after players. The actual signing last night in his Wichita home ended weeks of speculation and agony for the KU coaching staff and fans.
Owens was en route to Wichita last night from Quincy, Ill., where he earlier signed Keith Douglas, another highly recruited prep player. Owens will be at a press conference this morning with Ross, where the coup will be officially announced.
Ross, who had narrowed his list of possible schools to KU and the University of Arkansas, lengthened that list last weekend when he included Wichita State University and the University of North Carolina. He asked his staff to take some time with KU but the official signature couldn't be snared until about 10 last night, when assistant coaches Lafayette Norwood and UCLA would finish their hardest fought recruiting battle.
Ross had said that he liked the tradition and atmosphere at KU, but that he couldn't see a way to do it.
Ross last year averaged 32 points, 10 rebounds, five assists and four steals a game while leading his Wichita South team to a state championship.
The signings of two more recruits brought the KU crop to four. Last week 6-8 Kelly Knight of Salina South and 6-4 Art House college, signed letters of intent with KU.
The signing of Ross was a victory for KU recruiters, who had failed to sign such prest stars as Saw Barnie, Ralph Sampson and LaSalle Thomson.
Ross had received letters from more than 250 students interested in his talent. Two other Big Eight conference schools, the Ohio State University and Iowa State University, also recruited him.
Ross, who said he preferred to be called Ricky rather than Rick, is an outstanding outside shooter, something much needed for a KU basketball team that was plunged into an orange-haze zone defenses. He probably will play opposite point guard Darnell Valentine.
Ross' high school coach, Bill Himebaugh, had said earlier that his star had handled the recruiting pressure better than 99 percent of most players.
"Whoever gets him is going to get a franchise with him," Himehaugh said.
PENNELLIER
Ricky Ross
2
Wednesday, April 18, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Capsules
From the Kansas Wire Services
Carlin signs utility sales tax bill
TOPEKA-Gov. John Carlin signed into law yesterday a bill removing the state's new percent sales tax from residential utility bills.
to remove or the sales tax which mean an estimated $22 million in tax relief to Kansans who pay their own electric, gas, water and telephone bills.
Carlin's signing of the bill marked the fulfillment of a pledge the governor made during his election campaign last year.
Carlin also said he would reveal at a news conference on Friday whether he would sign another bill that would allow the state's private clubs to eliminate
their input pools. It will be a result of an attorney general's opinion that said liquor pools were not necessary under a 1978 state Supreme Court ruling affecting
Rhodesia votes on majority rule
SALISBURG, Rhodesia-Hacks and whites turned out in large numbers yesterday to vote as on equals on black majority rule, while 100,000 soldiers
The government hopes a large turnout will prompt political recognition of the breakaway British colony, which has been an international outcast since it unilaterally declared its independence in 1965. The government also hopes for an end to military and economic ties by the United Nations in face of a nuclear crisis or social separation.
response to reports of a man being killed by a gunman, white voted to end 90 years of white minority rule, the guerrilla war continued. The military announced that 20 people had been killed.
Mississippi flood still risina
JACKSON, Miss. - The Pearl River, which has driven more than 17,000 people from their homes in Jackson, rose to more than 25 feet above flood stage.
in Alabama thousands were evacuated as flooded threatened areas of that state.
President Carter declared Mississippi a disaster area Monday, making thousands of flood victims eligible for federal aid.
Court rules on real estate bias
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that a community or residents of a community have a legal right to sue real estate firms for alleged
In the 12- vote cleared the way for a trial on a lawsuit charging two Bellwood, III, real estate firms with discriminatory policies that robbed the community of
The ruling would make real estate firm nationwide easier targets for lawsuits charging them with racial steering—a violation of the Federal Fair Law.
Justices to tighten libel laws
WASHINGTON - In nationally televised reports Monday night and yesterday morning, ABC News said the Supreme Court soon would rule that public figures suing for libel may ask what a journalist's state of mind was during the writing of the challenged story.
The report said that Justice Rby Rehmeil was writing the court's majority opinion, and that Justice William H. Rehquist was joining White in the writing. It also said that Justice John Paul Stevens argued during one of the courts' closed conferences—attended only by the nine justices—that such a ruling
ABC News reporter Tim O'Brien did not reveal the source of his story, but said he was absolutely certain of the accuracy of the report. Such reports leaking a decision or a particular vote before it is formally announced are rare in the court's 190-year history.
Toneka education called equal
TOPEKA- The Topeka school superintendent said yesterday that a court-approved settlement of a 1973 civil rights lawsuit against the local school board had been reached.
The out-of-court settlement ended six years of litigation in the case of a black schoolgirl, Evelyn Johnson, who was awarded $15,900 in her suit against the university.
The board's attorney said the settlement would be the only such settlement for alleged discrimination in the quality of education.
However, Johnson's lawyer said he would file another class action suit on the same grounds as the first suit, which began as a class action suit until federal court rules in favor of Johnson.
The suit, filed on behalf of Johnson, was 10 at the time, claimed the school board failed to fully implement a 1964 U.S. Supreme Court desegregation order.
Topeka Superintendent James Gray said attorneys for an insurance company handling the suit against the school board decided a settlement would be made.
Date set for Evans' execution
MONTGOMERY, Ala. —The Alabama Supreme Court yesterday set a new execution date of April 12 for John Louis Evans III, a condemned killer who was convicted of killing four women.
But because of a new appeal filed on behalf of Evans, there appears little chance the execution will be carried out April 27. U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said in the court
Evans had said he preferred death to life in prison, but when Rehman granted the stay, Evans changed his mind and authorized a challenge of the court.
the challenge to the law was filed last week in U.S. District Court in Mobilie, Ala. by John Carroll, who represented Evans' mother when she sought to block her husband's conviction.
4 charged in quards' killings
Donald Couture, 26, of Wallingford, Conn., and Lawrence Pelletier Jr., 36, of Waterbury, were charged with three counts of capital murder and armed robbery in the first degree. Pelletier also was charged with possession of a sawed-off shotgun and possession of marijuana.
WATERBURY, Conn.—Police arrested two men and their wives yesterday for the ambush slayings of three security guards and recovered most of the nearly $1.9 million in cash, canceled checks and jewelry stolen Monday from Pualoir Security Inc.
Courte's and Pelleter's wives were charged as accessories to capital murder and with armed robbery in the first degree.
Warrants issued for Hart trial
Police said two to four other suspects may have been involved in the robbery and murders. The robbers apparently shot the guards from outside the compound.
PRYOR, Okla.—Warrants for the arrest of three persons accused of lying under oath during the Gene Leye Hart murder trial were issued yesterday in Oklahoma City.
Sheriff Pet Weaver said that his office was investigating statements made by people who testified during Hart's trial and that more warrants might be
The assistant district attorney said perjury charges would be filed after the people were arrested.
At the end of the trial, Weaver complained that at least one person, former Mayes County jailer Allen Little, had lied under oath. Little testified he had seen evidence later found near the death scene in Weaver's desk three years before the killings.
Hart, 35. was found innocent March 30 of the sex-slayings of three young girl Scouts whose bodies were found near their tent, about three miles south of
Weather...
Skies will be partly cloudy today and there is a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms, according to the National Weather Service. Temperatures will dip between 7°C and 15°C.
Bomb kills four policemen in Northern Ireland trap
BESSBOOK, Northern Ireland (AP) - A-body trap bomb killed four policemen yesterday in the worst such incident in a decade of Northern Ireland's sectarian
Twelve other people were injured in the explosion, an apparent escalation of the Irish Republican Army's spring offensive against British rule.
The police were killed when a bomb blew up their Land-Kover it as it passed a booby-trap.
slaught last month to coincide with the British campaign leading up to May 3
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blast, but police said it was in the wrong place.
It was the highest police death toll in a single incident since Northern Ireland's rebellion.
Violence had eased off in 1978, but guerrillas of the predominantly Roman Empire were still on the attack.
At first, police said the explosion was caused by a land mine planted in a drainage culvert under the road. But a Royal Ulster Constabulary spokesman in Belfast said later that the bomb was hidden in a small van parked on the roadside near the building.
"As the police Land-Rover passed the van, it exploded and the Land-Rover was shot down."
Police said it appeared the device was detonated by remote control by a terrorist lying in wait in the surrounding countryside, a tactic used by the IRA in the past.
The Royal Ulster Constabulary, the police force in the British province, has lost 121 officers since Catholic-Protestant sectarian eruption here.
Celebrate Spring at the 1st Annual AURH Spring Formal
QQQ
April 28,1979
9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom & Balcony Featuring: The Original Artists
Refreshments will be provided. Admission is free for all hall residents and their guests. Tickets are available today through 4/28 at your hall desk. Semi-formal or formal dress is appropriate.
--is the ultimate portable radio cassette recorder.
It features a six band radio tuner that receives
48 AWM strings and 3 short wav bands.
EVERYONE'S A TAN MAN!
(left to right) Ariel Brennan, Terry Doyle, Amy Emanuel, Tina Joffe, Kyle O'Neill, Joel Fink and John Krohn.
Enter the TAN MAN LIMERICK CONTEST!
All entries will be judged by Chancellor Dykes—I And published on TAN MAN DAY Wed. May 2nd.
BEST LIMERICK WINS $400 JVC PORTABLE
Deadline: Monday, April 30-5 pm
A lmerick is 5 lines with a rhyme scheme aabba
The JVC RC-828
For the best in sound quality IVC has put together a 5 watt 4 speaker system that includes a pair of 6 1/2 inch woolfoats and a pair of 2 inch
The component grade cassette section boasts a more 90% view & access and manual recording level for audio and video recordings. Two meters for accurate recording to Chrome tape capability, Full auto cover, Case. Use and pause
FROM
ut
ton
80150
MP2
Hammetts
These and a host of other features make the JVC RC 828
These and a host of other features make the JVC KC-828
the ultimate multi-tone radio recorder for home car and the great outdoors
HERE'S HOW TO ENTER:
TEAM ELECTRONICS
2319 Louisiana
*entry cost per laminated* $3.50 *All laminates published*
in UD on Tom KON, May Day, 2019
2. Bing Imericel to 111 Flint Hall or use Official Tom Man Liemerican Lincert form in classified.
3. Write l里姆ick about the Tan Man, your idea of a Tan Man, or why you or someone else in a Tan Man ...
4. Winners to be announced at a later date
5. Deadline Monday April 30 5:00 pm
6. Enter as often as you like.
MARK ZIMMERMAN
MAKE SURE YOUR VACATION DOESN'T TAKE OFF WITHOUT YOU.
There's nothing lonelier than being left behind at vacation time
There's housing longer than being rented in our town.
That's why we were Continental Reps right on campus. Our travel
I nats wye we got Continental Reps right on campus. Our travel specialists fill you in on schedules, discount airfares, tours and routes. And save you from calling all over town to get the right flight at the right price.
you just came an over town to get the right night at the right price.
Whether you're heading home or off to that special vacation, talk to your
Whether you're heading home or off to that special vacation, talk to your Campus Rep. Ask about our "Let Yourself Go" charge card too. We'll show you the for your vacation to take off. With you there to enjoy it.
Your Campus Rep is Melanie Zollars (913) 843-7874
AIRLINES OF THE UNITED STATES
The Proud Bird with the Golden Tail.
CONTINENTAL AIRLINES
O
North America/Hawaii/Micronesia/Orient/Australia/New Zealand/Fiji/Samoa
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 18, 1979
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
3
TODAY: ROBERT FLUKER will speak on "Multinational Corporations" A Threat to the Free Enterprise System?" during the Wednesday Forum at 11:45 at 1204 Eurea. UNIVERSITY EVENTS COMMITTEE will have an open meeting to discuss distribution and sales policies of 3:30 in the International Room of the Union. THE PSYCHOLOGY SCHOOL meet at 4 p.m. in 4 Fraser. MANNS ASSOCIATION OF SECONDARY SCHOOL AND AMICIAL Area 1 will meet at 4:38 p.m. in the Jaihawk and Kamsoa Rooms of the Union.
**10RIGHT: KU HONORS STUDENTS will meet at 7 in the Pine Room of the Union. KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 in the Union Parlor. JOHN DEFRIES will give an anthropology lecture, "Genetics of Reading Disability," at 7 in the Council Room of the Union. Example from Southern Germany," at 7 in 426 Lindley. A MULTIMEDIA LECTURE about RECONSTRATION AND AFRO-AMERICAN HISTORY will be at 3:30 p.m. in 300 Strong Hall. SIERTA CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Union. KU GUNG CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m in 173 Robinson. BUD GREENSPAN, a film producer who is considered an authority on the Olympics, will speak at 8 in the Room for Humanistic STUDIES "Signs, Symbols and Communications" lecture will be given by Tevatan Todovor, professor, at 8 in the Forum Room of the Union. JANCE SAFFR, pianist, will perform in a Fine Arts Visiting Series Recital at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. ROBERT BARD will speak on "Religious or Ethical Concernes in the American Courts," at 8 in 100 Smith Hall. The KU TUZEN ENSEMBLE and TUDA QUARTET will give a student recital at 8 in Spoon Hall.
**TOMORROW:** MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION is sponsoring a seminar on "Community Correction and the Role of the University" at 3:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union. The Kansas Secretary of Corrections will speak. A PANEL ON CONDITIONS INNECARAGUA will be at 3:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
Greenbrier's
OLD WORLD
DELICATESSEM
Cheese Emporium
Eat In or Carry Out
Sandwiches
Meats Soups Cheeses
Holiday Plaza—25th & Iowa
KAW RIVER RIVALRY
K.U. vs. K. State
CANOE RACE
April 28th & 29th
Details at the
HAWK
Don't Forget
Student Legal Services are available
Office Hours
Monday 1:30pm-4:30pm/211 Carruth-O'Leary
Tuesday 6:30pm-9:00pm/Senate office
Thursday 1:00-4:00pm/211 Carruth-O'Leary
Friday 9:00am-12:00pm/211 Carruth-O'Leary
Appointment only Monday, Thursday, Friday
Phone 864-5665
Attention all Pre-Physical Therapy Students.
You have a chance to become the next president, treasurer, or secretary of the physical therapy group.
Come to the meeting at Watkins Hospital Cafeteria on Monday April 23 at 7:00 pm.
You can nominate yourself or others or just come to ask questions.
Funded by Student Senate
Admiral Car Rental
Toyota
fireball
Buck Regal
Monte Carlo
Cullis Scheme
Mark V
Thunderbird
2430 Alabama
843 2931
$1,500 FREE!
Have you seen the 96X sign in the Holiday Plaza, 25th & Iowa? If you're the first to see us the electronic message, and the date our sign shines, you'll win all $1,500.
Tune into the "X" for details
96x radio
Stereo 95.7 F.M.
sua films
Wednesday, April 18
Shakespeare:
RICHARD III
(1955)
Dir. Laurence Oliver; with Laurence Oliver, Rajphi Richardson, John Glieldgud, Clarie Bloom, Cedric Hardwick. Considered by many to be the best filmed version of any of Shakespeare's plays.
(1975)
Dir. Rusy Meyer, with Shari Ebubank,
Nancy Charles, Japan to pick your tickets early.
OR CHECKED AT THE DOOR, SO BE
TO BRING THEM TO THE FILM.
Midnight Movie
SUPERVIXENS
Friday & Saturday,
April 20 & 21
JULIA
(1977)
Dir. Fred Zinnemann; with Jane
Fonda, Vanna Redgrave, Jason
Robards. Based on a story by Liliana
Hellman. Written for Academy
Awards.
No Friday matinee!
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted. $1.50 admission.
Monday, April 23 WOMEN'S ANIMATION FESTIVAL
The Festival will include 12 short anthony pieces by Karen King, Mary Rose, Mary Beau Bisson, Laughlin and Sally Crukshank (including his latest scifi 'epiQUAS' AMC series).
Tuesday, April 24
Judy Garland:
A STAR IS BORN
Dr George Cukor with Juyd Garland. James Mason, Charles Bickford. The best of the three versions of this book by Harold Adrian and Ira Gershwil
(1955)
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
+1mission.
SIX ELEVENS
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
APRIL 18,1979
Events' decision right
Anyone who has observed the administration's lack of commitment to academic freedom and an open exchange of ideas must be pleased by the University Events Committee's recent decision to drop a controversial literature distribution policy.
The policy, which outlined how and where literature could be distributed on campus, was suspended in January after several protests against the restrictions the policy placed on free expression and academic freedom.
IN FINISHING off the policy for good, Ann Eversole, chairman of the Events Committee, said last week that the committee found that the distribution policy was an unnecessary duplication of existing guidelines.
But more importantly, KU officials have admitted that the policy was overly restrictive and was a mistake. Given the usual administration attitude that "No news is good news," or
sometimes that "All news is good news," this admission by the administration is big news indeed.
LAST WEEK'S denise of the Integrated Humanities Program is ample evidence that the desire to kill anything new, different or outrageous still burns strong in the KU administration. But the decision to abandon the literature distribution policy could be a sign that perhaps the administration now is more willing to allow contrary opinion to be heard on campus.
In announcing the suspension of the policy in January, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said, "We have supported the rights of controversial speakers on campus and we have also repeatedly supported the rights of controversial material."
For once the administration's actions bear out those words. At least it's a beginning.
The world of 1789 is far removed from the world of 1789. Today, each American citizen is surrounded by a plethora of numbers--from the hundreds to the thousands, insurance policies and a host of others.
Carter recognizes right to privacy
All these numbers give so much information about the individual that many citizens feel nothing about themselves is their private property.
President Jimmy Carter, however, is working on a package of initiatives to restore a semblance of personal privacy to Americans.
New protections, Carter said in a message to Congress last week, are made necessary by the potential mitime of a statewide emergency to create a dangerously intrusive society."
The new protections would include coverage of insurance policy-holders, medical patients, some federal program agencies, pretrapping targets and news story sources.
"We CONFORT threats to privacy undreamed of 200 years ago," he said. "Whenever we take out a loan, apply for insurance, receive treatment at a hospital, obtain government assistance or pay taxes, we add to the store of recorded information about our lives which can now be flashed across the nation from computer to computer."
The tremendous increase in the capacity of computers to store information about our world, and the increasing wants information about his finances, government assistance or personal matters to be in the clutches of anyone who has access to the computer and knows how to punch the key keys.
Oil: our nation is literally and figuratively being run by it.
Gasohol merits funding for research
The vovorous need for more oil—coupled with open-ended price increases—is forcing our nation into greater dependence on foreign supplies. Political action and everyday life have created an environment to concern for oil prices and sums.
The public outcry to seek more independence from the oil companies has motivated President Carter to outline plans to force the issue.
In his recent energy message, Carter proposed re-education of the oil companies and the public. He wants the nation to move towards a development develop alternative sources of energy.
Carter's proposals make it incumbent on the nation to begin intense efforts to develop alternative sources of products, or to replace some altogether.
Jake
ONE OF Carter's main proposals is to lift controls on oil prices beginning June 17. The company also controls by Sept. 30, 1981. That would allow U.S. gasoline prices to rise to European standards. Already in some countries, country gas is more than $2 a gallon.
Thompson
Carter also proposed that Congress impose a tax on "windfall profits" to the U.S. oil companies. The money raised would be deposited in a special fund, called an "energy securities fund," and would be used to aid alternative energy programs, to help the poor and to improve mass transit.
Clearly, Carter's proposals should be taken seriously if we want to cut oil consumption.
One way to cut back is through the use of gasohol, which is gaining more support as oil prices continue to rise. Gasohol, an alcohol and gasoline mixture, could cut oil consumption if it were economically feasible.
BUT UNTIL recently, gasolon cost far more to produce than oil. But propensities of gasolon, led by grain prices, have been a growing research and make gasolon cheaper.
Of course, grain producers are seeking to raise low grain prices by increasing
GRYFFIN
FOR EVERYONE WHO LIVES, SOME MAY BE CHANGED BORN.
GENERALS
the demand for grain. The nation's dependence on oil companies might then be transferred to grain producers.
But, if the federal government controls gasolase research now, it also could control prices. Economical gasolase could curb the demand for oil.
Gasolon is an old idea. It first was developed in 1922, but the cost of production has increased. Gasolon is being sold in Iowa, Nebraska and Missouri and is usually a blend of about 90 percent gasoline and 10 percent 280-pound Iowa has 400 stations offering gasolon.
AND TODAY, the greatest deterrent is still cost.
Leonard Schruben, professor of agriculture and economics at Kansas State University, has been studying the cost of production is not yet worth the cost of production.
"The facts are that there has been nothing reported scientifically to demonstrate a technique for converting farm products to alcohol using less energy than is given in the form of ethanol. It has been shown that there has been a process demonstrated that would allow for the use of alcohol so that it would pay its own way."
More research money is needed. The government could draw from its "energy securities fund" to escalate gasohol development and make it cheaper. But gasohol research awaits Congressional approval.
ORIWEOUSLY, oil prices will continue to rise as supplies dwindle. Thus, gasohol is more economically realistic than in the past.
Carter's energy plan allows for the development of gasolil. It's up to Congress and the American public to push for research funding.
The decisive factor in gasoline research may be forced by supplies. Grain crops are renewable. Petroleum supplies are finite.
Gasolso, though only a supplement now, could become a substitute for gasoline. Congress and Carter should increase funding for gasol肖 research. It is the responsibility of the oil companies, which is a goal of the government and the public:
I am a fan of the movie 'Titanic'.
Mary
Ernst
Carter says his proposal seeks to strike a balance between protecting Americans' privacy and allowing "the flow of information" for legitimate business operations."
stitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court in a controversial case last year.
- Presidential support for strengthening the nation's 10-year-old legal curbs on wiretapping, generally along the lines recommended by a national commission.
- Proposed legislation establishing the in-
terpretation legal guarantees of confidentiality in federa-
tion law.
Carter's proposals seem to achieve such a balance.
ter- an assortment of congressional bills,
executive guidelines, presidential endorsements,
and yet-to-be-drafted legislation, contains the following
elements:
- Proposed legislation extending a similar guarantee in medical records.
- Presidential support for legislation now being developed in Congress limiting the use of lie detectors in private employment.
The citizen's right to privacy has been neglected by the government all too often, especially in this age of highly-developed electronic devices. Carter was right when the laws of 200 years ago were not adequate in dealing with the threats of today.
services
· Guidelines protecting the safety of innocent individuals when the government probes computerized lists to detect fraud and other abuses of federal programs.
His package should be welcomed by Congress and the American people as a renewed commitment to the rights of the individual citizen.
MARTIN 79
THE DAILY
COMIC
N.R.C.
WESTINGHOUSE
- **LEGISLATION restricting police searches for documentary materials held by the press.** The legislation would shield work products" such as notes, files and images from being released to a simple search warrant for other documents. Such police searches were ruled con-
The importation of vast new amounts of
Efforts to legislate bedfellows ironic
It should be remembered that the accident in Harrisburg, which grew so serious through a combination of human error and equipment malfunctions, did not claim even that a chain of events resulted from this very unusual chain of events would seem to indicate that, even when a multiplicity of breakdowns and mistakes occurs simultaneously and severely cripples a nuclear facility, the systems are still able to prevent a disaster.
There is a bit of sad irony to be found in the smacking efforts of the Kansas Legislature.
Perhaps the writer of the editorial would like to suggest some viable alternatives to nuclear power, including shut down. Where might Chicago, which is heavily dependent on nuclear electricity, find another source of energy that would be cheaper than their zero-fatality nuclear system.
The privacy package proposed by Car-
I find it indeed unfortunate that the Kansan has seen fit to engage in a little easy sensationalism with its editorial of April 9 against the nuclear option of generating electricity. This editorial, inspired by the events at the power plant, insists that the events in Pennsylvania have proven that "nuclear power plants are not safe" and that the only way the public safety can be assured is by "shutting down the nuclear power industry." How the leap between the facts of nuclear disclosures was made completely escapes me.
Recently, there was a debate in a conference committee about repealing two laws that uphold, superficially of course, sexual morality in Kansas.
To the editor:
House members of the pionty piously fought against repealing laws that make the death penalty more effective.
Currently, illegal cohabitation—defined as "persons living together as man and wife"—is punishable by a $500 to $1,000 fee or by 30 days to three months in jail. Violating adultery is punishable by a fine of $900 or both. Both crimes are middensmen.
foreign oil, with its damaging effects on our economy and the demonstrated danger of massive oil spills, does not appear particularly attractive. The other alternative, namely the biological capabilities, namely the burning of coal in the environment both in the mining and burning phases, and certainly would claim many lives in mining accidents or through the pollution of the air—especially if uncontrolled and in a scale to compensate for the loss of biodiversity.
The committee did come up with a compromise bill. The adultery law would be kept but cohabitation no longer would be a crime.
HOWEVER, Wendell Lady, Speaker of the House, R-Overland Park, said he thinks this bill will remain a proposal and suffer as much as defeat—as have similar bills in the past.
He said he doubts that the bill will be heard on the floor, noting that legislators do not like to deal with or vote on such issues because of negative consequences at election time.
Kansan unjust in nuclear criticism
Death penalty veto deserves applause
To the editor:
It would seem to me that the death of a single miner in the coal fields of Wyoming is a greater disaster than the "near disaster" at Three Mile Island, which has yet to show us our first documented case even of injury, let alone death.
We are writing to express our commendation and support of Governor Carlin
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
Kevin C. Travis Lawrence senior
We do not feel that any legislative body has the right to decide whether one should live or die. As long as there is any moral question involved—and there always will be—any such legislation is wrong and a violation of human rights. Rather, the precedent for our penal institutions is that they are to fill in the gaps in the role and not a punitive one. The death penalty for any crime clearly does not correspond to this view.
for his decision to veto the bill to reinstate
the death penalty in Kansas.
We appreciate Governor Carlin's decision on this issue; he has insured an important degree of respect for human dignity in the state of Kansas.
Given that the majority of the citizens of Kansas support the reinstatement of this bill, his decision was a courageous one and, in our view, ethically right.
Campus bus riders waste human energy
Martha Visser
Lawrence junior
And two others
To the editor:
There has been much talk in recent years concerning energy shortages. Very few appreciate the idea of reducing personal use. Whether it is gas, electricity or oil, Americans trown at any imposed stipulation. Yet, students living on campus at the University of Kansas seem to conserve possibly the most natural resource: human energy. Students live in a high physical fitness popularity so many students must ride campus buses.
True, riding a bus is more economical than driving a car to class, but KU's campus does not require cars for on-campus students. Even when warm weather sets in, hordes of students pile on the buses, chatting about how nice the weather is. By being lazy, and paying more than $2 a year for a car, we reduce the conservation of gasoline.
If so many of us are concerned with "cutting back," why can't bus riders dispose of human energy as well as those pounds who riders claim they wish to lose? To college students everywhere, the backbone of tomorrow's world is a powerful action, for it seems wasteful to let a gifted natural resource go to waste. Walk! Don't ride!
Dreux DeMack
Olathe junior
A. K.
If anything, the voting record of members of the legislature on these two issues indicates that too many Kansans can be shamefully vicious and hocritical.
Phillip Garcia
Lady states that legislators retain these current petty sexual laws to appease constituents. And it is generally known that most Kansans wanted the death penalty, and legislators voted in compliance with this sentiment.
Tampering with laws that uphold the moral fiber of Kansas is dangerous.
There is no morality in capital punishment. Morality is not sending someone to the electric chair on one hand and on the other condemning promiscuity.
Two years ago, Lady said, a Republican senator from Topeka voted to repeal a law against砂姆 between consenting partners. During the candidate's campaign for president, the defendant was indirectly accused of supporting sexual immorality. The candidate lost.
It is foolish that members of the house wish to retain laws that are hardly enforceable and furthermore contradict the state's recognition of common-law marriage—the cohabitation of an unmarried man and woman.
BUT WHAT I AM to the signifikant and
woolfie犀利 is more signifikant and
ratiawild
these laws are the efforts to maintain morals by legislators, House members in particular, after earlier approving a death penalty bill.
How can a person fight for sexual morality in the same time approving the killing of another person?
This is not a plug for adultery or cohabitation. It is only asked that the call for moral fiber be sounded from institutions better suited to do so.
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 afar from home, please send the letter should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kanasan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(UFSB 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May. UFSB 600-640 is available at www.ufsb.edu and online. Second-class postage paid at lawsuits, Lawrence, KS 60045. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $34 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, passed through the student bank.
and changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60445
Editor
Harry Massev
Editorial Editor
John Whitesides
Dick Stetminer
Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editors
Associate Campus Editors
Graphics Editor
Special Institions Editor
Media Editors
Sports Editor
Mary Thornbough, Sandy Herd
Mary Thornbough, Sandy Herd
Copy Chiefs
Cydnial Hunters, Barb Karolin, Caroline Townbridge
Entertainment Editor
Mary Ernst, Philip Garcia, Veronion Smith, John Ackman
Staff Writers
Mary Ernst, Philip Garcia, Veronion Smith, John Ackman
Linn Libernian, Deb Reichmann
Business Manager
Karen Wendorott
Retail Sales Manager
National Association Manager
Classified Advertising Manager
Assistant Classified Advertising Manager
Advertising Manager Makeup Manager
Staff Artist
Staff Photographer
Targeted Manager
Sales Representatives
Bob Allman
Ron Bailer
Kitty McMahon
Duncan Bunts
Advertising Manager
Danhis Cavosz
Greg Bligh
Delta Della
Alim Blair, Paul Kniol,
Knots Knots
Brenda Barton, Cindy Ray, Annemarie Jouanna
General Manager Rick Muster Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
Wednesday, April 18, 1979
5
n
d
d
d
t.
r
d
t
SenEx to discuss merger
The University Senate executive committee will discuss today a plan to merge the university with the New York State College of Pharmacy.
Evelyn Swartz, chairman of SenEx, said the committee would focus on the proposed merger of the men's backyard, which is the KU women's Athletics Advisory Board.
Swartz has said the representation on the new board must not be as complete as that.
The merger proposal was submitted in February to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes in a letter from Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; Marian Washington, director of women's athletics; and Bob Marcum, director of men's athletics.
The current men's board has 20 members and the women's board has 16 members. The combined board would have 15 members. The two parties voted and eight would be ex officio members.
The proposed membership of the board would comprise three elected faculty
representatives, three elected alumn
representatives and one student athlete
Compared with the current men's board, the faculty, alumni and student representation would be cut in half. Compared with the current women's board, faculty representatives would be cut from four to three, and student members from two to one.
ON THE PROPOSED board, the eight ex officio members would be the university comproller, the vice chancellor for student affairs, the student body president, the chairman of the Student Senate Sports Committee, the executive secretary of the University, the executive director of the University, a faculty representative to the Big Eight Athletics conference and National Collegiate Athletics Association and a faculty representative to the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women.
Compared with the current men's board, this would eliminate one ex officio member; the chair position on the board would be replaced by an executive director of the Alumni Association.
The proposal would eliminate the following ex officio members from the women's board: president of the council of women athletes, chairman of the health, recreation and recreation department and the representative from the chancellor's office.
Smoke detector warns of blaze
A smoke alarm has been credited with saving the lives of two residents of a mobile home that was almost destroyed by *n* fire late Monday night.
Firefighters said Alice L. Smith and her son Jason were asleep when a smoke alarm sounded in their mobile house at 101 N. Allegra St., alerting them to a fire in the home.
Damage to the home and contents was estimated at $7,000 by firefighters. The cause of the blaze is being investigated by fire officials.
JR'S
Be an active part
of next years
SR. CLASS—
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Deadline April 20, 1979— Level 3 107 B Kansas Union
Graduation Announcements & Ring Day Special
BRITISH COLONIAL UNION
Pick up or Order your graduation announcements NOW at the Kansas Union Bookstore
UNIVERSITY
SPECIAL on the Argentus Senior Class Ring ONLY $59.95 (April 17th & 18th Only)
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BOOKSTORES
master design
(Trade in class rings accepted)
We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with KU students.
CENTRAL AMERICAN HISTORY
Lawrence, Kansas
A Conference Sponsored by The Tri-University Center of Latin American Studies (University of Kansas, Kansas State University, and Wichita State University)
Kansas Union
April 19-20,1979
THURSDAY APRIL 19
PABell Discussion on the Curent Nicaraguan Simulation
PABell Discussion on the Curent Nicaraguan Simulation
MAURICIO SOLAUN United States Ambassador to Nicaragua
MARIANDO HIALLOS Rector. Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Nicaragua
EDUARDO CONAGRADO Decano. Humanidades. Universidad nacional
Autonoma de Nacaragua
3:30 P M
3.00 p.m.
Forum Room
LUNCH
WILLAM J. GRIFFITH University of Kansas
100 P.M. Theatre and the Shark Central American
Woodruff Aud Governments and the Developers University of
Kansas Humanities Lecture
CALVIN BILLMAN Augusta College
1:30 P.M William Joyce Griffith*
Council Room
FRIDAY MORNING APRIL 20
ROBERTA NAYLOR
2:00 P.M. M
Farish Dickinson University
"Central American Revised" The Formative Years
Library
FRIDAY AFTERNOON APRIL 20
JOHN P. BELL Indiana University of Ft Wiley
1000 A.M. EItte Organized Responses to Agrian Reform in
Kentucky
MIHAM WILLIFORD
10 30 A M
CENTER
Tinker Foundation
Jeremy Benchman and Jose del Vale™
DAVID CHANDLER
Bryant High School University
9 M-A M
Dr. Thiamucese through Jesus
Joseph Agyemba and
the African American Federation
R LEE WOODWARD Tulane University
11:00 A.M The Central American Policy of a Conservative
Counsel Room Caudilo, Rattel Carrera, 1840-1865
BREAK
KERNEN FINNEY 2.308 M 1 F
North Carolina Westerman College and
Washington S. Wardenton and the Handiars
of Texas
CHARLES L. STANSFER University of Kansas 11:30 A.M. *French-Scientists in Costa Rica, 1845-1914*
JOHN BRITTON Francis marion College
4:00 P.M. "Carleton Beats and the U.S. Department in
Council Room Central America: The Sanding Story"
MAUCIUNI D 00MIMUGE2 Kennsaw College
Costa Rica Winn and Titesa A Battle for Recognition in Costa Rica
College Reunion
BREAK
THOMAS FISHER University of New Orleans University to Central America in the Eighteenth Century
Counsel Room
CARLOS MELENDEZ
8 WEEK DPM.
Universidad de Costa Rica
Udversidad de Centro América, una
universidad con certificado de
el UNESCO.
FRIDAY EVENING APRIL 20
Open to all interested students and faculty
No admission fee
!!TONIGHT!!!
LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE
presents
Lost Record Recording Artists
RedWillowBand
RedWillow Band
KEGGER
NIGHT!!
Women - 2.00
Men - 3.00
FREE
BEER!!
and texas
set-ups from
8:00-12:00
BIG WEEKEND of COUNTRY ROCK
. . . Friday, April 20th . . .
"GATEMOUTH" BROWN
and
POTT COUNTY PORK & BEAN BAND
THE BAND
Saturday, April 21st
Pitt County
Portk't Bean
Band
with
SOUTHERN FRIED
Tickets available at
Better Days and the
7th Spirit Cellar
Doors open at 8:00
Show at 9:00
The Lawrence
Opera house
7th Spirit Club
Tickets now on sale for
EARL SCRUGGS
SPIRO GYRA
DAVID GRISMAN
ASLEEP at the WHEEL
842-6930 642 Massachusetts
Pitt County
ForKtBean
Band
6
Wednesday, April 18, 1979
GIBRALTARS
Tonight
PAT'S BLUE RIDDIM BAND
Guys—$3.00 All the Beer
Gals—$2.00 you can drink
Live E.
Disco
Live Enterta.
Disco
memberships available
642-5765
for the discriminating adult
Students eligible for food stamps
Staff Writer
Bv LORI LINNENBERGER
Food prices today tend to exasperate student shoppers.
Some exasperated students might be able to find out they are eligible to survive for five months.
Suel Starr, supervisor of the Douglas County non-public assistance food stamps program, recently said that more than 10,000 Douglas County residents were eligible for the program. However, only 1,600 to 1,700 were receiving food stamps.
Included in that 10,000 figure, Starr said, were KU students living on monthly incomes that would qualify them for food stamps.
"Although we think the program has been well-publicized, there are a lot of people that just don't know about it or don't have any idea that they might be eligible," she said.
"A LOT OF people look at food stamps as
welfare and they look at welfare as an
indication that they can't take care of
themselves. They're proud, naturally."
Of the 600 households currently receiving food stamps in Douglas County, approximately one-fifth are student aides. A household may be an individual.
Eligibility for food stamps is determined by the amount of income an individual or household receives in a month. Income includes scholarships, grants, wages, alimony, unemployment compensation and dividends.
After income is determined, deductions are made to ascertain net income. Deductions include tuition, dependent children and shelter, medical and child care expense. A 20 percent standard deduction is given, also, Starr said.
ONCE NET INCOME is established, a
maximum dollar amount of food stamps is awarded. For example, Starr said, if a student received a net income of $200 a month, he or she would be eligible for $10 worth of food stamps a month. The lower an applicant's income, the higher his food stamp benefits.
The maximum net income one individual may receive is $277 a month. That figure, however, depends on how much may change from month to month, Starr said, depending on fluctuations in consumer spending.
For instance, she said, the maximum value of food stamps an individual may receive now is $57. In January and February that figure was $88.
"STUDIES AT THE HEDAL level are constantly being done to compute the increases and decreases in the cost of living." Starr said. "They found out that living was less expensive this month than it was in January."
The amount of food stamps awarded a household automatically increases twice as year, she said, because it is taken for the cost of the cost of living will rise at least that often.
Starr said she thought most KU students received food stamps belonged to married or single-parent households, but she said she taught many married couples did not realize the assistance they could obtain under the Food Stamps Program.
"A two-member family with a net income of $200 a month could receive a $45 bonus in food stamps," she said. "A four-person family with the same income could receive a $131 bonus."
The student claimed as a dependent on his parents' income taxes might have a more difficult time meeting eligibility requirements and be an independent of his parents. Sarr said.
"But that's not to say that a dependent
student will not receive any benefits," she said. "They just have to prove their eligibility further than the independent students do."
Starr said a student had to state on his application whether he was claimed on his parents' income tax return. An eligibility application for food stamps is then sent to the parents to determine if they are eligible to receive them. The student also meets eligibility requirements.
Dependent students are eligible if their parents already are receiving food stamps
To apply for the Food Stamp Program, a student should be working a maximum of 20 hours a week. If the student applicant is unemployed, he must register for work with the Lawrence employment office, Starr said.
"If the student gets a job referral, he must go to the interview," she said. "If they want to employ him, he has to accept the job—if it doesn't interfere with his school work."
Non-students must either work a
minimum of 30 hours a week or register for
a job.
Persons receiving food stamps must undergo re-evaluation periodically, she said. Changes in residence, dollar amounts of bills, the number of people in the house, or the types of purchases made (such as food) may affect the person's food stamp allocation.
"Sometimes, nothing changes," she said.
"But they still have to be reported."
The incidence of abuse and fraud by students in the Food Stamp Program has been increased.
"For one, the newness of the program wore off," she said. "Students realized that
IF HER OFFICE discovers abuse or fraud in the program, Starr said, a claim is made that the employee is in Section of the Food Stamp Program. It attempts to recover any money that is used
Food stamps are reimbursed at an
Lawrence grocers, Starr said. It is up to the
individual grocer to decide whether he
wants to honor food stamps.
it was really a hassle to get around the eligibility requirements and all. Then they began to realize that it was a hassle to report changes and wait around for the stamps. I think most just thought it wasn't worth it. ___
Another athletic build gone soft.
"Some don't mind filing reports and some do," she said. "Groceries that do their business in the high-income area don't need sooner honor food stamps than groceries in the high-income area we really don't need
coming...
"I'm sure that there are still people out there who are on the program and really shouldn't be. I hate to even think about that, but maybe we should be a little worse for the people that really need them."
Anything used for human consumption may be purchased with food stamps, including vegetable seeds. Items not defined as food cannot be bought with food stamps, so the might include alcohol, cigarettes, pet food, detergent and toilet tissue.
So you've got a few problems with your shape. Don't worry about it, do something about it. And a good way to get started is by reading the next issue under "The free supplement to your college newspaper from Eord."
STATE U
You'll find tips on exercise, training and sports. And you'll discover a few of the unusual ways some athletes stay in shape. It's not all running and weight lifting. And you'll also find some very interesting information about how to shape up your ride with the great lineup of '79 Fords.
Double chin from lots of pizza with double cheese.
Sunken chest. Makes breathing hard.
600 calories.
Tennis elbow. Great for resting on table tops.
Belt overhang, makes tying shoes a problem
Stiff knee to walk and back.
Swollen.
The Food Stamp Program began in 1963 after President John F. Kennedy issued an executive order directing the secretary of agriculture to increase the amount and variety of food being distributed to low-income families.
FORD
Look for "Insider"— Ford's continuing series of college newspaper supplements.
FORD DIVISION
Ford
H.B. Quirk's
Starters
H.B. Quirks
The Restaurant & Crepene Iowa at 26th Street Lawrence, Kansas
Has Something For Everybody Try our new menu soon!
Salted Snaps
A boozy crack of salmon, bacon and marinated vegetables
Onion Soup Gravine
Cup 1.25 Cream 2.00
Viburnum favored with bread creme and melted thyme
Dog's Food the Dip
Cup 1.25 Cook 1.83
Cooked mixed greens with Dog's Food
Cup 9 Cook 1.03
Cooked mixed greens with Dinner cells
SALADS
Quirk Salad Plate
Mixed green, uncured vegetables, brown, and chopped egg, served in a halved glass plate 1.10
Vegetarian salad
Mixed green and halved carrots, fresh herb, chopped egg, uncured vegetables and meltered veggies 1.00
Chef Salad
Mixed green, sliced Bunt Beef, Honey, cream and hallder vegetables and meltered veggies 1.00
Sandwiches
Hand salad with grape juice and succulent onions in tainted
Hamburger with beef with dipping sauce
Served on a kettle with garlic in tainted boiled onion dressing
**Heart Beef**
Ham and New York
Broiled Salmon
Chicken Salad
Served with ham with phyllo of bread served with beef wedge, egg, grilled
Brown rice with tainted bread and celerie and beef and served on tainted bread
Neck steak with bacon
Charred steak on kettle
Charred burger on kettle
Cheddar burger
Soup and Tomato
Vollkorn soup with tomato dish
Something Different
Quiche with Bacon
composite feature, served with bank-hard cheese.
Cheese Briodil three flour briodil cheese with rosemary.
Liquorice.
Tortoise shell tortilla base.
A crash of Dionis Soupy Creature with Injection
spacebar 1.5.30
Brieved beef cubes with a slice in each grasswich
Strawberries Fruit & Chicken
Half of a chicken breast with strawberries
1.50
Half of a chicken breast with strawberries
4.50
Prime Rib
Prawns and scallops on salmon. Guests can cut of grilled
fresh rind.
3.75
Prince Solitaire Stork
As guest at it.
3.95
Reg. Cust Sirloin Streak
Crusted sirloin steak
2.75
Strict Stork
Strict steak
4.95
Phone: 618-767-2222
Crêpes
Tweezers served with Quick & Salad Photo
Phone: 618-767-2222
Steak Fries 65
Hand Recipes 65
Coffee and A Tea
Painters 75
Lingerie of Shrew 50
Ballet Pointe 61
Milkshake 61
Embellishments
Open
11-10 Tues., Wed., Thurs.
11-11 Fri., Sat.
12-10 Sun. Closed Monday
Entrees
Country Fried Steak
Bratened beef cutlets with chicken gravy
Southern Fried Chicken
Made from chickens dipped in our green spread batter
Prime Ribs
Fried and sandwich roast a generous slice of great leaning rib
Pistachio Steak
Asparagus loaf
Hog, Leg or Shrimp Streak
Crusted shrimp loaf
Strip Steak
Home Grill
Crêpes
Two crêpes served with Quick's Salad Plate, and Dinner rolls.
Crêpe Roll
Select loaf of chicken with herbs/spices and served with a chocolate sauce
Crêpe Struggelfoil
Salmon and fresh mushrooms in a delicious struggelfoil sauce
Shrimp Ver Burger Criepe
Shrimp mushrooms and green beans in a delicious lemon sauce
Canelloni
Autumn croque fritée
Fresh Mushroom Criepe
Shred fresh mushrooms in Morning sauce
Embellishments
All croissants served with crisp cheese cubes, steak fries, or cream cheese and crème potato, Quark's Salad Plate and dinner rolls.
Beverages
Lemonade 15 oz. $0.99
Soft Drink 15 oz. $0.99
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KU student pleads guilty to demonstration charge
Menninger was demonstrating against the anti-treaty demonstration.
Menninger was charged with disorderly conduct during a protest last month on the University of Kansas campus against the signing of the Egyptian-Iraqian peace treaty.
Bonar B. Menninger, Lawrence special student, yesterday pleaded guilty to charges of disorderly conduct before George Catt, judge of the Lawrence Municipal Court.
He was fined $15 and charged $2 court costs.
The trial of a student charged with resisting arrest and disorderly conduct as a result of the protest has been continued by the state.
Mike Hill, chief of KU police, said yesterday that the case was still being investigated by his department, but declined to say whether there were any suspects in the case.
Steven Schwartz, Barrington, R.I., freshman, who also was protesting the demonstration, will face trial in the Douglass case. 3, instead of today as originally scheduled.
KU police said yesterday that they were investigating the alleged rape of a student at Cayman Islands.
Police said the victim was studying in her room at about 10 p.m. when her attacker allegedly entered the room, asked to borrow her class notes then sexually assaulted her.
Alleged rape investigated
The alleged attack was not reported to police until Thursday, four days later. Reporting a crime is up to the victim, Hill said.
Hill said the report was not made public until yesterday because an officer was still present.
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Wednesday, April 18, 1979
7
St. Clair leads staff
By TONY FITTS
Snorts Writer
Dan St. Clair is dedicated to baseball and his statistics show it. In his second year at KU, the senior right-hander leads the receiving staff with a 64 record and 19,938 RPA.
He's always been dedicated to baseball.
"I've been a pitcher since I started playing baseball in fifth grade," he said. "When I was a freshman in high school, I tried out for football. I made the team as a second-starter stringer—but I never got into a game. I got pissed and the team just hit me, in the name of the season, when coach let everybody play. That was my football career."
Baseball is important to St. Clair.
"I then tried basketball, and then track. I finally stuck with baseball."
"BASEBALL" IS TO only reason I've continued to school," he said, "As long as they give me the education for playball. I'll take it."
A physical education major, St. Clair said he hoped to be coached some time, after he began his job.
"I've been at three different colleges so far, and each coach has a little different way of teaching."
St. Clair attended American Christian College in Tulsa, Oka, and Garden City Community College before coming to KU his junior year.
"I've been picking up little odds and ends about practicing and playing and sticking them in the back of my mind," he said. "If I see something different from what I've learned before, I'll think about it and compare it to what I already know."
"BUT I don't do too much of that. I'm here today, and to second hand coach Tommy."
to talk about of think. I'm here to play, not to seethat about and study pitching, though. He said he sometimes watched major league games on television and played.
"I watch what they do for control, where their release points are, how they come off the mound—and other things, like how they hide the ball from the batters."
He watches more than the pitchers.
"It's getting to the point now where I watch the big bites and see what they hit... it's a bit scary."
"I don't watch too much, though. I'd rather play baseball than watch it."
SOMETIMES, however, a pitcher has to watch battles. St Clair and the other members of the Kansas baseball study the chance in the Big Eight whenever they get a chance.
"We'll take the pitching charts from when we played them last year and see what they do with it," he said. "We'll go from that," he said. "We also ask around the league about the various hit rates."
This research doesn't always work
"I last year at Nebraska, I threw over 100 last bats, and only about six curves, and was thrown out three times." The Nebraska was supposed to be a fastball batting club ball," he said. "I'm glad I didn't get it."
THE PITCHER isn't the only person who has to know the batters. The catcher is very smart.
"the catcher," he said, "has to know each particular batter—what he likes to hit, where to put the target, when and how to catch on his iron—everything about the batter."
"If you get a good catcher who knows all that, you don't have to think at all. You can just stand up there and throw without thinking about it. If you have to do some thinking on your own about the batter, it takes away from your pitching."
"IF I DON'T get drafted," he said, "it won't be that bad. I had a chance to be drafted two years ago, but I decided to go to school.
University Daily Kansan
And St. Clair doesn't want anything to take away from his pitching. That's what he wants to use as a ride to the major leagues because he played in Kansas. But his life does' lend upon it.
"If I do get drafted, I'd like to go with a team with a young pitching staff who isn't making real big salaries. I think I'd get a team that has a lot of talent and have so much invested in a pitching staff."
"But if I don't get drafted, I'll probably work over the summer and earn enough money to finish my degree. Right now. I have thoughts and sights are aimed at baseball."
"You have a lifetime to work, but you only get one chance to play baseball."
Soccer club gets 3rd in league
Staff photo by STEPHAN SPECTOR
KU's soccer club placed third in the Big Eight conference tournament in Burlington.
Colorado beat Missouri 2-1 in overtime to claim first place in the seven-team tournament. Oklahoma State's soccer team did not make the trip.
Ball Beck's goal gave KU a 1-4 victory over Nebraska in its first game. Missouri shut out KU 2-0 in the second game, which put Illinois against Kansas State for third place.
With the score tied at two a piece, Brian Harris scored a clutch goal, and KU held on to win 3- Pete Nelson and Nikda Valovich also scored goals.
The team's next action will be the 12-team Wheelchair Invitational Tournament.
KANSAS CITY, MO. (UPI) - All Big Eight conference guard Darnell Valentine has been invited to try out for the 1979 U.S. Pan American basketball team.
Valentine is invited
Other league players invited were Rolando Blackman, Kansas State guard; Al Beal, Oklahoma center; and Dean Uthoff, Iowa State center.
KANSAN
Sports
Pitcher Dan St. Clair releases a fast ball at Quigley Field, showing the that earned him a team-bump 64 and record 1 and a LRA Rex. He says he always been dedicated to the sport.
Royals lose; face KU
The rally began with singles by Mark Wagner and Ron Lefonte off starter Paul Stanley. The ball was dropped in and got the second out of the innings. Kemp broke the deadlock with his hit to left. May then looped a ball to center. Amos Otis for a diving catch but the ball got past him.
DETROIT (AP) - Steve Kemp broke a 3-12 tie with a run-scorning single off Al Harbakos in the seventh inning yesterday and Milt May followed with a two-run double to lead the Detroit Tigers to a 6-3 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Kansas City manager Whitey Herzog played the last innings of the game under protest because of an interference call in the top of the seventh on Hal McRae. McRae pitched 64 pitches and ran into pitcher John Hiller covering the bag, while George Brett scored from second.
The Royals scored their first two runs in the sixth off Dave Rozema, one on a single by Pete LaCock and the other on a groundout by Frank White.
Umpire crew chief John Shulock sent Brett back to third. However, Brett later scored anyway in a single by AI Cowens, tying the score-3.3.
Today, the Royals play KU in an exhibition game at i8 in Royals Stadium. The game was scheduled to give Kansas City some practice from some hurriers other than its own pitching staff, KU coach Floyd Temple said yesterday.
Temple said he would start Terry Sutcliffe, who would pitch for two innings. Dan St. Clair will go another two innings. Speedy second baseman Steve Jeltz, who leads the 'Hawks in walks and stolen bases, will be KU's lead off hitter.
The games will open at 12:30. Admission is free.
Buck, Hogan contrast, 'Hawks win decisively
By GENE MYER8
Snorts Writer
KU's men's team traintown its fifth straight Arkansas State Invitational championship by a whopping 70 points, but the Crimson Jonesboro, Ark, were actually 17-8 and 46.3.
Those were the marks registered Saturday by Jeff Buckingham in the pole vault and Deen Hogan in the 400-meters. Despite their mutual successes, the two KU freshmen have had contrasting rookie campaigns.
The highly-touted freshmen have been two of KU's steadiest performers all season. They are also the only one meet. Hogan's injured hammatric has limited him to just on meet a month since his knee was broken.
BUT HOGAN put his training table days behind him by beating teammates Lester Mickens and Stan Whitaker in the 400-meter run. Not only did he defeat Mickens, one of the nation's top middle distance runner, and Whitaker KU's senior captain, but his 485 clocking is the third fastest in KU for a national championship for the NCAA Outdoor Championships.
Later in the meet, Hagan helped the hawks capture another of their six first-time kills.
the mule relay, he combined with Tommy McCaitlh, Whitaker and Mickens for a new album.
"I finally over the injuries," Hogan
said. "It was really easy and I felt so rela-
ted."
"COMING OFF the straightway, I just had this extra burst of speed. I never felt it."
KU's other winners were Anthony Coleman, with a NCAA qualifying 13.7 in the 110-meter hurdles; Jimmy Little, with a NCAA qualifying 13.6 in the intermediate hurdles; Matt Friedeman, in the discus (169-7); and the 400-meter relay team. Tim Jones, Kevin Newell, David Blutter and Mickens won with a 0.52, or one second of a second off the NCAA qualifying mark.
Even though KU coach Bob Timmons was dubious about the quality of KU's operative performance, especially since KU limped through the Texas Relays April 7 with a
KU tallied 179 team points to win the team title for the fifth time in as many years. No other school has ever won the team title in the Invitational, begun in 1974. The host Indians finished second with 103 points and Notre Dame took third with 93.
KU captures Wichita title
The women's track team captured nine individual first-place finishers and won the team title by dominating the competition at the Wichita State Relays last weekend.
Three Jayhawk team members registered double victories in the meet. The team's only healthy spinner, Lori Green, won her two events, the 100- and 200-meter runs.
It was the third week in a row that Kansas finished first and by doing it it remained undefeated in outdoor competition this year. With 192 points, KU easily outdistanced second-place Dodge City Junior College, which finished with 139.
Lori Lourrey repeated her performance of a week ago at the Nebraska Invitational by
finishing first in both the 100- and 400-meter
heights
KU's Michelle Brown won both the 1,000- and 3,000-meter run. In both races her closest competition was from her own teammates.
In addition to the three individual double winners, other KU first-place finished were by Deb Hertzog in the 800-meter run and Shawn Corwin in the high jump.
KU's two relay teams recorded the team's first place-first finish. Claire Overstake, Lowry, Wren Pass and Green ran 48.18 to place first in the 400-meter relay. The medley relay team of Overstake, Pass, Denise Homa finished first in 1:48.5.
Phoenix beats Kings in 1st round
The second game of the best-of-seven series will be in Kansas City Friday night.
PHOENIX, Ariu. (IIP) - Paul Westphal scored 25 points and Walt Dawvis added 24 to lift the Phoenix Suns to a 102-99 comeback victory over the Kansas City Kings in last night's opener of the NBA Western Conference semifinal series.
ahead to stay at 90-49 on Westphal's layup with 4:21 left.
The Suns outscored the Kings 14-3 in the last eight minutes of the third quarter to close to within two after trailing by 13. The Suns' run was early in the fourth period until Phoenix went
PHOENIX PULLED to a five-point lead but the Kings closed to within one with less than a minute remaining. A stuff by Alvan Adams with 20 seconds left put the Suns back up by three points. Don Buse then got to put the game out of reach.
Otis Bitsdorf tossed in 20 points to top all five Kansas City starters. Bill Robinzie and Scott Wednesday had 16 each, Sam Lacey 13 and Phil Ford 10.
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}
8
Wednesday, April 18, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Maupintour travel service
AIRLINE TICKETS
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Who is "Numero Uno"? Bud Greenspan
Producer of "The Olympiad," "Wilma," and widely recognized writer, director, and Olympic expert presents the first public showing of Numero Uno. A series of thirteen half hour documentaries on legendary world sport will lend commentary and offer his opinion as to who is "Numero Uno."
Admission: Free Wednesday, April 18, 1979 8:00 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom
SUA
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Firefighters request pay increase
By KATE POUND Staff Reporter
The requested 12 percent across-the-board raise would help local firefighters, many of whom earn less than $4.25 an hour, to fight increases in the cost of living, the spokesman, James Woydiak, vice president of the local, said last night.
The proposal package is deserved, Thewydzik said, because of the inflation rate, which has been more than 10 percent in recent years. It requires the information and job requirements for firefighters.
Pay increases requested yesterday by the city are reasonable in view of the inflation rate and increased responsibilities for firefighters, a spokesman for Local 1068 of the Indianapolis Fire Department.
The 12 percent raise was part of a six point package given to the city manager's office yesterday. The package asked for increased family health insurance benefits, increased eligibility for incentive pay and increased longevity pay for firefighters. Woydzak
FIREFIGHTERS MUST pass monthly盘点的 their job skillset for 30 months before they leave the company.
"Some of the city departments' employees just have to show up every day to get their raises. 'Woyzziak and.' We're the ones who have to prove we've earned our raises."
The firefighters also asked that their positions be reclassified upward on the city's pay scale, so that they will be paid on a scale comparable to that of other city workers. Reclassification would mean a 5 percent increase, in addition to the 12 percent increase.
Feyline & the K-State Union/UPC Concerts are proud to present an evening with
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The increase proposals fall within anti-inflation guidelines established earlier this year by President Carter, Woydziak said, because the Carter guidelines allow induction of hardship and special cases. The guidelines for maximum pay raises of 7 percent.
"WE FEEL SOME of those guidelines don't hold for us," Woydikin said.
$8.00 $7.50 $7.00
Tickets available now at the Kansas Union; also available at the K-State Union, April 7-25 at the Record Store in Agilvieville, Conde Music in downtown Manhattan, Mother Earth Records in Topeka, Kief's in Lawrence, FT. Riley Services, Herschel of Sight & Sound in Salina and Del's TV and Tape in Salina
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There's Always Something Developing at Our Place!
The image shows a man standing in front of a bed. He is holding the bed with his hands and appears to be looking at something on the bed. The bed has several pillows and blankets. There are also a couple of pillows on the floor next to the bed. The room has a desk behind the bed, which has a lamp on it. There are curtains visible on the windows. The walls are plain.
The city manager's staff will study the firefighters' proposals to determine whether they comply with Carter's guidelines.
With our fully-equipped darkroom here at Naismith, it's only natural!
Naismith
Hall
1800 Naismith
843-8559
Negotiations on the firefighters' contract, which will take effect Jan. 1, 1980, have not begun, Kevin Burt, city employee relations director, said. The city manager's staff and the firefighters only reviewed the proposal in yesterday's meeting, 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
City officials expect no problems with the negotiations. Burt added.
Mike Linderman, president of the
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The city yesterday also received a request or an adjustment to the city police officer.
"We're trying to work together with the city to come to an agreement," Lindeman said.
The request for an adjustment is allowed under a clause in the police contract which permits rate wage negotiations if the inflation rate reaches 12 percent, Gary Sampson, chairman of the Lawrence Police Officers Association, said.
The U.S. Department of Labor has estimated that there was an 11.3 percent increase in the cost of living index between February 1978 and February 1979.
The officers' current contract took effect
Jan. 1, 2019, and will run until December of
1948.
The city manager's staff will meet again with firefighters next Wednesday. Burt审计。
The city manager's office will meet with the police association tomorrow. Burt said.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 18.1979
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accordionist, product manager, and employment
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Contribute to team meetings, presentations, and
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AD DEADLINES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. Three offers can be added in person or by calling the UK business office at 861-8588.
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 First Hall
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Saturday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
DEFEND YOUR INALIABLE RIGHTS to life,
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instructed how to respond in the fight
if you are injured or killed.
Enroll now for Wheel wearing clipsers beginners
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FOR RENT
Still looking for a place to call home? Nakshmi will be the guest of honor for the manager of the visit. Sign up now and we will or give us a call at 843-8500 and we will be glad to help you in our NAKSHMI HALL, 1601 Nakshmi Drive, 843-8500.
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW BENT
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Christian Hirsch. Now and Summer. Close to competition. No. 842-608 between 2 Saturdays.
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2. BR 28 and efficiency. Close to campus. UI-UI
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Apartments and rooms furnished, parking, most
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MARK & II Apartment now renting for summer
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For summer subways a 1 bedroom display, pa-
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Most must furnished one bedroom apartment with two baths. Bedroom 1, $165-$300; utility 1, $41-$80; marketing 1, $19-$29.
Nies 2 bedroom townhouse, 2 baths, full kitchen,
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Summer roommates needed: Share 2 BR apt. 181,
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DAILY ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE
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Apartments. Completely furnished studio or
1 BK. Conveniently located at 2nd & Florida
just west of the Sanctuary on Kli Plu House.
8415255 • 842-4455
Summer sublease. Excellent complex Mall Apts.
Call 842-7580 at 5:00 p.m. 4-20
Pointe Madison Flute Guitar with strings, cords,
bass pickups, and accessories. Very good condition.
cards, keys and covers. Very good condition.
ROCKY
Js
Every Wednesday
LADIES' NIGHT!
.25* DRAWS ALL NIGHT!!
8th & Vermont
WATERED MATHTESTS $59.83, 3 year guard:
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. 138-136, ff.
Watch for truck on Sunday sold out products
Powder, 90th, & Illinois. Also wood crates
Sunsets - Sun-like are our speciality. Non-
Sunsets - Sun-like are our reason, reason.
1021 Muskelland 943-570
1021 Muskelland 943-570
78 Remainman 5, 6 F 1, La Cor 9,000 miles, 23,000 miles
79 Remainman 5, 6 F 1, La Cor 9,000 miles, 23,000 miles
80 Remainman 5, 6 F 1, La Cor 9,000 miles, 23,000 miles
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale! Make notes out of Western Civilization Maps made so simple that you can easily take a civilization 31 for exam preparation. *New Analysis*. Critic, Mails Bookstore, & Orad Bookstore. II, IL.
1972 CBSC Hospion Reliable, Trans, new nursery,
tune up best. Holden -864-6117 - 4-24
Afteroperator, starter and starter Specialist.
Specialist MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 832-906-3000, 900 W, 6th ftr,
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 832-906-3000, 900 W, 6th ftr.
Golf clubs, full set; Putter, 2-9 trus, 1-3 woods.
Call editions 825-5399. 4-19
SPORTS CAR. IA 197-198 TR6_low mobility. Michigan no risk; mechanically $2500. JOBD DISTRIBUTION.
Magnavax Console store; small-adult Azaki 195
speed. White zig-zag sewing machine; wood chair;
silver bracelet; Call Silhure after
saturday and Saturday; 846-846-846.
trying!
For sale by house - 1622. W. 22nd Terrace.
A third bedroom with roomette; approximately 1,000 square feet. Fully furnished for student or law graduate student, or young adult. Excellent demand possibilities. 4-20
8674
Set of bicycle wheels with Sunshine hubs and
Ariana rims. 85, $42-$4734
4-20
FMC Built Model T4, V6, automatic, dual-
chip, AM, Radio, Call 1-163-890-6389
3636
www.fmc.com
15 AM 6 cly. Camaro, 41,000 miles. AC, PS, ATM 5 AM FM 8 track and much more. One owner. Also Peyton 10300 speakers 6 months old selling for $200 asking $20 or best offer. 842-505-7000.
PHOTOGRAPHIES:- Due to an ordering error, stress with 42 rolls of钙 in 30 mm x 20 mm.
I have had 425 sheets of Kodak Elematite
I have had 425 sheets of Kodak Elematite
$33 Call bus. 864-8019. Keep it away.
4-19
Stereo (turndown speakers and AM-PM stereo
new needle听机, $100; call 864-360-1
4-25
Steve Beverly, Partner $X-25$ and $20$ will
accept all offers. $X-25$ price applies to
$19.99 price. Both booklet含税.
Email steve@steviebeverly.com
Round Corn Drink More will give you a free
Round Corn Drink more than 100. More
purchase our liquid trade kit... 801 Main St.
New York, NY 10024
Tinkler with body and a Built-Up Fur Knit Suit
Tickle your body with a Beta-Fur Knit Suit
Matte
Beta-Fur Knit Suit
Women's 10 speed bike 19" fully lined frame.
Women's 20 speed bike 19" new, Adidas $129,
6436-391 - 5 new, adidas
$129, 6436-391 - 5 new
Tennis tennis IRACD professional, almost new
with VS guts. Very interesting for 4-28
and with VGs. Intermediate level. 4-28
TRANS-A 1977, less mile #3 white gold bird
many options. Call Chris, 843-257-27
4-26
Found set of keys in park near Hillcrest. Can
mornings 81-592. 4-18
Found inscription glases on 4th floor of Sum-
mons Building. Claim from night, January at Sum-
mons Field.
HELP WANTED
Radios, calculators, books, unicornies, women in history found Claim at Karsun Agricultural formation Dekk
EXOTIC JOBS! LOKE TAHOE, CALIFORNIA!
Little erica in the desert with $1790-$4,000 annually.
Supports 3,500 people daily on ranch, cranes, river rafts, & more.
Sacramento, cranes, river rafts, $6,029. Sacramento, CRANES, $6,029. Sacramento, CRANES, $6,029.
Books belonged to Edam Yemama may be claimed in the Dean's office of Walt Disney.
OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer year round, Europe,
S. America; Australia, Asia, etc. All Fields, 2000-
9000; Expenses paid; Sight seeing free;
Info-Wo; M.C. Bon & D.A.; Connano 4-26
c. 82025
4-26
c. 82025
JOBS MEN WOMEN SAILBOATS!
CRUISE SHIPS! No experience. High pay! See
Cruise! Westport, Wilmington, Walmart夏威夷
Send $3.95 to 901x492, Sacramento, CA 95860.
4-24
x901x492, Sacramento, CA 95860.
HELP WANTED FULL TIME. Some mechanical
work must be done and dependable (
+ Himalaya, Nepal).
Candidates should have:
SUMMER JOBS, NOW! WORLD CHURCHERS;
PLEASURE BOATS? No experience! Good pay!
FOR A PLCATION and direct referral to SEAWELL,
60129, Sacramento, Cal. 85200
SUMMER JOB
Experienced painter. Interiors & exteriors, full-time position. Apply in person by 600-275-8100, suite A #4, suite B #4
JOBS IN ALABAMA
John Salmon, John Phillips,
Michael Salmon, Joe Spencer,
John Salmon, John Salmon
Student, Research Assistant - Project endals in education. D A and D, 10.30, setting up characteristic models for other peripheral devices using LM-210 hardware and peripheral devices. Experiment in UM-210 hardware and peripheral devices. During three quarter times for three months or more, data was collected and analyzed as required until April 16, 1979. Contact William K. Williams, Lawrence K., 26045, The University of Wisconsin Lawrence, K. 26045.
JOINS LAKE TAHOE CALIF. Fantastic tide!
$1,200-$1,400 honer! Thousands still needed.
Carson, CA Matthews Matthews Sord
Sord APPLICATION TO LAKWEE
60129, Sacramento, CA 95060
Adult with new transportation to care for 8 person
family on property in South Carolina $2,500
and $1,000 for home $1,000 (housing/waiting)
with family.
Career Opportunity for person to train with broad bearer and become established on a long term basis. Applicants must manage year round position with full benefits while training salary to progress with training objectives. KU, KU-644-8611, 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri. Equal Opportunity Affirmation Employee Employment
POSITIONS ANNOUNCEMENTS. The Office of Residential Programs has two Program Coordination offices, each offering one position in Oliver Hall, the other is in Hainberg Hall. Both require a barrier's degree and a demonstrated knowledge of educational programs. In Hainberg, a Bachelor's degree in theater production and management or a Bachelor's degree in General Aug. 12. Applicants for residential programs, 125 Strong Hall, Deadline September 1.
PSYCHIATRIC NURSES WANTED FOR ALL
ADJUDICE, ADOLESCENT, AND
ADULT WAIDS TO SERVE IN:
nursing Tucson State Hospital 720. W. 69th,
813-296-4578 813-296-4578 OLIGO Opportunity
Employer
Assistant to the Dean, regarding to Associate Assistant to the Dean, including to Associate Dean. This is an unannounced, from local faculty to departmental faculty. Applicants must be at least June 1 and no later than August 1, 1978, from June 1 to June 30 of the following year. Applicants must include academic program requirements, employment and financial facilities, equity opportunities, and supervision of several staff positions. University supervision
New label makeup application for Fonstadia & Garli
Asprey in pursuit of a new look. Alphey in pursuit of a new look.
Victoria Redhorn in pursuit of a new look.
Lawrence Open School is seeking a certified elementary teacher to work in innovative program, curriculum and curriculum development. Most positions will require a Master's degree or equivalent. NETS #32 Ohio Art equal opportunity Employee.
Secretary - Program administrator for busy office occurring to large numbers of college students. Responsible for job duties including degree. Experience in student personnel position. Prior experience performing preferred Permainent full-time position. Serve single with ability. Interview plus full benefit Office Offer $3,950. 6:30 a.m.-Monday-Friday. Equal salary.
MENYAN HEALTH TECHNICIANS, LICENSED
ADVOCAT FOR STATE HEALTH SERVICES WORKERS,
AIRBORNE ADVOCAT FOR PAINTING TAPEES
State Hospital 250w of running Water
State Hospital 250w of running Water
State Hospital 250w of running Water
Opportunity Encourages to apply
Opportunity Encourages to apply
Applicants are now available for Rock Chuck jobs. Job duties include: managing profit, must be responsible, well organized, and knowledge of Rock Chuck is desirable. Mail resume to Rock Chuck, Inc., 1010 W. Humboldt Ave., Chicago, IL 60267. Applications are due April 22, 2015. United Applicants are due April 22, 2015.
Applications are now available for Board Club
members to apply. Applicants must be responsible,
have strong organizational skills and be a
student. Knowledge of Board Club rules
RGV 1137 Union Applications are due April
Cook to work part-time, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Monday-Friday, 12-58 hours per week, Requires 3 years of experience. Cook for person wanting time off at Christmas breaks, eats will not work when KU is not in office. Requires 3 years of experience at Personal Office, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday-Friday, Office Affirmative Action Employer*
The department of mathematics will have openings for undergraduate mathematics, commerce and computer science backgrounds in undergraduate mathematics, composition and mathematics (10.30 and 10.30 daily; required times: 10.30 and 10.30 daily; required time: 6:00 and 9:00 daily). **602** assist in consulting room, SALARY $11,000 for undergraduate experience; for student monthly support on
**STUDENTS:** summer employment Pikniker's aide who desire employment as a Security Guard who desire employment as a Security Guard who must be 18 or older have trust and qualify you must be 18 or older have trust and apply in Person-M-Fri-09 a.m. 5 p.m. 6 a.m. 12 p.m. Apply in Person-M-Fri-09 a.m. 5 p.m. 6 a.m. 12 p.m. Missouri One hour free parking at Katy City Missouri One hour free parking at Katy City Missouri One hour free parking at Katy City Missouri 112 Grand An Equal Opportunity State
ENGINEERING TEAM, Positions $18.00 up.
Newer a fee to applicant. Call Bob Court.
913-524-6720 or resume to Courtney Perk.
College of St. State. Hs. Shawley,
Mission, KS 6523
Did your Easter break leave you with the summer job blue? We still have a few full time summer work positions available. To find out if they are open, visit www.mastercard.com or P.O. Box 2503, Lawrence Ks 64635-430
Must begin studies in mathematics, pre-grad, pre-law.
Meet with faculty in the department "Math 607 per month" for interview at spring. Must be registered by May 1st.
MAKE $3,000 THIS SUMMER. If you are hard
to find a job, contact us to be relied on.
MKE-16221 for interview and
ME-16221 for interview.
BUSINESS ADMN GRADS marketing & management position $12,000 up. Never a fee to apply. 856-749-3000 or resume to: Constituents Pte Service, 8000 W 4rd St Suite 101, 100 Waverley Ks, Maidenhead
LOST
Please help me find my black Labrador. He has
very much a love of people, very much a
very much a need and needed. Call 641-8275.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL US AT (641) 8275.
At Nummerfered or fourth floor Wearne, a BR21
calculator. If you find it 841-809-6154
Alpha 991 Security, gold, gold, diamond,
Diamond Research or Science of Westee, Reward
Division, Dlce 837-7070
MISCELLANEOUS
THEIR BINDING COPYING THE House of
Pharaoh Binding Copying The House of
Pharaoh Binding Copying in Larsen, Let us
choose a scripture and covering it in Lawyer.
Let us choose a scripture and covering it in Lawyer.
NOTICE
DEATH! WHY BOTHER? FCKANAR
72% You're probably asleep. 82% AFKAR. 90%
VBT5. Are you getting your because? Maybe not.
Check checkpoints 16A II BM. 804-7247-0112
Fortunately now in Lawrence Driving School you have a driver license which is valid both in residential areas and in commercial areas. Driven by transportation provider, driver has to obtain a driving license every two years.
J. HOOO BOOKMAKER. The finely assembled book collection includes two volumes of cover and 301 price case check books in all academic series. We will accept a valid identification condition. We maintain a full search engine. Mail resume to J. Hooo BookMaker (contact us) at press@jhoo.com. (Office: 214 East 59th Street, Suite 711, p.m., Sun, closed). (Office: 214 West 59th Street, p.m., Sun, closed).
PERSONAL
REKKS DIRE SHOP is now open. 282, Railburg A.D., Parks & Recreation in stock. Kick-off Thursday at 10am. (914) 537-4600. www.rekksdire.com
HAROUNR SPECIALS • 4-5 Mon. Tues. Wed.
MADIS HAINES SIGHT • 1-3 Mon. Tues. Wed.
MADIS HAINES SIGHT • $1,600拍片
PFX HTML, SUBSERV CURIE. Absorptions gei 10 to
20°C in CO₂. ABSORPTION: 98% at 20°C (1913) and
94% at 40°C (1913).
Guy Leshman, counseling referrer now handed
through KU file 841-306-306 of Headquarters 841-
306.
Only At KU
I'M A TAN MAN
Back
Side
Tan Man Promotion Very Lite
Announcements the Latest Addition
$6.95
THE TAN MAN KHAKI
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC
FOX HILL MURGERY CENTRE
Abercrombie, qb 62
Brownsville, tx 78301
800-649-6355
www.foxhillmurgery.com
Just come for Tan Man Day. The Tan Man Haikui
will help you. You can bring your own
shoes and socks and some are DISHWASHERS.
Tan Man mutilation on the beach, I a tan used
them at home
Tam Man - What is in a Tam Man? A Tam Man show doesn't just have one man. He doesn't care what people think of him at the gym. He doesn't care what people think of him in the office. He thinks he hacks and brothels in his home, and he's living in an environment Everybody wants to be a Tam Man.
JDINNOS Apply now for next year's Class of
2018. Apply today (April 20, 2018) at
Univ. Level (U).
**Belonging for special gender* Housemates! Home
Offer: £150 per week. **No Minimum**
**Opens May 1st - Labour Day** Members only. No
Minimum. *Only per household*
Kruidt, Swan and Tim, kick butt at the retires
Mary and Mary
4-19
Lawrence Community Nursery. School's open
house for parents and children interested in
junior April 16, 9-3, 11-15, and April 19, 10-3, 15-
18. At 8:45 a.m., For more information:
832-544-344.
Mitchell, You make great cookies and annoys me
forward to our next dinner. Thank you,
night night! "Crawl"
Psychology buffer! Shop and two PCs-Chat-Pool
Platforms, including Microsoft Office 2010,
Microsoft Word, APRibrary 20, April 9, 2011 - 4-20
FEB 2011
There once was a man with a tin.
Who was loved throughout the land.
When feeling real part,
he hunted him, a shirt
He bought him a shirt.
And around the Tear Drop Tree.
And Smitheen the Tom May Fan Club
4.19
Smitheen's Tom May fan club has been a
part of the party for forty years.
Partnership will be established on a
budget of $50,000.
SERVICES OFFERED
Academic Interest The Lawwring Open School
Academics Interact The Lawwring Open School
Academics Interact Advanced Reading Call: 841-360-9927
Academics Interact Advanced Reading Call: 841-360-9927
MATH TUTOR M.A. in math, patience, three
year professional training experience. 842-341.
www.math.tutor.com
PHOTOGRAPHY WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
phone number 1-800-243-6790. Available at:
Monday through Friday, 10am to 5pm, Monday
through Sunday, 10am to 5pm. Mon-Sun, 10am to
5pm.
RUESCHHOFF
LOCKSMITHS
Complete Lock & Key Services
1015 W. 9th
843-2182
TYPING
BWITHIN EDITING. Your manuscript, thesis or term paper edited into an effective, grammatical paragraph. You will co-writing with preface and smoothness, your thesis and articles also available. Editions: 842-1253
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can answer your math or CS problems. Computer Basics 814-8757 B614-8757
EXPERT TUTORS MATH 600-700. PHYSICS
INSTRUCTOR EDUCATIONAL B.S.
INTRY 1003 STATISTICS CALL # 849-5683
or # 843-1722. QUALIFICATIONS: B.S. in Physics,
complete 7 years experience in computer
programming.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476.
Lawrence High School. Exciting summer programs. Study and hone fine arts, organic gardening, dance, and taping classes. Three field trips to local schools in Language Arts, Math, and Research. Offered at 914-1809 or 842-7894. Call now 914-1809 or 842-7894 for more information.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. U.S.
Tired of traveling yourself? Naimall Hall is offered for the first time over a boarding plan. You can arrange a week vacation you can be yours if you choose this plan. Shan Maimall Hall, 1800 Naimall Road, 843-8580. NAMMILHALL, 1800 Naimall Road, 843-8580.
Type:Edition IBM Pica/Elite Quality work
Instructor Brief description welcome.
Date: 842-1927
Quality typing guaranteed- IBM Sebastian, Term-
thesis, dissertations. in Carole, Mande 1982.
Now accepting term paper for quality typing.
Lymn, 841-266 after 5.30 If
Experienced Typist—term papers, thesis, mice,
producers, editors. Send resume with spelling, correcting 81-5334. Mrs Wright
Accurate, experienced typist, form papers, thesis,
workbooks. Requires BS or equiv in Computer-
servicing. Tpz per page 748-8244. Ddtn
Experimented, lypid-thesis, disortations, termo-
dynamics of selective electrochemical selective
B-84-131; 842-2510.
Trying on Elite Electric Typewriter by expéri-
al service. Prime prompt service. Proofreading Mats-
hers. 843-1727.
TYPING Over 30,000 pages served. Quality work.
Email: info@typing-linda.com
821-9750. It'll All For You.
www.typeingservices.com
Experiment from all six, over eight service intervals in
a four-week period. Two of the intervals are on a
demand basis, two on a supply basis, and two on an
uniform basis. Each interval requires 1000
servings.
1. do downward ripping (raping) Under 20 pages,
2. do downward ripping (raping) Under 40 pages,
3. do downward ripping (raping) Under 60 pages,
4. do downward ripping (raping) Under 80 pages,
Represents, dissimulations, remuneres, legal forms,
reports, publications, selective solicitant. Call
312-650-8717 or Joanne. 811-272-7950.
Cheap, quick, professional typing. Please call (866) 750-2345.
WANTED
KPI empolyte would like to form a team
Obliter to Lawrence. We need 364-3485
4-18
Female roommate to share 1 bedroom near-break apartments only 2 rent negotiated
Information from women who have had abscess at the KU Medical Center are named confidently.
Recommends for summer and or fall in 3 hdrm
Apt. 511/508,itt incl. Kit A41-714i.
4-18
Need a commercial for automotive financing? A local dealer can help you with your financing needs. Call 1-800-235-7964 or visit www.harborbank.com. Please note, the value is subject to change. Offer only offers 0.95 & up.
Baitings wanted for summer luxury twenty-four
international courts clubhats Rent proposals Call
612-594-1000
OFFICIAL TAN MAN
- Mail in this form with check
Nitrous turbulent that can play at 16 JPM. 843-20
Nitro-Frank. 843-21
LIMERICK CONTEST FORM
2nd female roommate to 1 summer Malka 2 bed
room furnished $95
1.3 electricity Mekka 4-20
2 bedrooms furnished $195
or money order to
111 Flint Hall or just come
111 Flint Hall or just come by $3.50 per Limestone
- $3.50 per Limerick
Write
ALL LIMERICKS
PUBLISHED ON
TAN MAN DAY,
WED, MAY 2nd.
Contest Judge is Chancellor Dykesl
here-
NAME
PHONE:
ADDRESS
BEST LIMERICK WINS
$400 JVC PORTABLE
RADIO CASSETTE
RECORDER
TEAM
---
2319 Louisiana
WIN!
Recording level control
- ALC & Manual
Recording level control
* 2 VU Meters
* Full Auto-Stop
* S Watt -4 Speaker
system with 6 1/2" woofers & 2" Tweeter
MERCURY
JVC RC-828
---
10
Wednesday, April 18, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Agent Orange . . .
From nage one
"We probably know more about it than any other chemical," Richard Kociba, a pathologist for Dow Chemical Co. at its Midland, Mich., plant where Agent Orange is manufactured, said. "It's been in use since 1948."
ACCORDING TO DOW, the VA and the department of Defense, there is no actionable case.
Orange could produce any long-range effects on humans.
A 1978 Air force report, however, acknowledged that the topic was still open. And the departments of Defense and Health, Education and Welfare are beginning follow-up studies of people exposed to airborne accidents by industrial accidents in 1249 and 1376.
The study by the American Health Foundation reported 35 cases of cancer.
including rare kidney and testicular cancers, among the first 50% surveys surveyed.
cers, among the first 336 veterans surveyed.
Why, if Agent Orange can't be held responsible, are so many veterans facing such severe problems?
LEBINSON, WHO has been studying veterans' claims for more than a year, since a Chicago Orange representative first theorized the Agent Orange connection on a local television documentary, said he had not yet found the answer to that question.
Ma, Darrell Stephens, assistant chief of police said a Lawrence Police Department vehicle was following an ambulance, which was westbound on Ninth Street, when the police car struck David Tubbs, Topeka sobornbore.
A 22-year-old student was struck by a Lawrence Police Department squad car en route to a medical emergency about 10:30 last night.
Stephens said Tubbs evidently walked between the police car and the ambulance at the scene.
Student hit by police car en route to false alarm
He said both vehicles were operating sirens and red lights.
4' KOPIES
"No minimum"
kinko's
604 Vampire
B5 811E
A nursing supervisor at Lawrence Memorial Hospital said last night that Tubbs' left leg was fractured in the accident. His condition was unknown last night.
Stephens would not release the name of the driver of the police car last night. He said an investigation of the accident would take place today.
Stephens said the vehicles were en route to two persons who reportedly were lying on the ground not breathing. He said the persons were not found to need medical attention, and there was no indication that the medical emergency was purposefully turned in falsely.
LOVE RECORDS AND TAPES Paraphernalia 842-3059 15 W. 9th St.
SPRING SPECIAL
Selected group of shirts
h.i.s., dunloggan, crazy horse, & two scoops
stripes, solids, and plaids
15% off Thurs.-Sun.
CLOTHES
ENCOUNTER
10:5:30 Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sun
'till 8:30 Thurs.
holiday plaza
843-5335
"Why haven't they notified all Vietnamese veterans, about the possibility of a war?"
"I don't have a good explanation. There could be a myriad of reasons why they have not been given the chance."
Tim Caster, a Buffalo, N.Y., junior who said he has had a skin rash since he was in Vietnam nine years ago, has another question he thinks the VA should answer.
But Lebbinum said the VA had always urged veterans to report any problems that arose.
DESPITE THE VA's study of the Agent Orange problem, others echo Caster's
suspicions about the agency's determination to solve the controversy.
"They want to keep this thing pretty well hidden. I don't know why," Moore said.
AND MOORE SAID it would take congressional action "to get the VA offender" on the subject. None is planned, according to Moore, but he said he had found most Kansas representatives sympathetic.
Hand, Campus Veterans president, did not serve in Vietnam and was never exposed to the VA. In addition, he received minimum disability payments to all the veterans who may have been exposed to the herbicide could cost the VA as much as $18 per month for each veteran, half of the VA's total annual budget.
Lebinson said it would take large numbers of Vietnam veterans with similar problems to convince the VA to pay any disability claims.
Both sides do agree that the Agent Orange controversy is a problem that may be solved.
"Sometimes I wonder if we'll ever stop fighting this war," Moore said.
Presents
"BECOMING TO HOME IN THE WORLD"
(John F. Kennedy Library)
The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series
CAMP COUNSELORS
WANTED
The Mirecourt Trio
3:30 p.m. Sunday, April 22 & 8:00 p.m. Monday, April 23
Swarthout Recital Hall/Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats general admission for $4 KU students with ID will be admitted for $2 Limited tickets available for Sunday's concert
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
GRADUATE STUDENTS AND FACULTY MEMBERS FOR THE MASTER OF SCIENCE AMS IN BEAUTIFUL MAINE
Expenses required on any of the following programs:
Waste Water Study Group, Water Service, City of New York Transportation/Government, Crattis Construction General Contractors
Top salary, accolades & benefits for experienced Counsellors
Call or write for information & application
Email: info@changtong.com
CAMP SOMERSET for GIRLS
444 E. 85th St, Suite 201
New York, N.Y. 10028
1351-748-3401
Call 913/864-3982 for reservations
CAMP COBROSE for BOYS
P.O. Box 180, Manua Drive
Bedford, N.Y. 10506
(212) 837-7310
Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
Experience required in any of the following positions: Senior Director, Management, Development, Marketing, Water Saving, Sensing, Training, Air Quality, Engineering, and Technology. Working machine operator. Security.
C
A LEVITS
April
G R W F T W F T F
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 11 12 13 14 15
18 19 10 13 12 13 14
18 19 10 13 12 13 14
25 24 23 24 25 26 27
24 30
Not just fashion, but smart. We've
had a lot of nice and smart combo-
bials. They look great and they shuffle
great.
Hare Kavanagh
Director, Designer, Navigator, Logist
man and his team. He is passionate and a co-
director of the company. Hare will work with
his team to ensure that projects are com-
pleted on time.
LEVI'S
WOMENWEAR
Try On A Coordinating Top
QUALITY NEVER GOES OUT OF STYLE
CAUTORNIA STRAIGHTS
LITWINS 831 Mass. where clothes are for fun
where clothes are for fun
Open late Thurs & Fri
'til 9 pm
Open Sunday 1-5
ku
54th Annual Kansas Relays
at
Hershberger Track April 21,22,23
"outstanding national caliber athletic competition."
FRIDAY EVENTS "proliminaries"
General Admission *2.50
Grade or High School *1.50
K.U. Student *1.50
SATURDAY EVENTS "finals"
7
Reserved (West Stadium) $'4.50
General Adm. (East Stadium) $'3.00
Grade or High School $'2.00
K.U. student $'2.00
Tickets available at Athletic Ticket Office Allen Field House
Also available at Track on day of events
Proudly Announcing
COORS LIGHT
in Bottles
Coors
LIGHT
BEER
Coors
LIGHT
Six 12 Oz. Bottles
Contains only natural ingredients with no preservatives or additives
105 calories, 25% fewer than our regular beer
ADOLPH COORS COMPANY GOLDEN, COLORADO
La Peka Inc.
Your Local Coors
Coors
LIGHT
BEER
Concentrated cola alcohol concentrate
with preservatives de montmorillon
Coors
LIGHT
Six 12 Oz. Bottles
Contains only natural ingredients with no preservatives or additives
La Peka Inc. Your Local Coors Dist. 843-7000
Ticket evasion tactics try KU parking code
Re TAMMY TIERNEY
Staff Reporter
Parking tickets. Sonner or later, almost every day in the University of Kansas ones one
The daily scene at the Parking Services collection window is proof.
Double lines form and the guilty, some patiently,
others not so patiently, wait their turn to step up to
the door.
As the lines inch forward, the requests "May I have your last name and student number," and "I need your signature and driver's license, please." drone from behind the cabseh's cage.
Occasionally, this refrain is broken by an indignant outburst.
"Look, I was parked in front of Murphy for only two minutes. I had to take a book back to my professor. My car was running—How can you give me a ticket?"
OTHERS TRY a more timeworn excuse.
"I don't even own a car. It was my Dad's—bonesthief. He was up here visiting."
Usually, these pleas are not successful. Students and faculty are encouraged to appeal their tickets to the traffic board if they think they have been wronged, but appellants are seldom excused.
However, some members of the University community are successfully evading tickets.
According to figures compiled by the office of
parking services. KU faculty members currently owe $40,760 in unpaid payments. At $50 a loan, that is
What the faculty owes, however, is minimal compared to what students owe. Although they can set no specific figure, parking officials say that KU's student body owns the '6,000 faculty members in unpaid tickets
AND, ALTHOUGH Don Kearns, director of Parking Services said his department could "put the finger" on every person who was issued a ticket for parking violations, services said they had discovered ways to beat the system.
"I've gotten out of more than 20 tickets," said one Overland Park freshman. "I've gotten out of tickets I got for being in fire lanes, handicapped zones and lots of parking." It's easy. All you have to do is find the right method.
Finding that method, he said, often depends on who you know and how far you are willing to go.
For instance, getting out of a ticket issued for parking in a fire lane required some work, he said.
"What I do is go to a service station where a friend of mine works and have him write me a fake credit card. I will be there for the people at Parking Services and tell them I was parked where I was, where I was because my car was broken."
KU
4 82
COURTESY CAMPUS PERMIT Nº A42261
(Station No.) 4 K.G.
(Institute)
Location Entity
Expires 4-72-79 10:32
(Date) (Time)
Handicapped (Institute)
Handicapped (Unlikely)
Place in Lower Left inside corner of Wheelchair
TO PARK in zones where he has no sticker, he has developed an equally complex scheme.
"What I did was get a courtesy pass that had been filled out in penicill and erase it. I took it to a copying service and it had copied on blue paper. Now, I went to park in a campus lot, I just write myself a nausea."
As a last resort, he said, he sometimes tried pleading with cashiers at Parking Services.
"If worse comes to worst, I go in and try to whine a little," he said. "I say my car ran out of gas or my parents were up here and I was driving them around. I've never had to pay one yet."
Other students told about equally devious but less elaborate ways of getting around *Parking Services*.
"To avoid getting tickets all I did was never register my car with the University," said one Wichita junior. "Since my freshman year, I've accumulated about 10 tickets. Some of them finally caught up with me but not until last semester—two years later."
A PRAIRIE VILLAGE senior explained how she avoided tickets and cut parking costs at the same time.
"I live off campus and like to drive to school," she said. "But stickers cost $33 and if you park anywhere else, you run the risk of getting a ticket. So what I did was just a pickup for a residence hall for $18. Now, I drive one of the halls and park every day and then take the bus to class. It's really convenient."
The list goes on. Students and they threw the tickets away and then and the wind blew them away a bit. The students wrote to the University saying they received the ticket instead of the student and others have friends to go.
wise and soon would be cracking down on ticket evaders.
"A lot of people have the idea that parking should be free," he said. "What they don't realize is that people who want to buy a car for improvement we make, we pay for ourselves. It becomes very costly when people don't pay their rent."
ONE PROBLEM with catching up this year is a new computer program that is being used by Parking
"All the bugs aren't out of it yet," he said. "It's keeping us from being as efficient as we might be before I get sick."
The tow list is made up of persons with five outstanding tickets. If their cars are found on campus after the fifth ticket is issued, it is impounded until all the fines are paid.
Because it is connected with all 50 states, the new program also will aid in tracing cars not registered to it.
"For every ticket written, we'll be able to match a check and see who the car is registered to," he said. "Once we know that, all we have to do is match a driver's name and address to a student registered at KU."
Kearns said he hoped that absences of the residence hall lots would stop next year when students will be enrolled.
See PARKING back pag
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© William T. Kline, 1980
Up for arabs
Brian Hayes, Detroit, Mich. is all hands as he catches a frisbee during a demonstration at Haskell Indian Junior College. Hayes is a member of the AFC Aces a professional team.
Prosecution to finish in Hunter trial today
Bv CAROL REIER
Staff Reporter
After calling 18 witnesses yesterday, prosecutors in the trial of Charles C. Hunter, a 16-year-old charged with 14 counts of sexual assault and burglary, said the trial was over.
A KU student was among the witnesses for the state. She was the victim of one of a series of alleged rape and burglaries during December. Other witnesses included another alleged rape victim, two victims of rape and rapes and two victims of alleged burglaries.
Both Shepherd and Mike Malone, district attorney, said that they were not aware of any subpoena issued by the defense counsel.
Jean Shepherd, assistant district attorney, said after the close of yesterday's testimony that she would call 11 more witnesses for the prosecution.
"It's a lot of pieces to fit together."
Shepherd said. "Our part will end tomorrow."
Wesley Norwood, Hunter's court-appointed attorney, declined to comment on
Tomorrow is deadline for Kansan
Applications are available for editor and business manager of the University Daily Kansan for the summer session and the fall semester. Forms are available in the School of Journalism office, 105 Flint Hall. The Student Senate of the 105 Kansan University is composed of student organizations and activities, 220 Strong Hall. Completed applications are due by 5 p.m. tomorrow in 105 Flint Hall.
Hunter is charged with four counts of rape, two counts of attempted rape and two counts of assault.
On Tuesday Paddock ruled that Hunter was competent to stand trial after hearing testimony from Hunter and a Lawrence psychiatrist.
The maximum penalty for a rape conviction in Kansas is life imprisonment; for aggravated burglary, 20 years; and for attempted rape, five years. Shepherd said.
Yesterday's early testimony described four incidents that occurred during the early morning hours of Dec. 22. One woman said that she was watching television in her living room when a person came through her kitchen and assaulted her.
The woman said that her dog attacked the person and that he fleed through the back door. She said she was "absolutely positive" that the person was Hunter.
Hunter was arrested Dec. 22, and his juvenile status was officially waived in January. That waiver is now under appeal. However, District Court Judge James W. Paddock yesterday denied a defense motion that he had been made aware of the decision had been made on the appeal.
Hunter testified on the competency hearing that he had heard voices that
A registered nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Terri Thomas, testified that she had seen a man who was on Dec. 21. She also identified a coat and hat on as that hunter was wearing when she shot him.
She also identified a finger brace that was later admitted into evidence by the judge. The brace, she said, was found on the floor of her living room after the alleged assault.
The coat that she identified was picked up as evidence in an alleged burglary that occurred Dec. 22, a few minutes after the attempted raped in the same neighborhood.
"I screamed my head off," she said. "He hit me in the mouth and started choking
Vol. 89. No.134
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Graduate senator quits at hearings
Bv CAITLIN GOODWIN
Staff Reporter
The resignation of a student senator marked the end of the Student Senate budget hearings last night, as the separation between the graduate senators and the undergraduate senators seemed to arrow.
Ron McDowell, graduate senator, submitted a prepared letter of resignation when the Senate decided not to give the Senate authority to elect a president.
The Senate had approved a GSC allocation of 41 cents a student, or $1.018, according to the Senate revenue code.
McDowell said in his letter that he thought there were a few senators "tailorled" legislation through the Senate.
"I do not intend to waste my time and the time of the Senate in a power struggle with those senators who are so 'sheep-like' that they are willing to pass legislation in the interest of unity rather than debate it," he wrote.
HE ALSO said that he thought it would not benefit the graduate students to try to work within the Senate.
"The only way that graduate students will receive adequate representation in student government is by offering them leadership roles."
autonomy to deal directly with issues affecting graduate students," he said in the letter.
He said he thought more graduate senators would follow him in resuming.
Margaret Berlin, student body president, said that she was disappointed that McBwllen resigned but that his performance was satisfactory.
"I really wish the graduate student senators would bring their complaints in the form of legislation, resolutions and amendments," he said.
"NOT ALL the graduate student seminars are like that. A few are very active and I commend them. I'd say five are
Some of the graduate senators said they were particularly upset because they had thought there would be enough money for their additional requests in the unallocated fund, which is money left over from previous campaigns.
However, Keith Maib, student senate treasurer, told the Senate that there was only $8.70 of unallocated money left. According to the revenue code, there must always be at least $3,500 in this fund to be used for emergency situations.
Berlin said that when she had talked to Mark Mikkelsen
BERLAIN SLD the Student Senate Executive Committee originally had placed the GSC bill toward the end so that it could benefit from any money that might have remained with the students of Kansas, a student lobby group, not been funded.
executive coordinator of the GSC, there was more than $14,000 in the unallocated fund. However, that money had dwindled as it was doled out to other organizations during the budget hearings.
McDowell said the agenda was changed so that the bill for the additional GSC funding came at the end of the hearings.
Mikkelsen said he wondered whether the Senate had any intention of allocating the additional money.
Staff Reporter
"We're facing a possibility of $2,000 in supplemental tumps," Mab said. "If you pass this bill we'll cutting the tax."
Gerrymandering argued in court
The Senators who opposed the GSC bill said they thought that by taking the money out of the unallocated fund, they would be able to provide better services.
Rv PATRICIA MANSON
HOWEVER, TOM Green, an assistant
"They in effect gerrymandered an incumbent legislator."
TOPEKA—House Republicans attempted to weaken the political power of KU students and Democratic State Rep. Mike Glover of Lawrence when they drew up the new bill, a Democratic party official told the Kansas Supreme Court yesterday.
"It was a deliberate attempt to split an identifiable voting group, i.e. students, and it was done for political purposes," David McGarry said in a Democratic Central Committee, said "It was done to defeat Mr. Glover by putting him in a heavily Republican district. Not only are the students heavy Democratic voters, they are probably Glover's strongest."
"Every attempt was made to recognize existing city boundaries as well as county boundaries."
attorney general, said he had seen little evidence that the districts were affected.
THE ONE-MAN-ONE-VOTE principle
The bill would create a new district in Lawrence. The 43rd District, represented by Republican John Vogel, would be moved to the south; the 42nd would be moved to the west, and a new district, the 46th, would be created in East Lawrence. The new district would extend across Massachusetts Street to include the city's neighborhoods, areas that had been in the 44th District.
The reappointment bill has been opposed by the Democratic Party and a group of KU students, who say it violates the institutional principle of one man, one vote.
requires that one person's vote counts as much as any other person's vote. The U.S. Supreme Court and the Kansas Supreme Court have ruled that splitting the vote of a ethnic or religious group through gerrymandering is a violation of this principle.
Green, however, said there was no legal precedent to consider students as an
"I FOUND NO cases that ruled students to be a group to be discriminated against,"1.
After the hearing, State Rep John Solbach, D-Lawrence, who spoke against the bill, said he hoped the Court would set a precedent and apply the one-man-one-vote rule.
"The arguments that the principle would apply to students would be the same arguments used for race," Solbach said. "We can show by analogy that students,
because of age, income, intelligence, family background and status in the community, are an identifiable group. A young person's own count as much as an older person's vote."
Splitting the student vote would hurt the political power of Glover, who has represented the students in the Legislature, Sobach said.
"I think the reaportionment was unfair to Glover," Solbach said. "When you try to pull a Democratic incumbent into a heavily Republican district, that's unfair, especially when the way you do it is by drawing some very strange-looking lines."
SOLBACH SAID that differences in the number of people in each district was additional evidence that the districts had been made more diverse, and that percent more people than the ideal number set by the Legislature, thus diluting the political strength of that district's voters, he
Staged illness used to protest conformity
By DOUG HITCHCOCK
Staff Reporter
The fast-food machinery hummed along, momentarily undisturbed. The dinner-time crowd stood in short lines.
Nothing interrupted the murmuring crowd, the cash registers, or the sizeing burgers, until a customer in the kitchen heard a voice.
The other customers, waiting to order, fell silent. The fast-food machine slowed for a moment and the employees peered out from the kitchen to see what had happened.
He stopped part way and started throwing up convulsively.
An instant of silence, broken only by the sound of the vomiting, passed, then two more people jumped up and
They skirted their vomiting companion and brushed past an employee who was trying to take control of the
"HEY, WHAT'S going on?" he asked. "Why are you throwing up on my floor?"
The customer looked up and said, "Your food made me puke. I was just sitting there eating and it made me
Then he turned back and punctuated his statement with another heav.
The employee jerked his head away, closed his eyes and walked back to the kitchen.
The customers who had witnessed the scene had already turned their attention to the two who had made it
In the parking lot, they, too, were throwing up.
Their companion ran out to join them.
When they had emptied their stomachs, they hopped into a car and screeched away.
All of their vomiting had been voluntarily induced by injecting mild renal agents.
Although incidents like these may raise some eyebrows, the perpetrators, who call themselves the Earthworm Men, are well-known.
THEY HAVE NEVER been parsed or apprehended.
They refused to give their names but offered character names from a short story as their Earth Terrorist names.
Bozz, the 'Shroom Lord, and Sisля Org. the Last Human Detective, founded their group after Bozz wrote a short story about a terrific group destroying industries and businesses for polluting the environment and marketing climate change.
Although they do not destroy industries or businesses, the terrorists do attack local night spots and fast food
They call their methods of attack "subtle violence."
"THERE'S TOO MUCH conformity, although it's not really conformity, more like mass misguidance."
Boaz said, "Subtle violence is designed to give onlookers a psychological jail. It's meant to affect them."
To combat conformity, the terrorists have declared a war of sublethal violence on 'fast food, plasticity and
They use "bio-bombs" constructed from rotten fruit and
Besides vomiting in fast food outlets and hanging figures such as Ronald McDonald in effigy, the terrorists have been accused of stalking and assaulting
an occassional pump to register their displeasure with discordium. They bombard the dance palaces with the
But the terrorists' personal philosophy represents more than random acts of petty violence.
"We want to know why it happened. Were we in succeededanimation?"
Boaz said, "Everyone in this country seems to have been unepoched, and we missed out.
Org said, "We have a lot of statements to make but we also have a lot of questions, because somehow we think we missed out on the mass processing that everyone in this country has undergone."
The terrorists said that the clothes, dances and relentless pounding which they said accompanies disco, along with the mass-produced fare of fast-food restaurants, had never pleased them.
BUT, IT took the mass acceptance of disco and the success of fast-food chains to drive them to action.
Boaz is the creator of the earth-terrorism concept and of the names, but Org is responsible for the artwork.
Boz said, "Slas and I are the active contingent. He's the sigh lobe, and I'm the left lobe."
The silk-screened 1-shirts that are a part of their uniforms bear their logo: a dark skull floating on the face of a shadow planet with Earth Terrorists written across the ton.
The their uniforms also include a bodgepede of military surplus garb; bright-blue leather face masks and socks.
The uniforms are designed to shock and surprise onlookers.
See TERRORISTS page nine
2
Thursday, April 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services
China, Vietnam look for peace
BANGKOK, Thailand—Pace negotiations between China and Vietnam began in Hanoi yesterday with a Vietnamese proposal to establish a joint military base.
Vietnamese negotiator Vice Foreign Minister Phan Hien said Chinese troops still occupied more than 10 areas in Vietnamese territory and continued to attack the city.
Hien proposed that both armies withdraw between two and three miles from the border recognized before the Chinese invasion in February. He also proposed that prisoners of war be exchanged soon, according to a Radio Hanoi broadcast.
China's response to Vitam's proposal was not immediately known. But earlier yesterday, Xinhua, the official Chinese news agency, accused Vietnam of recent border provocations and said there were casualties on both sides in fighting between April 9 and April 16.
Voters hampered by guerillas
SALISBURY, Rhodesia—The second day of national elections yesterday showed a low voter turnout in southern Rhodesia because of high rates of illiteracy. The electoral commissioner, Despite guerilla activity, officials predicted at least 60 percent of the electorate would vote in the five-day elections to bring limited black rule to power.
Only 3 percent of the approximately 6.8 million people in Rhodesia are white.
Election register Eric Poeumbassimilis said 13 percent of the electorate had
white skin.
Drug resists.
The country mobilized 100,000 soldiers to protect voters and voting places from terrorist attacks.
voted from pan poll on Tuesday not holding a vote yet. Holdeds said enervilla activity had been lower than expected.
Christian army to rule itself
TYRE, Labanon -The Christian military in southern Lebanon yesterday declared itself under "self-rule" and proclaimed a new "Free Lebanon" state.
A militia leader, MaJ. Saad Haddad said the Christians' intention was to liberate the country from all invaders and foreigners who have bad in-
tention.
The militia, which is supported by Israel, contends that Lebanese forces are heavily influenced by Syria, which they see as a rival for control of Lebanon. The Israeli and Christians think that a Lebanese army aided by Syria would allow Palestinian guerrillas to infiltrate the Israeli border and heighten tension
Southerners flee flood waters
JACKSON, Miss.—Thousands of Mississippi residents packed bags and fled yesterday to escape record flooding on the Pearl River that already has cost an estimated $20 million in damage.
In Alabama, hundreds more joined the 5,000 families in the Black Belt region who have abandoned their homes to rise waters. Officials warned of the threat.
The Pearl dropped to 42.5 feet in Jackson after cresting at 43.2 feet Tuesday, more than 25 feet above flood state.
SALT monitoring is disputed
POLICE and National Guardmen continued to patrol the flooded downtown area, permitting only authorized people and dump trucks with sandbags dirt
Civil defense officials said about 2,000 people had left their homes in Columbia, Ala., before the river's crest, which is expected this weekend. About 500 other families in Selma, Ala., were evacuated as flood waters surged into west central Alabama.
WASHINGTON-Defense Secretary Harold Brown said last night he was convinced that the United States would be able to verify the Strategic Arms Committee's assessment.
There had been concern about the ability to monitor Soviet compliance with the treaty after two U.S. monitoring stations were lost in the Iranian revolution.
There had been concern about the ability to mobilize slower compliance with the treaty after two U.S. monitoring stations were lost in the Iranian revolution. It had been reported that CIA chief Stansfield Turner had told senators in secret that it would take five years to replace the lost Iranian monitoring station.
Brown said in a CBS interview that the United States had a wide variety of monitoring stations and that the monitoring of Soviet missiles had never relied on them.
"What I believe is that within a year we'll have regained the verification capability as regards SALT limits that we lost in Iran," Brown said.
Cold shutdown one step away
HARISHBURG, Pa. — Technicians successfully dropped the temperature in Three Mile Island's primary cooling system yesterday, but they must take one more day to complete the job.
The final step is the designing and building of a backup cooling system, which would serve as an extra precaution against breakdowns or leaks in the primary system.
A spokesman for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said the move toward cold shutdown would not be made until the backup system, now in the design phase, is operational.
Technicians sped up the cool-down by changing the primary cooling system's elaborate plumbing makeup to allow more steam to pass through a condenser.
The condenser drained off heat and dropped the temperature to 233 degrees. The cooling system's temperature was 243 degrees before the steam process began.
Topeka police seek more clues
TOPEKA- Police are seeking additional clues to the death of Sandra Meuli, a woman missing eight months, whose remains were discovered on the city's east side.
Topeka police Capt. Don Demore said no cause of death had been established. A skull, minus its lower jaw, was found Friday night in a wooded area within 20 yards of interstate 70. The Shawnee County district coroner Tuesday identified the remains as those of Meull, 43, who disappeared from her apartment Aug. 24.
Additional skeletal remains were found Tuesday a short distance from the spot where the skull was found. Investigators also said personal belongings of the woman were found on the opposite side of the interstate about two miles east of where the skeletal remains were found.
New Kansas turnpike proposed
Demore said police were checking with the woman's children and relatives to determine whether any of these belongings seemed to be missing from her.
Demore said robbery did not seem to be a motive.
The proposed toll road would replace part of Kansas Highway 96, running east from near Leoon in Butler County, to Highway Kansas 39, about six miles north of Fredonia. The bill's sponsors, State Ses. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, and Mike Johnston, D-Parents, contend the exiting route is dangerous.
TOPEKA-Gov. John Carlin yesterday signed into law a bill authorizing a $100,000 salary to determine whether a 55-mile turbine could be built in New York.
The bill allows the state Department of Transportation to transfer $100,000 from the state highway fund to the Kansas Turnpike Authority for the survey and assessment of the road.
The money would be repaid to the highway fund if the road proves feasible and bonds to build it are sold. Rough estimates place the cost of the road at
Correction
In yesterday's story about Agent Orange, the Kansas incorrectly identified Mike Hand. Hand is vice president at Campus Veterans. Lance Bombough is present.
Weather
Skiers today will be mostly cloudy with a chance of thunderstorms this afternoon and tonight. Temperatures will be in the low 70s, according to the U.S.
Voting 6-3, the justices ruled that reporters and editors are not constitutionally protected from having to explain how they prepared a challenged report. They may be asked to provide an explanation of the state of mind" during that preparation, the Court said.
Editorial process open to question
WASHINGTON—Public figures who sue a journalist or news organization for libel may ask to know the "editorial process" which led to the alleged libelous statement, the Supreme Court said yesterday.
But Supreme Court Justice Byron R. White said yesterday, "According an absolute privilege to the editorial process of a media defendant in a label case is not required, authorized or pressaged by our prior cases." That "would substantially enhance the burden of proving actual wrongdoing" the court did not intend its 1948 label decision to do, he said.
THE SUPREME COURT, in the landmark New York Times v. Sullivan ruling in 1964, made it difficult for public officials or other prominent people to bring successful libel action against such defendants or "reckless disregard" to establish their damage claims.
WHITE SAID there is no First Amendment privilege barring a libel plaintiff who has "a specific claim of injury arising from a publication that is alleged to have been defamatory or false." This would mean that processes that went into broadcast or publication of a story.
"That is not to say that the editorial discussions or exchanges have no constitutional protection from casual disclosures."
Herbert, who was stripped of a battalion command, gained national prominence in the early 1790s when he formally charged his superior officers with war crimes and atrocities in South Vietnam.
HERBERT'S 1973 suit named as defendant CBS and its 900 minutes," news program, correspondent Mike Wallace; and "Eric Schultz," news program, correspondent Kevin Moore.
The decision in the journalism case is a victory for former Army Lt. Col. Anthony Herbert, who is using CBS and CNN to report on his wounds.
Lando's investigation of Herbert's experience led to a 1.94, 1704 "Minute" telecast called "The Selling of Colomel
LANDO ALSO wrote an article for the Atlantic Monthly based on his findings.
Herbert's suit charged that the program and article injured his reputation by "falsely and maliciously" portraying him as a liar.
When Herbert's lawyers questioned Lando, the producer refused to comment on the editorial process or how he planned to write.
The decision was hailed by Mary O'Melveny, one of Herbert's lawyers.
H.B.
Quirks
White, Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, and Justices Harry A. Blackmun, William H. Rehquist, Lewis F. Powell J, and John Paul Stevens, voted in the majority. White, Chief Justice Richard W. Stewart and William J. Breman J, voted with the minority.
H.B. Quirks
Jack C. Landau, director of the Committee for Freedom of the Press, said the decision "is a major defeat for the First Amendment, because it allows courts to intrude into journalism." He said the committee's judicial discussions of journalists and news organizations.
Has Something For Everybody Try our new menu soon!
The Restaurant & Crepene
Iowa at 26th Street
Lawrence, Kansas
Starters
Oniam Soup Gritin
A chewy gravy with bread crust and melted cheese
Soup of the Day
A sweet potato soup with cinnamon, apples and carrots
Cup 05
Crisp waffle with Dinner rolls
Salads
Knife Salad
Mixed greens, dried Beet Root Mash, onion and chili pepper leaves, and mixed vegetables
Cup 1.00
Sandwiches
Italian Herbs
Hand rubbed honey, parsley and mustard on heated bologna bread with bread crust and melted cheese
Boat Burger
Hamburger with lettuce and tomato on hot coiled patty with bread crust and melted cheese
Hawaii and Neon Chicken Salad
Chicken salad with mustard on lettuce and served on hot coiled burger
Bacon
Bacon sandwich with egg on top
Hawntugger
Cheddar burger
Soup and sandwich
All kinds served with strawberries
Something Different
Quiche with Bacon
Cheese quiche with Bacon
Sharing Quiche
Buffalo quiche and mandhese
Soup and Quiche
A quiche of Ooniam Soup Gritin with ham, quiche
Cup 4.00
Entrées
Country Fried Steak
Beef tenderloin with a thick beef gravy
Southern Fried Chicken
Fried chicken tenderloin in a spoonful butter
Prime Rib
Tenderloin and turkey only. A generous portion of green meat
Perte Serion Steak
Reg. Cut Serion Steak
Tenderloin tenderloin (free)
Steep Steak
Roast the Home
Crêpes
Taga crepe served with Quick's Salad Plate and Dinner rolls.
Crepe Ditan
A crepe topped with chicken with lavewheat spikes and served with rich cheese sauce
Crepe Strognoff
Mixing mustard, and green onions in a delicious Newbury sauce
Mixing Newbury Criepe
Mixing mustard, and green onions in a delicious Newbury sauce
Cancunlore
With Mexican criepe favorite
Fresh Mushroom Criepe
Shred fresh mushrooms in Marmite sauce
Embellishments
Beverages
Lemonade
Soft Drinks
Seltzer
Fruit Tea
Apple Tea
Red Tea
Bottled Berry
Domburicine
Desserts
Quick's Special Cheesecake
with raspberry sauce
Amaretto Cream Pie
Banana Ban Criepe
Fudge Mini Criepe
Charries Savannah Criepe
Hot Apple Criepe
Entrées
Country Fried Straw
Broadside fried stalk with crisp chicken gravy
Southern Fried Chicken
Half of a chicken dipped in our special batter
Pumpkin Roll
Tasting and Saturday only. A generous cut of grilled
Kumos, donut
Petite Salmon Straw
Angelina Roll
Ring, Out Salmon Straw
Tanker and breaded heart
Strip Straw
Back on the Hoop
Crêpes
Two crêpes served with Quick's Solar Pâte,
and Dijon rille.
Crépe Drink
Select breed of chicken with low-carb spices and
served with crisp cheese sauce
Crepe Strips
Silicon and fresh muddains in a delicious strangelyn
mousse
Shrimp Neewburg Crêpe
Shrimp, muddains, and green onions in a delicious
Neewburg sauce
Campbell's
An Indian criepe favorite
Fresh Mushroom Crêpe
Stewed fresh muddains in Morning sauce
Embellishments
Beverages
Lemonade 15 and 50
Soft Drinks 15 and 50
Gourd Pie 15 and 50
Coffee 15 and 50
Hot Tea 15 and 50
Milk 15 and 50
Mashed Beers 75
Desserts
Quirk's Special Cheesecake 95
with raspberry sauce 1.25
Amorted Cream Pie 75
Banana Bum Cr蛋糕 1.25
Fudgy Mini Cr蛋糕 1.25
Cherries Savannah Cr蛋糕 1.50
Hot Apple Cr蛋糕 1.25
Snick Pine 85
Hibiscus 65
Sugar Cream and Alcove 75
Pumpkin 75
Cinnamon Brew 65
Baked Potato 65
White maple syrup 65
Embellishments
Beverages
Lemonade 15 and 30
Salt Drink 15 and 30
Iced Tea 45
+ Ice 45
Swift 45
Hot Tea 40
Wild Milk 40
Rotted Bees 75
Powdered 1.25
Fragrant 1.25
Open
12-10 Sun. Closed Monday
Open
11-10 Tues., Wed., Thurs.
11-11 Fri., Sat.
12-10 Sun. Closed Monday
Try our Great 2600 Harry H. Blasco Owner
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Tuesday, April 13, 2016 at 10:30 a.m.
1
Thursday, April 19, 1979
3
University Daily Kansan
Ulcers demand changes in habits
By BRENDA WATSON
Staff Reporter
Whenever Gloria Slice, Cherryvale sophomore, has a big test up, there's a burning pain in the pit of her neck.
states.
"I know it's there," she said. "I feel that twinge."
"I know it is strike," Stace has said. "You infect—a disease that attacks 10 percent of all adults sometime during their lives."
of Antarctica to the ocean. It is a sore eaten by stomach acid into the lining of the stomach or duodenum, which is about the first stomach meal.
According to Martin Wollmann, physician and director of Wakelin Memorial Hospital, a persistent burner in the pit caused by stabbing the hand is a common cause.
wolfram was then after an ulcer was diagnosed, usually by X-rays, then it was treated with dietary controls, and later with antibiotics.
"A PATIENT should combine several treatments to avoid an extreme in any one of them," he said.
Dietary controls include restricting foods that tend to aggravate the aruge, such as coffee, alcohol, spicy foods, carbonated beverages and fried foods, while eating foods that tend to absorb stomach acid, most notably dairy
Medication includes a variety of antacids, including cinnetine, the newest and most promising in terms of safety and effectiveness.
Surrey also is used to treat acuties, but only rarely. The problem is diagnosis
Surgery labels use letters, usually a little problem in diagnosing or treating ulcers, Wolmuml said that physicians could not
with UCERS we get into that uncertain area of psychosomatic illnesses, the interplay between emotional and physical health.
pimpin their cause to stress or pressure and, in fact, could not pimpin their cause at all.
"We just don't know what causes ulcers, and I am not quite convinced that pressure is the cause."
Wollmann experimented that one in every 1,000 KU students was treated at Watkins specifically for an ulcer. He also said that about one out of every 100 students hospitalized there had an ulcer. Watkins hospitals about 700 students
Wollmann said that although it could not be proved that pressure causes ulcers, it definitely aggravates them.
Slice said she has had firsthand experience with that. She learned she had an ulcer while she was still in high school, and although it was nearly healed by the end of her senior year, it was from time to time. When it does, Slices know how to handle it.
"I JUST start eating really carefully again, especially during finals," she said.
"I have to eat five times a day," she said. "In high school, I must find a place to feed and, here at KU1, I must have a place for me."
Stice said that life with an ulcer meant a lot of inconveniences.
"Eating out is practically impossible. You can't have spice or fried foods, no starches or vegetables that have a shell, like corn or peas. All your meat has to be broiled or grilled." You're supposed you were supposed to use is a very limited amount of salt."
After strictly following the regimen for nine months to heal her ulcer, Stice obviously knows it well. Even though her job at Tac Bell makes it more difficult, Stice still watches what she eats.
"The thing that really bugged me was no fried foods," she said.
STICE SAID she especially liked fried chicken, which she now bakes instead.
having an ear also requires more sleep, according to Stice. She said the amount depended on how bad you felt.
Sliced said that she was not surprised when she found out that she had an ulcer because other members of her family were sick.
Wollemain that there does seem to be a "familiarity" or tendency for ulcers to run in families.
"Your chances of getting an ulcer are greater if someone else in your family has one," he said.
Wollmann also said that there was a greater chance for
nervous with true O blood to get ulcers.
"We have no idea why," he said. "The statistics just show it."
Another interesting statistic, according to Wallmann, is the recurrence rate for ulcers is significantly higher than that of cholecystitis.
Wollmann said that even though there were no good answers and that people would have to live with that, they felt that it was better.
"The student rate is not excessively high," he said. "Ulcers are almost always curable. They can be easily diagnosed and usually treated quite innocuously. The outcome is most optimistic."
College pressures often hard to bear
Much of the pressure in a student's life is caused by the taxing demand of adjusting to a variety of standards, expectations and relationships, according to Jim Lichtenberg, counselor at the KU counseling center.
However, Lichtenberg also said that most pressure is generated internally as opposed to being caused by external factors.
"There are a lot of assignments, a lot of exams and each makes a different demand on a student," he said.
"We create a lot of stress for ourselves because of the way we think about things and the importance we place on them," he said.
"SETTING STANDARDS is terribly important, but sometimes they are unrealistic," he said.
Many of the center's cases are students referred by the Student Assistance Center. They do not have learning difficulties but Lichtenberg calls "test anxiety."
"THEY FREEZE up on an exam," he
said. "It's not that they don't know it. It's just that they can't get it out. Then after they get out of the stress situation, it all comes back to them."
"They wonder if their college education will be worth anything. They're concerned about whether they'll get a job," he said.
The first step in learning to handle stress better, according to Lichtenberg, is to identify the problem.
"YOU HAVE to ask yourself 'what times do I feel that clutching panic?' "he said.
The next step for the person is to determine what he is thinking about at the time, what he believes, what he values and what is important to him.
Third, learn to think more rationally and learn to relax, Lichtenberg said.
and learn to relax, Lichtenberg said.
He also said that people could be taught how to relay.
"It might take a half hour the first time," he said.
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Lake Clinton
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Campus Vets
Dam
you
films sua
Friday & Saturday,
April 20 & 21
JULIA
(1977)
Dir. Fred Zinemann; with Jane
Fonda, Vanessa Redgrave, Jason
Robards. Based on a story by Lillian
Hellman Winner of 3 Academy
Awards.
*No Friday matinee*
Dir. George Cukor; with Jugdar Gulman, James Mason, Charles Bickford. The best of the three versions of this novel by Harold Arlen and Gerald Gurshwin.
(1975)
Lake Clinton
Sat.
April 21
Food Beer
or Advertising
paid for by
Midnight Movie SUPERVIXENS
Dir. Russ Meyer; mover with Sarl Eubank,
in the office. In the week, RATED X. AGE IDS WILL
BE CHECKED AT THE DOOR, SO BE
IN TO BRING THE TO THE FILM
Monday, April 23 WOMEN'S ANIMATION FESTIVAL
The Festival will include 12 short animated films by Susan Pikh Khnill. The festival also includes *Laughlin* and *Sally Crawshank* inclusion her latest title "epiUSA"
Tuesday, April 24
Judy Garland:
A STAR IS BORN
(1955)
Wednesday, April 25
Film Noir:
DOUBLE INDEMNITY
Bilary Wilder, with Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanleywicz, Edward G Robinson, Screenplay written by James M. Cain's novel, based on James M. Cain's novel.
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. $1.10 admission.
JR'S
Be an active part
of next years SR. CLASS—
Apply now for 1979-1980
Standing Committees
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SR. CLASS GIFT
CLASS UNIFICATION
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Deadline April 20,1979— Level 3 107 B Kansas Union
也
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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 editors.
APRIL 19,1979
An unhealthy mystery
The legacies of Vietnam seem to be without end.
And for an undetermined number of Vietnam veterans, their legacy from the jungles of Southeast Asia is an increasing number of health problems—from skin rashes and certain disorders to cancer and birth defects.
The common denominator in many cases is a herbicide used as a jungle defoliant in Vietnam called Agent Orange.
Veterans across the country say their health problems stem from exposure to the chemical and about a thousand have filed claims with the Veterans Administration for disability payments.
TO DATE, THE VA has resisted such disability requests, saying that there is no evidence to conclusively support the health-related charges against Agent Orange.
Indeed, the controversy surrounding the effects of the herbicide has produced a great deal of confusion, much of which centers on one of the herbicide's main chemical ingredients—2,4,5-T. That chemical has been temporarily banned from widespread use in agriculture and forestry by the Environmental Protection Agency.
Nevertheless, many scientists say
that 2,4,5-T, when used properly, is safe. For each victim of 2,4,5-T poisoning, its supporters seem to bring out a healthy lifetime user of the herbicide. The effects it conducted on the effects of the herbicide, but much remains in debate.
HOWEVER, A FEW facts are not in dispute:
*2, 4, 5-T contains a dioxin contaminant known as TCDD, one of the most lethal poisons known. TCDD causes birth defects and miscarriages in laboratory animals. No one is certain what it does to man.
- The EPA says some evidence indicates that “pure” 2,4,5-T – as free as possible from TCDD– may cause insects and miscarriages in lab animals.
- When a person is exposed to 2,4.5- T, he may suffer dizziness, nausea, headaches and a skin condition called chloracne. The long range effects, however, are not known.
That's the rub. No one knows. Several agencies, including the VA, are conducting investigations into the problem, but that's all.
A full congressional investigation into the use of Agent Orange and 2,4,5-T is needed. The mystery concerning its effects on Vietnam veterans and perhaps even their children must be resolved, and any necessary compensation must be paid.
save the federal government some money,
but found there were laws against that sort
of thing.
Overregulation plagues bureaucracy
Bhavas—a federal employee who, like most American workers, is aware of tax-cut impacts on their jobs and controls and the balanced budget movement—has a chance to help control
Unfortunately, Bavas discovered the federal bureaucracy dominated his life.
BAVAS HAD SERVED his time, and his supervisor, Louis Masotti, director of the NU Center for Urban Affairs, wrote HEW recommending the raise.
Then in November, Bavas found out he was due for a Civil Service step pay increase from HEW. As a federal employee, all he had to do to qualify for the raise was work a specified number of years and submit a supervisor saying his work was acceptable.
Bavas works for the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare helping universities develop their urban affairs programs. Through promotions he has become an adviser for the Center of Urban Affairs at Northwestern University.
Bavas, who was to receive a $1,272 addition to his comfortable $40,000 salary, heard about the letter and decided to take action.
"I have lost a lot of friends at HEW over the years by going around saying we're all overpawed, which we are," he said. So he wrote HEW a letter.
So, he wrote HEW a letter.
But Christopher Cohen, regional director for HEW, did something that astounded Bavas. Cohen telephoned Bavas and said he had to accept the raise. Federal Civil Service Law does not permit a federal employee to turn down a pay increase. Cohen
"While (the raise) would be very nice, I would like to ask that you not authorize such a pay increase . . . it may well be that the money can be used more beneficially in some other way or simply not spent," Bavas wrote.
IN A FEB, 23 letter, Cohen wrote, "I
empathize with your desire to waive your
gift and your promise."
Amin's friends, enemies face exiles' judgements
By ERISA KIRONDE N.V. Times Feature
N. Y. Times Feature
NAIROBI, Kenya—For the first time since Uganda's long nightmare began in 1971, exiled Ugandans are due to hope
Many people are concerned about the period immediately following liberation.
That has happened before—on a large scale, most recently, in 1971 during President Idi Amin's takeover, when bitter tribesmen attacked and burned the property of those, like Omar Bashir, who had been living with the regime of Milton Obote, who was deposed as president.
Rumors of bitter reepalial attacks on Moslems, Rwandese and the other minority groups, often foreign, who formed the core of terror gangs have filtered through the news blackout. It would be hard to not touch to the ugly specter of revenge in the country said.
A FEAR of reinstating Obote, who most felt was most responsible for creating President Amin and all he had stood for, was the main factor against unity among the exiles. Meredith Crawford, a former member of the Uganda Lute, a respected academician, was elected chairman of the Uganda National Liberation Front's 11-man committee, which will run the country for two years after liberation, preparing the nation to face a new era.
The committee has appointed professional administrators for the liberated areas, a move that should bring relief to the countryside, which has been accustomed to illiterate lurkers in the caves and may layayas in the Sudan and Nubians in Kibera, just outside Nairobi.
These erstwhile arbiterists of life and death have been scurrying out of Uganda, illegally requiring cars to carry their loot.
UGANDANS INSIDE the country, after the long, fierce muzzling of the years of suppression, are taking more openly and using the telephone, taking advantage of the confusion and flight of members of the hated State Research Bureau, the most feared of Uganda's three secret security networks, which has killed thousands of the government's opponents.
On the diplomatic front, it will be very difficult to accept an Arabism in Uaanda, at least for some years.
Arab support for President Amin has seen to that, particularly the support given him by Libya, which has been overt during the war of liberation. Unfortunately Islam is identified closely with the Arabs. Moslems make up only 5 percent of Uganda's population. They had跌 discrimination against, particularly the lack of education in the colonial era (where were the Arabs?).
After Uganda's independence, no one was kept out of church
schools. Many of the Moslems who became educated were the very ones, so necessary to their community and the country, that Amin promoted so indiscriminately out of turn. Many may well end up victims of the liberation.
BRITAIN, THE midwife with Israel of the Amin nightmare, will be difficult to forgive. The "whiskey run" from an airport in London - the ferrying of luxury items to Amin's thugs - was a difficult task, and the relationship must continue and Britain's return will be tolerated.
Israel, the co-midwife, will be welcomed back if only for the brilliant Brentte Baedle, which boosted morale within the country.
This will spite the Arabs and, nearer to home, the Organization of African Union, which, in spite of President Amir's atrocious, conferred its highest award, the chairmanship, on him and which only last month would not condemn
Exiles are grateful to the United States for its vocal stand on human rights and for its official ban, despite the many difficulties.
KENYA, TOA, has given refuge to thousands of exiles, at a cost that strained its resources. Silence, though, must fall on the enemy, for KENYA is now one of them.
Ugandan exiles who that United Nations bodies have drawn up contingency plans for rehabilitation of the economy, plans that can be hawked around, preferably to the smaller countries in southern Africa, are best able to administer and implement plans in small nations.
Exiles also hope that help will be forthcoming immediately to our mortally damaged Makerere University, once one of Africa's best, from old-time stalwarts like the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations.
HEALTH NEEDS, too, will be staggering, giving the World Health Organization an opportunity to introduce its new approach.
Manpower inside the country also has been demoralized by the hardiness of daily living and reduced to petty trading to make ends meet. Laborers will need to be retrained to nurse the sick, and there is a challenge to return home is accepted, but we shall need friends.
In the field of health, as in all, we will have a manpower problem. With thousands of our trained men on fixed-term contracts in so many other countries, it will not be easy for them to drop everything and filter back.
Africa
Niger Chad Sudan
Nigeria Ghana Central African Empire
Congo Uganda Kig
Zaire Tanzania
Angola Zambia Mozambique
Rhodesia
Erisa Kironde, who was the head of the Ugandan Electricity Board from 1962 to 1972 and was chairman of Uganda's Red Cross, was until recently a United Nations Children's Fund program officer for Nigeria and Ghana.
explained to you in our conversation, the law and its implementing regulations do not permit an employee to waive payment of an increase such as yours."
Jake
Thompson
"Can you believe it?" he asked. "Waste is so institutionally established's against the law to do this."
Bavas was dumbfounded.
Bavas found that his only recourse was to write a check to the federal government for the debt, but he didn't. He also discovered that no one in Chicago or Washington could remember a federal government debt.
Bavas' situation is an example of the absurd and discomforting efforts the
OVERREGULATION IS nothing new in the federal bureaucracy. It seems to exist as a result of the fact that the fog in Chicago, it "comes on little cafe" feet. That is why we need to be careful.
government has made to dominate lives. The money is not important. What is important is that Baviss could not exercise political power, a right one protected by the Constitution.
Unfortunately for Bavas, the government is not through with him. Without explanation, he has been informed that at the end of his NU assignment on April 30, he will be dropped to Philadelphia and that his Civil Service classification will be dropped from 15 to 13.
"I think the intent is to drive me out of the government," he said. "They want me out. I
Bavas said he thought the government wanted to remove him because he was a
conformist. The federal bureaucracy's are highly magnificent in the Bavaria situation.
BAVAS NOT ONLY is being denied the constitutional freedoms that should allow him to deny a raise, but he also is being discriminated against because of his efforts.
The lesson the government is trying to teach seems sinister—don't make waves.
It is absurd when one considers that our nation was founded on principles chosen by our founders. The makers in American history. And those principles have guided the nation for more than 200 years.
Overregulation is indeed a quiet disease in the federal bureaucracy. The Bavas case demonstrates that the American public must be on guard against its influences. The public must also find ways to reverse the trend toward more regulation.
Andrew Bavas should be awarded, not punished, for his actions.
MANNELY
RE DIGITAL ANIMATED
© 1974 WILLIAM BROWN
WAGE PATROL
HEIGHT LIMIT 7%
TEAMSTERS
Sending veterans back to war unfair
It seems painfully trivial when the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences was about to present one of its highest awards to a film about the American experience in Vietnam, the Pentagon was changed. The notion of recalling challenged Vietnamese veterans in the event of war and sending them into combat ahead of new recruits.
The film is "The Deer Hunter," a powerfully moving drama about Vietnam and the experiences shared by three soldiers from Pennsylvania.
But aside from that, it is a needed reminder of some of the unpleasant postwar reflections of a country morally battered by a war it never quite understood.
Pentagon officials argue that the volunteer army is not providing them with enough manpower. So to make up the difference, they must first in the event of war and sent into combat.
Vernon Smith.
YET IT APPEARS as if Pentagon officials are already forbidden Vietnam and what it means to American Americans. Recent actions indicate that the Pentagon is eager to go about the business
PAPER
"We don't see any other solution in the short range," said John Brinkerhoff, a defense manpower official, at a Senate services manpower subcommittee hearing.
The major asset of this plan, officials say, is that the veterans would need only 3 to 4 weeks of training before going into combat, against 12 weeks for new drafts.
BRUNKERHOFF SAID the plan would be used only in a declared war or if the nation
Pentagon officials told Congress that the new plan had not been approved by Defense Secretary Harold Brown, but that he wanted the idea was being drafted for his review.
On the surface, it would appear that the new plan might be a trial balloon of sorts. But the problem is more complicated.
and what congressman in his right mind would support such a plan.
At the heart of this issue is the discussion that military might is determined by the number of bodies at one's disposal and that the volunteer system is not working. But depending on the source of information, such a discussion quickly becomes moot.
HEADLINES HERALDING the "failure of the volunteer armed forces" blossomed until Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wis, using the same statistics as everyone else, pointed out that the number of people in uniform, which is a true measurement of military might, was more than 2,000 greater at the end of the year than the number the military services had undergoing. The recruits had been more than made up by an excess of re-enlistments.
Has the United States ever been ready for war? "That is a difficult question to answer because of the unreasonable for Uncle Sam to call the Vietnam veteran first and put him through the hell of yet another senseless war while the country gets ready. It just wouldn't be right."
Kansan's nuclear stand hypocritical
To the editor:
In reference to your editorial of April 9, "Stop Wolf Creek Now," you and many others have reacted to a previous bias rather than to the facts.
The exposure to people outside the plant to radiation was less than that airline employees, pilots and cabin attendants receive in a year and is comparable to additional radiation received by those living in Denver rather than Harrisburg.
No study has shown that living at high altitudes, with their increase in low level radiation exposure, has led to increased cancer. Even living and working in masonry rather than wood frame enclosures leads to an increase in exposure to low level radiation.
The radiation received by several plant employees was more serious, about that allowable for any three month period for workers in the nuclear industry. But, even at this level, there is no evidence of danger to mature non- pregnant persons.
What has been overlooked by most commentaries such as yours is that we have seen in this accident what has been feared to be a failure, a failure to coolant accident, and almost all the resulting release of radioactivity was confined, as designed, to the interior of the car.
I find it hypocritical that you and other media ignore the problems of other energy
In spite of the multiplicity of human error and at least one unexplained mechanical malfunction, the control systems functioned correctly, shutting down the reactor and opening the emergency cooling system. The only unexpected effect is the release of the hydrogen bubble, and this is now known to have been a result of an incorrect response by an operator.
We have learned about at least two things from this accident: the possibility of such a bubble forming, and the safety of commercial nuclear power reactors.
KANSAN letters
sources. What are you going to advocate when a liquid Natural Gas ship blows up in Boston or New York harbor? You are aware that the burning of coal releases significant quantities of radioactivity into the atmosphere? Did you know that even "clean," renewable solar energy should it prove more effective? It would cause an increase in the average temperature because of the necessary decrease in the Earth's albedo? What about
In conclusion, I ask you ton consider some of the alternatives: black lung disease, the sulphur oxide suffocation of smog, economic subjection to OPEC nations, the environmental disaster of rapid strip mining, the economic disruption that would occur if we stopped carbon capture and a substantial shock in per capita energy utilization and the status of the Third World while we wait for the possible development of alternative energy sources.
the more major oil spills, on the Arctic
and offshore waters; half of Alaska other
offshore drilling rigs.
Francis W. Prosser Professor of Physics and Astronomy
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
(USPS 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and March through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday through April. Subscription fee $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 a year activity county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity县.
Editor
Barry Massey
Send changes of address to the University Daly Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence KS 66045
Editorial Editor
John Whitesides
Management Editor David Stern Editorial Editor John Whistleman
Mary Hoenk Campus Editor Carol Hunter Assistant Campus Editors Carel Hunter Robert Beer Campus Editor Diane Porter Special Revision Editor Mary Thorburnbaugh
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 19, 1979
Budweiser presents... the TASTEBUDS "FORECAST"
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6
Thursday, April 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Athletic board increases urged
BY TONI WOOD Staff Reporter
The University Senate executive committee voted yesterday to recommend to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes that the proposed athletic board be increased.
Dykes approved the merger of the men's and women's athletic programs last week, but the proposed merger of the two boards has not been finalized.
In February, the proposed merger was submitted in a letter to Dykes from Dei Shankel, executive vice chancellor; Marian Washington, women's athletics director; and Bob Marcum, men's athletics director.
SenEx members had expressed concern earlier that the proposed board would decrease faculty, alumni and student representation, while administrative representation would remain strong.
COMPARED WITH the current men's
board, the faculty, alumni and student representation would be cut in half in the proposed merger. Compared with the current women's board, faculty representatives would be cut from four to two, and student members from two to one.
Four ex officio members would be out, and one voting member would be added to the proposed board.
SenEx's recommendation to Dykes would call for faculty membership on the board to be doubled from three to six. Student representation would change from one student athlete elected by the student body president.
K-Club is a proposed club of letter winners.
SenEx will also recommend that faculty representatives "reflect the reality of their appointments."
THIS REFERS to certain board members who, although elected as
faculty representatives, actually perform only administrative duties.
SenX will also recommend to the chancellor that the merged board make policy rather than advise. The current men's board, the Kansas University athletic department, and the policy rather than advises, as does the Women's Athletics Advisory Board.
On the current men's board, faculty may serve two successive three-year terms.
Gerhard Zuther, a member of SenEx and the current men's athletic board, said, "There is something to be said for a game on the board. It takes time to learn the ropes."
An amendment to the recommendation that would have limited faculty terms on the proposed board to either two two-term term, or one term, was defeated by SenEx members.
He said limiting the terms would "play even more into the hands of the ex officio members," because their terms would not be limited.
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We offer complete training that will enable you to begin your work at a "five figure" income level. Additional considerations are an insurance program, new car demonstrator to drive, license, insurance, gas allowance and paid vacations.
If you are sharp and have a lot of ability combined with a desire to succeed—then you best visit with us! Call Mr. Willey or Mr. Postlethwaite for an interview appointment.
Dale Willey Motors, 1116 W. 23rd St., Lawrence, 843-5200.
KU
54th Annual
Kansas Relays at Hershberger Track April 19,20,21
"outstanding national caliber athletic competition."
FRIDAY EVENTS General Admission '2.50 "preliminaries" Grade or High School '1.50 K.U. Student '1.50
Reserved (West Stadium) 4.50
General Adm. (East Stadium) '3.00
Grade or High School '2.00
K. U. student $2.00
SATURDAY EVENTS "finals"
Tickets available at Athletic Ticket Office Allen Field House
Also available at Track on day of events
Fair policies followed by non-profit groups
By LAURIE WOLKEY
Although some privately funded, nonprofit organizations affiliated with the University of Kansas are not required to follow affirmative action employment guidelines, the organization said that they voluntarily offer equal opportunities to employees.
Staff Reporter
According to *Clarence Dillingham*, associate director of the KU office of affirmative action, some non-profit organizations at the University are not included as part of the affirmative action package have voluntarily shown support for the plan.
"They are part of the University and have employment guidelines."
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The University of Kansas Alumni Association and the Kansas University Endowment Association are among the organizations that are not required by federal law to follow the University's affirmative action plan.
VICKIE THOMAS, associate general counsel, said, "Support organizations are not covered by the affirmative action plan. But we encourage them to follow guidelines or are free to discriminate."
Larry Heeb, vice president of the Endowment Association, said that the association was not directly bound by all requirements, but that it did support them.
Affirmative action programs, administered by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, were designed to ensure that federally funded institutions did not discriminate in hiring according to race or ethnicity; they also established guidelines to correct underemployment of women and minority groups.
IN 1972, an affirmative action plan was initiated at KU.
The plan provides guidelines for equal hiring practices for women, minorities and disabled persons, promotions, tenure, benefits, and other employment policies and financial aid policies.
Al Knatt, director of the equal employment opportunity office of the department of human resources, said, "Non-profit organizations are treated the same as religious organizations. There is no monitoring requirement and no checking procedures."
According to the KU Handbook of Affirmative Action Procedures, before hiring an employee, a federally funded organization must file a report on its hiring procedures. However, privately funded organizations are not required to file the report.
THE HANDBOOK says "The person making the final decision will submit the committee's recruitment and selection precs to the appropriate vice chancellor or the University director and the office of president, as required in a formal or informal, is made to any candidate."
Leaking gas in Malott Hall is mystery
No one was certain how a hydrogen sulfur leaf originated in Malott Hall yesterday, but school officials were to investigate the leak this morning.
Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry, said he did not know where the leak came from.
was not too strong in the library area. The odor, however, was intense in the book stacks area.
"We have never had a problem like this in 16 years." he said.
"The odor smelled like rotten eggs. It was not too strong in the library area."
Robert Verleez, Lawrence senior and Malott librarian, said he noticed the odor when he arrived on nonday yesterday.
"People who went into the stacks said they were feeling nauseous," he said.
bricker said the freshman labs used minute amounts of hydrogen sulfur.
BRICKER REFUSED to speculate on the leak's potential danger.
"I just can not say until we find out where it came from," he said.
"We're doing qualitative analyses in chemistry labs and we do not use hydrogen sulfur per se, but we only generate it in a solution.
"Furthermore, our labs are on the opposite side of the building from where the older was. I think there could be an opportunity to construct the construction of the "be said," he
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7
Project will train women to lead
The University of Kansas is the center of a state-wide project to increase the number of women in administrative positions in Kansas public primary and secondary
The federally funded two-year program will prepare 13 female teachers from 10 Kansas school districts to assume leadership positions in education.
"The Women's Educational Equity Act Program has funded this project to test a model which will be used in other states if it is successful in Kansas," Judith Admission, Director of the Project of Internships, Certification, Equity Leadership and Support, said recently.
Nearly 99 percent of the school superintendents in the United States are men,
according to the American Association of School Administrators. None of the 307 superintendents in Kansas are women and many are principals in Class A&B schools are women.
DURING THE project, the participants will complete the requirements for administrative certification, which include at least 38 graduate credits in administration.
The key element in their preparation is an administrative internship. Each intern is required to work with school administrators, year working with school administrators, and interns are working with elementary school principals, four with secondary or junior schools, and four with remaining four with central office administration.
EACH INTERN has specific responsibilities and must complete a major project
in her school district. One has developed a computerized information system. Another has set up a rating scale for school facilities to measure their performance close. Two have assumed temporary responsibilities as acting principals and two have already been appointed as assistant principals.
"We have four that have been offered contracts," Tom Thomas, graduate project assistant, said, "and that's very good, since that's usually done in May."
The interns receive a salary matching that they were paid as teachers from grant funds. The interns earn $1,000 per month.
"We expect to place all of our interns in administrative positions by next fall," Adkison said. "Our success is negating the barriers they women cannot be successful leaders."
Equipment stolen from Strong Hall appraised at $800
The theft of computer equipment valued at $800 from a room in Strong Hall was reported to KU police Tuesday.
A computer terminal valued at $500 owned by the department of computer science as well as equipment valued at $300 owned by Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. had been stolen, police said.
The room the equipment had been in was kept open during the day for student use, police said.
Costa Rican educator dies
Carlos Monge Allano, who began the first student exchange program between the University of Kansas and the University of Costa Rica, died April 8, Anita Herzfeld, KU's director of the Study Abroad program, learned yesterday.
Monge died of an aneurysm while attending a seminar in Caracas, Venezuela
tending a seminar in Caracas, Venezuela. In 1968, Monge began the exchange program for students at the University of Kansas to study at the University of Costa Rica. He served as director of the University of Costa Rica from 1962 to 1970.
Monge served as president of the Central American Council of Universities. He was credited with securing a program to spend 5 million dollars to Costa Rica government for higher education.
He was 70 years old.
Monge was known for his books about higher education. His most famous book was "The Social and Human Geography of Costa Rica."
Memorial contributions may be sent to Claudia Gutierrez, director, University of Chicago.
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New students in education to be tested
Beginning next fall, the School of Education will require all new students and transfer students to take an English competency test, James Gowen, director of freshman-sophomore English, said yesterday.
"It is important to take this test early in college if you plan to major in education," Gowen, professor of English, said. "That way, you can take the necessary courses to insure competency."
The exam will be given at 1:30 p.m.
Saturday, April 28, in Wescow Hall.
The deadline to sign up for the test is April 25
in room 360 Wescow.
"Command of English is important for any teacher to have." Dale Scanell, a math teacher at Lakeside High School, said "As far as lack of these skills, the trends in our school were following trends in the world."
The test will be an hour and a half and include a writing sample and multiple choice questions.
"The School of Education is taking vee seriously the literacy of all teachers" Gowan said. "This is basically a placement test in composition.
University Daily Kansan
On Campus
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TODAY: MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION seminar on "Community Correction and the Role of the University" at 2:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas University. A lecture for graduate students about RECONSTROUND AND AFRO-AMERICAN HISTORY at 3:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of WOMEN'S SOFTBALL, KUva, Nebraska at 6:30 p.m. at Holcom Sports Complex. Also at 6:30 p.m. CHI EPSION CIVIL ENGINEERING SOCIETY DINNER in the Centennial Room of the Union. At 7 p.m. SUA BRIDGE in the Pine Room of the Union and the SCIENCE FICTION CLUB in the Centennial Room of the Union. With Nancy Lilwhite at 7:30 p.m. at 1141 Massachusetts St. At 8 p.m. the KU SKYDIVING CLUB meets in Room 124, Robinson Gymnasium, a STUDENT RECITAL at Swartow Recital Hall features Susan Shumway, violinist, and Coleman pianist. KU VARSITY BAND CONCERT at BEND High School. HUMANTIES LECTURE by William Griffith, "The Sardines and the Shark: Central American Governments and the Developers," at 8 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium.
TOMORROW: Meeting all-day will be EDUCATIONAL PLANNING,
PROGRAMMING AND BUDGETING conference in the Forum Room of the Union, KU ROTC DAY in the Military Science Building, TRI-UNIVERSITY CENTER of Latin American Studies in the Council Room of the Union, BLACK CARSEERS DAY in the University Center of Solidarity at 11 a.m. in Cork o l the Union. At noon will be the SNYDER BOOK COLLECTING CONTEST AWARDS LUNCHEON in the English Room of the Union. Also at noon the 59th ANNUAL ENGINEERED EXPOSITION in the University Center of Solidarity DON FRAMBROUGH, registration in Parrott Athletic Center at 1:30 p.m. Elmer V. McColm Centennial Symposium STUDENT PAPER CONTEST at 1:30 p.m. in Room 641, Malot Hall. VTAMEN B6 IN HISTORICAL PERPENSIVE lecture at 1:30 p.m. in Biology CLUB at 4:30 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union, KU FOLK DANCE CLUB at 7:30 p.m. in Room 173, Robinson STUDENT RECITATION featuring Gracia Carlson, trumpet, and Evelien Hoogstraten, fute, in Swarthout Recital Hall. The Elmer McColm Centennial SYMPOSIUM STUDENT RECITATION featuring R. Davis of the University of Texas and Robert S. Levy, University of Louisville, at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
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THURSDAY APRIL 19
Panel Discussion on the Current Nicaraguan Situation
April 19-20, 1979
MARIANG FIALLES Rector. Universidad Naconal Autonoma de Nicaragua
MAURICIO SOLAUN United States Ambassador to Nicaragua
EDUARDO CONRADO Decano, Humanaides, Universidad nacional
Autonoma de Nicaragua
Forum Room ...
WILLIAM J. GRIFITT
8:00 P.M.
Woodruff Audt
Governments and the Developers'' University of
Kansas Humanities Lecture
FRIDAY MORNING APRIL 20
HN P. BELL Indiana University at Ft. Wawne
**JOHN WELL** Indiana University E. F. Wiley
9 00 A. M.
E. Elegant Organizational Responses to Agarism Reform in
the United States
KENNETH FINNEY North Carolina Westville College
2 3/4 P M Washington S. Valentine and the Hurdras
Milton
DAVID CHANLER
Brighton Young University
the A.M. Fell of the Central American Federation
R. LEE WOODWARD 1100 A.M. Tukean University
T. THE Central American Political Policy of a Conservative
Midwesterner 1844-1855
B. HENRY BURKE 1844-1855
DAVID CHANDLER Brigham Young University
R. LEE WOODWARD Tutane University
BREAK
MIAMI WILMILIFORD Tinker Foundation
10 30 A M JERRY Benjamint and Jose del Valle
LUNCH
HODERT A. NAYLOR Forrester Dickinson University
2:00 P.M. *C中央美国学院* Revised The Formative Years*
*Campus Edition*
CHARLES L. STANSIFER University of Kansas
FRIDAY AFTERNOON APRIL 20
CHARLES T. STANSFER University of Kansas
11.10 A.M. **Foreign Scientists in Costa Rica, 1845-1914**
CALVIN BILLMAN Augusta College
1 30 P. M. "William Joyce Griffith"
Coastal Room
BREAK
MARUCIUS DONNIZUMGUEZ Kennean College
3:30 P.M. Wilson and Timaco A Battle for Recognition in Costa Rica
JOHN BRETTEN
4 O.E. P.M.
Francis maries college
Carleton Beats and the U. S. State Department in Chicago
David Bentley
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THOMAS FIEHRER
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Immigration to Central America in the Eighteenth Century
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8
Thursday, April 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
KU black symposium to be this weekend
By ELLEN IWAMOTO
Staff Renorter
Presentation of a Black Student Involvement Award and two distinguished service citations will highlight the Black Awareness Symposium Awards Banquet at 6 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
The symposium, which will begin 12:30 p.m. Friday and continue until noon Saturday, will focus on the theme "Success: A Black Perspective."
Samuel L. Adams, associate professor of journalism and director of Gannett-AEJ Project for Enrichment of Journalism Education, and Marc Henderson, associate White House press secretary will be required to request for their service to black proms.
The five finalists for the Black Student Involvement Award were selected from 12 nominees by members of the Black Faculty Committee and submitted to the Committee of Black Student Organizations.
THE FOLLOWING students were selected in recognition of their involvement in the project.
Dayna C. Eubanks, Wichita senior, was the chairperson for the 1979 Intercollegiate Association for Women Students and was a newscreator and newseditor for KJHK radio. Simon Monsard, Libreville, Gabon, senior is president of the African Dance Group to establish the African Dance Troupe and the Black Host Family Program.
Sharon Parker, Columbus, Ohio, senior,
is president of the Black Student Union and
was awarded the Outstanding Woman in
America Award by the Women's Recognition Committee.
Ross Quine, second year law student, Kansas City, Kan., is president of the Black American Law Students Association and a member of the Kansas University Academic Affairs Committee.
Reggie Robinson, Salma senior and 1978 student body vice president, is active in the team.
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Issues and answers panels led by members of the RU Black Union Committee will be offered on topics including blacks in Higher Education, Blacks in Government and Politics and Blacks in the Social Services.
Student awareness workshops will focus on topics such as Choosing the Right Job, Black Women and Professional Status and Censorship, Minorities and the Media.
KEYNOTE SPEAKER for the symposium, Ragan Henry, will speak at a p.m. Friday in Woodruff Auditorium. Ragan is the president and owner of Broadcast Enterprises Network, Inc., the largest broadcast company owned by blacks in the United States.
Carlton B. Goodlett, president of the National Black United Fund and publisher of the Sun-Reporter newspaper in San Francisco, will speak on "Black Resources and Our Struggle for Survival" at the awards banquet.
Tickets for the dinner are $6.50 at the door and admission is free for the speech.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
has excused all black students, from their
classes, beginning noon Friday, to attend
the Black Symposium activities.
Police accident will be studied
An accident involving a Lawrence Police department squad car and a pedestrian Tuesday night is being investigated by the Lawrence Police department.
Maj. Darrel Stephens, assistant police chief, said yesterday that supervisors and the accident review committee of the Lawrence Police department would try to determine whether the driver of the squad car, Severeno A. Osborne, was the incident, was at fault in the accident in which David Tubbs, Topeka sophomore, was struck.
The review is to determine if the accident was avoidable in terms of the of the accident.
Tubba was reported in satisfactory condition last night at Lawrence Memorial
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Occasionally, in small groups of two or three, they ascend a flight of stairs to the House gallery or amble off to committee and testify vigorously for their causes.
Outside the chambers, a group of similarly dressed people appears to be lounging. Some sit at tables here and others rock on their heels, they talk among themselves.
It is 10 a.m. and the heavy wooden doors open to the chambers of the Kansas House, where you can close. Carrying rolled up newspapers and steaming cups of coffee, the businessman arrives.
Staff Reporter
THESE PEOPLE are lobbyists, men and women who represent every special interest in Kansas from Catholic Charities to the Chrysler Corporation. Neither constituents nor legislators, they make acting as go-betweens between the two.
Lobbyists find jobs rewarding backing legislation demanding
Because they are not allowed onto the House floor, they content themselves with listening to the proceedings over a loud-sneaker above their heads.
By TAMMY TIERNEY
Since the regular session of the 1979 legislative session adjourned two weeks ago, most lobbyists have been tying up loose ends at the Capitol and preparing to return to the jobs they hold during the nine months the Legislature is not in session.
One such lobbyist is John Mettner, a Topeka lawyer who works part time for Common Cause, a "people's" lobby group that supports issues like the Equal Rights Amendment and remapping of legislative districts.
Mettner got his job a year ago by an advertising an ed in the newspaper. He said it was the group itself and not the op-posed extra money that attracted him to it.
Mettner said he had spent a great deal of his time in the last year establishing a business.
"IF I COULD describe Common Cause in 'two words' they would be open govern- ment."
"The money is not that important to me. Compared to the $40 to $50 an hour I make as a lawyer, it's nothing. I figure I make about $4 an hour working for Common Cause, but it's very easy for me to work for it. I believe I have in the things they stand for."
"Common Cause doesn't really have a lot of money, so we can't throw our
weight around—we don't have it to throw," he said.
"Right now, we're concentrating on making ourselves known as a viable organization. We have a lot of prestige back east in Washington, but there are some people in Kansas that equate公务员 with the Chinese Liberation Army."
"YOU'VE GOT TO BE there all the time," he said. "You have to show you're interested. There were times this year when we had a committee meeting to go to the bathroom."
The key to effective jobbeting, Mettener said, is keeping legislators aware of the group's interests.
"I's not that I don't trust the legislators; I just want to be there to blow the whistle on any finagling. In fact, I'd saved pretty close to some of them."
And, although Common Cause was effective this year in lobbying for the ERA and reapportionment, Mattner said it was the friendships that helped to make his job successful.
According to State Rep. John Solbach, D-D Lawrence, who worked on the House reappointment bill, the feelings of friendliness and appreciation are mutual.
"We all already have our minds made up on the death penalty," he said. "I just don't think any group has an influence on how a legislator voted.
"I really enjoy the people at the Statehouse," he said. "It's good fun and a good education to just talk with them and do some good-natured arguing. There are some amazing personalities up there—some really interesting people."
"It's an old issue. Legislators get asked the death penalty questions at every election. Most of them take a stand and stick with it. Really, the hearings on law-and-order issues like the death penalty are just going through the motions."
"Every member of the Legislature has a stake in reaportionment, and associations like Common Cause are the ones who step in and say 'Hey folks, let's make sure that this is a legislative process, but let's look at the in best interests of the people.'"
"I WILL GUESS just by observing a "1" will have he a very high intelligence on our computer."
Solbach said that Common Cause's presence at committee meetings gave committee members a spirit of "kept them from each other's throats."
"There are often very bitter conflicts during reapportionment, and it's not unusual for one legislator to go after another through the reapportionment process. I think John Mettner's presence demonstrates those kinds of problems," he said.
A lobysty with another perspective on her job is Sister Broles Brinkle, a soft
A lobbyist whose job may serve as a school to political other jobs is Hanses Zacharias, executive director of the University of Assam, a statewide student lobbying organization.
A ONE-TIME HIGH school history teacher, Brinkel became interested in lobbying after working with several community service groups.
spoken sister of Catholic Charities in Leavenworth.
Like many lobbyists, Brinkel spends 10-12 hours a day working. What she says separates her from her colleagues, are the attitudes and beliefs she brings to her job.
She became a lobbyist in 1978 and since then has worked full time for Catholic Charities and the Criminal Justice Department, where she defends death penalty and community corrections.
"IVE LEARNED how to run a press conference, testify before a committee, go to a hearing and give advice to very good education. I guess I've also gained a greater appreciation of politics. It's a very involved process. it's one thing to get a law through and another entirely to make it happen."
"I think it's very important that the Church be visible in the Legislative arena," she said. "When it's not, that's really bad news. I also talk it's important that people realize I'm a sister—I shows us is here and that it's interested."
"I think being a nun gives me a sense of morals and principles," she said. "I also think it puts me one step ahead because all people remember我 because I’m different.
"Also, most people realize that I'm not here doing this for myself or to further my own ends, so they are probably less susceptible of me than they might be otherwise."
Brinkel said one of the most rewarding aspects of her job was the education she received.
A FORMER STUDENT body president at Wichita State University, Zacharias anges one day to become a government official. She says a good way to get acquainted with politics.
When their efforts are not rewarded,
acharias said, lobbies can become very frenzied.
"I suppose I will stay with it as long as there is a need," she said. "I not sure what's coming up. This is where the spirit of the world is, and I don't know where I will move me next."
Apparently, Zacharias' hard work pays off—at least as far as the Kansas Board of Regents schools are concerned.
"This is the best preparation I could get," he said. "I like trouble-shooting and taking the wind out of bureaucrate buffons."
She said her presence in the legislature also helped to bring the Church closer to her.
Although she has the approval and support of her church, Brinkel said she was not sure how long she would remain a lobbist.
"TREALLY HELPS to get constituents to call and write letters. Also, providing legislative counsel is a needed function. A staffer with experience at Statehouse comes from lobbyists. You have to be careful, though; your resume ruined if you give incorrect information."
"I think they do a pretty good job of representing students' views and making them more aware of their role, that only on system-wide issues. As far as individual schools like KU are concerned, they aren't that effective. But for some students, it might be up with a lot of needed information."
With his background in student politics at WSU, Zacharias said he had the intelligence to be a leader.
"You need to have a professional presentation with research behind it. You have to know personalities, know the rules and know who has influence and makes decisions. Then be there—get to know them and let them know you."
BCAUSE THEY lobby for moral issues such as the death penalty, State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said he did not want to lead the Catholic Charities were very effective.
"It's like being in the stands at a baseball game. You're not the coach, you you're not theump, you're not the coach, you just try to cheer your on to victory."
BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) -Cheating, stealing, misuse of financial aid, grade inflation and misleading advertising are creating a growing ethical crisis in higher education institutions, the Carnegie Council on Policy Studies in Higher Education said yesterday.
Study finds college ethics problem
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"UNLESS CORRECTIVE actions are taken, this situation is likely to lead some students to take even greater advantage of the situation, and to make some colleges even more reluctant to insist on ethical conduct by students," the report said.
The report said 13 percent of student loans made by one federal program and 17 percent by another are in default and the rate of nonrepayment of veteran's loans is 44.
"WITH REGARD to cheating, 8.8 percent
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of undergraduates report that some forms of cheating are necessary to get the grades they want. That is an increase of 1.3 percentage points since 1969," the council said.
I also said that a survey found theft and mutilation of periodicals were serious problems at 8 percent of the institutions studied.
In addition, the report scolded students and professors for "a substantial misuse by students of public financial aid, infiltration of grades by faculty members and misleading advertising by some institutions in the search for students."
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 19, 1979
+
Police are looking out for drunken drivers
Bv DEB RIECHMANN
Staff Writer
It was 1:30 a.m. and Lawrence Police Officer Vince O'Neill, patrolling the streets looking for persons driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol, flagged down the truckman for a conference in an office near parking lot.
"Slow night, huh?" O'Neill said. "Even the radio traffic is light."
"Yeah," his friend answered. "There's even a full moon tonight and it is a proven fact that when the sun sets, the moon will rise."
O'Neill agreed and puffed on a cigarette, relaxing for a moment before he resumed his patrol.
"Hey, there goes a fast one for ya, buddy," his friend said, motoning to a car as it sped up on his feet.
"Yep. You later," O'Nell said as he jerked his car into drive and swung onto the street in pursuit of a skateboarder.
O'NELL PUSHED the gas pedal to the floor. Then,
as he approached the intersection of 13th Street and
West 57th Street, he pushed the brake pedal.
"Damn. Where did he go," he said as he looked both way before spotting tail lights moving south on the highway.
The Porsche was traveling so fast that O'Neill quickly lost sight of it.
"He can rip the pants off this old creature, " O'Neill said still following the tail lights at 80 mm.
But after three minutes of hot pursuit, O'Neill hat sigh of the vehicle predicted the driver entered a trap.
If I had one of these new cars I would have had a chance at catching him," O'Neill said. "I could almost guarantee he was drunk. A Porsche, it would be speeding over thou bumps on Kasold.
THE EXCITEMENT was gone from N'Ollie's voice as he drove toward east Lincoln Street to begin another story.
Each week, Wednesday through Saturday, a
Lawrence police officer is assigned to patrol in the Alcohol Safety Action Project car. His sole duty from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. is to detect drivers operating under the influence of drunks or alcohol.
From February to March this year, 64 car checks were made by Lawrence and KU police officers, who stopped drivers because they violated traffic laws or were suspected of operating under the influence.
More than 35 OUI arrests were made.
But the Alcohol Safety Action Project is more than police patrols and car checks. About 80 percent of the drivers booked for OUI are referred to the ASAP department, who are trained to alert them to the dangers of drunken driving.
THE ASAP was started in Lawrence three years ago by the Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcohol. Its function is to reduce the number of injuries in alcohol-related accidents.
According to the project's director, Bruce Beale, the number of alcohol-related accidents in Lawrence has been reduced by 30 percent since the program began.
O'Neill has been driving the ASAP patrol for more than two years and said his experience helps him determine what to do.
Driving without headlights is a common indicator that the driver is drunk, he said.
"People, also under the influence have a tendency to go left of center and wander in between the center line and the curb—sometimes bouncing off the curb," O'Neill said.
"When I do stop someone I check to see if the driving compartment smells like alcohol. I look at his eyes. Do they respond to a flashlight? Is the driver's eye bright or dim?" This is a driver's license and observe the he presents it.
"Lots of times the guy can hardly manipulate the plastic dividers, or he might pass over a few times before finding it. Sometimes they'll fall out of the car or have to hold onto the car to keep themselves up."
"I must give them a balance test. I'll tell them to stand on their right foot and elevate their left leg. The average person will have no trouble, but the average person with an injured knee will keep touching the ground for balance." No Nell said.
THE NEXT STEP to determine whether a driver is under the influence is a series of field sobriety tests.
"I might ask them to swing them while standing on one foot—like they’re kicking a football. That’s the one that really gets them. They look like they’re whirbirds. It’s really a riot to watch."
Most of the drivers he stops beet his warning, but some, according to O'Neill, never learn.
"Sometimes I'd take to them out to an accident where someone has put their face through a wind-
National statistics indicate that about one-half of the highway accidents in the United States are alcohol-related and one-third of regular injury accidents involve a drunk driver or pedestrian.
O'Neill compared the number of alcohol-related driving fatalities to the number of soldiers who died in the war.
"IN VIETNAM, from 1963 to 1973, approximately 55,000 U.S. troops were killed in action," he said. "In 1973, 55,000 on highways and more than 80 percent of these fatalities were due to alcohol-related."
Beale said the key to keeping drunken drivers off the streets was for the judges to refer individuals arrested for OUI to ASAP to go through the driving school.
About 600 Lawrence citizens have gone through the program. Beaal said, and only 7.9 percent have been approved.
The average fine for OUI for $175 and a 30-day suspended jail sentence. Under the law a judge can fine up to $500 for a first offence, but judges say they are not obligated to dismiss cases from driving again when intoxicated, Beale said.
Now, after three years, statistics indicate that while KU students make up about 20,000 of Lawrence's $30,000 population, they represent 15 percent of the OU1 arrests.
When the program was first initiated, many people thought it specifically aimed at "getting the kids to do math."
STUDENTS ENROLLED at Haskell Indian Junior College account for 13 percent of the OUI arrests, Beale said, and the rest are typically middle-age men.
Beale cited several reasons why the numbers of OUI arrests among KU students were low.
"One reason is not as many people at KU have cars and also several of the bars are within walking distance."
"Also, younger people are able to hold their liquor better. Young people' drunken coordination is better than a 45-year-old man's drunken coordination," he said.
Beale said that women make up 8 percent of the OUI arrests in Lawrence. This does not correspond with national statistics that indicate that women drink as much as men, he said.
Drugs present a difficult problem for ASAP personnel and Lawrence police officers, Beale said, because there is no quick, easy way to measure a drug's influence on a driver.
Alcohol, however, is easy to detect in the bloodstream. The law states that if the alcohol content in a driver's bloodstream registers at 10 on a breakerazor monitor, he may be booked on an OUI
According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, to reach 10 percent, a 160-volume man has to drink at least seven one-cuce drinks of $B$-proof alcohol within two hours after his first drink.
Alcohol affects people differently. O'Neill said, "IT'S WHEN you feel euphoric that you're in the danger area. When you start saying, 'Well, one for the road.'"
Alcohol affects people differently, O'Neill said.
A former KU student Blake Julie, 2411 Louisiana St., was stopped by an ASAP officer about two years ago because she had run two stop signs on her way to the Flamingo Club. 501 N. Ninth St.
"First he asked me to say my ABCs as fast as I could," she said. "I kept messing up. The third time I messed up again, but him to take out the extra R. He laughed and we got along after that."
"He went back to talk with his partner and then told me he would let him go I'd get straight home.
inside, O'Neill found an opened can of beer and a driver who appeared to be drunk.
O'Neill, who had been parked for someone to run the灯, turned on his lights and chased the dog.
He was pretty nice—he didn't give me a breath test. I'd been drinking since 4 that afternoon and I had no reaction.
One man, however, was not as fortunate and was booked at 13:10 one morning last week. The man drove a van through a flashing red light at 23rd and Alabama streets.
O'Neill proceeded with a few field sobriety tests and then handcuffed him, told the other riders to go home, called for the van to be towed and transported him to the station.
THE DRIVE was silent and tense while O'Neill began to question the man about his evening at the club.
"How many drinks did you have at Bullwinkle's?"
O'Neill asked.
"Not enough," the driver of the van replied.
O'Nell驱 to the east side of the Douglas County Law Enforcement Center and radioed for the garage door to be opened. The arrested suspect was frisked and all upstairs to the Douglas County jail for a breath test.
About 20 minutes, the legal waiting period before a test can be taken, and the driver was tested.
Relays runner hurt
While runners in the Saturday's Marathon Relay are concerned about getting into shape for the 26-mile run, Dou Drake, 2525 Jasu Drive, is in a hospital bed hope to run the race next year.
Drake, a junior at Lawrence High School, was on his daily run Tuesday afternoon when he collided with a motorcycle at Louisiana and 1st streets. Drake fractured his right hip and ankle and suffered multiple abrasions.
Drake's mother, Margaret Drake, said she thought her son had determination.
The streets were not busy, Drake said yesterday, and he faced the traffic as he ran to watch for oncoming vehicles.
Incomplete police reports indicated that Drake was jogging north on Louisiana Street when the accident occurred.
He said he was not able to remember exactly what had happened in the accident.
Mrs. Drake also said she thought running would help her son in his rehabilitation.
The operator of the motorcycle, Carl Climer, 2506 Lazbybrook Lane, is a mechanic at Lawrence Yamaha, 506 W. 32rd St.
Climer said he was test-driving a customer's motorcycle when the accident occurred.
He suffered chest and jaw injuries and multiple abrasions but said he hoped to be riding again in a few days.
Climer said that the accident was "kind of like a dream" and that all he remembered was a face flashing by.
From page one
Terrorists
To warn their upcoming victims and to advertise their cause, they place ads in the Kansan to announce their plans.
Although the terrorists have not attracted any new members with their ads,
their actions and ideas have drawn many of their friends into their attacks.
Some of their acquaintances have suggested that they steer clear of the establishments that offend them.
However, Boaz and Org are the only full-time terrorists.
Many companies can offer you a job that says manager, but how many actually give you a real manager's responsibility?
YOUR FIRST JOB AS A MANAGER SHOULD LET YOU BE A MANAGER
In the Navy, you get the responsibility the moment you receive your commission. The Supply Officers start with six months of intensive training, at full pay. Then on to one of several positions with hands on responsibility immediately. They travel the world, earn $20,000 after four years, and receive attractive benefits.
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Four positions, open to students, are available on the board of directors of the New York University School of St. Interviews with students who are interested in serving on the 1979-1980 board will take place during April 26, Susie McCormick and Todd Forster for Consumer Affairs, said yesterday.
Consumer Affairs is a public service offered that investigates complaints of possible design defects.
"Because we are partially funded by Student Senate we are required to have half the representation on our board consisting of students," Hanna said. "Most of last year's student reps are graduating, so a number of vacancies are occurring."
Hanna said the main responsibility of the
hannas, which has five student members, five
at-large community members and two
employees of the Consumer Affairs Office
as members, was to make policy for the association.
Decisions made by the board of directors this year included partial funding of Consumer Affairs through the United Fund and Consumer affairs offices into a new, central location.
"They help support Consumer Affairs when it comes time for the Student Senate to vote on legislation," Hanna said. "They keep Consumer Affairs informed about the needs of students and staff."
"BECAUSE WE are a corporation we have to, by law, be governed by a board of directors," Hanna said. "And our board operates as a policy making body, which decides on our staffing, our programs and our funding."
The Student Senate last week approved $7.39 in funds for Consumer Affairs, about
one-third of the budget.
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She also said housing was a concern.
Hanna said that students could pick up applications for board positions at the office, 819 Vermont St., or call 843-4608 for an interview appointment.
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Advance Tickets 67.60 reserved 66.60 general admission
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FRIDAY-MAY 4TH --- 7 p.m.
Topeka's own RONNIE WILLMS and THE BLUELIGHTERS with MISS SANDEE ROSE
with guest stars THE TENNESSEANS
Kieff's in Lawrence Record Store in Manhattan
The party tray featuring thin Sliced Roast Beef,
Ham, Corned Beef, Pastami, Big Eye Swisse,
Jalapena, and Cheddar, Onion, Dark Rye and
Sesame Seed Hard Rolls. Potato Salad or Cole Slaw.
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Hanna said she expected next year's
move to our present location were the major changes that took place last year". Hanna was able to help students be able to help us communicate to the campus community that the merger was successful.
The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series
WELCOME TO HOME IN THE WORLD
Presents
The Mirecourt Trio
Call 913-864-5982 for Reservations
3:30 p.m. Sunday, April 22 & 8:00 p.m. Monday, April 23
Swarthout Recital Hall/Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats general admission for $4 KU students with ID will be admitted for $2 Limited tickets available for Sunday's concert Call 913/864-3982 for reservations
ROGER DE NIRO in "THE DEER HUNTER"
Shows each week at 8:00 Sat Sun 14:45 Admin $3.00 Hillcrest
SALLY FIELD is "NORMA RAE"
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Thursday, April 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Open events highlight 54th Relays
The second jewel of the Midwest Relays circuit has traditionally featured the nation's best collegiate talent, but this year it is the team that takes on a token on slightly different appearance.
The relays have a bigger field than ever, but because of a rapidly rising number of meets throughout the nation and the Mississippi State conference, there has been spread across the United States. In fact, two of the big Eight's best squads, Nebraska and Missouri, will not make the trip.
To eliminate any loss in prestige, the junior college competition has been bolstered. But, the meet also will display the talents of several collegiate star who won Olympic accination.
The Olympic hopefuls head the billing in five special open events: the 100-, 200- and 400-meter dashes; pole vault and the Glenn Cunningham mile run.
OPEN 100- AND 200-METER DASHES- These fields will pit the best of the Big Eight sprinters today against the best from the past. Former Oklahoma stars John Garrison and William Snoody and former Kansas state champion Kyle Johnson will form Oklahoma's Mike Kelly and KU's Kevin Newell represent the best among present collegians.
Among the three, they have won seven big Eight individual titles. Snoddy and Wiley had their most dramatic confrontation in the 300-yard dash at the Big Eight Indoor championship, when Wiley batted Wiley by 41 seconds. Wiley dove for the tape and broke his arm in the process.
"Anyone who's followed the Big Eight over the past few seasons knows these three (Garrison, Snoddy, and Wiley) have had some classic duels," KU head coach Bob Timmons said. "All three have continued to run in good times since leaving school."
Maurice Peoples of the D.C. Internationals, and Stan Vinson of the University of Chicago Track Club and, more generally, all are ranked among the world's top 10.
Peoples, with a personal record of 45.22,
was ranked sixth in the world last year by
Track and Field News. Vinson was right
in calling for better world rankings,
with a personal record of 45.24.
OPEN 400-METER DASH--Three of the world's top 10 quarter-milers are in this field along with KU9 Lester Mickens and the best collectible middle-distance men.
A member of the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic team, Coombs was 16th in the women's doubles.
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OPEN POLE VAULT — two of the best paulters in KU history will be battling in this event. Terry Porter is the elder statesman and a career player 18 to 19 to his credit plus a pro 167 Montreal Olympics behind him. But freshman Jeff Buckingham already has set a school record with a 17-8 vault last season. He's also among more than seven inches since late February.
Also in the open field are 'Peoples' teammate Fred Sowerby and Boston University standout Glen Cohen, a British jazz singer. The group is also Olympian, representing his native Antigua.
The other scheduled competitors are
Akwanaas State's Paul Pilla, who vaulted 17-
feet into the air and won a marathon match. His teammate Andy
Pintus, who has a 14-year career best to his
前辈.
vault. The sophomore has three NAIA titles to his name, two of them indoor and one of them outdoor.
Billy Olson of Abilene Christian has his second-mark in the field with a 17.10%
GLENN CUNNINGHAM MILE RUN—An Irish Olympian, a former Colorado star and a 31-year-old "discovery" are the top names in this event.
Naill O'Shaughnessy, an Irishman who attended the University of Arkansas; Rick Musgrave, a former Colorado star who is now an assistant coach at Oklahoma; and Dick Buerkle of the New York Athletic Club are the favorites in this event.
"All three men have broken the four-minute barrier," Timmons said. "I think any of them are capable of challenging Jim Rvun's meet record of 3:54.7 set in 1967."
O'Shaughnessy's 3:55.4 clocking indoors in 1977 was the second fastest indoor mile in history, but Bukeer went him one better and ran 3:54.9 indoors in 1978 to set a world record in the mile. But out of newcomer to the mile, having spent most of his career as a long-distance runner.
Bayless leads decathlon
BYGENE MYERS
Sports Writer
Bob Bayless of Oklahoma Christian finished the first day of the Kansas Relays with a 93-point lead in the only event of the day, the Jim Bausch decathlon. Bayless got his lead on the rest of the 14-member field by winning the long and high humps.
For KU, Grant Overstake was in fourth place halfway through the 10 events of the decathlon, and Mark Graham was seventh. Both KU competitors said they were disappointed with their performances and ended up 8 a.m. starting time for the decathlon.
"I guess I just have an afternoon
dismiss. "Overtake said. "But that a
really nice way to end it."
"If you don't start breaking your PTA (personal records), you know it's not going to be a very good day. I ditch it, but I'll have the time there and see what happens tomorrow."
Graham moved up to seventh after winning the 400-men, the final event of the season.
"I heard the old foosteps in the 400, and I
knew this was my event and I couldn't afford to lose it,” said Graham, who is competing in only his second decathlon. “I'm disappointed in just about everything I've done today, to tell the rest of the events and see what I can do.
"I got off to a poor start, and an 8 am. it is pretty pasthetic. My body, I guess, needs to be up for three or four hours before it can do anything. Anyone can gripe, and an athlete can pick anything apart, but I'd rather not."
The competition resumed at 8 a.m. this morning with the final five decathlon events: 110-meter hurdles, discus, pole vault, javelin and 150-meters.
— oo baysman, Oklahoma Christian, 3,720; 2,180
— newark, Delaware, 4,195; 2,565; 2,220
Illinois, 3,001; 4 Grant递增 Kansas, 3,425; 5 John Wheyne, Southern Illinois, 3,306; 3,686; 2 Brad Muller, West Point, Park College, 3,285; 3,686; 2 Jack Hill, Jackson College, Park College, 3,285; 3,686; 3,115; 11 Bob Duckworth, Northern Colorado, 3,270; 12 Robert Bardas, New Mexico, 3,280; 13 Holden King, California, 3,270
Results of the first five events of the Kansas Relays
destination.
FYI SOB
(for your information; same old bureaucracy . . .
or maybe it isn't
The Student Assistance Center is now located in 121 Strong Hall
We are available Monday thru Friday from 8 to 12 and 1 to 5 to assist individuals and groups with academic skill enhancement; personal management and adjustment issues; personal problems; services for non-traditional students; services for students with disabilities; information on sexuality; and other issues as they occur.
Feel free to stop by or call 864-4064, as you need information and/or assistance.
59th Annual
Engineering EXPOsition
The Imaginative Mind
Industry Exhibits Student Displays Demonstrations
School of Engineering The University of Kansas
FRIDAY 12-9
SATURDAY 8-3:30
Friday, April 20 and Saturday, April 21
Learned Hall, Lawrence, Kansas
Awards Banquet April 22 at the Kansas Union
Paid for by Student Activity Fees
KANSAS
Decathlon determination Staff photo by STEPHAN SPECTO
Staff photo by STEPHAN SPECTOR
Grant Overstake, one of two KU entrants in the Jim Bauch decathlon in the 54th Kansas Relays, sprints toward the long jump pit yesterday in the opening day of both the decathlon and the Relays. Overstake, in 4th after five events, and 13 other athletes will finish the decathlon today.
Attention all Pre-Physical Therapy Students.
Come to the meeting at Watkins Hospital Cafeteria on Monday April 23 at 7:00 pm.
Come to the meeting at Watkins Hospital Cafeteria on
You have a chance to become the next president, treasurer, or secretary of the physical therapy group.
You can nominate yourself or others or just come to ask questions.
Funded by Student Senate
SUA ACADEMY AWARDS CONTEST WINNERS
1st Prize (10 movie passes & GWTW poster):
Doug Levine
2nd Prize (6 movie passes & poster):
Ken Jones
3rd Prize (4 movie passes & poster)
Howard Bauleke
4th- 12th Prizes (2 movie passes & poster):
Chuck Carpenter
David Dart
Lisa Hoerath
Rick Quinlan
Carla Labunski
Rick Quinlan
Dana Richardson
Chris Shields
Kimberly Williams
Julie Van Pelt
NOTE: If you won a prize, please pick it up at the SUA Office in the Kansas Union as soon as possible. Poster choice is limited.
sua films
---
Thursday, April 19, 1979
---
11
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports Roundup
University Daily Kansan
89 score ends golf title hopes
KU's Nancy Hons holds a share of the individual lead for two rounds in the Sooner Invitational golf tournament in Norman, Okla., this week before dropping out of contention yesterday with a final round score of 89.
Hoins finished in fifth place, 10 shots behind mediastinal Stephanie Mischek of Oklahoma University. Hoins had matched Mischek stroke-for-stroke in an eneat shot (8:50) Mischek, however, fired a 79 on the final dye to win the game.
OSU won the Big Eight last year.
KU did not enter the tournament as a team, but sent Hoins and teammates Cathy Eyre to represent the squad. Eyre scored 107 points in Guild Course, with rounds of 96, 90 and 84
Men netters salvage one match
The rest of the KU squad remained in Lawrence to prepare for the Big Eight Championship match which is this weekend in Norman. KU coach Sandy McCutchen could enable KU to challenge Oklahoma and Oklahoma State for the championship.
Defending Big Eight Conference champion Oklahoma State. University crushed the KU men's team 18-4 on原谅 on the Allen Field House courts.
Chet Collier was the only Jayhawk to get a victory, defeating Derek Edmonds 64-62 in no. 2 Ines.
IN DOUBLES, Kaskow-Louderback in HOSKING-Collier, 6-0; Lattrell-Edmonds best KRZman-Swain, 6-1, 4-3; Hewlett-Pennell beat Russer-Wieser, 2-6, 1-7, 5
Other singles results were: No. 1 Chris Kaskow over KU's Mark Hasking, 7-6, 6-4. 2 Brad Loughrey over KU's David Young, 6-4, 6-2. 4 No. 2 Reggie Lattrell over KU's Wayne Wayne, 6-3, 6-4. 0, 5 Rick Perry over KU's Rick Penell over KU's Joe Rusey, 7-4, 7-6.
"We played all right," KU coach Tom Kivisto said after the match, "but they really played well."
Kivisto said the Cowboys had been picked to repeat as conference champions.
The Jayhawks travel to Boulder, Colo., this weekend for matches with the University of Colorado and Iowa State University.
Second half dooms rugby team
KU's rugby club came close to upsetting one of the best rugby teams in the country Saturday, but a strong second half against the Bengalers and the Blues to a 24-23 victory over Kansas.
The KU ruggers led the Kansas City team in the first half, 84, but the Blues scored four points in the second half to overcome the deficit.
According to KU club member Rick Renfo, the Blues have one of the strongest teams in the nation and the strongest team in the Midwest.
"The Blues will be playing in the U.S. Club Championships," Renfro said, "so
you'd have to say that they are of the top 20 teams in the country."
Renfo said that KU's opponent this weekend also was one of the best teams in the Midwest. The Kansas squail was a winner and led the tournament in thenament in Des Moines, Iowa, but the tournament was canceled. KU will play the Des Moines club Saturday in Des Moines.
"The Moines has a real class team." Renfro said. "We beat them last year in a kick-off after a tied game, so we're looking for a good game this week."
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The Kansas Jayhawks and the Kansas City Royals are an even match through the sixth inning yesterday in an exhibition game but Joe Zebb's single in the seventh scored Tom Brady for the Royals' reserves a 64 victory.
KC reserves beat KU regulars
Bv TONY FITTS
Snorts Writer
The game, played in Royals Stadium before about 1,500 fans, was scheduled to give some of the Royals two-line players some work against full-speed pitching under
Steve Jeltz led off the game for the Jayhawks and hit the first pitch from injury-listed Marty Pattin into the outfield for a single. Jeltz then stole second, and scored on a double-play ball hit by Bob Halastik, giving Kansas an early 1-4 lead.
"I knew the pitcher tries to get the first pitch of a ball game down the middle." Jelz said after the game, "and try to go for it when I lead off the ballgame. I think the
Royals came out there in the beginning a little lackadaisical, but they began to realize that it was their job.
THE ROYALS beats pitcher Terry Sutcliffe for four runs in the bottom of the second on singles by Jamie Quirk and Jerry Terrell and doubles by Clint Hurdle and
Third baseman George Brett and most of the Royals regulars spent the afternoon at hapu.
KU tied it with three runs in the third when Pattin allowed the bases to be loaded. Vic Harris then singled in a run, Pattin walked Roger Riley for another, and Bob Halastik scored on a fielder's choice hit by Scott Wright.
"I wasn't concentrating enough," Sut-
caffé said. "I'm just glad I don't walk
out there."
leadoff single and student base allowed the Jayhawks to relax and play baseball against
Each team scored an unearned run in the fifth, and the game stayed tied at five all time.
"It pumped everybody up," Scott Wright, KU's leading hitter for the game, said. "It made us feel like we could play with these guys."
Jeltz also beat out a soft bunt, which died about eight feet in front of the plate, for a single in the sixth. He was two for five at the plate, and was the pivot in what Hurtle called a "major league double play in the seventh.
"That second baseman—he played well," Rovals manager Whitey Herzog.
JELTZ WAS THE spark for Kansas. His
Galen Worley was the game's losing pitcher. In two and 3% innings, he allowed five hits and six runs.
"I DIDN'T EXPECT to go three innings," Worley said. "I hadn't been throwing that ball."
The KU players said they were a little
disappointed at the quality of the pitchers they faced.
"The guys that threw today just didn't have what I thought was major league pitching at all," Wright, who went two for three against Pattin, said.
Steve Mingori replaced Pattin in the sixth and got the victory. George Throop got a win over Mingori, and he became the most
KU got nine hits off the Kansas City pitcher.
"If he (Herzog) can pitch Minorj in that league, 'Worley said,' he ought to give me a chance."
KU will play five games with the Missouri Tigers at Columbia this weekend. The Jayhawks return home next Tuesday with a doubleheader against Washburn.
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Exhibition fun for Hurdle chance for young players
By JOHN P. THARP
Associate Sports Editor
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Everyone had a little fun yesterday at the ballpark.
The Royals' reserves enjoyed their short return home to the artificial turf of their stadium in a game against KU that didn't count. Kansas City had just returned from a disastrous road trip that yielded the Roadrunner, the West champs a lone victory in five games.
KANSAS CITY outscored Phoenix 14-4 in
It was the first time in KU's 100-year baseball history that the Jayhawks faced a professional team. It was the only freebie this season, and it will remain this year and 1.500 ahead of it.
It was one of the few times that Clint Hurdle, who at 21, is the youngest Royal, would get a chance to play against athletes as young as he is.
"THAT WAS GREAT," Hurdle said, sipping a beer after the game, which the
Kings' show not enough in opener
"We were controlling the tempo of the game, but we let it slide away late in the third quarter," said Kings Coat Cotton Fitzsimmons. "Don't get me wrong, I didn't want to run and we stood around too much and ran down the clock, then didn't get the good shots."
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI)—The Kansas City Kings won an attention-commanding performance Tuesday night against the Phoenix Suns, but it was not powerful enough to capture the opening shot of the game. The team sent semifinal series between the two teams.
The Suns came from 13 points behind early in the second half to win the game by 49.
Kansas City's Scott Wedman made only 4 of 9 for the night.
"FORD DIDN'T shoot very well," Fitzsimmons said. "They dropped off on him. And he had a lot of shots but they weren't falling."
the final seven minutes of the first half to
emerge with a 58-49 lead. They stretched the
margin to 70-57 with eight minutes left in the
first half, and they closed it to
in 52/7 entering the final quarter.
The Kings' extended lead Tuesday night was somewhat surprising because they shot a home run.
Kansas City guard Phil Ford had his worst shooting night of the year. He scored only 12 points, shooting 3 for 17 from the Door.
Buns' Sun Coach John MacLee gave the
Kings cut for pressing in club to play
Harry.
reserve Rory won 65. "I finally got to play with some kids my own age."
Harde showed why by-passed college to play major league baseball and become a Sports Illustrated coverboy in the process. He scored twice, four, scored a run and had two RBIs. But he realized the value of college players getting a chance to play against the big team.
"We had 27 turnovers—that were partly attributable to Kansas City's defense. It was a very, very physical game. Kansas City is a whale of a ballcub."
The Kings will have a chance to even up the best-of-seven series in Kansas City.
Paul Westphal led Phoenix with 25 points and Walt Davis added 24.
THE SUNS had stretched their margin to five points at the two-minute mark, but the Kings came back to within 98-97 with 49 seconds left. A stiff by Alvan Adams with 20 seconds remaining and a pair of free throws by Benson with nine seconds left put the game out of reach.
"That's something they really enjoyed doing," he said. "We definitely had a better ball club out there but they played us in the games at the mercy — we can't afford to lose."
"They can't lose anything. They got further confidence, too, by facing major legal threats."
HURDLE, PLAYING AS designated hitter, knows well the ups and downs of a young hitter. Last season, after his magazine cover appearance in spring training, big things were expected of him and the pressure was on for him to show up. The manager put up to manager Herzog's expectations by hitting only 286.
But Herzog is expecting big things out of his youngest player again this year. He has said they should happen because Hurdle and KU players are often something that KU players who are good and are lazy enough to land spots in the majors will face. Hardie said he was impressed with the KU effort he saw and was inspired by all of the game and what it did for the Royals.
"They bring a little more enthusiasm back," he said. "It was a lot of fun for everybody. They're really aggressive with each other." He added a lot of first-pitch and second-pitch strikes.
"It helped us to play a practice game instead of just taking batting practice, especially those of us who haven't been able to bat much. You can take all kinds of batting practice but it's not the same without the umpires and a real pitcher."
ZUER
19
Double Play
Staff photo by CHRIS TODD
Kansas second baseman Steve Jelte jumps over Joe Zebd's slide to complete a double play in yesterday's exhibition game between the Jayhawks and the Kansas City Royals. The
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12
Thursday, April 19. 1979
University Daily Kansan
Game's devotees spin controlled fantasy
Bv LAURA STEVENS
Staff Reporter
The characters are on a mission. They have wound their way through a series of corridors and rooms darkened with monsters and filled with treasure. A few of their company has died. The rest, through a door, are rescuing them.
They round a corner in the labyrinth to see a new monster guarding a wooden door. The monster is a giant spider.
The players缸 a six-sided die. On a roll of one or two, the monster does nothing. On a three or four, he gives out a hamburger. On a five or six, he attacks and usually wins.
This monster is one of the characters in a fantasy game that is more real to its players than life. It is the robot with a mouth that blows fire.
ONE CAN OBSEVER Dungoes and Dragons—or "D and D"—being played at virtually any time of the day or night. There are games almost every weekend, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. night in Hashinger Hall. In fact, there are so many devotees at Hashinger that the hall government this season will use the various books, mammals and dice needed to play.
"It's real life and you're in a fantasy world," Bill Walshower, Overland Park parksonage, said. "It's a kind of place to grow up."
Despite a set of basic books, an advanced players manual, a manueller manual, 4, 6, 8-12, 12-20 and 23d dice, a game board and, in some cases, miniature figures. players manage to learn the intricate rules.
"It's very simple, really," Peter Newallis,
Leaward sophomore, said. "Only one guy has to know the rules very well, and he's the referee."
NEWLEALL, WHO has played for five years, said the rule books were guidelines only. The referee, or dungeon master, could make up his own world and his own monsters. That is why characters like Ronald McDonald end up in a game inspired by J.R.R. Talkenström's "Lord of the Rings."
Newswail's roommate, Harry Cooper, Fort Worth,
sophomore, operates his own dungeon at Dodge
City.
"Harry's going to the point where he has a lot of original stuff, and rules are 'that useful any more,'"
According to Newalla, D and D originated in 1973 as an outgrowth of more traditional war games. Dave Torre (David Torre), a game developer, games designer, Mannequins-Si-St. Paul, Minn., engaged in a miniature battle games with metal figurines. He added fantasy elements and mythical or Biblical characters, including Gyrx, Gygax, and published write the instruction manuals.
Through the years, players have added their own elements. Dungeon masters have been known to base their worlds on Norse, Japanese, and American Indian mythologies.
MELVIN TUHRO, McAlester, Okla., senior, is researching a sword used by Central American Indians.
Tubro started playing D and D two months ago with friends at Hachinger.
"I went from player to dungeon master in one
month," he said. "It takes a lot more time to be a dungeon master."
Cooper worked last summer on his dungeon and constantly works on revisions and ideas for new dungeons. He has a notebook filled with special journals, maps of the land, making land, rivers, mountains, swamps and oceans.
Underwood keeps a soft-sided briefcase with more than 1,000 pages of notes on characters, monsters and
animals.
"When you're sitting in a boring class, you can pull out a notebook and work on a dungeon or create a new
Like Underwood, most players keep intricate records of their characters and about the game. The best way to keep them safe is that person he wants his character to be: cleric (or holy person), magic-user, fighter, ranger, or warrior.
THE SPECIFIC qualities of the character are chosen by a roll of the dice. Such qualities include degree of strength, intelligence, wisdom, conformity, dexterity, charisma and personal appearance.
These qualities help determine how the character will react in the game.
Many people become devoted to their characters. "After a while, the character starts to become you, and then becomes an evil one."
After a while, the character Janis is to become you,
and you become the character, "Cooper."
Newalisa said, "It *it* goes to be a real ego trip. There are some people who are goody two shoes in life and others who are not."
Characters band together and go on adventures.
which are for their own benefit, and quests or missions, when hired by someone else.
THEY USE medieval weapons such as swords, daggers, maces, battle axes or morningstorms to fight monsters with such names as Orcus, Goll, Morrem扎or, Shrieker or Sylph. There is a 105-page book of monsters in addition to ones made up by dungeon masters.
Through their experiences, the characters try to remain alive, winn treasure and gain experience. The number of points they gain is determined by the dungeon master. This advances the players' characters to higher levels. The game is not over for years until his character dies, which can take years.
"They've killed off all my characters, but I'm still here," Stan Kulp, Stillwell sophomore, said. Kulp started playing only two weeks ago and has lost 10 characters. He continues to run five characters in Tuhr's dungeon. Cooper allows players to run only one character at a time in his dungeon.
PLAYERS SAID they spent from 15 to 40 hours per week at the game.
"It's an escape." Newallis said.
Cooper said, "And D is a nice way to come out of a
rough week of classes and to just sit down and play."
Erin Kary, Belton, Mo., senior, said, "You can release the feelings built up during the week. Like,
it's not all that bad."
Chrity Marcotte, Great Bend junior, is one of the few women running in Cooper's dungeon. Her
"I keep telling the guys that I will insist on running
a female character until one of them runs a female character, she said. "Then I will run a male character."
Marocote, like most D and D players, decries in the game as part of her general interest in fastball.
Underwood said, "I can see myself sitting in an oldage home playing."
And, players said, it is something that can be played at any age.
SPECIALTY STORES for players also have appeared.
Tuhro said a store in Kansas City, Kai, King's Crown, was the only direct outlet for game supplies in the Midwest. Advanced books for the game cost about $14 and beginning set about $14. Diec cost $2.50. Tuhro said.
Newallis said miniatures cost from $0 cents to $2 each. However, he said the game could be played using graph paper diagrams rather than a computer. He said he even knew a man who played by mail.
What benefits will the players gain for life?
Lawrence man stabbed
Underwood, a creative writing major, said he thought it helped his ability to write.
Leon Kimball, 38, 1231 Pennsylvania St., suffered a stab wound in his chest during a domestic disturbance Tuesday night. Lawrence police said.
"Noone," Newaliss said. He said he had heard or "couple," broken up over the game or players losing because of girlfriends. In addition, he said about a group of people who played had trouble with grades because of it.
Kimball was reported in satisfactory condition last night at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Police said Kimball was at home in the 400 block of Country Club Court when an
"It's totally a waste," Newalis said. "It has very
few redeeming features. It's also a half of a lot fun."
It was a small business.
acquaintance allegedly stabbed him with a steak knife.
Jo Anne Hancock, 421 Country Club Court, was arrested after the disturbance and charged with aggravated assault, police said.
Hancock was being held in the Douglas County jail last night in lieu of $15,000 bond.
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"Professor Griffith has directed more graduate work in Central American history than has anyone else, in the country," said Stansifer, a former Griffith student.
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All 11 speakers from American university or the conference are form doctoral students.
Mauricio Solaun, U.S. ambassador to Nicaragua, will be participating in a panel discussion on the Nicaraguan civil war at in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Bv ELLEN IWAMOTO
The discussion will open a conference on Central American history being sponsored by the Tri-University Center of Latin American Studies. Kansas State University, Wichita State University and KU are members of the Tri-University Center.
Staff Renorter
said. The resources include a collection of government documents, books and
journals.
Salaun will be joined on the panel by Martina Fiallo, president of the National Association for Cancer Research.
Charles Stansifer, associate professor of Latin American Studies and one of the conference organizers, said the conference was planned to coincide with tonight's lecture by William J. Griffith, professor emeritus of history.
The conference is intended to call attention to KU's collection of library resources for the study of Latin America, particularly Central America, Stansifer
Griffith will speak on "The Sardines and the Shark: Central American Governments and the Developers" as part of the KU group at Woodruff Auditorium on 8 p.m. at woodruff Auditorium in the Union
Conrado, dean of humanities at the National University of Nicaragua.
Lectures will be from 9 to 13 o'clock a.m. and from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow. All lectures are scheduled for the Council Room of the Union. The topics include:“Central America Revisited: The Formative Years.” “Wilson and Tinoco: A Battle of Recognition in Costa Rica” and“Immigration to Central American in the Eighteenth Century.”
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Concluding the conference tomorrow will be a lecture by Carlos Mielendez, professor of history at the University of Costa Rica, at the New York University School of American Affairs: A Contemporary Problem. "
Show honors student artists
The exhibit comprises works by students nominated for art department scholarships. Prints, oil and acrylic paintings will line the walls of the gallery.
The works of 37 KU art students will be on display beginning at 3 p.m. today when the annual Undergraduate University exhibits open in the Kansas University Gallery.
Phillip Blackhurst, chairman of the art department, said the type of work in the exhibit varies each year.
sua films
"It all depends on what the faculty members decide are representative of the best works in the department." he said.
Blackhurst the winners of the scholarships would be announced in about two weeks. The number of two-week scholarships awarded to be awarded have not been determined.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 19, 1979
13
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Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period, not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online; by selling the UDB business office
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Poll County Pork &
Bean Band with Southern Fried
The Tawerice Opera House
1st Special Club
BEER
AMUSEMENTS
LOUISE'S
EVERY FRIDAY ATTENENDES 7:35
AND COONERS
$1 PITCHERS
1000 Flutes
BIG K's
MON-THURS 7-9:00
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7-9:00
.50' Schoolers & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1-7:00
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
Purple Pig Happy Hour
5:00-6:30
Mondays and Fridays
.25/ Draws
810 W. 23rd St.
FRIDAY
Gatesmouth Brown
with
Pot County Park &
Bean Band
SATURDAY
Pot County Park &
Bean Band with Southern Fried
The Lawrence Opera House
The Spirit Club
BEER
AMUSEMENTS
LOUISE'S
EVERY FRIDAY AT AFTERNOON 7-9
60 SCHOONERS
$1 PITCHERS
1000 Mass.
BIG'S
MON-THURS 7:9:00
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7:9:00
.50' Schooners & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 7:7:00
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
Purple Pig
Happy Hour
5:00-6:30
Mondays and Fridays
.25/ Drawn
810 W. 23rd St.
BIG K'S
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.
Purple Pig
Happy Hour
5:00-6:30
Mondays and Fridays
.25/ Draws
810 W. 23rd St.
Wanted! Female commute to share 2 bedrooms in
Austin. Send resume to: Katie Ackerman, KU
Ku Line office, $107. For more info:
www.kateaackerman.com
To inquiries, I, BR, unpublished. Cordwray warranted to submit this request. Cordwry warranted that manuscript may be accepted for review in August. All materials are subject to review.
Seafood 1. lbf approx. Southside Plaza
2. lb approx. Northwest Plaza
3. businesse or longer Call 987-654-2000
4. businesse or longer Call 987-654-2000
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
All New & Contemporary
unit on harmonised Sunday unit today &
you can see why the move is to Sundance
Apartments. Completely furnished studio or
1 BR. Conveniently located at 78 & Florida
just west of the Sanctuary on Ki Bus Route.
841 5255 • 842 4455
ROOMS FOR BRENT Convenient location—new
houses from student Union. Call 212-798-3640.
SUPERFLAKE—a beautiful two bedroom apartment for summer $235.00 Call 841-7405 4-255
Summer summer 2 bedroom apt furnished or
mature tenant $2450
Call 811-3451 or 811-3452
Adventure summer holiday. Live-in style. ON CARUSAM.
Applicant must have 2 years of experience as Bookteller. $189.00 per month. Call SWI at 513-276-6464.
Sublease for summer 2 bedroom bungalow, fitted-tunnel-alt air conditioned 2 bungalows, walk to cathedral, swimming pool, car park.
Summer student-need someone to share large
math sets, math notebooks, single math
sets, or couple 800 - 842-7211.
FOR SALE
Forerder Muttjung Bass Guitar with strings, straps,
stems, picks and covers. Very good condition.
Would be great with covers. Very good condition.
WATERED MATTISSES $39.8, 9 year ... bnw.
WHITE LIGHT 704, Mass 812, 126-8.
812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-
812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-812-
Watch for truck on Sundays selling produce.
Jawahire Foods, 9th & Illinois. Also woven
SunSpec-Sun glases are our speciality. Non-spec-
ual SunSpecs are selection, reassurance,
2021 Mass. 841-679-7533
Afterburner, starter, and generator. Specialized
electric motor. Motor is rated at 400V, 600W,
MOVETIVE ELECTRIC, 843-856-2900, 2000 W, 6th
(1).
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure出线 of Western Civilization Notes serve to improve the quality of instruction in category 3: For exam preparation "New Analysis" in Booklet 1, or for practice in Booklet 2, Clerk's Bookshelf, & Oread Bookshelf; if not, visit www.westerncivilizationnotes.com.
1972 CUBE Honda, Reliance, Reals new battery,
CDE tune up. Best offer. B64-6117
4-24
78 Heron M 6 C 1 La Ca '0.992 ml 29,496 mL
79 Hermen M 6 C 1 La Ca '0.992 ml 29,496 mL
80 Hermen M 6 C 1 La Ca '0.992 ml 29,496 mL
81 Hermen M 6 C 1 La Ca '0.992 ml 29,496 mL
82 Hermen M 6 C 1 La Ca '0.992 ml 29,496 mL
Golf club, full set. Putter, 2-9 irons, 1-3 wands.
Cup earnings 842-5399. 4-19
Magnavox Console store; small-adult Anaki 19x
speeder; white zig-zig sewing machine, wood-
working bench; mini computer; p.m. week nights and Saturday. 824-8446. Keep trying!
4-15
FANTASTIC RECORD
& TAPE SALE
NOW!
at the
Kansas Union
Bookstores
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Daru Co, an outstanding gene-
alist in the field of papermaking. Paper maker
Ethaniel H. Pipeer, Jr., born in New York, died
on June 27, 2018 at age 95.
For sale by owner—1622 W. 22nd Terrace. A
square feet carport, and a square foot
square feet carport. Good investment for
law or graduate student, or young
female. Excellent financing possibilities. Call 412-759-3070.
10.5 kg crayon, Camaro, 410,900 miles, AC, BF, ATV
12.5 km/h, ATV, Dodge, 320,800 miles, AC, BF,
ATV, Toyota, Hilux, UW6000 6 months old
20.0 km/h, ATV, Chevrolet, UW7000 6 months old
**Service Receipts:** Power BK-325 cost $20 will pay
$760. Power BK-325 cost $10 will pay
$160. Power deposits shall exist condition
required.
Set of bicycle wheels with Sunshine hubs and Araya rims 85,423-47432. 4-20
Steve radio tuned speakers and AM-PM stereo
radio needles; $106, needles; 644-351-400
4-23
Tennis tournam. HEAD professional, almost new,
2017 with VG girls. Very interesting play.
4-25
2976
Hand Corner Drug Store will give you a n = 80 can of
paint for their make-up use. **80** Man. The paint
courtesy their make-up use.
TRANS-AM 1977, low milieu black /w gold; bird
marylands; Catena 849-252-990
4-20
Tingle your body with a Bail-Buff Back Scrubber for $4.95 from Ronald Corner Drugosator 801 Main Street, New York, NY 10027.
Women's 10 speed bike $9* fully lugged frame-
less backpack $75* Alicia Making $425; BG-
600-3-1 9-weekday $9
BG-600-1-1 9-weekday $9
Vauque hiking boots. Like new. Size 8 men's
132M Venture-Back door. Wed 5 p.m.-7 gat.
9 a.m.
167 Sunset Alpine Alpine convertible top, reg-
selling price - Price $195. Calm $213
213 at 7 p.m.
Sherman, Sylvanen, grow late! 1958 Model RXK-WXK
Model WXK-0200 Aircraft, with two fuel tanks,
two ailerons, six wings, one main rotor, small
cockpit, six seats.
1971 Congar X-7, VI-A, 80-P, P.S. B, A.C.
Corsair fm cassette, many extra $50 Bca $11
$30
Batteries 30
SAVE! on
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
All with
$24.30
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
THE BATTERY SHOP
842-2922
Honey tree and hive. Third season, 45. Also three wheel bike, $81. $81-127 extras. $190.
7. DONCE CHARGER - AC, AT rated
condition (1300 or less) kWh 814-2123
814-2124
HELP WANTED
Jackson bicycle. Exclusive condition 22 inch
frame, $40 or best offer. M1-641-8023
EXOTIC JOE LOAK TAHOR, CALIFORNIA!
Little expense, fantastic伙食! $1700-$4000 summ-
lar meals for four. Rent labs, labratures, ranches, eminons, river rafts, & more.
Need $20 for in-Lake Work QB. Box
$60 for on-Lake Work QB. Box
$80 for on-Lake Work QB. Box
**GOVENSBAS JOBHS** Summarize your school experience.
Please include:
* 1 year of school experience
* High school diploma or equivalent
* Job description (if applicable)
* Employer name
* Phone number
* Email address
JOBS:
MEN WOMEN NAIL BOATES
SHAKER SHORELINER
STAFF 15.00% off
Nail Boaters 15.00% off
SHAKER 15.00% off
Experienced painter, Interiors & exterior; full-time through summer. Apply in person 208-347-1500.
HELP WANTED FULL TIME. Some mechanical
knowledge. Must be熟于 and dependent
on computer software.
SUMMER JOB'S, NOW! WORLD CRUSHERS!
PLEAISUEE JOBS! No experience! Good pay!
SUBMISSIONS ONLY! Valid for PURCHASEMENT and direct referrals! WORLD COWBOY
801129, Sacramento, Cal. 95800 5-8
JOBS! LAKE TAHOE CAMP! Fantastic tips!
$170,000 annual! summer! thunderstill filled,
Casinos. Restaurant. Ranches. Cruises. Sunsuit.
Hotel 60129, Sacramento. CAT 60580. W-8
Adult with own transportation to cane for 8 hours.
Adult with own transportation to cane for 8 hours.
Same light hinderance. $290 per hour.
Career Opportunity for person to train with head trainer and heritage established as a long term management position. Provide year round position with full benefits with training; advance in progress with training; complete a job offered or move to office, K.U. 864-651-300, at 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday-Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday-Equipment Equal Opportunity Affirmation
PSYCHIATIC NURSES WANTED FOR ALL
ADULTS. Apply online at www.psychiatric-
ADULTWADDS.com. Agree to the office of director
of nursing. Topeka Stallion Hospital 7200 W. 70th,
Topeka, KS 66070. Phone 912-258-4576. Equal Opportunity.
Job Code #N15023.
Assistant to the Dean reporting to Associate
Assistant to the Dean, an unqualified non-female position
is an unqualified non-female position. Applicants must
have at least a bachelor's degree and no later than August 1, 1979, or at a salary
up to $40,000. Skills include academic programming budget-
ing employment and financial aid facilities, equipment,
systems, and supervision of several staff members. The
certification is a face-to-face degree. Education
required is a bachelor's degree. Education
certification are preferred. The application deadline is
August 25, 1979. Other details contact Associate Dean John J.
Kamat (813) 643-7320. An Equal Opportunity
and Affirmative Action Employer sought from all qualified gender representatives
of the national origin, age or ancestry. 4-20
Now taking applications for Foundation A & Grill
Cafe, please visit www.foundationa.com. Apply in person at Vella Restaurant,
2327 S. 10th St., Chicago, IL 60614.
Lawrence Open School is seeking a certified elementary teacher in word or innovative program, with experience in curriculum development desirable. Most resumes should include job title, $35 Ohio. An equal opportunity Employer.
Secretary-Program assistant for bark office entering to large number of college students. Req's Master's degree, Experience in student personnel permanent full-time position. Salary compensationPermanent full-time position. Salary compensation package. Apply in person. Kansas Union Personnel Office 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday. Email secretary@ksunion.com
Applicants are now available for Rock Chalk Applications. Job duties include profit, must be responsible, well organized, knowledge of edge and knowledge of Rock Chalk is desirable. Applicant for position 1, Y106, Union, Applicants are due April 23, 2017.
MENTAL HEALTH TECHNICIANS, LUNCIED BY THE WORKFORCE OF ATRIC AID, HEALTH SERVICE WORKERS
State Hospital, 200 w. 60f. Topeka, Kansas State Hospital, 200 w. 60f. Topeka, Kansas
Workforce of Atric Aid, HEALTH SERVICE WORKERS, encouraged to apply.
Opportunity Keyship Program
Applications are now available for Rock Chase
professionals. Applicants must be responsible, have strong organ-
zation skills, and be able to work with a team. Applicants
must be a student, Knowledge of Rock Chase
KU V11091. Union Applications are due April
20th.
Cook to work part-time, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Monday-Friday, 15-20 hours per week, Requires 4 years of experience for person waiting time off at Christmas; Irgling breaks, etc. will not work when KU is in town. Personal Office 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday-Friday.Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Law.
**STUDENTS:** summer employment Pinkerton's Inc. is now taking applications from Security Guards in the Greater Kansas City Area. Security Guards in the Greater Kansas City Area have raw workforce availability and telephone access to graduate programs. Grand Hyatt Browning, room 794, Kansas City, MO. Employees must hold a Bachelor's in the bank garage, 1124 Grand Avenue, Rental Appointment.
ENGINEERING GRADS. Positions $18,999 up.
Never a fee to applicant. Call Bath Courty.
913-563-7250 or reside to Courtry Perk.
Mrs. D. B. St., St. 11e, St. 16th, Marvary
House, Ks. 65220.
Did your Easter break leave you with the summer job? We still have a few full time summer work position available. Find out if we are open for you, or if you can help, to P.G Box 203, Lawrence Ks 6403-4-30
Students taught in business, pre-med, pre-health,
pre-graduate and post-bachelor's degree majors.
Make 1007 per month. For interview with
professor, please contact the professor at:
485-325-6911.
MAKE $3,000 THIS SUMMER. If you are hard working, independent and willing to reapply for your position, please apply.
BUSINESS ADMN GRADS marketing & management positions $12,000 up. Never a fee to applicant. Call Bob Courtsbury at 135-826-1500 or visit www.bobcourtsbury.com or St. Suite 102, Shawnee Mission KC 62022.
Looking for work in the market & fall help to work with clients in different locations & night shifts. Contact: Wilfred Funds, 215-843-9600, wilfred.funds@forsale.com
Legal & Child support secretaries Good押
legal and child support secretaries Good押
not be required. Marriage salary $520-$680,
office of Douglas County District Attorney,
office of Douglas County District Attorney
to be received at 389, 709. Kraig Opportunity
reach center.
Mature limited education student or grad, waited
for more than 5 years before applying,
added jobs 1-24hrs earlier his last day.
Applied for position at AA 313trifield Terrace He-
dge. In April in position at AA 313trifield Terrace He-
dge. Applicant qualified and won employment.
Employer Qualified news and women com-
pleted job with employer.
One of the mid-west oldest oldders and storage dealers and焊工s will train qualified delivery and焊工s Will train qualified DDOT requirements. Hard work only need to be demonstrated. Shawn's or cell at 913-451-1400. An equal opportunity employer.
One of the mid-west's moving and storage companies will train staff. Will train qualified, enjoyable people who will apply to Appleton at 1926 West Church Street in pers
PERSONAL
HIKS HIRF SHOP is now open. 288 Railway,
600 Railway, 53th Street, New York, NY.
quick repile, quick repair. Vermont, V4R1-14E 165
500 Railway, 53th Street, New York, NY.
HARVARD SPECIALS $250 for 4-Mon. Tues. and Fri.
$300 for 5-Mon. Tues. and Fri.
MADIS'S HARVARD SHOW $169 for 1-hour
SHOW at Madis's HARVARD SHOW $149 for 1-hour
SHOW at Madis's HARVARD SHOW
FORT HILL SURGERY CLINIC. Aberrations up to 17 weeks. pregnancy tests. Birth Control, Counseling. Tolna Hospital. For appointment call: 918-536-2400 or 410-269-4100. *Yorkland Park, Ks*
Guy LALI counseling referrals now handled
through KU Info - 964-358 or Headquarters 841-
323.
JUNIORS Apply now for next year's Class of
100 Commemorate Dedication April 20 - 107. *Bust*
*Headshot* www.juniors.com
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortion up to
17 weeks. Frequently Testing, Birth Control,
Counselling, Total Ligation. For appointment
at 424-530-3800, 481-301-1101,
St. Owen, Parkland, KS, USA
Becoming for special occasion (Banana Island, Hawaii).
Become a leader in the team.
May opt to participate. Not required.
Apply online at banainail.com or by calling 1-800-742-3966.
Kindall, Swan and Tim, kick butt at the relays
Marye and Marley
4-19
Mitchell. You make great cookies and amusements,
and take us on an outing to our dinner at 11
day night - "Clive."
SAVE YOUR FACE PACE creative portraits, taken in
weding ceremonies. Portraitism is gospel.
For details and pricing contact: portraitism.com
Psychology buffer* Stop and use Pal-Chi-Phys-
ychology Kernels instead. Kernels contain Level-2
PARALLEL KERNELS
Kendall, Swan, and Tint "Shatter em" at the rides—Some Girls.
Hey backbounce Warm astral "Torn." May the birdy of paradise fly up your nose 4-19
But your drunk and give him a host
at the taz in the Taz is the host of host
Although I have
To go down south and back on the coast. 4-19
permitted and or currently involved with residue.
Call Randy at 841-8064
4-25
ICHARDS PORCH IS NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING!
4-20
Phi Kappa Traikai Actives, Good back! 'Nuf
4-12
SERVICES OFFERED
Academic Interning The Lawren School Open School
Math, Music and Beautiful Reloaded Call now 816-340-6596
MATH TUTOR MA in math, pattern, three
professional training experiences. BM2-HI.
*
REWRITING EDITING-Your manuscript, thesis
documentation. Editing is the process of
meticulously corrected finished work, reflecting
thinking with precision and amethasm. Outlining
of texts and articles also available. Elevate
your writing.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with:
Alice at the House of Update/Quick Cup Center.
Ailee is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday,
sunny, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at
Mass.
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can help you with your math or CS problems. Contact us: 412-678-4126.
EXPERT TUTORS: MATH 000-770, PHYSICS
EXPERT TUTORS: MATH 000-770, PHYSICS
MISTRY 100-770, STATISTICS
QUALIFICATIONS: B.S. in Physics, M.A. in
Math, 7 years experience in computer program-
ing.
Tried of feeding yourself? Naimhall Hall is designed for the first time over a boarding plan. Your room has two en-suite rooms, week can be yours if you choose this plan. Shop at Naimhall Hall, 1003 Naimhall Drive 43-8589.
Lawrence Open School, Exciting Summer programs and arts classes for kids, adults, and families; and biking. The firm art organic gardening, flower design, and animal behavior classes in Langauge Arts, Math, and Language. Available 7-9am or 10am. Call now to book a 7-9am walkable studewalle call.
TYPING
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4176. 0
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980 ff
Now accepting term papers for quality typing.
Lymn, 841-266恩 5:30
tt
Quality tested, guaranteed - IBM Schematic. Terms
mileage, disclosures,利息 Catalog Cattle 1881XI
Typed/Editor IBM Pc/Elec Quality work
Typed/Font IBM Pc/Elec dissertations welcome
Horn 842-1212 729
Experimented Typid-term papers, thesis, mice, mice
spiled, spilled, spilled. 83-146, Mrs. Wren
83-146, Mrs. Wren
Experimented, bryst-theory, dissilences, term-
bonding, electron-dispersion, selective
electron-binding, 842-311,
842-310, 842-312
Erupt, trigger all kinds, over night service unreliable; editing available: 814-4712 evening; 5-13
I do keep quick typing. Under 30 pages, I don't know how long it will be. Then activities at 5 p.m. and weekend, after 9 a.m.
Tapping on Blite Electric Typewriter by exporter
Gregg Procter service Proffessor. Professionals Mgrs.
843-1173
Accurately, experimented hybrid -brief papers, booklets,
letters, manuscripts. In 1956 a manuscript was printed
victory. The page number 341-244. Duoma J.
Mazares.
1 day service, quick typing, jkt 2, & under.
1 night service, Call Ruth, 643-648 an a.p. 5-8 p.m.
Training, editing, experienced Electric typewriter carbon or vinyl ribbon. I love them. Anne $895.00
WANTED
I. events, documentation, resumes, legal forms,
laws, calls, billing records, selective. Call E-
mail: 516-429-3200.
Romantic Wedding. fun summer luxury. town
center location. 2nd floor. Bout negotiable.
county rugball club. Hunt negotiable.
Steel- turtle that can play at 16 PPM 853-
835-Frank 4-20
Nord 2 rooms for summer. Spacious 3 bedrooms. Maidroom/breakfast own, room 2. patio, pennsies, tables on bus routes. $98.50 per room. Call 617-4232 for more details. ends 8/4-3232 afternoons.
3rd formal innuemate for summer Malk 2 bed-
room furnished 955.1 electric. Malk 2 bed-
room furnished 955.1 electric.
Formal: non-committing recommit to fall. Call
Berkley clinic (416) 110-8921. Need bed.
Dollie Clinic 811-4524.
Wanted to work for 2 days at a house. $1350 a week.
Need someone to help with laundry, cleaning,
Hospital I need a good form for a laid-back job.
Make sure you have a computer and phone.
Squares three bedroom apartment; furnished.
to compete with 15. Extremely clean to compete with 823-761.
***
Waistad Coordination of development for Kansas Teachers, Family and Family Unit and Dept. of Special Education, Department of Education, undergraduate education related skills, preiss grant application experience, preiss grant application experience, preiss grant application experience, application of writing, Vita and training in preparation of Linda Alen, Early Childhood Instruction to
Need a nice 2 or 3 bedroom Apt or home for
4-5 students (Grades 1-3)
8034
1 need a good used 25 mm. camera. Call Note
81-803-654
Reasons in exchange for child care Summer and
19th school year. Must be available even after
graduation.
or money order to
OFFICIAL TAN MAN LIMERICK CONTEST FORM
- Mail in this form with check
111 Flint Hall or just come by.
- $3.50 per Limerick
ALL LIMERICKS
Write
PUBLISHED ON
TAN MAN DAY.
WED. MAY 2nd.
here →
Contest Judge is Chancellor Dykes!
---
NAME:
ADDRESS
PHONE:
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14
Thursday, April 19, 1979
University Daily Kansan
FLOYD
Kitchen crew
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
FrancisSharp,left,Nashville,Tenn.,sophomore;Barbara Shaw,K.C. Heylin,Manhattan junior divide the daily chore of Eating Sci.Fa.N.M.34;JuliaBuller,Hutchinson sophomore;and that comes with living in their Sardis community,204 Oread St.
Students enjoy live-in fellowship
By JULIA GOPLERUD
Staff Reporter
Members of Sards, a Christian community in the basement of the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 124 Ourea Church. There are three different from what they expected.
Some of the students said they thought the living situation might be restrictive.
"When I heard it was a Christian community I thought you couldn't drink or swear here. The idea of a Christian community probably does scare people off," Barbara Shaw, Santa Fe, N.M. junior, said.
"To be a Christian doesn't mean you don't drink or enjoy life." C. Heylin, Manhattan junior, said that all we profess are religious, and we didn't differently. We're just normal people.
"the only restrictions we have are to be courteous." Francis Sharp, Nashville, Tenn., sophomore, said. "Some of the rooms can't be smoked in because of fire rules, and I smoke a pipe, so I just don't smoke in those rooms."
ALL OF THE four students living in the community said they had considered other living situations before they heard of Sardas.
"I was going to live in an apartment last year, but it was too expensive and too small," Julia Bacon, Hutchinson sophomore, said. "I found out about Sardis or a club where I met at the atmosphere and I like living with guys-I lived in a co-e-dorm last year."
"It's also close to campus and I like the independence of it," she said.
Shaw said she had wanted to get out of a residence hall and had considered a scholarship hall at the same time she considered Sardis.
Sharp, who has lived in Sardis for two years, said he had made different housing plans before he came to KU but changed his mind.
"I kind of understood what Sardis was all about and thought it would be good for
Heylin said he tried to find a studio apartment last fall because he liked privacy and because he did not want to live in a residence hall.
"A FRIEND kept suggesting this place to me," he said. "It's been a really positive experience and there is a financial advantage," he said.
The rooms at Sardis are three different sizes, and the students pay rent on a graded sale. A single room costs $78 a month. A large double room is leased to two persons at $60 a person. A small double room costs $48 a person.
Because four persons are living in an area suitable for seven, the students renting the double rooms do not have roommates but pav double room rent.
Sardis has five bedrooms, 4½ bathrooms, a large kitchen, a dinette, a utility room, a large living room with a bedroom, a large room large enough for three or four cars.
Sharp said the area where the students were to be living quarters for a minister's family.
"It ited to be housing for international students a few years ago, and it may have been something else between the time it used to be used for the international students," he said.
The area has been used for the Sardis community for five years.
The students share household chores,
cooking food expenses and Christian
religion.
"We each cook dinner three times every two weeks." Heyln said. On Sunday we fed the hungry dogs.
He said breakfast and lunch were the responsibility of the individual occupants.
The students said they had specific household chores including grocery shopping, banking and cleaning. Each month into a checking account for food.
STUDENTS BECOME A part of the community by applying to the board of Ecumenical Christian Ministries. They are members of the board and one member of Sardis.
"Sardis is a community instead of a group of people just sharing the same space. We have group meetings, special events and an orientation program," Sharp said.
"Sardis" is from the New Testament book of Revelations, where Sardis is named as one of the early churches in Asia.
Fox Hill clinic confirms changing abortion attitude
Staff Reporter
By KATE POUND
Cheerly colors, comfortable furniture and a bright, modern building are not exactly the usual picture conjured up by the word abortion.
Yet bright and cheery are adjectives that describe the facilities of the Fox Hill Surgery Clinic in Overland Park. The clinic is well-equipped and dedicated toward profits specializes in abortions.
Abortion, formerly a bogey word that drew gaws in polite society, was made legal by a 1973 U.S. Supreme Court ruling. Since then, abortion has left the back alley and moved into hospitals, doctors' offices and clinics.
Fox Hill's location amid several new business and medical buildings and its advertisements in area newspapers are reported to have been slowed by abortion that has developed since 1973.
ONLY A SMALL Club of Overland Park citizens opposed the clinic's opening in August 1974. Maureen Anderson, assistant clerk at the clinic, recently. Opposition has been quiet since then.
The change may be partly because of new attitudes about abortion, she said, and partly because of the other services the clinic will eventually provide.
The clinic's staff of two physicians, three registered nurses and seven counselors performs abortions and tubal ligation, a sterilization procedure for women, two days a week. Anderson said. However, the clinic had a history of infections as it increases the types of operations done.
Anderson said that the clinic was designed to handle several types of surgery, including oral surgery, outpatient plastic surgery and sterilization surgery.
Most of the clinic's patients are referred by physicians or Family Planning and Planned Parenthood groups, Anderson said. However, some women come to the clinic after reading advertisements in area newspapers, including the Kansan.
THE CLINIC BEGAN to advertise a few months ago, Anderson said, after administrators saw advertisements for similar clinics in newspapers in other cities.
Mary Whitten, family planning coordinator for the Kansas Department of Health, said that there were no laws to protect her from using its services, but that ads were unusual.
Although she did not know how great the direct response to the Kanas anad had been, Anderson said that the clinic advertised in the paper that they were based on campus and its proximity to Overland Park.
No matter how women learn of Fox Hill, they go through the same procedures for them.
Most patients call the clinic for information and to make appointments for their surgeries, Anderson said. The calls are answered by telephone counselors who ask
THE FIRST STEP of the procedure includes fee payment. Anderson said.
each caller for medical and personal each caller. The counselors then a date
The patient fills out several forms and signs a form saying she is aware of the details of the abortion. After the patient checks in, she undergoes blood tests and an urinalysis to determine blood type and to check for venereal disease.
On the day of her surgery, a woman comes to the clinic and is checked in.
After the tests and exam, patients are divided into small groups for counseling. Group counseling is used, Anderson said, because the clinic's staff has found that people will relate to each other and can help them cope with the counseling is available if a patient wants it.
THE COUNSELING SESSIONS, which are conducted in small, sunny rooms, are informed consent" sessions, Anderson said. The woman must understand the abortion procedure, and they answer questions and make sure an abortion is what the woman wants. If a woman doesn't seem sure that she wants an abortion, counselor agencies can give her more counseling.
The women is then taken to a large, brightly-decorated waiting room where a medical history is taken and her blood pressure, pulse and temperature are measured. An examination is done by a licensed practical nurse and a second exam is done later by a physician.
"We're not in to doing an abortion on someone who hasn't quite made up her mind," she says.
After the counseling sessions, which take about an hour, the woman is taken to a dressing room and given a hospital gown. The patient is then placed in the room to wait until she is called for surgery.
Kearns said he also was considering several other means of outstarting the student ticket evaders. Among them are monitoring campus lots for persons without a pass to park there and changing the colors of courtesy passes each month.
Another method that is soon to be used by Parking Services is wheel locks. Instead of towing cars after five tickets, ticketers will be given a lock on the wheels until fines are paid.
required to show proof of residence to purchase a ticket. This year, student, ticketers working out of the residence halls were helping to alleviate the problem, he said.
hall residents to apply as ticketers and our service has really improved. They're very diligent and the tickets are a real deterrent."
"Scholarship halls are pretty close to campus and to several bars, so a lot of people just drive in and use them. People have also tried getting into college, but they say they live there. Since we didn't feel we were getting enough ticketing, we got several scholarship
The counseling sessions often include birth control information.
"Our numbers of temporary medical permits always go up after vacations and that's fine," he said. "But there really has been some improper usage."
Fox Hill uses the vacuum-aspiration method of abortion, which removes the fetus through a suction hose. The procedure is done under a local anesthetic.
A SURGERY COUNSELOR waits with the patient and goes into the operating room with her. The counselors, Anderson said, are specially trained to help patients relax. They stay with the patients until after the surgery.
Services. One example is the use of temporary medical passes.
Kip Cubin, president of the All Scholarship Hall Council, agreed.
The surgeries are done in two operating rooms that are small-scale replicas of operating rooms in larger hospitals. The operating rooms are fully equipped for surgery and include monitors to check vital signs during an operation.
"We can't take the money out of their paychecks. All we can do is to wear their cars and ask them to pay. Dr. Shankel has sent a personal letter to all faculty members asking them to pay their tickets, but it hasn't been very effective."
"WHAT WE try to do is encourage students who live in scholarship and research communities, we said. "They know the problems and what the abuses are, so they do a pretty good job."
University has no way of enforcing traffic violations written to faculty members.
"We know who the faculty and staff are that aren't paying their tickets, but at this point, we have no leverage to make them pay," Kearns said.
From page one
The method should be particularly effective, Kearns said, with faculty members being involved.
WHEN THEY WANT to, Kearns said, faculty members can be every bit as snooky as they want. "I'll just give you the best," he said.
Parking...
The clinic also has a surgery prep room and rooms for instrument sterilization.
Because 35 percent of the Parking Services budget is made up of ticket collections, money that is not paid is missed. If more people realized what the money was used for, they might be more inclined to pay their tickets. Kearns said.
Still, facing the prospect of collecting hundreds or even thousands of unaided funds, some banks have been forced to
"It's to prevent a woman from doing something she might be very sorry for
After the surgery, which takes less than 20 minutes, the patient is taken to the recovery room, where her vital signs are watched and she is checked for bleeding. The recovery room is so restlessly decorated and are equipped handle any post-operative difficulties.
"We'll catch up with them," he said. "It's a matter of time."
The women who come to Fox Hill belong to no particular social group, she said. The majority are in their 20s, but the clinic focuses on women and women in their early teens.
Whiten said minors may have abortions without the consent of parents.
WOMEN REQUESTING tubal ligations are questioned to make sure that the operation is the birth control method they want. The baby may be performed tubal ligations on young women who have not had children because the operation is a permanent form of childbirth.
The clinic follows a similar procedure for tubal ligation, a sterilization operation that cuts or ties the fallopian tubes, which carry the egg from the ovaries to the uterus.
According to the woman, she entered the clinic at 8 a.m. and returned home by 12:30 p.m., after having also shopped and eaten lunch.
However, one former Fox Hill patient said that she spent less than three hours in the hospital.
The woman, from St. Joseph, Mo., praised the clinic and its staff, but disagreed with Anderson's statement that a six-hour clinic stay was usual.
Fees increase because of the extra care required for patients who have abortions or endometriosis.
Abortions performed later in a pregnancy are more difficult to do, and patients need more medication and a longer recovery period, she said.
HOWEVER, AILOR said, most clinics charge more for abortions done after the 12th week of pregnancy because of increased difficulty and risk.
"Everyone there is so kind," she said.
They make you feel that you're the only person
who's not so nice.
The woman said that Fox Hill was recommended to her by her county health department, and she said she was glad her abortion was done there.
after the surgery. Anderson said. The entire procedure takes about six hours.
However, Anderson said that Fox Hill requires parental consent before it will perform abortions on girls under the age of 16. However, the state does not require parental consent.
Fees do go up for abortions later in the pregnancy, Anderson said. From $175 for an abortion done before the 12th week of pregnancy, from $300 for an abortion than $900 for an abortion after the 16th week.
The clinic's fee for lab work, counseling and surgery is $175 cash. According to Ann Allor, a registered nurse with the Douglas County Health Department, abortions usually cost between $150 and $175 in this area.
$412
Round Trip
EUROPE
AIR FARE
ONLY
Whiten said that the Fox Hill clinic, like any medical facility in Kansas, must pass a state health department inspection. There are no specific state laws concerning birth control or abortion clinics, except for those governing all clinics.
Kansas City/Chicago/Luxemborg
K. U. Union 900 Mass. The Malls
GIBRALTARS
We sell Eurail Passes. For more information see Maupintour travel service
Memberships available 9th & Iowa—Hillcrest Center—842-5765
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Doors open at 9
AFTER SPENDING at least an hour in recovery, the patient is checked out and may leave the clinic. She can arrange to have a free follow-up exam a few weeks
Anderson said that Fox Hill's standards and professionalism assured the clinic
Auditions for the Town/Gown Production of South Pacific
The University of Kansas Theatre Announces
tonight at
843-1211
Come to the auditions with music prepared to sing selections from Broadway musicals. An accompanist will be provided. Please wear clothing comfortable to dance in as dance auditions may be included.
tonight,
Fri. & Sat.
Saturday, April 21 1:00-400 p.m.
(Callbacks: Sunday. April 22 1:00-4:00 p.m.
102 Murphy Hall (Band Room)
South Pacific will be performed during July
with which casts in the events in June
For further details, contact Dr. Tom Rea University Theatre/864-3944
Juniors and Seniors with at least one year of physics and calculus may be eligible for a year of post-graduate training in nuclear engineering and over $650 per month for up to 12 months prior to graduating through the Navy's Nuclear Power Officer Candidate Program. Prior experience in contact interview EG Dunderson, in Lawrence, at (913) 841-4376, collect, or write;
$7800 AS A SENIOR AND POST GRADUATE EDUCATION IN NUCLEAR POWER JUNIOR—SENIORS
Navy Officer Programs
610 Florida Street
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
GRADUATE STUDENTS AND FACULTY MEMBERS
FOR TOP QUALITY SUMMER CAMPES
CAMP COUNSELORS
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
top salary, accommodations & benefits for experienced Counselors
Call or Write for information & application
to counselor@mcc.gov
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444 E. 86 St, Suite 20C
New York, N.Y. 10028
Experience required, any of the
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Woodworking, Triggers, General
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Moonlight Madness Sale
Wrangler jeans 11.99
Terry short sets 14.00
Knit Tops 4.99 & 5.99
Coordinate Groups to 20 to 40% off
Jogging shorts 9.00
Tubes
1.99 & 2.99
Spring Slacks 9.99
Dresses & Coats 20 to 40% off
Plus many unadvertised specials.
We will close from 3 to 5 p.m. to get ready and reopen from 5 to 11 p.m. Thursday April 19th.
M. C. & Visa Bostwicks Welcome
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layaways on sale
items
BIG BEAVER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas Vol. 89, No. 135
Friday, April 20.1979
b news
Lawrence, Kansas
By ELLEN IWAMOTO
Staff Reporter
The sudden withdrawal of U.S. support to Nicaragua after almost 41 years has left Nicaragua government officials feeling almost betrayed, Marinico Solan, former ambassador to Nicaragua,
When he was appointed ambassador in 1977, Solano said his mission was to implement the Carter administration's human rights policy in Nicaragua, which meant reducing aid if standards were not met.
Solau, who resigned from his post last week for "personal reasons," was participating in a panel discussion on the current Nicaraguan situation. He spoke to about 50 people in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union as part of a conference on Central American history.
Civil war has been raging in Nicaragua since January 1978, when a popular opposition leader to President Anastasio Somoza's government, newspaper publisher Pedro Joaquín Chamero, was
Strikes and bloody street fighting between Sandinista guerrillas and Sonozna's National Guard
See related story page nine
Solaun outlined the history of U.S. relations with Nicaragua from the 1920s, when Nicaragua was a client state of the United States, to the United States' current policy of neutrality in the Nicaraguan civil war.
A CLIENT STATE is a country that allies itself with another, more powerful country to receive protection and support, in return provides goods and other resources.
"Nicaragua was a faithful client," Solau said, "Sonora's family were our friends."
The United States had been a supporter of the Somoza family since 1933, when the U.S. Marines ended their 21-year guard of Nicaragua and placed the National Guard in the hands of Somoza's
When U.S. officials made it understood a few years ago that the United States wanted to see changes in the policies of the Nicaragua government, Solanu said he believed the country. He also reinstated constitutional rights such
as freedom of the press, Solan said, which opened up significant possibilities for democracy in Nigerra.
But Somza also felt let down by the U.S. human rights policy, Solaun said. He questioned why the United States withheld its support after almost 41 years.
SINCE RECENT uprisings in Nicaragua, the United States has followed a policy of neutrality, Solana said. The embassy in Nicaragua was told not to help organize either the Sandinista Liberation Front or Somoza's supporters. They were told to avoid any commitment to either side. Solana said.
Some Nicaraguan government officials have said privately that they understood the need for change in their policies in order to cope with those through the United States was trying to depose Somoza and use him as a success story for its human rights.
Other Nicaraguan officials have said the United States is taking a "soft line" on the Nicaraguan
He said that they thought the U.S. government was historically responsible for the Nicaraguan government and that all that was needed was for the United States to use its magic wand to help change things.
Also participating on the panel were Mariano Faulios, president of the National University of Nicaragua, and Eduardo Conrado, dean of the department. Mr. Faulos spoke at a press conference earlier in the day.
FIALELOS, WHO HAD FLD in from Nicaragua Wednesday night, was pessimistic about the possibilities for a peaceful solution to the civil war in Nicaragua.
"If the government continues to have the upper hand," he said, "pacification of the country is very fast."
Fiaulos said the war in Nicaragua was not a typical civil war. The government does not have exclusive control over violence or force, he said. It controls parts of cities part of the time.
" their strategy is to keep several strategic points, such as the headquarters of the National Guard, airports and government offices, but the rest of the country is no man's land." he said.
Although Somera has said he would allow free elections at the end of his term in 1981, Fialsa said that if the elections were allowed, they would not be free, but would only legitimize the government.
ATTEMPTS AT mediation by the Organization of
American States to end the fighting have been futile, Failos said. The only impact was made by the presence of the mediating committee, which was formed during the fighting during November and December, he said.
Some church and academic leaders in Nicaragua have taken matters into their own hands, Fialos said, and have formed the National Committee of Reflection.
The committee, formed a month ago, will attempt to talk with all groups in Nicaragua. It has set goals of finding a peaceful solution to the war and seeing if fighting can be reduced or avoided.
Fiallo said that in Nicaragua, political assassinations had become a possibility that he must consider along with arrest. Although freedom of the press is crucial, the price for being too outsaken it to be sent to jail.
Fiallos, who earned his Ph.D. in political science at the University of Kansas, said he had strafed very closely by the attackers.
"People in the universities have a big responsibility to find a solution to the conflict in Nicaragua," he said. "Many students have taken up arms and joined the guerrillas."
HARVEY HILL
Staff Photo by ALAN ZLOTKY
Wyoming, Teammate Mike O'Bange also gave Nazu a well-deserved lift to the stands. See related story and photo on page 13.
Winning the 10,000 meter run was not the only reward for Joseph Nazu from the University of
State rests case in Hunter trial
By CAROL BEIER Staff Reporter
Free ride
Staff Reporter
Hunter's court-appointed attorney, Wesley Norwood, told the court he would not present any evidence for the defense but he did not answer questions.
Closing arguments will be heard today in the trial of Charles Hunter, a sixteen-year-old Lawrence youth charged with 14 counts of sexual assault and burglary. The prosecution rested its case yesterday after two full days of testimony by the state's witnesses.
"One motion will be to discharge. The defendant will not present any evidence." Norwood said. "He will not take the stand."
Hunter is charged with four counts of rape, two counts of attempted rape and eight counts of aggravated burglary.
THE MAXIMUM penalty for a rape conviction in Kansas is life imprisonment, for aggravated burglary, 20 years; and for at least one count of assault.
One of the two victims of alleged rape who testified yesterday was a KU student. She identified Hunter as her assailant.
Another woman told the court a man had entered her home and raped her on Dec. 11. She said she could not be positive the man
She said her assailant told her he would kill her if she went to the police.
"I didn't want to believe it was happening," she said. "I kept thinking about the pot pie in the oven."
Two Lawrence police detectives testified about statements made by the defendant on the day he was arrested. Dec. 22.
DETECTIVE JIM Haller testified that Hunter had told him that he had entered several residences with the intent of raping the
According to Haller's testimony, Hunter pointed out those residences during a drive in a squad car Dec. 22.
The houses were those that were entered during a series of reported burglaries and sexual assaults in December.
Detective Ted Crady told the court that Hunter had said there was no plan for his selection of the houses he would enter.
he was no plan for this selection of the houses he would enter.
"He went into any house he wanted to." Cradd said.
The trial will reconvene at 9 today before District Court Judge James W. Paddock.
Kansan deadline today
Applications for editor and business manager of the University Daily Kansan for the fall semester and the summer session are due at 5 p.m. today in 105 Flint Hall. Forms are available in the School of Journalism office, 105 Flint Hall; the Student Senate office 105B Kansas Union; and the office of student organizations and activities 220 Strong Hall.
Other cities hail, regret malls
By LORILINENBERGER
Staff Reporter
The uncertainty of the effects a regional shopping mall would have on Lawrence makes speculation easy to come by.
But those cities across the country already endowed with regional shopping malls seemed to agree that the malls had two effects on their communities: an immediate deterioration of the central downtown district and an overall boom for the city.
Officials in ten of the 20 cities that have regional malls developed by Jacobs, Viscosa and Jacobs, the firm proposing the mall for Lawrence, said the malls hurt their downtown areas. The 10 cities were small-to-medium-sized.
Saginaw, Mich., with a population of 83,000, received its regional mail in 1972, and William Jones, Saginaw Township manager, said he first thought the downtown would never recover.
"Fashion Square Mall meant the death toll for downtown," he said. "Since it was built, the city has really deteriorated and gone wild."
JONES, WHO called the firm of Jacobs, Vissiou and Jacobs,
very reliable and first-class," said the mail most desired
of his collection.
"But if they had it all to do over again, I think they would fight it," he said.
The citizens of Saginaw Township did not protest the development of the mail, Jones said, because they wanted more information.
"Hardy any retail stores are left downtown. Some have moved to the mail," he said. "The downtown now looks terrible—stores are closed."
Although the regional mall hurt downtown Saginaw, the overall effect on the township has been a beneficial one. Jones said.
"It's been great for the town," he said. "We never would have grown as much or as fast as we'd be building a new home as we did." He skipped to another skyscraper.
JOHN URICH, assistant planning director for Madison, Wis., said the citizens of Madison also did not contest the development plans submitted by the state.
See related stories back page
and 1971 by Jacobs, Visconsi and Jacobs. Madison's population is 178,000.
"At that time, the sentiment was not strongly against the malls," he said. "Today, JVJ would have encountered a great deal more difficulty, mostly because of energy concerns and the impact the malls have on downtown retail districts."
"Even if the city of Madison didn't want the malls, JVJ would have built outside our city limits. They wanted that."
One of the worst effects of the mails, Urich said, were that they wasted prime agricultural land once abundant in the area. That land was reopened for commercial use, he said, and caused what we term a greatest controversy over the mails at the time they were proposed.
Urich said that the city enjoyed a good working relationship with Jacobs, Viscini and Jacobs, but he added that he thought the development firm gained more than anybody else from the malls.
"The malls provided many benefits for shopper overall," he said. "But I think VJI were the ones made the most happy one."
Urich said the mails caused a number of downtown businesses to relocate at the malls or close down completely. He labeled the situation of the Madison downtown as "a classic example of what all downtown areas are going through as a result of large regional
David Clark, a planning administrator for Middletown, Ohio, said he agreed that Jacobs, Visconi and Jacons were the biggest donors.
"JVJ was definitely the beneficiary from the mall they built here," Clark, who admitted he was somewhat prejudiced toward the downtown, said. "I think the community has suffered because of them."
Middletown has a population of 50,000 Towne Mall covers approximately 400,000 square feet, which is about the same size as the city.
23 new developments proposed
By PAM MANSON
Staff Reporter
Larcence is not alone
Staff Reporter
The same company that has proposed building a regional shopping mall in Lawrence also has proposed building malls in 22
Some cities are welcoming the mail with open arms. At least one city in fighting the mall tooth and nail. And many of the cities
One city, although it is listed in a company brochure as being the site of a mail development, has not even heard about the project.
Officials in the city, Orangeburg, S.C., population 40,000, said they had heard nothing from the company.
have a seem certain that someone would eventually build this bar, but no one's brought a definite plan to us," a snooker player wrote.
Racine, Wis., has heard about a proposed mail development to be built by Jacobs, Visconis and Jacobs, a Cleveland development
"WERE HAPPY to see them come," Thomas Wright, director of planning in Kacine, said. "We're anticipating them with open hands."
Wright said the city's shopping dollars were going to Milwaukee, a 6-hour drive to the north. He said Hacite, a city in western Indiana, is also shopping there.
The proposal has raised opposition among the city's downtown merchants, who say the downtown would be hurt by a mail.
In addition to Racine and 21 other cities, Jacobs, Viacomis and Jacobs has proposed building a mail in lawrence, at highway 50
However, in many of the cities with populations of less than 150,000 where Jacobs, Viscomal and Jacobs has proposed building the stadium.
of 125,000 people, had no major shopping area. "Downtown has never been the No. 1 shopping area," he said.
Wright said Racine and the surrounding area's population, a total of 125,000 people, had no major shopping area.
"Downtown has never been the No. 1 shopping area," he said.
THE COUNTY Racing is in sold 100 acres of land to Jacobs.
V viscison and Jacobs for the mall. The mall was first proposed five years ago, but the ground is still vacant. Wright said the company will be planning to move there.
One city seems determined to keep any regional shopping center from being built. The city of Battle Creek, Mich., population 40,000, and a nearby township have placed themselves firmly in the path of any mall development.
He said, "The roads and sewers are ready. We're just waiting for the mail to come."
Jacobs, Viscounti and Jacobs has been denied rezoning twice, according to George Zollner, planning director for Battle Creek township, population 25,000, which is five miles from Battle Creek. The final decision now rests with the township's board of trustees.
"JVJ is behind in terms of the game," Zollner said. "It doesn't look good for them."
He said that much of the opposition to mails was based on a land use guide that specified not to over-to-market the area. He said some people in the township had sanded another developer, who already had gotten land rezoned for a mall, to delay construction.
Zolner said, "For now the one mail is delayed and the Jacobs mall is defeated."
Sam Stelirecht, planning director for Battle Creek, said the city was doing everything it could to delay mails so the city could be notified.
"We know that we're fighting to save the central business district," he said, "that the malls go in, we'll lose Penneys and Macy's."
Stellrecht said the downtown has a plan to build a "Superblock" to revitalize the area. It is planned for 11 open acres in the center of town and would cost $30 million. Superblock would include a sports arena, a large hotel and many new specialty shops, he said.
concerning the malls' benefits, Stellrecht said, "I see little benefit to the central business district. We'll have a lot of vacant stores to deal with. We're kind of going broke now that we have the space available downtown."
See MALLS page 11
2
Friday, April 20.1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- Capsules From staff and wire reports
Parcel bomb kills one in Cairo
CAIRO, Egypt—A parcel bomb exploded yesterday, killing one Cairo postal worker and injurying four others in an act of violence that marred yesterday's bombings.
Agry shopekepes and residents of the downtown area near the post office blamed radical Arab opponents of the treaty for the explosion.
Ministry of Interior police officials who are supervising the vote count said preliminary reports from the 36,750 voting centers showed an "unprecedented turnout." Egyptian President Anwar Sadat had predicted a 99 percent voter turnout.
Yesterday's explosion was the first bomb known to have exploded in Cairo since February and post office officials have brought in bomb detection equipment.
Inquiry sought for Wichita riot
WICHTA—A group has charged that the Wichta police department cannot conduct a fair investigation into alleged police brutality and has asked the police to withdraw from the investigation.
Calling themselves the "Herman Hill Involvement Group," the organization said members did not think the internal affairs division of the Wichita police department could fairly examine allegations of police brutality and misconduct in the riot that followed a rock concert.
The police department has received 71 complaints of brutality or misconduct by officers. More than 40 police officers and 26 citizens were injured in the shootings.
U.S. economic growth slows
WASHINGTON - The nation's economic growth allowed to its lowest level in a year during the period from January through March, the government said.
Economic growth in the first quarter of 1979 was at an annual rate of 0.7 percent, after adjustment for inflation, the Commerce Department said. That meant that economic output had fallen by 2.5%.
Declines in consumer purchases and home and factory construction were given as reasons for the decline.
The Commerce Department also said inflation during 1979's first quarter increased to an 8.7 percent annual rate, up from 8.2 percent in the last three months.
And disposable personal income went up $7.8 billion in the first quarter of 1979, reaching $911 billion on an annual basis, the department said. That figure, however, is not high enough to justify the use of capital.
Judge closes Synanon hearing
LOS ANGELES—A judge hearing pretrial evidence in a conspiracy-tort case against Sassonnian founder Charles Dederich and two Syanonian defendants on Monday.
The judge also applied a gag order. Municipal Judge Vincent Erickson granted the orders, without comment, on a motion by an attorney for Joseph Musico, a Synanon member who is one of those charged in the Oct. 10 ratttlesmake attack on Paul Morantz.
Morantz, a 33-year-old attorney, earlier had won a $300,000 lawsuit against Svannon, which is a reliance and drug rehabilitation foundation.
The California penal code permits a defendant to have a preliminary hearing closed—a controversial section of the law that defendants occasionally invoke. Two judges have declared the section unconstitutional, but the matter is under appeal.
Lebanese to be court-martialed
BEIRUT, Lebanon-Lebanon ordered the court-martial of Maj. Sand Haddad yesterday after Haddad claimed a section of southern Lebanon as an invocation.
Haddad also attacked an administrative base of the U.N. peace-keeping force, pouring an estimated 4,000 machine-gun bullets and 150 rounds of rocket and mortar fire into the base to drive troops from the area Haddad proclaimed "Free Lebanon."
A Lebanese government spokesman said a five-man military tribunal was scheduled to start Hidayat's court-martial Monday. If convicted of the charge of
Haddad and his 1,500 rebel soldiers and right-wing Christian militiamen are entrenched along the wide mile. 59-14 long strip bordering Israel.
Keu SALT II issues settled
WASHINGTON—The United States and the Soviet Union have settled key issues in the talks on humanitarian situations, but still are not ready to sign a treaty, information sources said yesterday.
The sources said agreement had been reached on the rules for defining a new missile type during the duration of the SALT II agreement. The definition of new missile types has been a main unresolved issue. The treaty would limit each side to developing one new land-based intercontinental ballistic missile
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dohrynn scheduled a meeting for late last night to discuss the remaining points of dif-
Wolf Creek investigation begins
BURLINGTON - The Kansas State Building and Construction Trades Council began an investigation of the quality of construction at the Wolf Creek Nuclear Center.
The president of the council said he expected the building contractor at the plant to "svp" on workers who tried to help the investigation.
He said the council would hire a full-time person who would be assisted by business agents from the 12 locals represent the $1.07 billion plant.
The quality of some concrete work at the plant has been previously investigated. In addition, Allen Thompson, the council's president, said there was a lack of knowledge about the process.
Bob Rivens, a spokesman for Kanaas Gas & Electric, one of the builders of the plant, said that, "obviously we don't ask on people," and that if there were fire hazards in the plant, he would call the company.
HEW to study Topeka schools
TOPEKA--HEW officials are scheduled to begin an investigation today into whether the Topeka Board of Education is violating a 1954 Supreme Court decision banning segregated schools, according to a Kansas City Star copyrighted story.
The regional director of the elementary and secondary division of the HEW civil rights section said an investigating team would review the Topoka case.
It was reported last week that the Topeka school system paid $19,500 last December to settle a lawsuit filed by Evelyn Rose Johnson, a black girl who churbed she had received an inferior education. Knowledge of the payment was made in writing to the school board by the help of a federal judge, who sealed court files.
Weather...
Skies will be partly cloudy today with temperatures in the lower 70s, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. There is a good chance for rain this week.
TOPEKA (UPI) - State officials yesterday warned high schools and colleges not to tamper with any picnic acid on their surfaces because the chemical could explode.
Top education and health officials meeting in Torkea issued a warning that containers of the yellow crystalline chemical used in high school chemistry experiments could become unstable and explosive with age.
Officials warn of explosive acid
Although the substance poses no threat in the presence of water, old stocks which are dry or come in contact with metal may if disturbed or dropped, the officials said.
Because the acid could explode if improperly handled, school officials are urged to contact the state about disposal of the substance.
In large enough amounts, they said, the chemical could have an explosive charge like dynamite. Picric acid has been used in explosives, dyes and burn ointments.
KANAS OFFICIALS issued the warning after reading a magazine report of the plague.
Maggies Spring Affair
hashinger hall
april 23-28 7pm
mon.
The chemical has been found in Kansas high schools in Topeka, Sublette, St. John, and Lansing.
ues.
dance:
traditional to modern
mon.
art exhibition opening
4 floor
composition:
original works
concert:
choral and instrumental
wed.
However, state officials are notifying local school administrators, firefighters and emergency preparedness personnel and asking them to contact the state for instructions if they find bottles of the chemical in their schools.
thurs.
mime show
School officials at Liberal, St. John and Macksville said they had found the chemical in the house.
Estimates are that the chemical in Liberal may have been on the shelf for 50 years. Local authorities exploded those bottles of acid without incident.
A copy of their written warning also will be relayed to the Kansas Board of Regents
fri. & sat.
Spotlight
Performance April 27 28 7 p.m
Hashinger Hall
Donations accepted at door
fri. & sat.
Spotlight
THE WARNING was issued by representatives of the Department of Education, the Division of Emergency Preparedness, the state Fire Marshal's
"Surely they can all tight for a few more since they may have had it for 25 or 30 years."
Roger Carlson of the health and environment department said the disposal method would depend on the chemical's volume and age.
Office, the Department of Health and Environment and the Department of Human
ALTHOUGH OFFICIALLS speculated that schools probably would have no more than 50 students, the report said.
Carlson said it was not known what amount would triflower a dynamite-like explosion.
The education department's science and math consultant, Romena An仕瑟, urged school officials not to take immediate steps to get rid of the chemical, which has been used in science experiments for at least 50 years.
Utah officials cite A-bomb test effects
Matheson was the first witness before a joint congressional committee that is investigating whether the nuclear fallout caused cancer and other health disorders among people of southern Utah, Nevada and Arizona.
SALT LAKE CITY—A congressional hearing into whether open-air nuclear tests in the 1950s caused cancer begin者 yesterday, Utah's governor testified that part of U.S. military 300 times as much radioactivity as areas at the Three Mile Island nuclear accident.
Gov. Scott Matheson said no one knew at
SCHUMM FOODS COMPANY
the time that the levels of radiation were as serious as is now known.
presents
lemon tree
11 W. 9th
Natural Frozen
Dessert Yogurt
Special Weekend Price
THE TERRITORY HALL
SMOKEHOUSE
719 Mass.
Original Hickory Pit BBQ
WEEKEND SPECIAL
ONE HALF
WHOLE BBQ CHICKEN
3.25
NEW YORKER
PRNO HALIAN
PIZZA
DOUBLE SAUSAGE TOPPING
This special served 5 PM to closing
with purchase of Any Size Pizza
MISS STREET DELI
IN MASSACHUSETTS
Hot or Mild
Offer Good Thurs. thru Sun., April 18-April 22 No Coupons Accepted
SMOKED SAUSAGE $1.50
The Downtown Eating Establishments
H.B.
Quirks
H.B. Quirks
Has Something For Everybody Try our new menu soon!
Starters
SOUPS
Sorbate Soup
Slow cooking root of onion, thyme and marinade vegetables
Olive Sauce Gravitation
Cup 1.25 Cocktail 2.00
A flour-free sauce with bread crumbs and marbled cheese
Cup 1.65
A fresh rosemary dressing
Cup 95 Cocktail 1.65
A flour-free sauce with Daisy collis
SALADS
Quicks Salt Plate
Mixed green, uncured vegetables, banana, and shaped egg, served on a baked glass plate
1.10
A vegetable Salad
Mixed green, uncured vegetables, banana and shaded cheesy, fresh sprouts, chopped egg, uncured vegetables, and dried fresh meats
3.00
An Salad
Mixed green, dried beef Burger, ham, cheese and shredded cheese, and uncured vegetables
3.00
The Restaurant & Creperie Iowa at 26th Street Lawrence, Kansas
Country Fried Steak
Browned beef tail served with waffles the key greasy
Southern Fried Chicken
Half of chicken breast served in new special batter
Prime Rib
Trading and Saturday only. A generous cut of green
Latin Burger
Lasagna burger
Prime Salmon Steak
Salmon steak
Reg. Cut Salmon Steak
Fried chicken-burred beef
String Cheese
Best in the Home
Crepes
Two crepes served with Quick's Salad Plate,
and Dinner Plate.
Sandwich
Indian HERO Hand salad berry, grape cheese, and mustard on a tuffed Indian leaf, with Italian dressing 1.00
Roast Beef served on an Kebab with yogurt, pieces of bacon or chicken, cheese on bread 2.75
Ham and Yogurt With green cheese on kebab roll in hot bread, served hot, cold or grilled 2.75
Chicken and Yogurt Lemonade with lime, orange and clementine and celery and served not tuffed in hot bread 2.45
Burger Creamed lettuce with chives and served not tuffed in hot bread 1.90
Smash burger with lettuce and served not tuffed in hot bread 1.60
Hawaiian Burger One burrito kebab roll in kebabs 1.80
Hamburger Grilled lettuce with cheese and served not tuffed in hot bread 1.60
Chili Burger -10 joints with a phyllo of hibiscus served on a kebab 1.15
Sugar-free Chili Burger Sugar-free hibiscus, thyme, and in 10 juices served with hibiscus bread 2.15
Something Different
Quiche with Bacon A delicious change 1.00 with white plum 2.75
Mesquite Quiche Baked with shrimp and mandarin 1.85 with white plum 2.75
Soup and Quiche Soup with cream Sage Canton with white plum 1.00
Egg Brunch An omnipotent favorite, served with bunk buns 2.75
Cherno Blintz Dive cherry filled hibiscus cups with sambar sauce 2.75
Lomeng With salt and garlic brush 4.50
Entrees
Country Fried Steak
Browned beef salad with a chicken grey
Southern Fried Chicken
Half of a chicken dipped in one cup special butter
Prime Rib
Fish and bacon and baked only. A prairie cut of green
Eating Beef
Petite Salmon Steak
Smoked Salmon
Reg. Cut Salmon Steak
Trader (chebried steal)
Spring Steak
Beef in the house
8.95
Crêpes
Two crepes served with Quick's Salad Plate.
Crepe Dain
Nice bread of chicken with frosted sprouts and
served with a rich cheese sauce
4.65
Crêpe Steganoff
Salmon and fresh mushrooms in a delicious strognuff
use
4.65
Shrimp Necklug Crepe
Shrimp, mushrooms, and green onions in a delicious
Venom sauce
4.95
Camellia
A Indian cr蛋糕 family
A Fresh Mushroom Cr蛋糕
Sliced fresh mushrooms in Morning sauce
4.65
Embellishments
All butter served with your choice of boiled potatoes, steak flies,
meat or wheat bran batter. Quack Salad Flakes, and dinner rolls
Entrees
Country Fried Steak 6.50
Bredenbock beef sauté with a chicken gravy
Southern Fried Chicken 6.50
Half of a chicken dished up on one cut in special batter
Prime Rib 6.50
Flanked and sometimes on top. A generous cut of grilled Eating Beef 6.50
Pretzel Salmon Streak 6.50
Arugula 6.50
Big Call Salmon Steak 6.50
Fresh-cooked salmon steak 6.25
Strip Steak Roasted in the Home 6.95
Crêpes
Two crêpes served with Quick's Salad Plate, and Dinner rolls.
Crêpe Drain
Add flour or chicken with brownie spices and served with rich cheese sauce 4.65
Crêps Straggioff
Nutmeg and fresh mushrooms in a delicious straggioff sauce 4.65
Shrimp Sencheng Crêpe
Shrimp, mushrooms, and green onions in a delicious Nudgie pancake 5.05
Cannelon
Walnut crêpe pastry 4.35
Fish Mushroom Crêpe
Steed fresh mushrooms in Morgan sauce 4.65
Embellishments
Beverages
Lemonade 15 and 30
Sea Bread 15 and 30
Iced Tea 15
Coffee 10
Mint 10
Hot Tea 10
Milk 10
Rotted Beer 75
Diamond Ice 75
Impact 1.25
Desserts
Quick's Special Cheesecake 95
with raspberry sauce 1.25
Amorteed Cream Pie 75
Banana Bun Crêpe 1.25
Fudge Mint Crêpe 1.25
Cherry Noise Macripe 1.00
Hot Apple Cr蛋糕 1.25
2600 Harry H. Blasco
Steak Fries 65
Hash Browns 65
Sweet Corn and Cheese
Pistachios 75
Cottage Cheese 60
Baked Polenta 60
Walnut Squash 55
Embellishments
Snack Fries 6.5
Eat Beer 6.5
Sip Cream and Cheese 7.5
Pretzels 10
Cavity Sweet 10
Baked Potato 10
With vanilla cream 6.5
Embellishments
Beverages
Lemonade 35, 40
Soft Drinks 15, 10
Food Tr 15
Coffee 15
Sugar 10
Half Tea 10
Milk 10
Bottled Beers 1.5
Domestic 1.5
Import 2.5
Beverages
Lemonade 25 and 50
Soft Drinks 25 and 50
Iced Tea 45
Coffee 30
Snacks 30
Hot Tea 40
Milk 40
Raspberry Beers
Domestic 75
Import 1,25
.
University Dally Kansan
Friday, April 20. 1979
3
Union fire still mystery after 9 years
Rv LOIS WINKELMAN
Staff Reporter
Nine years ago today students listened to Judy Collins on their radios. They protested the draft. They marched in front of Strong Hall.
Wesco Hall was only Wescos Hole, the dug-out site for what was to be a 25-story humanities building, the Yuk was the most popular bar, and someone set a fire bomb there.
When firefighters finally extinguished he flames early the next morning, the building had received more than $2 million n damage.
Firefighters contained the fire in the south wall of the Union, but 40,000 square feet of the building was not in danger.
The fire shocked administrators, students and government officials near the end of what had been a fairly calm semester. Since the late '60s, KU had
spawned frequent demonstrations, some violent.
THE YEAR BEFORE the Union fire, students opposed to the draft attempted to burn the Military Science Building to protest the presence of ROTC and military recruiters on campus. They successfully canceled the annual ROTC review by surging onto the field at Memorial University in Chicago and suspension for several KU students, including the newly elected student body vice president.
Student rights was one of the most turbulent issues of that period. Students pickedet Strong Hall and demonstrated for a voice in University government.
When a new student code was adopted in the spring of 1969, the Student Senate was established. For a while, students settled down.
CHANCELOR E. LAURENCE
chalmers to deliver a Senate early
date. SU is calmer now.
Two weeks later, David Awidy, student body president, echoed Chalmers when he told the Kansas Board of Regents, "I do not foresee any demonstrations on campus. Awiy was a member of activist organizations and had participated in many protests.
But during the third week of April, the Gambies store downtown was gutted by a blaze.
Several Molotov cocktails were thrown in various parts of town, causing minor damage.
Then for three days, disturbances erupted among students at Lawrence High School. On the third day, police used tear gas and mace to break the disturbance.
Black students received threatening
phone calls and the Black Student Union urged all boys to arm themselves.
But still, no one was prepared for the events to come.
Students rescued approximately $50,000 worth of art from the burning building.
THE NIGHT OF the fire, Frank Burke, Kansas Union director, arrived at the scene shortly after the fire was reported. He and students aided the firefighters by hauling houses, working on the burning building and keeping the crowds from interfering.
The next day, Burge issued a statement of gratitude to those students. "It was a tremendous display of efficiency and effectiveness," he said. "The students were willing to do anything within their power to come up with the Union building to a minimum."
The burning of the Union triggered a five-day wave of violence in Lawrence.
Govern. Robert Docking declared a curfew in and around Lawrence lasting from 8AM to 5PM,Extra police,National Guardmen and Extra police busy through the night investigating curfew violations, fire bombings and abandoned school building was destroyed by Fire.
THE CURFWE AND the violence continued. Sniper fire could be heard throughout the city. Another fire bomb damaged the Military Science Building. A trash bin behind Strong Hall burned. A Molotov cocktail thrown in a KPL substation near Daisy Hill caused power to go to the residence residence hills there and in Stoffer Place.
Officials and Lawrence citizens soon thought the curfew was causing more problems than it was solving. They petitioned the governor's office and the
curfew was ended. For two more nights violence continued, and then tapered off.
Even though arson was immediately suspected in the Union fire, Chalmers said he did not think it was the work of left-wing conspiracy. He said the rash of fires in Lawrence and on the campus suggested the fire was set by a vromianiac.
"I do think it is the work of one person, or perhaps two or three," he had said.
NO ONE EVER discovered who set the bomb that burned the Union.
Even if there was enough evidence to arrest a suspect, the Kansas statute of liability for assault could not afford a arsonist two years after the crime, unless the suspect has left the state during those years.
KU is calmer now. But students still listen to Judy Collins on the radio. They still protest the draft and they still march in front of Strong Hall.
Nurse shortage may have effect on new hospital
By PATRICIA MANSON
Staff Reporter
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
TOPEKA—The University of Kansas Medical Center might have trouble finding enough nurses to staff its new hospital, a medical officer told Kansas Regents yesterday.
The official, Masahiro Chiga, hospital administrator for the Med Center, said, "With the new hospital, we will have more positions opening up. We also operate the largest number of intensive care beds in the Kansas City area.
"With the legislative appropriations, I believe we should have an adequate number
of positions. Whether we can fill these
positions is another question."
Dykes also said an increase in the number of students enrolled in the Med Center's nursing school would ease the shortage. The Regents recently voted to increase the school's enrollment next fall from 65 to 125 students.
Most of the remaining construction work will be repair of the cement panels that make up the outer walls of Bell Memorial, Miller said.
Win A Doobie Brothers Backstage Pass
All 600 beds will not be filled when Bell Memorial first opens, David Robinson, vice-president of Bell Memorial.
Although the hospital will not accept patients until July, the staff has begun moving equipment into the building, Russell Miller, a vice chancellor, said.
The basement level contains the general supply and purchasing department and the
"All of the construction is essentially completed as of today." Miller said.
Chiga and other Med Center officials met in Topeka with the Regents' Health Education Committee. The full board is scheduled to meet today.
"When we move, we won't expand the number of beds by a great deal because we
CONTACT SUA FOR DETAILS
Last May, 140 panels were found to be chipped and cracked. KU officials said last week that 94 of the panels still had not been repaired.
"That contractor has been trying to get some patching and improvements made within the last few weeks." Miller said. "He seems to be taking us more seriously."
Bell Memorial, the new hospital, will begin accepting patients in July. It eventually will contain 600 beds, 214 more than the present hospital.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes told the committee that a pay raise recommended by the Kansas Legislature for nurses might the night shift would help reduce the shortfall.
The contractor, Vincent DICardo, has told KU and state officials that the repairs will be completed in time.
"The failure to have a shift differential has been the greatest deferment to building a bridge."
don't have the personnel," Robinson said. "I should call the number of beds by order if I have longer stay."
The Med Center's shortage of nurses reflects a nationwide shortage, Robinson said. He said the Kansas City area needed about 200 or 300 more nurses.
films sua
Friday & Saturday,
April 20 & 21
JULIA
(1977)
Dir. Fred Zinnemann; with Jane
Fonda, Vanessa Redgrave, Jason
Robards. Based on a story by Lillian
Hellman. Winner of 3 Academy
Awards.
*No Friday matinee!*
(1975)
Midnight Movie SUPERVIXENS
The Festival will include 12 short animated films by Susan Piper. *Katherine* Laughlin and Sally Crulkshan (including the film 'quel' *QUACI* UTIL II TITT ACACKADERI)
Tuesday, April 24
Judy Garland
A STAR IS BORN
Monday, April 23 WOMEN'S ANIMATION FESTIVAL
Dir. Russ Meyer; with Sibi Earbank,
Charles Pasquale RATED X: AGE IDS WLL
BE CHECKED AT THE DOOR, SO BE
TO BRING THE TIME TO THE FILM
(1955)
Dir. George Cukor; with Judy Garland,
James Mason, Charles Bickford. The best of the three versions of this book is by Harold Arlen and Ira Gershwin.
Wednesday, April 25
Film Noir:
DOUBLE INDEMNITY
Dir. Billy Wilder; with Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanway, Edward G. Jackson. Screenplay written by Wilder; Marianne Heller, based on James M. Cain's novel.
(1944)
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 other noted, please 15.15 admission.
"WHEN YOU SHOOT A LOTTA POOL IN BARS, THE ONLY THING YOU WANT FILLED UP ARE THE POCKETS."
Steve Mizerak
Famous Pool Player
LITE BEER FROM MILLER.
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED
IN A BEER. AND LESS.
Use Kansan Classified
UNIVERSITY DAILY focus KANSAN
Lawrence
APRIL 20, 1979
City is more than KU
For many of the more than 23,000 students at the University of Kansas, Lawrence is that town that is spread out around the University.
The issues and conflicts that produce passion in Lawrence sometimes produce little more than a yawn from the average KU student. But while KU is the center of your universe for four years (or sometimes longer for the less fortunate), the city of Lawrence should be an equal partner in its importance to KU students.
EVERY FACET of your lifestyle while attending KU—what you do, where you go, where you live and how you live-is affected by the decisions
that are made concerning the future of Lawrence.
And that future is at a crossroads. Will Lawrence continue the rapid growth that has characterized the last few years or will it adopt a more controlled and orderly approach to expansion?
The burgeoning influence of neighborhood groups and continuing questions about zoning changes have combined to draw more students into civic affairs. Students living in the Oread neighborhood, and other students as well, realize that they no longer can afford to ignore the concerns of Lawrence. Whether for one year or four years—or longer—Lawrence is home.
Fairer representation needed on commission
Two years ago this month, the voter of Lawrence rejected by a 340-1 margin a referendum that would have changed Lawrence's present city manager-compromise form of government to a mayor-council form of government.
The move by voters is a rational one, as the mayor-council form is more suited for cities with populations of 50,000-plus population. In fact, only four cities in Kansas with populations of more than 10,000 have a mayor-council government. The largest of these, Prairie City, has 279,000 voters.
While the move to reject that type of change was a rational one, there is an irrational opposition in Lawrence to all types of change in city government. But a real need does exist for a change and it should be examined.
THE PRESENT form of government comprises five commissioners who are elected at-large from the city and who earn $900 a year for their services. One of the commissioners acts as mayor, and the other, acts as the mayor. The mayor, then, acts mainly as a figurehead.
The persons doing the actual job of running the city are the city manager, who earns somewhere in the range of $30,000 a year, and his staff.
We can believe that the system does, in fact, work nicely if we also ignore the fact that a large part of Lawrence remains unrepresented by the current system.
Of the five commissioners now serving, none is from North Lawrence. And one recently elected commissioner, Marci Francis, is the first commissioner in more than a decade from the howley student-populated Oread neighborhood just east of the KU campus.
A qualified city manager who can run the city's business is a must for the city size of Lawrence. But so is representation on the commission for all of its residents.
MOST OF THE commissioners tend to travel south and west Lawrence, as three of the first five are from North Carolina.
Despite this lack of representation, major efforts have been mounted since the mayor-council question was raised two years ago. There may be several reasons for it.
First of all, all areas such as North Lawrence, East Lawrence and the Oread community historically have had a lack of political organization. But recent efforts by such groups such as the Oread Community, the Pinkney Neighborhood Association have attempted
Mary Ernst
to make those areas more viable and more visible during political decision making.
THESE ORGANIZATIONS have all too often, however, been the only means of representation for those areas that they represent. That is because they lack equal representation on the commission or because they have no representation on it at
And efforts to change the system rarely come from the people within it.
Former Mayor Marie Argersinger said during the debate in 1977 that the possibility of commissioners elected from districts, instead of at-large, would not help the cause of representation for all Lawrence residents. Lawrence residents.
"The idea of geographical representation is a big, bad mistake," she said. "It would just lead to the councilman bickering over regional votes, and I would hate to see that. Think the other commissioners are really like me. And think I'm responsive to the people, too."
AND MIKE Wilden, assistant city manager, said, "Right now the commissioners look at what's best for the whole city. But with districts you would have that 'I'll scratch your back and you scratch mine' business."
Such arguments may be valid if the commissioners do look at what is best for the entire city, not just the interests of south and west Lawrence.
But there is some question as to how well that is done. Complaints by neighborhood groups in several areas of the city show that they are not being well represented.
In including the interests of North Lawrence in commission meetings would be a good start.
CHANGES MUST be made. Barkley Clark, Lawrence's new mayor, said recently that when Lawrence reached a city commissioner, the city commissioners by districts might work.
That wait may be a hard one for many residents of Lawrence. Representation is vital to them in their struggle to keep their areas as functioning parts of the city.
It is that struggle that must be supported by city officials and by residents of Lawrence who wish to see all members of the community served by city government.
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
(SUPS 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 weekdays. Admission is $15 for six months or $27 in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a week outside the county. A 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 60015
Editor
Harry Massey
Managing Editor
Dick Dunnett
Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Graphic Editor
Personalized Editor
Make-up Editors
Instructor
Associate Sports Editor
Wire Editors
Wire Editors
Editorial Writers
Chief Photographer
Business Manager
Karen Wendroff
Retail Sales Manager
National Advertising Manager
Classified Advertising Manager
Assessor Creatives
Advertising Make-up Manager
Staff Acquisition
Staff Photographer
Teachersets Manager
Sales Representation
Entry Massey
John Whitmore
Editorial Editor
Mary Houk
Mary Houston
Carol Hunter
Randy Glen
Randy Glen
Mary Thornbrush, Sandy Heard
John Tharp
John Tharp
Cydi Hughs, Bar Kowing, Caroline Trowbridge
Lori Lanniberg, Debbie Gele
Business Manager
Karen Wendroff
Retail Alumni
Kitty McMahon
Kitty McMahon
Jeff Kaplan
Jeff Kaplan
Dan Cavayan
Della Dolly
Brenda Paxton, Cindy Ray, Allen Reynolds, Joanne Snauth
General Manager
Rick Munster
Advertiser's
Chuck Knopf
In stark contrast to the pictureresque KU campus lies the neglected Orcad neighborhood.
Oread neighborhood needs rezoning
Too many of the Victorian structures in the neighborhood—the area east of the KU campus to Massachusetts Street and north of 17th Street to Ninth Street—have lost their aesthetic value.
The porticos, bay windows and turrets of many of the two and three-story houses have deteriorated because of their age.
Porches are cluttered with rotting wood, abandoned refrigerators, bikes, furniture and trash.
Parking space in the area is cubicle. Yard care, except for a few notable cases, is nonexistent.
More importantly, the structures provide efficient apartment units for KU students. The rent is low, but the overall quality of the units is only adequate because owners and landlords seek quantity for profits rather than prices.
BUT THE problems facing residents in the neighborhood are the same old problems of the past.
About two years ago, the Oread Neighborhood Association was formed to work with the city in areas of planning, rezoning, environmental and safety inspections and services within the neighborhood. Part of the problems then stemmed from the high residential density of the neighborhood.
Landlords and owners wish to maintain current Oread neighborhood residential zoning codes, which are the two highest density residential zoning codes, and this allow for new developments of units to be crammed into two or three-story structures.
Today, the concern of high residential density still exists, and a battle to rezone the neighborhood is being staged between owners and landlords against tenants and owner-occupants.
Philip Garcia
THEERE are a number of houses on Ohio Street that contain at least six apartments, and a three-story house with a basement on Louisiana Street has mailboxes for 15 apartments. The hallways of this structure are not
1.
equipped with smoke detectors or fire alarms, a building code requirement.
The current residential zone codes for the neighborhood allow one unit, or apartment, for 500 square feet of lot area.
The Oread Neighborhood Association, representing the interests of tenants and owner-occupants, on the other hand, wishes to rezone the area so that the density of the neighborhood would be stabilized.
A rezoning of the Oread neighborhood that would reduce the number of apartments allowed for each lot is needed.
Such action would help to improve compliance of structures in the neighborhood with the uniform building code. Such an approach would reduce neighborhood. It would reduce future conversions of houses into multi-family structures, and thus reduce the need for new construction.
"TFS A MESS up there," Gene Shaughnessy, city building inspector, said of the complaint of structures that were found in the apartment.
Shaughnessy said that the existing structures in the area were converted into multi-family units from one-family units before the current residential zone code for the Oread neighborhood was enacted in 1986.
As a result, the structures are legal as apartment dwellings but do not conform to uniform building codes for new buildings.
EFFORTS to rezone the neighborhood would stabilize the neighborhood's density or decrease the density of ewaters fed there.
MORE OVER, Shaughnessy said, his office did not have the staff or time to check if all repairs to existing structures complied with the building code. He said the growth of the area was too great for his office tocheck a particular area for repair.
Shanghuesy said if houses in the Orchend neighborhood were checked for compliance with the building codes for new structures, 80 percent would be in violation of the code, especially in areas of electrical wiring and plumbing.
Garner Stoll, of the Lawrence-Douglas County planning department, said the continued status of the Oread neighborhood had a high density zone would lead to a construction boom that would arrange the construction of more duplexes and four-plexes.
Many structures would fail to meet set back and off street parking requirements as well. One owner in the neighborhood said he knew of only two structures in the area that met requirements for fire safety.
New construction in the neighborhood, Shaughnessy said, has been in new and smaller family units such as duplexes; larger structures for more occupants would not meet building codes.
Any new repairs, and more importantly, construction,
must meet new building code standards. Thus landlords
and owners find it more profitable to continue to rent out
existing structures in a zone that allows a high density
"Zoning is never retroactive," Stoll said.
The result of renting structures as multi-family units to maximize profits is overcrowded, neglected and cluttered.
What's more, any beauty the neighborhood might have is lost in the transient status of some of the tenants and the apathy on the part of the landowners or landlords who live outside the neighborhood.
A rezoning of the Oread Neighborhood would help prevent future cramming of structures, improve chances for mandatory compliance of the building code, and ensure that new construction would house smaller family living units, all of which would help restore the beauty of what was once a Victorian neighborhood.
PLACE LOOKS
PRETTY SOUND
EH KAPUTNIK?
...KAPUTNIK?
MARTIN
THE DAILY
KANSAS
Saturday morning. No school today, but the cartoons are playing on television so you have to get up. But you really don't mind because you've been looking forward to doing all week. Now, what kind of mess all we need, Olive Oil get themselves into today.
In between a commercial and a bowl of Sugar Pops your mother informs you that she is planning to go "uptown" and asks if you're interested. Of course, the answer is yes, and with speed that even Superman would envy you're dressed and ready to go.
Oh, I remember. I remember those Saturday mornings when my big only bwry was not a jacket, and it wasn't without telling a "story," when a new pair of tennis shoes (black hightops, please) were as highly valued as gold; and when the call upstown was the promise of new adventure.
UPTOWN WAS the name that black folks where I lived called the area officially known as downtown. I'm not sure why it was called that, but when it came time to go there my younger brother and I would pledge to the car, my mother usually at the gym, only about a 15-minute drive from where we were. I'd have I don't have to wait long before the fun began.
There were stores upon stores on the two long city blocks that composed the heart of the downtown area. Montgomery Ward, J.C. and a few other big name wares were there.
On a clear day, crowds of shopers filled the sidewalks. Some just look, with some that know more.
Vernon Smith
And then there were the kids like me, in short pants and high-top sneakers, who tagged after mothers who seemed to have no sense of time.
BUT THERE was more to downtown than just following Mom. Going downtown was fun. There were lots of things to do and see, but most of it, someone might even buy you something.
For example, there was this talking mym bird in The Leader clothing store. My brother and I, while waiting for our mother to try on every outfit in the house, would spend hours fussing over it. We had quite figured out how it could talk but we did have a few theories.
During the Christmas season, upwinter was the place to be. The brightly decorated trees were a welcome addition to the occasion, not to mention Santa Claus. Penney's and Ward's had the best toy departments, and we would make it our business to present items before new镀 under the tree.
At the end of a long shopping day, if we were lucky, there was a stop at the long soda fountain in Grant's five and dime. There, a large glass bottle of soda and your today's quarter pounder, and a chocolate
malt was served in a tall glass, not in paper cups. And you could always find your car at the parking lot.
TODAY, THE uptown that I knew and loved as a kid is dead. The stores with the exciting toy departments, the Saturday morning throngs, the smartly dressed maquines and the long soda fountain have moved west, to the new indoor shopping mall.
At first the downtown merchants vowed that they would continue to operate their stores downcity. The developers' first overtures indicated that the downtown area would not be affected adversely by the new mail.
They also pay millions of dollars in state and local real estate taxes and generate an estimated 8.5 billion in sales taxes. Town have even renamed themselves after the name of a new mail. So it is no wonder that they eliminate the space that surrounds them.
But one by one, hurt by the reduction in foot traffic, the merchants were forced to pack up and business. It was either that or get busy. It was simply a matter of survival.
The shopping mall was something new to the city that had a certain mass appeal.
CONVENIENTLY located just off the great American highway, these meticulously planned and brightly conceived one-stop shopping, and turned it into a virtual one-stop culture, providing a cornucopia of products nested in an ecological ideal idea.
But mails also are powerful, so powerful that they overwhelm everything else. There is nothing strong enough to balance them. Mails use up more than 2 billion square feet of retail space. They employ more than 4.5 million people.
Malls have quietly entered—and quietly transformed—many communities, but they were a major part of the transition into new places, abused the landscape, created eyesores (deserted downtowns). They have produced chaotic traffic conditions and even disrupted local community services.
In the next few weeks Lawrence will be considering the advantages and disadvantages of having its own indoor shopping mall.
The developers already have stated that the city can support another shopping mail. The downtown merchants however, are saying otherwise. The battle lines are clearly drawn and an ensuing fight should and be expected.
Thriving downtowns have become somewhat of a novelty these days, a rare find in most cities. The trend is clearly toward the shopping mall.
But, although the malls provide almost anything one may desire, there is a certain faceless anonymity about them. Basically, you don't see anyone you've seen one mall, you've seen them all.
It would be a darn shame if Lawrence were to lose its downtown to the proposed mail. In these prefabricated times it is nice to be able to relive old memories.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 20, 1975
5
Criminal corrections could evolve operate best at KU,official says
Staff Reporter
Bv BRENDA WATSON
The University of Kansas could play an indispensable role in developing criminal corrections that could be operated in this community, Patrick McManus, Kansas secretary of corrections, said yesterday.
McManus spoke to 52 people in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union as part of a seminar and panel discussion sponsored by the Department of Education.
McManus, who opposes the death penalty, promotes the provision of alternatives to imprisonment for non-dangerous criminals. A non-dangerous criminal would not be considered a threat to a society. McManus said.
The University could help develop a theory of community corrections because "a community under the shadow of a university is perhaps the best place for the sophistication and understanding needed for such a theory to occur," he said.
"If he could be kept in the community it would be less damaging to the community and certainly less damaging to the individual," he
"The INTERACTION between students, faculty and their research capabilities would help us articulate what we're doing," he said. "Young, inquiring, bright people are a great asset toward these. They aren't willing to just accept things the way they are."
MeMansu said the prison has not changed as an institution over the years.
"It is still a large place where people removed from the community are sent to be reformed, rehabilitated, to repent, whatever."
"We would have to say that they are not successful in terms of turning the person around.
"Communities are dissatisfied with current criminal and juvenile corrections systems. We need something else."
That "something else" McManus said, is a good community corrections program which would help criminals learn to interact with young people.
"It doesn't offer a cure, but a more realistic possibility of a criminal coming back to function in society," McMansie says.
Such a program would be directed by a corrections advisory
board of private citizens and community representatives from the professions of law, education and corrections.
McMANUS SAID the promise of federal money would be an incentive for participation in such a program. The community would need to find solutions to the problem.
"You could have only one plan," he said. "You would have to decide between using the money to send the affenders to prison or to leave it on the street."
McManus used halfway-house residences as an example of community corrections.
He cited one small community in which junior college students ran a halfway house for criminals in exchange for free room and
"Their primary function was to serve as model roles for the prisoners," he said. "It was a beautiful arrangement."
"A hundred times that could be done here with so much student talent."
McManus said that community resistance to such a program would be "100 percent," but that resistance could be alleviated by taking the community's fears seriously, breaking down stereotypes and halting halfway houses in the middle of residential communities.
"ACTUALLY THESE houses are much more controlled than a fraternity house. In fact, I would much rather have a well-run halfway house than a fraternity in my community," McManus said.
But the real key to acceptance by community members is making them feel as if they own the program, McManus said.
"It has to belong to the people," he said, "otherwise there is no incentive to make it work.
"They have to believe in it, put their guts into it and be willing to work to make it successful."
McManus, appointed corrections secretary by Gov. John Carlin early this year, served as an assistant to the assistant of Corrections in Minnesota and was responsible for the additions in Minnesota Community Corrections program before coming to Kansas.
County given priorities for computer use
He was called in as a consultant on designing the Kansas Community Corrections Acts of 1872 and later was asked to assist in the construction of a new jail.
The director of the Douglas County data processing center yesterday submitted a list of priorities to the Douglas County Comptroller to increase the county's use of its computer.
The list of priorities for the data center includes the recording of traffic tickets, the general county ledger, the payroll and the registrar of the registrar of deeds onto the computer.
A priority list is submitted annually to the commission for its approval.
Jim Tate, coordinator of the data
processing center, said the county had never listed those items on the computer.
The computer, which is housed in the Lawrence Administrative Center, 2017 Louisiana St., is rented by the county, and the Lawrence School District.
According to Bob Neis, county commissioner, the county plans to put the records of the offices of the treasurer, appointee and clerk on the computer in the future.
The county has ordered four computer terminals, one of which will go to the telephone switchboard.
Presently, county records filed in the computer must first be recorded by hand and then sent to the data center to be filed into the computer.
Tate said that when the terminals were installed, time would be saved that now was
"One of the beautiful things about these terminals is that they will reduce our job as well as the money we spend."
"Some of this record keeping is so monotonic that it is ideal for a machine to
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Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
ASHC funds await vote
Solarship hall residents may not want to approve next year's ASHC budget, Lisa Schultes, All Solarship Hall Council Meeting, said at an ASHC meeting last night.
According to a budget report submitted by Schultes, increased costs in printing and mailing a summer newsletter and the insufficient funds allocated to social activities would raise residents' dues 75 cents.
Dues this year were $3.50 and have been proposed at $4.25 next year.
The report said $1,402.90 was spent for social activities, although $1,160 was for charity events.
Because the ASHC treasury had a balance of $243.34 and because $100 was
donated by an ASHC summer intern, the over expenditure was absorbed.
Schultes asked hall representatives to get hall residents' reactions to the budget, which will be voted on at the next meeting.
In other business, David Delano,
housing and contracts co-chairman, said scholarship hall residents should get more parking spaces in their hall lots next fall.
The extra spaces will be a result of a hall ID card, which will be used for identification in addition to the standard cards shown when a parking sticker for the scholarship hall lot is purchased, and only scholarship hall residents will be allowed to buy stickers
Residence halls also will be using the two-card identification system.
"The cards are well worth the money it is going to cost," Delano said.
Delano estimated the IDS would cost 10 cents each and would be distributed next week.
Students selected to live in scholarship halls next year have been notified, Ruth Beaer, selections committee chairman, said.
He said the ID cards could also be used to identify residents who attended scholarship hall parties and to help out-of-town students cash checks.
Bae said 59 men and 54 women had been selected. Nine foreign students also were
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Prof argued historic case
At a time when the seeds of racial conflict in America were beginning to grow, Paul Wilson, professor of law, found himself in a state of despair.
By DOUG WAHL
Staff Reporter
Wilson argued a case that Time magazine called the most important case to intimately affect American families since the Dred Game.
The plaintiffs were black children of elementary-school age who claimed that segregation in public schools had a detrimental effect.
The case was appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court by blacks who wanted to repeal a statute that permitted segregation in public schools.
Wilson, then a 34-year-old assistant attorney general, was sent to Washington to argue the case for Kansas only 14 days after it was filed.
After working nights and weekends to prepare his brief and oral argument, he left from Topeka on a Saturday and arrived in New York.
"I went on the train because I wanted time to think and to go over my argument," he said. "I arrived in Union Station, and there was a newsman selling papers with the screaming headline 'Legal Titans to Battle.'"
"I think this reinforced my realization of the importance of the case.
"The case was not regarded as being so monumental in Kansas then as it is now. It affected relatively few communities," he said.
"I had been receiving calls from attorneys in Southern states like Virginia and South Carolina, and I realized from their calls that to the extent they could, I would be willing."
Wilson said he was not arguing specifically for segregation, but was questioning whether policy determinations should be left up to the district.
*Segregation in public education was a vestige of human slavery.* By my own religious and ethical standpoints, this kind of overt racism is hardly an exception.
"We live in a system where power to govern is divided between the state and federal governments. The basis of my argument was that the elimination of this precedent belonged to the legislative department of the state in which the law existed.
Wilson said the U.S. Supreme Court had ordered the case to be restored to its socket and had asked attorneys to focus their attention on the issue.
*On the basis of legal precedent, on the basis of history and what were then the prevailing values in our culture, it seemed to me that the laws we are now enshrined in the Constitution
"The court was being asked to make a decision in one of the most important questions in the history of courts."
"The court asked the attorneys to focus their arguments on why Congress proposed the 14th Amendment, why the states ratified it and what they thought the impact would be on separate schools," he said.
According to Wilson, the Kansas case was tried before the Supreme Court along with four other cases on segregation from black labor. The Supreme Court held that segregation
He said it was only by chance that the appeal in the Brown decision reached the Supreme Court earlier than the other appeals.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2;1 and Acts 4;25
"SUFFERED UNDER PONTUS PILATE!" This is a statement from the Apostle's Cure: "I BELEAVE in GOD THE FATHER ALMIGHTY 'MAKER OF HEAVEN AND LORD' OF CHRIST; I BELEAVE IN GOD LORD: WHO WAS CONCINDED BY THE HOLY GHOST, BORN OF THE VIRGIN MARY, SUFFERED UNDER PONTUS PILATE . . . Probably many millions of Protestant in the Church or a House dedicated to the worship and care of God and join together in repeating The Apostle's Cure.
"SUFFERED UNDER PONTIUS PILATE!" Christ was thrilled when he saw the man with "Whence art thou ill?" But Jesus gave him no answer. Then said Pilate unto Him, Speakest Thou not unto me? Knowest thou not that I must power to crucify Thee, and have power to die."
So, in considering the meaning of "Suffered under Pontinus Pilate" note these facte: Platen had the power to crucify, or die. A reason for his responsibility and duty to execute authority one by one is that he had received Jesus' accusations and prosecutors: "I find no fault in this man, what evil hath He done?" With the power to crucify or release a person from death, he delivered Him to be crucified, nailed to the cross so, Christ Suffered under Pontinus Pilate because he had the power to crucify. In faces of men, afraid of offending Caesar and the personal loss of job, salary, etc. The mob told him Jesus claimed to be dead, but the turned Hemme loope he was not Caesar's friend. This was known.
called for a basin of water, washed his hands publicly, and thus tried to get innocent blood off his hand!
Plate tied to wash his hands of "innocent blood" and his failure to do his duty and "pass the buck" of responsibility on to the mob. But The Creed does not say Christ "Suffered under the scribes, Pharisees, and hypocrites — which is in fact who had the power to release Him but on account of fear, interest and preferment delivered Him to cruel death!"
Plate did not want the job of passing judgment on Christ, and tried to out of it by让 off in sending him to Herod, but he had taken it out of his hands as he Christian is God He said, "I, and my Father are One and same, you have the path of Penius Pilate", and I trust with true repentance, that the writer looks back over his life from the time of boyhood and notes that he must and instance when he"the walked the path of Penius Pilate". And he cannot right on account of the fear of the faces of men, or the fear of loss of one kind or another. "Ye are My witnesses", said Plate, and so he should beChristian should earnest pray that Christ might,"suffer no more under you and me" on account of our walking"the path of Pontus Pilate", and through fear or favor fail to do them. This is why he is honorable and right, regardless of the consequence.
If we fail to "Stand up for Jesus" regarding the vows we have taken to "Stand up, and regard respect and obedience to God," we risk losing our freedom from interest, and the fear of being considered peculiar, unpopular, etc., then we need not expect God's help and grace in such situations.
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Friday, April 20, 1979
7
Plan designed to improve Oread
By KATE POUND
Staff Reporter
Ald Landon and William Allen White lived there as students and professors Garruth
To the east and north of the University of Kansas is the Oread neighborhood, which has been home for thousands of KU students and faculty members since the 1800s.
The neighborhood extends from Ninth street to West Street and from Missouri Street to Massachusetts.
Today, 3,000 people, 45 percent of students, live in Oread. Residents have joined with city officials to plan the neighborhood's future.
That neighborhood plan has become a catalyst for improvements, according to Kathryn Clark, president of the 2-year-old Oread Neighborhood Association. The association is an organization of more than 200 landowners within the neighborhood's boundaries.
Some of the goals of the neighborhood plan are improved street lighting, new parking facilities, sidewalk repairs and zoning changes.
THE PLAN, developed by the city's planning office, must be approved by the Lawrence City Commission before it will be put into action. Once approved, its goals will be ranked in order of priority and Community investment money will be budgeted for them.
The planning office developed the plan after surveying Ouread residents and studying housing needs.
Downzoning won't cut the amount of housing available to students in Oread, Garner Stoll, city planner, said recently. However, because it would encourage rental property owners to improve their buildings, he said, some rents may be raised.
The plan calls for downwoning, or changing residential zones to decrease population.
"It could hurt people who need an extremely cheap place to live," he said.
Lynn Goodelli, director of the Lawrence Community Development office, agreed that if the neighborhood were downzoned, landlords would take better care of their properties. Existing buildings will not be affected by downzoning, but if a structure is torn down, the number of living units in a new building would be limited.
PART OF THE association's efforts to help this plan include the Oread Neighborhood Trust.
The program already has brought results, she said. Burglaries in Oread during this year's spring break were down 60 percent from the same week last year.
The Anti-Crime Program sponsors crime prevention classes, "Block Watch" programs and security checks of neighborhood homes to Nan Harper, the program's director.
Other parts of the Oread plan call for bicycle paths and improved sidewalks. More than half of the Oread residents walk or bike to the survey location, which is taken by the planning office.
Residents disagreed on how well the
neighborhood has been maintained and improved.
JANE STEVENES, 1123 Louisiana, said many neighborhood houses had been allowed to deteriorate. Stevens and her husband, Richard, have lived in Oread for more than 70 years and during that time, she said, the neighborhood had changed from being primarily owner-occupied homes to absentee landlord rental units.
Stevens said the neighborhood, which was called Faculty Row during the first half of the century, was still a good place to live, because of the Oread Neighborhood Association.
"It's good to see people trying to improve themselves," she said.
For some, the neighborhood's main advantage is its location.
"We moved here because we would be closer to campus." Carolyn Hall, Ells
Other students said they had been attracted by Oread's buildings.
"I'd much rather live in a big, old house than in an apartment complex. Marina Polo is one of my favorite places."
However, for some students, location and nethetics do not outweigh the disadvantage of being at home.
"I won't even consider living there now," she said.
One former Oread resident said she had left the neighborhood after she and a new neighbor bought her.
Other Oread residents complained of the noise from nearby taverns and a lack of furniture.
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Lawrence police pay raises rejected
City officials yesterday rejected a request from city police officers for a cost of living pay raise on the grounds that it violated President Carter's anti-inflation guidelines, Kevin Burt, director of the city employee relations office, said.
to increase the officers' cost of living raise to a level even with the cost of living index, officials are willing to discuss alternate proposals, Burt said.
P. O. BOX 2 / 2100 A W 25th St / 913 842 1811 / LAWRENCE KANSAS 66044
The rejection came during a meeting yesterday morning between city officials and representatives of the police officers.
"We want to continue the dialogue between the two sides," he said.
Although the city rejected the proposal
However, he said, the city officials thought they had a "moral obligation" to follow the anti-inflation guidelines. The mayor said that pay raises be held to under 1 percent.
The police officers' request would have meant an increase of more than 10 percent.
Police officers plan no specific action because of the rejection, Gary Sampson, chairman of the Lawrence Police Officers Association, said.
"At this point in time, both sides are just checking out where the other side stands," Sampson said.
Hydrogen sulfur gas leak is cleaned up
A faulty storage cylinder caused a hydrogen sulfur leak in Malott Hall Wednesday, Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry, said yesterday.
gases can't escape because they were absorbed," he said.
Bricker said the faulty cylinder would be taken back to the supplier.
Bricker said the cylinder, which stored hydrogen sulfur gases, passed no more pressure.
"With the east wind, the odor was blown in by the library as the cylinder leaked," he said.
Bricker said the freshman chemistry labs, which used minute amounts of hydrogen sulfur, had nothing to do with the leak.
The hydrogen sulfur fumes were strongest in the book stacks on Maloff's sixth-floor window.
"There are no more problems. The
doll was caught and expelled and the games
were collected in the library."
Frances Fischer, Maiolti library
"anastasia of nouns faucets were gone"
"It's been a while."
Bricker said the fumes drifted into the black stack because the cylinder was too small.
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Fridav. April 20,1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
On Campus
TODAY: Meeting all-day will be:
EDUCATIONAL PLANNING,
PROGRAMMING AND BUDGETING conference in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. KU ROTC DAY will meet all day in the Military Science Building, TRIUNIVERSITY CENTER OF Latin American Studies in the Council Room of the Union.
BLACK CAREERS DAY in Woodruff Auditorium. LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY will meet at 11:30 a.m. in Cork 1 of the Union. At noon will be the SNYDER BOOK COLLECTING CONTEST AWARDS LUNCHEON in the English Room of the Union. Also at noon the 90th ANNUAL ENGINEERING EXPOSITION in the Kansas Room of the Union. CLINIC WITH
KU COACH DON FAMBROUGH,
registration in Patrott Athletic Center.
ELMER V. MCCOLLUM CENTENNIAL
SYMPOSIUM will be held at 1:30:
STUDENT PAPER CONTEST at 1:30 p.m.
in Room 411, Malott Hall. VITAMIN B6 IN
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE lecture at
3:30 p.m. in Room 411, Seminary Field.
BILOGO CLUB at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower
Room of the Room KU FOLK DANCE
CLUB at 10 a.m. in Room 173.
RECITAL at RECITAL featuring Gron-
Carlson, trumpet, and Evelien Hoogstraten,
flute, in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy
Hall. The Elmer V. McCollum Centennial
SYMPOSIUM EVENING PROGRAM with
Donald R. Davis of the University of
Leuven, University of Louisville, at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
Attention all Pre-Physical Therapy Students.
You have a chance to become the next president, treasurer, or secretary of the physical therapy group.
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TOMORROW: The KU GUNG FU CLUB will meet at 8 a.m. at 175 Robinson, BLACK CAREERS DAY will be held from 9 a.m. to noon in the Union. A MEDIVAL TOURNAMENT will start at 10 a.m. at South Park, in case of rain it will be held at Off-the-Wall-Hall, 737 New Hampshire St. COMMUNITY AUDITIONS for the summer production of "South Pacific" will be held from 4 a.m. at Room 1600 in East GERMAN WRITERS will be held at 2 p.m. in the Forum Room, Union. STUDENT RECITAL featuring Kathy Wolfe, will be held at 3:30 p.m. at Swarthout in murphy Hall. THE DISCUSSION CLUB DINNER will be held at 7 a.m. at Student Recital featuring Jayne Casselman殷军, mezzo-soprano, at 8 p.m. in Swarthout, Murphy Hall.
SUNDAY: SAUCH HESS will be held at 1 p.m. in the Union. A LECTURE, "Courthouses of Kansas" by Julie Wortman, will be held at 1:30 p.m. in the Spencer Museum Auditorium. The students will take place at 4:30 p.m. in woodwulf Auditorium, Union, a Banquet will follow. The Lawrence Host Family FAREWELL PICNIC, 5:30 p.m. at the Eugene Nunemaker Farm Route 4, Lawrence SUABACK MUSEUM, 6:30 p.m. at the Parsons. STUDENT RECITAL featuring John Kelley, cellist, will be at 6 p.m. in Swarthout, Murphy Hill.
Regents to vote on wood boiler
The Kansas Board of Regents today will vote whether to request legislative funds to study the addition of a wood-burning boiler and a new insulation for the boiler was made by KU officials.
A wood-burning power plant would be the best temporary solution to KU energy problems, William Smith, professor of engineering, said recently.
By DAVID SIMPSON
Staff Reporter
"A first step toward the resolution of RU energy problems would be the installation of a high-efficiency generator."
Smith said the wood burning boiler would be a low-cost alternative to enable the University of Kansas to survive a shutoff of oil and rag.
Smith's proposal calls for the wooburning plant to be built next to the existing power plant, which is south of Flint Hall. The plant could supply KU with power if there were problems with the existing system, he said.
"The total cost for the wood-burning plant would be $1.5 million." he said.
"THE AREA IN which the new plant would be built is fairly well screened from view." Smith said. "With judicious land preparation, it will impact of the new plant would be minimal.
Plans call for the construction of a wood
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storage facility in the West Campus area, and a silo in the area next to the existing power plant. Wood would be stored on West Campus and would be handled by trucks to the silo. When needed, a conveyor belt would be moved from the silo to the wood-burning plant.
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"When being used at capacity, ten trailer loads of wood would be required for the plant every 24 hours," he said. "The truck runs could be scheduled in the period from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. and would cause minimal traffic problems. The silo would have a storage capacity so weekend operation of the wood run would not be necessary."
Rodger Oroke, director of Facilities Operations, said that although he had not studied the plans, he was skeptical about a problem because of problems with the truck route.
"ONE OF THE problems would be interaction with the traffic around Robinson College," he said. "The problem is the mess we'd have because of the trucking and handling of the wood."
Oroke said hauling wood or litter always made a mess.
"Whatever route that might be chosen would require considerable attention to planning and execution," she said. "The streets would have problems similar to the ones leading to the landfill that is now north of Lawrence. Debris would be all over and there would be a general increase."
"Wood is not as obsoulous as the garbage that is hauled to the sanitary ladders.丛林 is not as obsoulous as the garbage that is hauled to the sanitary ladders."
Smith said the trucks that would haul the wood to the plant would be equipped with special trailers to prevent debris from falling into the streets.
The wood burned in the plant would come from the waste wood of the sawwels that were used as a fuel.
XXXXXXXXXX
GETTING WASTE wood from sawnmills is less expensive than chopping your own trees for wood." he said. "At full load, the baker will do it in 20 minutes or 15,000 units or 15,000 units for the three winter months.
Studies indicate there are 15,000 tons of concrete every year within 64 miles of Lawrence.
Smith added, however, that it was difficult to predict the long-term availability of these batteries.
"Declining supplies and increasing cost of gas and oil will increase the demand and thus the price of wood," Smith said. "It is estimated that in the three county area of Douglas, Franklin and Jefferson are at least 175,000 tons of coal and dead wood removed for optimal forest management. The saw mills would be happy to get rid of it."
Smith said that if funds were appropriated, it probably would take less than one year to complete construction. The other question is the chances of the funds being appropriated.
"AS LONG AS we can buy natural gas and oil, the Legislature will not be receptive to any energy proposals," he said. "I'm not optimistic about the approval of the plan until something happens, like shutting down the University for lack of energy."
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 20,1979
9
Students protest Somoza
By LAURIE WOLKEY Staff Reporter
While Mauricio Solan, former United
American ambassador to Nicaragua, spoke to
the delegation of the President of
Nicaragua.
yesterday, student protesters marched outside the Union to protest against the
About 20 protesters, carrying signs that said, "Nicaragua, the future Nicaragua," and
STOP
ARMING
SOMOZA'S
REGIME
SOMOZA'S REGIME
Staff photo by CHRIS TODD
Tired protester
It was a long afternoon for 18 month-old Claire Stewart, despite being carried during the day in front of the Kansas Union by her mother, Ruth. The protesters marched to show opposition to the death penalty.
marching in a large circle in front of the Union, said they opposed to Somova's invasion.
Anastasia *Sonoma*, the long-time president of Nicaragua, recently toured the
But according to the protesters, Nicaragua aircraft were bombing major cities in Nicaragua during Somoza's visit to the United States.
Rhonda Neugebauer, a member of the KU Latin American Solidarity Committee, said the march was organized to coordinate with Solaun's lecture. However, Negebauer said, the march was "not about the lecture, but about the issue."
The issue, protesters said, was Somora's dictatorship in Nicaragua and the United States.
IN RECENT MONTHS, demonstrators said, Nicaraguaans participated in two general strikes against Somoa's government and more than 60,000 citizens were forced to flee Nicaragua to neighboring countries.
The protesters also blamed the United States for supporting the Nicaraguan government.
According to a leaflet distributed by the Latin American Solidarity Committee, "The main objective of the U.S. imperialism in Nicaragua has been to provide a stable outpost of regional domination and security for the Panama Canal and Central America. Economic interests are also a key to U.S. investment in the internal affairs of this country."
Neubeauger said, "The United States is keeping Somoza in power."
The committee's leaflet says, "Although direct foreign investment in Nicaragua is modest even by Central American standards—about $130 to $170 million, three-fourths of which comes from the United States—it remains a lack of mineral resources and the breadth of Somoa's own control have made it a secondary haven for U.S. capital."
ALTHOUGH THE Latin American Solidarity Committee sponsored the march, the committee had the support of several other student group members.
One member, who asked not to be identified, said he was a member of the Iranian government.
"Our struggle is one with Nicaragua. Somoza called the shah his good friend. Our enemy is both and so our struggle is the same," the student said.
While marching, the protesters chanted,
"No more Somoa!" and "CIA out of Nairobi."
One marcher, Ruth Stewart, carried her 18-month-old daughter on her shoulders during the demonstration. Stewart said she looked like a child and had heard about the march from friends.
Two other protesters, Miguel Umena and Jorge Valverde, both special students from San Jose, Costa Rica, said they joined the protests last month and opposed to the Nicaraguan government.
"IN ANY PLACE we find a regime, it is important to fight for freedom. Umena nama
About five plain-clothes KU policemen watched the demonstration from a distance, holding a flag.
The march, which lasted about an hour,
attracted about 15 onlookers.
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10
Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Photos tell stories of the ordinary
By JUDY WOODBURN
Staff Renorter
In a darkened room, the photographs float in black and white succession on the floor.
Click. The knobby, veined hands of an old woman carass the smooth, rounded cheeks
Click. A 17-year-old unwed mother talks,
nosedouse with her tiny son.
Though black and white, and motionless,
the pictures seem real. The people seem
It is because photographer Chris Johns finds news in everyday people.
Johns, a photographer for the Topkea Capital-Journal, was recently awarded "Press Photographer of the Year" by the National Press Photographer's Association. The University of Missouri School of Journalism and the Nikon Corporation.
"I'M TRYING TO overcome a common misconception of many journalists—that the bizarre things are news. There's news in the most ordinary things," he said.
In an awards presentation slide show, shown yesterday to KU photography students, John questioned his role as a journalist and photographer.
"Is it right to photograph a daughter while her father burns to death in their house?"
"Is it right to exploit people for the sake of a picture?"
"Is it right that for several days I am
Although the intimacy and sensitivity of the photographs seem to provide their own wordless justification, Johns himself can answer the questions in a different way.
incredibly close to someone and then am
gone, never to see them again?"
"You've got to decide if the message a photograph will offer to the community is
Although he admitted it was a rather "nebulous" goal, Johns said he hoped to make the community a better place to live in through his photographs.
"YOU DO THAT by allowing people to see the humanity in real life—everyday life."
Though still and silent, the faces in the slide show seem willing, somehow, to tell
"It's not enough for a picture to be dramatic or well-composed," Johns said. "If it doesn't tell the real story, it's no good."
Johnsa said he considered himself a journalist and a storyteller, first, and a writer.
"I JUST HAPPEN to use a camera to express myself," he said.
For John, the only difference between a photographer and a writer is that they use the same word.
He said he had written about 75 percent of the feature stories that had accompanied him.
"I it's incredible what people will tell you as a journalist," he said. "They open up to it."
Which means well take a little extra time to fuse over you and make you feel right at home. So more of the good things you go out for are really right here. At COUNTRY KITCHEN*
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Where you're no stranger and neither are we.
A story titled "The Shortest Season",
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strangers with things they might not even save to their wife or husband."
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"I just thought the people of the community should see what the jail is like," he
During his four years on the Topeka Capital-Journal, John's photographs have told the stories, both humorous and deprecating, of "unheard of people."
johns, who is originally from Oregon, said
nobody in the world was it easier to take
over
And "Looking Between the Bars" shows the life of prisoners confined to the Shawnee
"TOO MANY PHOTOGRAPHERS spend their time fiding around in basement darkrooms, not thinking in terms of news," he said. "Photographers are lucky only because they increase their chances of safety, by being out actively doing things."
If you can't take pictures of people here, you can't take them anywhere," he said.
But people do not just jump in front of John camera, begging to have their picture taken.
"I hope I'm a lot better than at 56," he said. "I said to hate think I opened out at 27."
Already Press Photographer of the year at 27, John wishes to be slightly more lucky
But for Johns, there's always room for improvement.
Kansans quiet about nukes
MORE OF WHAT YOU GO OUT FOR.
If Kansans are worried about nuclear energy because of the accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant, they are not telling their legislators in Washington.
Although a flurry of congressional hearings and legislation followed the March 28 nuclear incident, which resulted in the death of six people, congressional legislators have remained uninvolved.
A poll of the offices of Kansas' two senators and five representatives indicated that the amount of mail on the subject of nuclear power had not changed.
"We thought we'd be deluged, especially with Wolf Creek (nuclear power plant) there. But the amount of mail has been unusually small," Katz said.
Sen. Bob Dole has received only 20 letters about nuclear energy since the Three Mile Island incident, Bill Katz, Dole's press secretary, said.
congressman have not received more than the usual amount of mail on nuclear power. The legislators have received letters from constituents, according to representatives from the legislators' office.
Rep. Dan Glickman is the only Kansas legislator who has been active in the nuclear debate.
Glickman has asked President Carter to appoint a full-time inspector from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to every nuclear power plant in the United States. There are 70 operating plants and 92 under construction.
Sen. Nancy Kassebaum and Kansas' five
Bill Beachy, Glickman's executive assistant, said the request was prompted because the NRC now has only 20 full-time nurses for the nation's nuclear power plants.
McCollum to be commemorated
A symposium commemorating the 100th anniversary of the birth of E.V. Mcolm, a chemist who attended the University of Illinois and the universities in the field of nutrition, will be today.
Some of McCollum's greatest contributions to science were his use of rats for experimental studies and his proof of the existence of vitamin A.
1975
As part of the symposium, six students will present chemistry papers from 1:30 p.m. until 3:30 p.m. in room 641, Malott Hall. At 3:30 p.m. Emmond E. Sull, professor of microbiology at the University of Texas, will speak in room 411, Summerfield Hall.
Chancellor Archil R. Dykes will present the undergraduate research award at 8 p.m. Tuesday, April 25th.
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Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
11
Plan . . .
From page one
amount of square feet proposed by Jacobs,
Viscosi and Jacobs for the Lawrence
Clark said he thought traffic tie-ups and accidents were two of the worst results of the project.
"We've had a nightmare of traffic accidents and bottlenecks," he said.
He said the downtown economy was badly hurt by the regional mall, but that it was one of the biggest signs of economic recovery.
CLARK AND Sebastion Deillippus, director of the city-county planning commission in Rockford, Ill., population 150,000, helped secure the JVL marts outweighed the benefits.
DeFilippa said he thought the Rockford mall, Cherry Vale, hurt the town's central park.
"People's shopping habits changed," he said. "The competition of the new mall was too strong. Even if you have an adequate downtown, the mall will still shift business away from downtown because of its newness and novelty."
He said some downtown shops relocated at the mall, which opened in 1973, while others left and vacated the downtown. The business is now at Cherry Vale, he said.
"We haven't seen our downtown revitalize itself," he said. "A lot of money is being pumped into downtown, a lot of government buildings built there, but the trick hasn't been done yet."
"Retail stores haven't recovered. I doubt if anybody will ever see a downtown
like it was in the past; I don't think it will reestablish itself."
The community itself was harmed, DeFillippis said, because of the mall's extensive use of city streets, sewers and water.
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"THAT WAS to cause a detrimental effect for the city," he said.
John Bates, executive vice president of the Elyria, Ohio, Commerce and Industry Association, said he thought that a regional emphasis on water-based essential utilities such as water and sewer
"of course the mail will push the city that much closer to the time when we run out of it."
But he added that he thought that overall the Jacobs, Visconsi and Jacobs mail. Mall of America could be the city. The Elyria downtown, he said, was not part of the city, even though most of the retail stores either relocated or closed down in order to mail. Elyria has a population of 60,000.
"The downtown has a different function now," Bates said. "When the larger retail stores went out to the mail, non-business offices moved over the city. They are essential parts of the city."
He said there currently were no large retail stores in the downtown area.
And citizens of Euclid, Ohio, population 63,000, also were pleased with the overall benefits provided by their Jacobss, Viscions and Jacobs development, Euclid Souare.
NANCY OLDS, assistant director of the Euclid Chamber of Commerce, said the impact of the mail on the downtown district "was not all that bad."
"Some stores had to close, but what was moved out to is almost 100 percent replenished," she said. "We still have a lot of traffic downtown. At first, everyone was attracted to the newness of the mail, but now it's back to normal."
Although the downtown was at first nervous at the mail proposal, they now have
"We felt we didn't have the services we needed," she said. "We had to go to Cleveland to get what we wanted. Now, we're in Baltimore on a small call, including those downtown shops."
Oids said the city of Euclid was pleased by the efficiency and integrity of Jacobs, Vincenzo.
changes it produced, Olds said. The citizens of Euclaid, she said, accepted the mail from the town.
"THEIR MALL had a most drastic effect on our downtown area," he said. "Now, 'It's not just a city; it's one of us' across the country. It's trying to revitalize itself, but it's tough when you have to go
Even though Jacobs, Viscini and Jacobs enjoy a good working relationship with most of their customers, the results of their efforts are still not as good as an associate plan for Canton, Ohio, said.
Potter said that many downtown stores relocated at the Belsen Village Mall and that development in the mall area "just went wild.
"You wouldn't believe how it's changed in two years time." he said.
"I would have to say it definitely was bad for the city overall," he said. "The mall itself is beautiful, just beautiful, but it's producing detrimental side effects."
Everyone in Canton eventually may benefit by the boom produced by the mail, Potter said, but the current effect is a harmful one. Canton's population is 185,000.
The effects of a Jacobs, Viscosi and Jacobs mall in Lexington, Ky., population 212,000, has been to move the central retail area of downtown to the south part of the
Frank Thompson, director of planning services in Lexington, said the Fayette Mall had caused a number of downtown shops to shut their doors.
"I don't think the downtown will ever again be a major retail area," he said.
Malls...
From page one
Jacobs, Visciona and Jacobs also could run into some opposition in Stevens Point, New York.
ACCORDING TO David Medin, building inspector in Stevens Point, downtown merchants generally are opposed to having city centers outskirts of the cities, population 25,000.
"The city would prefer to have the mall downtown," Medin said. "However, the one downtown would take a lot of money. Land to be bought to be bought and cleared of buildings."
And Jacobs, Viscensii and Jacobs faces competition from another development company that has proposed building a mall in the city. The company wants to build its mall downtown.
In constrain to its plans for most other cities, Jacobs, Vusconsi and Jacobs plans to build downstream in Wauuau. Wis. The mayor of this city his city was willing to pay to have the mail.
"The company agreed to go downstairs with the mall." John Kamenberg, the manager of a local town, said. "The developers have come in before we had to put malls in on the outskirts of town, and I've veted them. Jacobs are fine developers and good people to work with. Its app is going
KANNENBERG SAID a referendum on the mall had been held April 3. Of the 81 percent who turned out, 62 percent voted to have a $15 million in bonds issued by the city to buy land for the mall and to build parking lots by leasing the mall to be leased by Jacobs, Viscounts and Jacobus.
Jacobs, Viscason and Jacobs will spend about $25 million building the man, Kanu.
He said there had not been much opposition to the mall among the merchants in Wausau, population 33,000, with a metropolitan population of 65,000.
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Backstage Pass
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Positions are available this spring and fall for college seniors and graduate students with degrees in Math, Physics, Chemistry, and Engineering (U.S. citizenship, under the age of 28) to teach college and graduate level courses at the Navy's Nuclear Power School in Orlando. Florida An excellent benefit package is included and no teaching experience is required.
Contact Ed Gunderson, in Lawrence, at (913) 841-4376 (collect) or write:
Navy Programs
610 Florida Street
Lawrence, KS 68044
BURGUNDY HOUSE
A FREE Dress Shirt and Tie . . .
Whether it be for social wear, for interviews, business, or
graduation your total wardrobe is very important We would like to help . . . with any suit purchase now through May 13th, we'll give you a free dress shirt and tie (a $32.00 value) to help complete your outfit.
Whitenight's
Town Shop
TEACHERS WANTED
FYI SOB
(for your information; same old bureaucracy ... or maybe it isn't
The Student Assistance Center is now located in 121 Strong Hall
Bocky's
Stop by before or after the KU Relays for a delicious Burger topped off with a delicious treat from our Dairy Bar
We are available Monday thru Friday from 8 to 12 and 1 to 5 to assist individuals and groups with: academic skill enhancement; personal management and adjustment issues; personal problems; services for non-traditional students; services for students with disabilities; information on sexuality; and other issues as they occur
Feel free to stop by or call 864-4064 as you need information and/or assistance.
BULL RIDER
Bucky's
2120 W. 9th
Participate in the
Intramural Wrestling Tournament
Saturday and Sunday, April 28-29,
in Robinson South gym.
Deadline for entry is 8:30 am on Saturday.
Weigh-in will begin at 8:30 am on Saturday and 9 am on Sunday. Matches start at 10 am.
All wrestlers must attend a safety clinic in the South Gym, Saturday at 9 am.
Tournament rules, weight classes, and entry forms are available in Recreation Services, 208 Robinson.
98
Relays Weekend Special
Rainbow Trout with Toasted Almonds and Herb Butter
served over Rinse Pistol
Trout Almondine $5.50
The Kansas Relays Represent A Great Tradition.
The Eldridge House Has A Tradition Of Fine Food And Service.
Enjoy The Finest Eating Atmosphere In Lawrence Tonight.
ALL YOU CAN EAT
SUNDAY BRUNCH
$4.75 per person
Another Missouri city, Springfield, also has raised little opposition to a proposed policy.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO ADD GRATUITY TO PARTIES OF EIGHT OR MORE.
"A question has been raised about the effect it would have on traffic," he said. "Other than that, no one has gotten into much discussion about it."
The Eldridge House
701 Massachusetts (913)841 4666
According to John Eastbarn, planning associate, downtown merchants have had little to say about Jacobs, Visconsi and Jacobs' proposed city for the city.
EASTBURST SAID the company had submitted a zoning request and a proposal to build a mail on the east edge of the city to receive mail. The proposal would be July before any action would be taken.
"There have been private and public funds spent on the downtown," Rosser said. "I'm surprised there hasn't been more opposition to the mail."
"I say there are about 80 businesses here and 45 percent are for the mail," he said.
A proposed mall for Fairborn, Ohio, has not had much opposition because the mall would not have a negative impact on the city, said Ray Unterburger, chief engineer for Development Co., which is planning the mall with Jacobs, Viscusi and Jacobs.
UNTERBURGER SAID, "Fairburger is an ideal location. There is no developed shopping area in the city now. The mall will surround around which the city can develop."
Fairborn, population 37,000, is 15 miles east of Dayton. The land for the proposed mall already has been zoned for commercial development.
"The downtown merchants aren't very
he said 'And the downtown is
pretty."
In Clarksville, Tenn., Jacobs, Viscounts and Jacobs had little opposition when it reenclosed 100 acres of land three months ago. In 2014, the director of planning in Clarkville, sand
He said downtown Clarksville consisted of banks, law offices and city offices. Clarksville, population 57,000, is the only city in the county, he said.
The mail, to be built on the northeast edge of town at the intersection of two highways, would be competition for St. Joseph's downtown, which has a three-block
The request was approved by the city council and the county commission, both of which had jurisdiction because the land was partly in the city and partly in the county.
There has been a surprising lack of opposition to a proposed Jacobs, Vissiomi and Jacobs mail on the outskirts of St. Joseph, according to Richard Rossiter, city planner.
pedestrian mail. The mail was built in the early 1900s to help revitalize the downtown.
one REASON for the township to oppose could be that the city of 80,000 knowledge of the plans for a mall from the local agent of Jacobs,Viscosi and Jacobs recently applied for rezoning of the proposed site, Rosalier said.
Eastburn said there were "more and more visible buildings" in the downtown of the city.
"But they ve redone the downtown into a pedestrian mall," he said. "Some stores are active now. Also, a state office building was built. We hope it will revitalize the area."
The University of Kansas Theatre Announces
Auditions for the Town/Gown Production of South Pacific
Saturday, April 21 1:00-400 p.m.
(Callbacks: Sunday, April 22 1:00-4:00 p.
102 Murphy Hall (Band Room)
South Pacific will be performed during July
with rehearsals in the evening; in June
Come to the auditions with music prepared to sing selections from Broadway musicals. An accompaniment will be provided. Please wear clothing comfortable to dance in as dance auditions may be included.
Fox further details, contact Dr. Tew Rea University Theatre/864-3944
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Hillcrest
12
Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Recruiting is link to basketball
In the middle of the Kansas Relays and spring football, at the start of major league baseball, during the beginning of horseracing and during the NBA playoffs and the fight for the Stanley Cup, one thing gives the great sports stabilizer—college basketball.
That thread is recruiting. After the Salt Lake City games, and even before, most of the nation's coaches who weren't at the game were in town to get there next year. They weren't diagramming new plays or building new gyms, they were recruiting for all they needed.
In hopes of bolstering sagging programs and cementing successful programs, coaches made airlines or private jet connections to students. They pleaded, cailed, complimented and convinced high school and junior college basketball players to sign with their teams.
NEVER BEFORE, except perhaps for the military draft, has so much interest been shown in 18-year-olds and in some even younger.
More than 250 schools wrote KU's big catch, Ricky Ross, Kentucky's top recruit, Sam Bowie, received more than 400 letters. After the letters come the personal visits
PETER PATRICKS
Campus Vets
SHORTS and LONGS
Spring Party
Lake Clinton
Highway 40
Sat.
April 21
Food, Beer
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paid for by
Campus Vets
SUDDENLY, THE information I had learned about the battle for Bowie, which included such items as luring Wil Chamberlain back to Lawrence to convince Bowie to play against him. I was given and giving a helicopter tour of campus, complete with a touch down in front of cheerleaders and a pep band, was one of the highlights in the in the Hess was angry to play basketball.
And that's important. Ross should help KU's program, at least from the aspect of student recruitment.
Kansan, as Sutton is, had Ross thinking to north Carolina. So in one night his last night he was a teammate.
John P. Tharp
Just when I was figuring Eddie Sutton had lured Ross to fill Stilemon's镍牌 at a Arkansas, Ross played in an all-star game with Antoine Cairn, a 6-9 Wichita State catch, and announced WSU was back on his list for the national championship. Gregory Kelseer and Earvin Johnson, could win a national championship. But then, North Carolina's coach Dean Smith, an old
to the athletes home. Coaches can do this three times. After that, a prospect can visit up to six schools interested in him at the schools' expense.
And a better program means better basketball. Collegiate basketball, especially around here, has a tremendous following. It can get bigger.
After all this, a prospect makes up his mind. On or after the annual letter of intend day, prospects become recruits, although they've still technically resumed their training and attend regular practice or they enroll. The tricky part is getting that signature.
FOR MORE THAN a month I've been in a game of information volleyball with readers, sources, athletes, other sports writers and a few coaches about who is signing here, and when. Ross particularly generated the most interest after KU failed to nab either Bowie or Ralph Samson. Samson may be a different case because he was drafted into the pros. But it's time consuming trying to second an 18-year-old.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)—If the Kansas City Kings are to even their best-of-seven NBA playoff series with the Phoenix Suns to 1-tighton, a lot depends on Sam Lacey.
And Lacey, who is the Kings' captain and a veteran of one other playoff stint, knows it.
"You hear talk about other centers." Kings' coach Cotton Fitzsimmons said. "But they're not in the playoffs. Sam's one of them. He's got it. You've not mentioned that's all. He does his job."
AND EVEN though the Suns came from behind to win the opening game of the series, 102-99, Tuesday night in Phoenix, Laconey held Suns 'center Alvin Adams to 10 points, six rebounding while scoring 10 points, grabbing 12 rebounds and blocking five shots.
Lacey key to Kings' comeback
DRINK &
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Guys—$3 Girls—$2
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708 Massachusetts
Third Annual
KU ROTC DAY
April 20,1979
Declared by Chancellor Dykes to recognize the achievements of ROTC and its support of the University of Kansas
Displays Rapelling Demonstrations Information Military Science Building Friday,8-4:30
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"He's involved with everything," Lacey said. "Everything they usually run off the offense comes to him, and he's looking for cutters. So if you can take him out—if he wants the at 15 and you can make him to at 30--it's got to make a difference."
been in the league nine seasons, knows if the Kings want to stay around longer this time, a lot will depend on his performance against Adams.
"I felt we contained him," Lacey said.
"The way he plays, they have a lot of screens set for him. So you have to get a lot of help on him."
I would try to make things really tough for him. I would really like to deny him the power.
THE LAST TIME the Kings were in the
wheel, the last time they came to the
Chicago Cubs, the Los Angeles Lakers who
KU in five-game weekend series
The Kansas baseball team opens an important conference series this afternoon with a double-header against the University of Missouri in Columbia. The teams will play another two conference games with a non-conference contest on Sunday.
KU needs to win the conference games this weekend. The 'Hawks are last in the eastern division of the Big Eight with a 5-3 record. Missouri and Iowa State are tied for second at 6-2, and Nebraska leads with a 7-1 record. The two top teams in the division at the end of the season advance to the Big Eight tournament in Oklahoma City.
Terry Sutcliffe and Dan St. Clair are
expected to start on the mound for the Jayhawks today, and Kevin Kerschen and Clay Christiansen probably will start tomorrow.
MATT GUNDELFINGER who has been sidelined for the past week with a sprained ankle, should see some action against the Tigers. He pinch-hit once Wednesday when the Gaels City Royals in an exhibition game but softer afterwards that he had reinjured the ankle.
Missouri is 30-8 on the season, with a 23-
game home winning streak. KU is 23-6-1.
Win A
Doobie Brothers Backstage Pass
The Jayhawks' next home game will be April 24, against Washburn University.
CONTACT SUA FOR DETAILS
Greatbriar's
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Celebrate Spring
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April 28, 1979
9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
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Featuring: The Original Artists
Refreshments will be provided. Admission is free
for all hall residents and their guests. Tickets are
available today through 4/28 at your hall desk.
Semi-formal or formal dress is appropriate.
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Refurbished stadium set after lengthy preparation
By BARB KOENIG
And time—lots of it—is what Norm Stuart and his crew put in to prepare Memorial Stadium for this year's $9th annual Kansas Relays.
Sports Writer
After all, it takes a lot of time to paint 160 hurdles—two weeks to be exact.
Stuart, KUAC maintenance foreman,
and his six-member crew began Relays
for the first time in the basketball
season. In addition to preparation,
Field House for basketball games,
Stuart's crew painted hurdles, built an
aircraft stands and repaired other
装备。
"We always try to get started during Christmas break." Stuart said. "We have to. If we don't, we don't get enough done."
ALL THINGS considered, getting ready for this year's Relays was not much different from any other year, but the lack of cooperation from Mother Nature.
"If we wouldn't have had the bad weather, we could have had more done sooner," he said. "But 'I've got a great师.' That that's why we've thready means."
Trying to ready Memorial Stadium itself for one of the most coveted Relays is no easy task. Stuart said.
Because the Relays are the first event held in Memorial Stadium since football season, clearing away the cobwebs and leaves is necessary. Workers used big blowers to clean up piles of leaves and trash that were nestled in the stands from the field.
Concession stands and bathrooms also had to be cleaned. The water had to be turned on and a special training area had to be built in the east dressing room. A snow fence to mark off the judges area and reserved seating had to be installed.
CREW MEMBERS also spent a great deal of time painting the track and installing aluminum curbing along the side of the first lane to keep runners on the track.
Last minute details included mowing the fields, removing the near goal post, dumping trash and cleaning the field and tomorrow's events are rained out.
LOVE RECORDS AND TAPES
LOVE
Stuart said the remodeled press box also would be easier to keep clean this year.
STUART SAID these wood stands, made especially for the Relays, previously were nailed to the stadium bench seats. The benches were replaced with aluminum benches during the renovation, workers had to make special braces to secure the benches to the floor.
Although the majority of the work for the Relays has been done, Stuart and his crew still have much to do.
Paraphernalia 842-3059 15 W. 9th St.
THIS YEAR, remodeled dressing rooms made it feasible for a training area, formerly a big outside tent, to be moved inside the east dressing room. Crew members partitioned the dressing room so that half of the area could be used by women and the other half could be used by women athletes. The men will use the west dressing room.
One thing the renovation did not improve was the securing of stands for the judges and announcers.
In past years, the final days of the Relays has continually been rained out, forcing the high jump, long jump and the pole vault to be moved to the field house.
Stuart said he and his crew spent all day and part of the night down at the stadium to be on hand for any emergency and to clean up after each day's events.
Although the $1.8 million stadium renovation did not make Relays preparations any easier, Stuart said, the stadium is a lot nicer to keep in.
The renovation, which began last spring, forced the Relays to be held outside of Memorial Stadium for the first time in the history of the competition. Events were at the University of Oklahoma, Shawnee Mission East High School, Haslam College, Indianapolis College and Emperor State University. The marathon was in Lawrence.
But all good things come to an end. And even though the end of the Reliys will mean a massive clean up job, it also signal some relief for Stuart and his family.
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"As soon as this is over, we will go back to five days of work," Stuart said. "We won't know how to act."
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Our Free Catalog has many more details available, even on prints on the website. You can buy our prints by buying our book at 815.176.2355 or 902.429.2355 now how to buyurt in 815.176.2355 PA42 029.2355 St. Johnstown. PA42 129.2355 St. Johnstown.
KU BAND MEMBERS 1978-79 Annual Spring Formal Banquet Sunday, April 29, 6:30 p.m. Union Ballroom
PROGRAM:
Band Awards Slide Show of KU Band History Other Entertainment
Prepaid to those paying fall band fee. $6.00 all others including guests family and friends. Sign up for all reservations and get tickets in Band Office, Room 214, Murphy no later than Wednesday, April 25.
---
"BECOMING TO NOW IN THE WORLD!"
The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series
Presents
The Mirecourt Trio
3:30 p.m.Sunday, April 22 & 8:00 p.m.Monday, April 23
Swarthout Recital Hall/Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats general admission for $4 KU students with ID will be admitted for $2 Limited tickets available for Sunday's concert Call 913/864-3982 for reservations
University Daily Kansan
13
ACKSTON
ORU
314
Staff Photo by ALAN ZLO (k)
Long distance
Ronald Frizeke of Oral Roberts University leads a group of runners in the Billy Mills 10,000-meter run yesterday. KU's Kendall Smith trials Frizeke and at least two other runners. Frizeke placed third behind two runners from Wyoming, Smith, KU's only entry in the event, did not place in the top eight places.
Bird loses NCAA scoring title
MISSION (UPL) - Lawrence Butler of Idaho State edged out Indiana State's Larry Bird for the national scoring title in NCAA Division I for the 1978-79 season.
In final statistics released yesterday by the NCAA, Butler won the title with an average of 30.1 points a game and Bird, who led Indiana State to a second-place finish in the NCAA tournament, finished second with 28.6 points a game average.
Bird also finished fourth in the country in rebounding with an average of 14.0 g game.
Other individual titles went to Monti Davis of Tennessee State for a 16.2 a game rebounding average; Murray Brown of Florida for field goal percentage and Darrell Mauldin of Campbell for free throw percentage.
Team titles went to Nevada-Las Vegas for offense; Princeton for defense; Syracuse for scoring margin; UCLA for field goal percentage; St. Francis Pa. for free throw percentage; and Alcorn State for rebound margin.
10 records broken in juco division
Sports Writer
Bv BRETT CONLEY
Golden Valley, Minn., athletes set six meet and three national records as a total of 10 meet records were broken yesterday in Kansas. The Kansas Reyals at Haskell Stadium.
The three national records set by Golden Valley came in the women's $400-yard relay, the women's 100-meter hurdles and the women's 200-meter dash.
Delene Hawkins, Terrie Snoody, Kim Watts and Joan Marin combined in the 440-yard relay to post a 49.09 clocking that beat the record of 49.46.
Hawkins took part in her second national record of the day as she won the 100-meter hurdle in 15.1 seconds, smashing the old record of 15.4 seconds.
Watts got in on the record setting for a second and third time when she won the 200-meter dash in 25.18, which snapped the old record of 26.34. Her record was in 25.12. Her heat met the old mark of 12.4.
GOLDEN VALLEY's two more marks were in the high jump, where Dave Trost scored 6-11-4 in the men's finals and Kim Ganzer went 5-4 in the women's finals.
Trost's jump broke the record of 64 which he held with two other people, and Ganzer's jump was four inches higher than the old woman's mark.
The four other meet records came in the men's triple jump and spring medley relay and the women's 400-meter hurdles and two-mile relay.
Gerald McNair of Forest Park, Mo., won the triple jump easily with a lap of 48-7. His nearest competitor was over two feet behind him and finished finishes beat or tied the old record of 48.
THE JACKSON, MICH., spring medley relay team of Andre Lawson, Mark Brown, Ricardo Hawkins and Dana Houston nipped Cloud County as its time of 3:26.1 lowered the old record of 3:26.6. Cloud County's 3:26.2 also was under the old mark.
Debbie Sobakta of Dodge City combined for two meet records as she turned in a time of 1.07 l. in the women's 400-meter hurdles to beat the record by half a second and also ran a leg on Dodge City's victorious two-mile relay team.
Other members of Dodge City's two-mile relay were Jamet Wilson, Glenda Stewart, and Juanita Neff. Their time of 9:34:7 beat the old mark by nearly 23 seconds.
Golden Valley coach Slev Legreb said he was surprised by his team's performance.
Also, matters were not helped, Legreb said, when his team did not arrive in Lawrence until 5 a.m. yesterday because of car trouble.
LEGREB SAID that it was only the third outdoor meet of the season for Golden Valley and that at last week's meet in Minnesota, that was still snow on the infield.
"I was somewhat surprised with our 440- yard relay because it is an early meet for us," Legreb said, "but I don't think they are close to their peak.
"And Trot only started jumping at the end of March because he was playing basketball. I was hoping he was going to clear seven feet. If he would have been at the stadium and had a better runway, I have no doubt he would have cleared seven feet."
DISC-MUS. WINDSOR
3, 2, J.B. Fayburn, Garden City, 146, 3, David Jones,
151.
Haskell results
JUNIOR COLLEGE DIVISION
DISCUSS-WOMEN'S 1. J. Randle Rogers, Barton County.
2. Clyde Carrier, Barton County, 10.25.3. Becky Kerr,
Barton County, 10.25.3.
LONG JUMP-MEMBERS 1. Mark Brown, Jackson
2. Label K, Hutchison, 2. Jeff Phillips,
3. Label J, Hutchison, 4. Jeff Phillips,
*JAVELIN-MENN'1* — Chamber Thacker, Butterbury C
ounty, Wood Bound, Butterbury, 18-6-3. *Doug Wint-
er* — Chamber Thacker, Butterbury, 18-6-3.
LONDON JUMP- WOMEN'S -1, Potter Valley, Dodge City,
LONDON JUMP- WOMEN'S -1, Potter Valley, Dodge City,
Hawkins Hackney, 1794-9.
**AVAILEN- WOMENS** 1-Jayne Torre, Hollinsen 13-
**AVAILEN- WOMENS** 2-Jayne Torre, Holliens 16-
**AVAILEN- GOLF** 10-Mary A. Kline, Goldman Sachs 13-
10 4000 METER RUN-MEN-3'S - Mike Haug-
Higgins, T.J. Smith, Mark O'Neill,
Marco Borges, Shane McCarthy, Martin
Morgan, Michigan South, 2/6; St. Vincent,
Barbara, Kentucky West, 2/6
HIGH JUMP-MEN-1, Dave Trust, Golden waven
11+3 meet level. Jackie Troust, Jin Hualun, Lake
Keeper, Danny Ritchie, Joe Eddie Koger, Jackson, Joel Light, Bartount County, and Joe Eddie
Koger, Kevin Grisham, Kevin Grisham, Hubbard,
and Pd Craig, Greg Gentry.
1,000 METER STEEPLEHASE-MMNY--Garris
1,800 METER STEEPLEHASE-MMNY--Garris
1,800 METER STEEPLEHASE-MMNY--Garris
1,800 METER STEEPLEHASE-MMNY--Garris
1,800 METER STEEPLEHASE-MMNY--Garris
1,800 METER STEEPLEHASE-MMNY--Garris
SHOT 10P MUT-MEN-1, Jun Fairway, Garden City,
SHOT 20P KET-Hutchinson, Hattie Smith, Butler
Buller
DISTANCE MEDLEY RELAY-AMM 1.0, provides
power to the AMM 10.1.8, 10.2.6, 10.3.2, Butterworth
County
THIS JUMP-JUMP-MN—1, Geraldo McNair, Park Forest, PA.
THIS JUMP-JUMP-MN—2, Alicia Anderson, Kansas City, KS.
THIS JUMP-JUMP-MN—3, Andrea Dixon, Buffer County, 46.
THIS JUMP-JUMP-MN—4, Emily O'Reilly, Palm Bay, FL.
484 RULY-WOMEN -1, Golden Velvet -Kim Wattas
485 RULY-WOMEN -2, Golden Velvet -Kim Wattas
486 RULY-WOMEN # 6 by Dodge City, 1798. 3 Dodge City
487 RULY-WOMEN # 6 by Dodge City, 1798. 3 Dodge City
SHOT PUT - WOMEN - 1, Kariye Allen, Hickman-Guynen; 2, Karya Hawkins, Clay County, 6, 3. Joyce Sawyer; 4, Brianna Sawyer.
TWO-MILE REAY LAYUP - Dodge City - Debley
Miller - record album #29.7.5.10 - Golden Valley, West
Virginia. Record length is 47:36.
**PROGRAMMING**
Yale University valedictorian (18) Boyle, Katherine; Penn State valedictorian (18) Bayer, Eastern Kentucky; Purdue valedictorian (18) Raper, Eastern Kentucky; Northwestern valedictorian (18) Horton, Michael; Harvard valedictorian (18) Both, Zwillow.
*60-MUTTER DASH-MEN-1. Andrew Lawson, Jacksonville,
County 49. 8:53. Craig Crainstein, Hartton County,
County 49.
609-METTER DASH-WOMEN - 1, Parm Burke, Barrack
609-METTER DASH-WOMEN - 2, Tara Hale, Golden Valley
Golden Valley 37, 7, 7.1, Chelsea Kardinier, Haden
Kardinier
1308-METTER RUN-MEX-1. Dave Wintzelman, Southwestern. 3.15.1. D. Delwin Hudkinson, Hudkinson. 3.15.2.
1,986-METER RUN-WOMEN-1, Jaila朱敏, Dodge Girl
2, 40.6, Tummy Fucker, Dodge Girl
3, 40.6, M.I.T. Girl
4, 60.8, M.I.T. Girl
100-MITER DASH—MEN-1, Lefroy Thompson, Forest Park, Mo. 10.5. Meet record time for event, 2 Kevin Barriner, Southwestern University, 10.8. 3, t Walter Burrow, Garden City, Barbara Garden, Garden City, and Head Strader, Hutchinson, 11.0.
HIGH HUMP - WOMEN - 1. Kami Gamer, Golden Valley,
Boston; 2. Todd Ferguson, Boston; 3. Shane O'Connor,
the St. Johns State, Hartford and Raleigh
College; 4. Joshua Berry, Boston; 5.
18-METERS HIGHLIGHTS--MPE-1. Dave Sykes,
Ripley Ballooner; HIGHLY RAINED.
Ripley Ballooner; HIGHLY RAINED.
Ginkgo Biloba; HIGHLY RAINED.
Brustsen, Barton County, and Jenae Young, Cloud Coun-
ly, 9-32.
108-METER HURDLES - WOMEN - 1, Defense Hawaii,
Golden Valley, 11.3. National high school college record, old record 18 k. Kerry Chienwon, Flaunt, Mindet, 1986. 2 k.
Mary Lorrienden County, 18.4. Mary Lorrienden County, 15.4
100-METER DASH - WOMEN-1, Kim Watt, Golden Valley, 12.2. Meid record, old记载 by Paul Matter Dodge City, 19.2. Loural Rhea, Hutchinson, 12.4, Ive, Stagie, Shagley, Dodge City, and Dodge Last, Hutchinson.
**100-METER RUN-MEN-1** - John Watz, Eastern
Missouri State University, 1-233-867-3591;
Hutchison, Sutchinion, 1-333-814-Hoon, Jackson,
Hutchison.
600-METERS-RUN-WOMEN--1.J. JAMESDFF.Neff, Dagger Coach
500-METERS-RUN-WOMEN--2.D. JANE Duffy.D cloud Country
Golden Valley, 108-734-1222; 6. Duffy, Cloud Country
**10-METER INTERMEDIATE HURDLES—MEN-1**
Dave, Dives, Jackson, Mich., and Ron Pullet, Ballet County, 20. Record record, first time for 2. Olsen, Mickey, Michael, 3. Baldwin, 8.2.3. Robert Hawkings, Jackson, Mich., 5.34
400-METER HURDERS—WOMEN -1, Debbie Solatka,
Dodge City, 7.01. Meet record. Meet old 1.06 by
Rhamna Swert, Golden Valley, 1972. Mary Ladigensen,
11.19. R. 3. Ruth Hurden, Cloud County,
11.19
10.947-MATH DASH - 3M-1, Lehford Thompson, Fort Wayne
804-755-2600, steve.dash@fortwayne.com
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-METER DASH-WOMEN-1, Kumari Watson, Golden
-METER DASH-WOMEN-2, Kumari Watson, Golden
by Pit Miller Gadget, 1978. CIFR 302. Ferdinand Goldsmith,
CIFR 504.
M METHOD UN-MEN-12, K Burrows, Garmon,
L Baxter County, 15.2.00; L Baker, Haker,
Butter County, 15.2.00; L Baker, Haker,
Butter County, 15.2.00
Howlett named assistant
By BARBARA JENSEN
Staff Reporter
Phyll Hilsay was named as an assistant athletic director for KU's men's athletics this morning by Bob Marcum, men's athletic director.
Howlett, an assistant athletic director at Drake University, will replace Jerry Waugh, who resigned March 15.
Howlett will serve as an assistant athletic director for men's and women's athletics after KU's athletic departments merge July 1. Marcus will remain
athletic director, and Marian Washington, KU's women's athletic director, will be associate director.
Howlett's responsibilities will include the supervision of non-revenue producing sports, the spirit squirt, compliance with federal regulations, including NCAA and AIAW rules, and the athletic awards program. She will also serve on University committees that affect KU's athletic program.
Bayless wins decathlon by 182-point margin
Howlett said she would move to Lawrence sometime in June.
Although the junior college competition at Haskell Junior College dominated the second day of the Kansas Relays, there was little day of activity in Memorial Stadium.
Bob Bayless of Oklahoma Christian captured the Jim Bausch decathlon, turning a 63-point lead after Wednesday's first five rounds. Bayless, who won the only time during the two-day test that Bayless, who is coached by former U.S. basketball star Jerry Barbieri, was after the initial event, the 100-meter race.
He won the long jump and high jump on Wednesday and the 110-meter hurdles yesterday to finish only his third decathlon with 7,191 points, a personal record.
"My goal was to score 7,000 points and I reached it," Bayless said.
KUS TWO contestants went in opposite directions on the final day. Grant Overstake, who was fourth after Wednesday, slipped to fifth with 6.623 points, and Mark
Graham, who was seventh, advanced to sixth with a personal best of 6,489.
Graham, 'who was competing in his second decathlon, won the 400-meters Wednesday and the 1,500 yesterday. He beat Michael Kovac in the 1,500 by almost four seconds.
In the only women's event of the day.
"It was a good feeling to win it (1,500) after competing like the crap the whole day." Graham said. "I was so pissed off that I had to call the cellar and make myself respectable."
In the other finals, Joseph Nzau of Wyoming won the Billy Mills 10,000-meter run in 29.57.5, and teammate John Kamau finished second in 30.39.7.
DAVID MCCALLEY of the Kansas City Northstarists won the 5,000-meter walk, a new event to the Rebays, in 22.53.3. Second-place Jerry Young of the St. Louis Track Club finished more than two minutes later at 24.57.9.
Corral Urish, former Kansas State star who competed unattached, won the 5,000-meter run in 17:14.3.6 The KU athletes placed in the top 10 with Karen Fitz leaving the way for Tara finish. Her 17.47.1 clocking was 12 second faster than her fourth-place time last year.
Maureen Finholm took eighth and Jane Brock snapped 10th.
Kansas won the faculty invitational distance medley for the first time since 1976, beating two K-State squads and a team from Kansas Wesleyan. KU covered the two-and-one-half-mile course in 12:09.5 and won by a 1:19 margin.
In the preliminaries of the intramural 440- yard relay, seven fraternity teams and one residence hall team qualified for tomorrow's finals. Ellsworth Hall won the first heat in 44.35 and Phi Gamma Delta captured the second heat in 46.15. The intramural record 44.28 was set by the Silver Streaks in 1977.
Stadium results
OPEN DIVISION
BILLY MILLS 10-MAN WEEKEND RUN-1, Joseph Ngan, 29.17.30, 2 John Kanau, 30.35.27, 29.17.30, 2 John Kanau, 30.35.27
1,500-METER MAILK-W.1-K. McCaddy Kannah C.S.
3,000-METER MAILK-W.2-K. McCaddy Kannah C.S.
Jerry Vang J. Swing Lea Truck Chk. 3. R. Benold
W.1-K. McCaddy Kannah C.S.
3,000-METER RUN-WOMEN-1, Cardinal Ursul, United
17, 14.2 MAY; Martin Sartor, Texas 17, 30.5 M.
16, 13.2 MAY;
INTRAMURAL I REMAIN RELAY HEAT all fanless for dinner (qortermore 'youth') Heat 1-1, Eilworth Hall (Garvin, Harian, Wagattaff, Edmonsd), 46.2, Kupa
FACULTY DISTANCE MEDLEY RELAY -1, Kansas State University, McKenna, Missouri; 13, J.B. Rush, Wendy Fannion, McGuire,McKenna; 14, J.B. Rush, Kansas State (Johnson, Utah); Schlenker, Peters). Kansas State (Dawn, Debricks, McGwire, McKenna).
BvGENEMYERS
Errors plague teams in softball double-header
Sports Writer
Kansas and Nebraska played giveaway games last night at Holeo Sports Complex in women's softball action. The two teams play for the title in KU's home opening double-b header
The result was a 3-1 KU victory in the opener and a 4-12 Nebraska decision in the second.
The Jayhaws committed seven miscues in the second game to hand the Cornhuskers their victory. Nebraska was held to just eight points at just the right time to fuel KU's attack.
With a 1- lead in the opener, KU's Rose Rader stroked a single in the bottom of the second to send Parm Clark across the plate. Rader quickly tried to steal second and
Husker Laura Lowe's throw had her by a step. But Nebraska's shortstop, Linda McCrea, dropped the throw for what would have been the inning's third out.
KELLY PHIPS TOOK advantage of the error by sending a line shot into left field to hit the ball.
That was all KU pitcher Sibley Sinclair needed to wrap up her 15th victory against six losses. She went the distance, giving up just three hits and striking out five. The only walk she gave up got her in trouble in the first half. Then she jam and yielded only one run in the inning.
Nebraska's No. 8 batter, Urizzly Umsch,
opened the sixth by drawing the walk.
Sinclair had retired the past 11 batters.
Ryan Bauer hit 24 and scored a ground out,
and scored on a single by Kris
Hermanson, who advanced to second on the throw to the plate.
Sinclair retired the side when shortstop Phipps dug Shelly Scott's hit out of the hole between two third base and beat her by a half-step.
"I WAS RELYING on the defense, which was great," Sinclair said. "When I get in training, I want to be a better player."
But in the second game, the only one who could rely on KU's defense was Nebraska, which saw the Hawks drop fly balls, throw the wrong base and forget to cover the bases.
"We made some really bad mistakes early," KU head coach Bob Stancilift said, "and that got us down. Then everything kept getting worse."
Going from bad to worse for KU was
rightfielder Shelly Fox, who let a dyeing line drive get past her in the second. Two runs were scored on the play. In the fifth and sixth innings, KU had a total of four errors which led to three runs in the fifth and six in the sixth.
THE PROBLEMS in the fifth arose when Scott dropped a bund in front of the plate with runners on first and second and no outs. The first baseman and catcher charged but pitcher LaAnn Stanwix fielded the ball, looked to third and didn't have a play. Stanwix also looked to first but no one was there to catch a throw.
A saecifery two and two-run single made it
and put the game away for Nebraska.
Said.
KU is 23-10 and Nebraska is 25-16.
Sprinter wants to leave injuries behind for Relays
By GENE MYERS
Sports Writer
There was never any doubt in Kevin Newell's mind.
"Knew it right away," he said. "I have a history of pulled muscles and it was like somebody reached out at my leg and started grabbing the muscles out of it.
His quivering thigh and throbbing muscles told their own story.
That incident occurred Feb. 23 at the Big Eight Conference Indoor Track Championships but it was hardly an isolated incident in a series of near-misses. This was just one in a series of injuries and bizarre injuries that have fragmented the promising career of the senior sprinter.
He has suffered hamburger pulses often enough to know what one is, and barely 60 feet into the 440-yard dash, Newell knew all too well that he had one.
"Right then I saw it all go away. All my tits gone. I took it harder than any thunder."
Newell's newbies of doubling in the 490 and 600 dashed, but, to a large extent, so were KU's chances of capturing its third straight indoor title.
WHEN HE HASN'T been sideline, Newell has been one of the conference's elite, earning All-American honors three times on KU relay teams. But the past two seasons have brought little more than disappointments and injuries.
"I KNEW I was going to do it in both the 60 and the quarter," said Newell, who had recorded the best electronically-clocked times on Saturday for the 10-20 to 20 points for us. Instead, I only got one
In the Big Eight Indoor, not only were
Without Newell for KU in the 40, Missouri's Dale Udo, the defending champ, and Dan Fortune finished third and fourth for 10 team points.
Despite the latest setback, the 6-10, 155-pound spinner from Chicago hasn't had his confidence and optimism, and hopes to hit stride for the Kansas Relays, and then the conference and national meet. The Relays end on Wednesday and continue through tomorrow.
Missouri defeated KU by seven and one-half points, even though the Tigers won only three events to KU's first five-places. Missouri won with 91 points.
"I felt bad we didn't win and it embarrassed me."
"It's not going to put me back too far," Newell said. "I'm in good shape and as long as I can stay healthy I'm capable of some great things.
AS FOR the Relials, Newell probably will be in the 440 and 880-yard relays and the invitational 100-meter dash. In the 100, he'll be up against Texas' standout drop Johnny Lamm "Jones" and Clifford KUW, KU's winner from 1975 to 1978, who is Newell's sold rival.
"I don't think he was overshadowed by Clifford," Newell said. "In fact, I consider him my best friend and I learned a lot from him. But after my sophomore year, I thought I was competitive with him—I beat him a lot in practice."
"I want to break the school record in the
100-meter and run some good 200c. I want to win the 100 at the conference and be up at it.
"I could have accomplished just as much as Clifford, but I just had injuries and he didn't. I guess it's just our makeup. I'm stocky and susceptible to muscle pulls, and he's slender with no muscles to pull, anyway."
'It seemed like whenever we'd get in a meet, though, he'd get the better heats and lanes and I wouldn't even make it to the finals.
NEWELL HAS clearly set his goals for the 54th edition of the Relys.
"I want to wim what I'm in," he said. "We have an excellent chance to win the 440
"This is my senior year and I've only been able to compete in one Kansas Relays before, so I'm looking to go out with a bang."
His tone appearance came two years ago and Newell, then hampered by the flu
and 880 relays, and I hope I can pull one off in the 100.
TOMMY EASTMAN
Kevin Newell
But those two hindrance were nothing compared with the problems of his junior year. The trouble began early in the 1978 game when Newel lost a bolt with a shot put.
"This is what everyone tells me because I never saw it. I just remember believing that I was next to death, I just knew I was hurt. I didn't know what from. Then I blacked out."
"WE WEER DOING a mini-decathlon to break the monotony of practice and I was standing off to the side talking to someone," he said. "I guess someone didn't know what he was doing and the shot whished by his eldest inches past his chin, and hit in the belly."
After recuperating, Newell stepped right back into competition instead of gradually working himself back into shape. The result in all these problems that bothered him the rest of the year.
HE DID MANAGE, however, to recover
to run with Anthony Coleran, Bob
Cook and Phil Terry.
"Actually, I was fortunate. I only ruptured my bladder and was immobile for a month. The doctor said that if it had hit me, I would have been curtailed. It probably would have been curtailed."
and a slight hamstring pull, described na performance as "dog crap."
"I guess I was just fortunate to do as well as I did. I was just running out of natural ability because after each race it felt like I had been whipped. I have never been so tired after running just a 100. It felt more like I had run a series of quarters."
meter relay team at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. That earned him his third
"Injury-wise, I was okay," Newell said,
"but I was really out of shape. We just had nobody else left; they were all racked up,
too.
Before this season, he was confident that the injury jinx that began his senior year in high school had run its course. Newell has that undying sense of confidence, even when he is not running out. Before that time expires, he wants to capitalize on his injury-married potential.
---
"The highlight of my career was my sophomore year when I won the Big Eight indoor 60," he said. "That was the same year we won the NCAA Indoor mile relay, but that didn't thrill me that much because I had to share it with three other people.
"I have more pride in my individual accomplishments and so far that's my biggest one."
If a healthy Kewell wants to add to his individual achievements, he should find support from the group.
14
Friday. Anril 20.1979
University Daily Kansan
Sculptor creates own business
By RHONDA HOLMAN
Whether it is doing a sculpture for the lawn of the state Capital or a new emblem for the campus Naval Reserve Officers School, the sculptor believes in finding his own opportunities.
"I don't wait for someone to come to me," he said yesterday. "If you are a designer and you want to use your creativity to do something, do it. Then things will start coming to you."
Boon's philosophy has brought him success as a designer and bronze-casting artist.
Boon, 33, is a design major whose work on a new JAWky emblem for the NROTC brought him requests from the Army and Air Force around as well.
projects-most of them on his own initiative.
BOON ALSO designed an emblem for the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Association which was approved by both Congress and the president, he said. The idea for the emblem—a seagull suspended above a sea during a vacation at an East Coast beach.
"I was watching a seagull hang there in the air—not moving back or forth," he
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said. "After five or ten minutes he just pulled in his wings and dove into the water. I realized that the bird had both the knowledge of the air and sea and I wanted to make something for a group of people such as the NOAA with the same knowledge."
Boon's present project is a status of a horse for Topeka West High School, where he labors.
Boon is looking at photographs and anatomy books for ideas on how to get the horse's muscles just right. He said he would go in and learn all about the horse's form by the end of the semester.
The horse began as a steel outline, was given a styrofoam body and slowly covered with wax to allow Boon to work on the animal's proportions.
BOON SAID he wanted to finish the horse and the campus military designs before he continued with his other two projects—a 44-foot sculpture for the state Capitol lawn and an emblem for the Lawrence City Offices Building.
State Seen. Ross Doyan, R-Concordia, is supporting the idea for Boon's sculpture for the Capitol lawn. The sculpture would look like a wheat and a double helix of DNA. Boon said.
Boon said the city emblem would represent how different racial groups in New York had been represented andraid to the present. He said City Manager Buford M. Watson and several city commissioners had seen the design and liked it. Boon said he was not sure how the project was being done.
Boon said he worked closely with the people he was designing for to ensure that the new product met their needs.
"To me, it is important whether your process includes working with the people your piece is for," he said. "That way, it can be more an emblem that they wanted."
BOON JUST spent $3,700 on a new welding device and estimates he owns $50 worth of hand tools. He said most bronze work cost about $1,200, but he did not wait to be paid before starting on a piece.
"I want to start my own founder and then I'll be able to do sculpture work in bronze for other businesses and other countries, even," he said.
Boon said he hoped to combine his knowledge of sculpture, design, physics and art with his experience as an educator.
He said his greatest reward came when he saw ROTC men on campus wearing shirts with the word "FREE."
SOLID ARTS
Student sculptor
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
David Boon, Topeka junior, applies hot wax to a statue of a horse
he has been working on all semester. Boon will use the wax model as a mold for a bronze statue of the horse.
Commentator backs equal rights amendment
Shana Alexander, a commentator for CBS "60 Minutes," called on women to stand up for equal rights in the working class yesterday in the Kansas University Ballroom.
Alexander's half-hour speech was punctuated by an aplause and nods of approval
from the audience of 500 people when she said women on the job should receive the training.
"You must demand equal pay with men," she said. "If you demand it today, you're more likely to get paid."
She praised Kansas as a leader in gran
ting equal rights to women because it was one of the first states to ratify the Gender Equality Act.
She also praised Sen. Nancy Kassebum,
IKan, for her aggressive role in the U.S.
council.
In a question-and-answer session after talk, Alex spoke about the recent U.S. immigration policy.
would allow a reporter's state of mind to be used as evidence of malice in a libel suit.
"I have more sympathy than most of my liberal journalistic friends in this issue," she said. "I don't think it will hinder journalistic practices that much."
Alexander's talk was sponsored by the School of Business and the University State
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Jefferson City Trip
Seed Reel
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Paul Revere is Here
Fun on Mars
Chow Fun
Quasi at Quackadero
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with Directors: Susan Pitt Kraning • Mary Beams • Kathleen Laughlin • Kathy Rose • Sally Cruikshank
FAMILY MEMORIAL
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 20, 1979
15
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luxury apartments 7. min. with campus 1 &
balleen balcony off-street parking, dispea-
sioned patio, outdoor kitchen, office,
1915 Mist Apt. a2 - 842-003 - 841-024 - 841-026
Must edit sub-leaf. Call 843-7525 Apt. Available
Call: Mail 843-7525 Apt. 4-20
PRIVATE HOOMS - In an established student enrollment center, lower-income students "work from $20 to $50 including tuition."
Roosting was warranted for summer, literary junky
and a fan of the local football team. Our
coach's football clubkick. Rent w/optimal CAT
condition.
Bubbaury, luxury 3 HR, 2 bathrooms, partially
exposed pooling space (excellent rent) - ND-9033
ND-9033
Pier number subway 1, 3 bedroom duplex, parking
parking lot 69th & Kensal Road C41 84134, 4-20
750 King Street, London EC4W 6U
Nice 3 bedrooms flathouse; 2 baths, full kitchen.
Available anytime in May. Post information:
814-6397
Trailrunner summer summer 3 berm, 2 bath,
Bathroom EMB m101 - 814-8252 Next call optional
Balanced rammate. - sold. 2 BR bsp kit
balanced compaq c450. $1995 paid. Compaq
841-2866.
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
Summer sublime, 2 bedroom Applebrook Apt. 2,
swimming pool, A C价, nagez $425
918-743-6500
2 BR's of 4 BR Condomination at Tailfare for
their comfort and comfortably. Call 841-765-anyone
at 841-765-anyone.
Summer, sublease, one bedroom unfurnished unit
swimming pool, Available May 20 Call 618-749-3050
2 bedrooms. Meadowbrook for four persons inde-
cible, standing above present rent. Negotiable.
Semi-grounded. 550 sq ft.
Female, roommate for summer, two bimmers.
Appleroft Appl. AC, pool. Call 814-2270.
ideal summer intel complex, 300 f. from U.
851 AC, 2 bdmr semi-armored, clean, uii-
851AC
1. houses, utilities included, AC dishwasher, 2. bedrooms, spasions to next laundromat, 4. blocks to accommodate 841-3390 4-29 Summer sunshine is available. Call 841-7580 for 5.00 p.m. call 841-7580 for 6.00 p.m. Call 841-7580 for 7.00 p.m.
DAILY
GUIDE
ENTERTAINMENT
MUSIC
PRIVATE CLUBS
MINGLES DISCO
SEE YOU THERE THIS WEEKEND!
Ramada Inn 2222 W. 842-7030
G.P. LORD'S Staying Alive Staying Alive Memberships Avail. 701 Mass.
TONIGHT!
"GATEMOUTH" BROWN
with Special Guest
Cookin' Bowl & Beer Store
Pott County Pork & Bean Band
Adv $4.50 Showday $5.50
with Southern Fried
POTT COUNTY PORK & BEAN BAND
with Southern Fm
The Lawrence
Operate House
The Operator Club
Shows 9:00
DINING
Aztec Inn
LUNCHEON MENUS
807 Vermont
842-9455
PASHL PEAU
PAUL GRAY'S
Jazz Place
Hazel Church
LEGENDARY - JAY
McCHANN
MISSHA
1426 MALES 843-8575
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
KJHK's Annual Open House
Today between 10 am-5 pm. 1120 W. 11th
7 Hours of Live Music, Prizes, Concerts and Giveaways
Guaranteed Good Treatments CARES
Electric Music, Prices, Contests and Giveaways
Guaranteed Good Time! It’s FREE.
Responsibilities wanted to share, please older home,
children's bedrooms, kitchen, laundry room, central air
conditioner, an air-conditioned bedroom, shared utilities.
BEER
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.
AMUSEMENTS
10day between 10 am-5 pm. 1128 W 11**
CEp Out for Weekend Reference
BIGK'S
Purple Pig Happy Hour
5:00-6:30
Mondays and Fridays
.25/ Drawn
810 W. 23rd St.
Summer suitorine, 3 bdrm house, AC. 2-car
garage, N of campus, $850 2-ger car
garage, 11/17/17-11/24/17
*Wanted* Female nominate to share 2 bedrooms in a house.
*Cash price* $100. *Salary*
CITI tax no. $300. *Fees* For more info, go to www.citiproject.com.
Nassau 1 bedroom apartment, Boulevard Plaza,
603 West 47th Street, New York, NY 10029.
Summer semester or longer. Call 855-251-1011.
To submit a 1 IBE unpublished Cederwood loan to Merrill Lynch, please send the application to August 25, 2016,受理号/MM-148376 for bonus in August 25, 2016.
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
All New & Contemporary
Visit our furnished display und today &
with ten rooms the newer at 13 Sundance
Apartment. Completely furnished studio on
1 BR. Conveniently located at 27th & Florida
just west of the Sanctuary on U Bus Route
RAF 4906
8415255·842.4455
ROOMS FORE RENT. Convenient location: serviced from student tractors, Union, Call now 858-6205
**SUBLEASE—a beautiful two bedroom apartment**
for summer $235.00 *Call* 841-765-4065 • 4-25
**SUMMER SALE—EVERY SATURDAY FROM MARCH 1ST TO APRIL 30TH**
Summer Suite 2 bedroom apt furnished or
unfurnished. Compass $390 a month.
Call 811-3451 or 811-3471
Student statement. Luxury style. ON CAMPUS.
Book online: 800-496-2715
Booklet: $19.00 per month. Call亭 at 800-496-2715
www.arcadia.com
9' month leave, August 16-May 31 One BR unfurnished- $480 2 BR unfurnished-$50 plus furniture available 3BR-Valley Suite or furniture available 4BR-Valley Suite or 842-3154 or 842-3154. Parking 23rd Murphy Drive just off 23rd and 4-26.
Spend your summer at our pool & save. Wear summer jane June-Aug. 15, 1 bedroom furnish; $149. Poolside furniture available; Catering furnished; Furniture available; CALL 843-1155 or M42-8416. Attn: Jules Agfs, 230 Murray Highway 4-23rd off Irdwa & 4-36
Subscriptions for summer 2 bathrooms and furnished
room(s) must be submitted by May 15, 2016.
$250 fee required paid. Call Gray at 843-843-7996.
Summer suburban need someone to share large
math supplies. Req. Master's degree, single major,
60 or couple $50. 843-721-9000.
Sublime 4 bedroom dorm for summer $75
* person* * utilities* : Kitchen, Bathroom, 841-504-5944,
2849
Summer sublime. Beautiful black tie look.
Summer outfit. Accented neckline. AC
for every clothing. 813-709-5200
4-26
Summer outfit. Beautiful black tie look.
Summer outfit. Accented neckline. AC
for every clothing. 813-709-5200
4-26
Studio Art Furnished Excellent location $1250.00
Artist Studio 25' x 35' available.
Available May 1st, 842-282-9600
Sublease 2 bbm1 bat AC D, W, laundry facility
7 min. walk to campus $249 Call 841-707-6171
Summer tilt camp with option to revert 2 Bedroom close campus. AC 813-681, unarranged
For cert this summer. One bedroom suite, new A+
Room in. In campus, 643-6476, after 9:30.
$195.00 usd
3 beam, double beam for summer with option
4 block; 2 beam, double beam for summer with option
5 blocks from campus. B322-0822-5666
5 blocks from campus. B322-0822-5666
2 bedroom Meadowbrook Apt. to share with one
room for the summer. Food vegetable 690
690
2 roomsmate to share 3 bedroom Trailbridge
Apartment or sublease 814-6755 4-26
Sublease with option to renew: Luxury 3 bedrooms, 3 bath, Townhouse, Poens Tennis Club, Car Port, Iris Route, Retequepal Club, Dish Network, and more. Available in Mid-841-529 or Mid-843-7423.
FOUND
EXOTIC JOB! LAKE TAHOE, CALIFORNIA
46400 summer. Over $550,000 people needed.
luxury ranches, cedarrials, river rafts, & more.
ranching, fishing, boating, golf, 824
61292; Sacramento, California, $5500
HELP WANTED
**OVENSKA JOBBS - Summer-year round, Europe.**
S. America, Australia, Aula, etc. All Fields, $260-
$180 per month. Expenses paid. Sight seeing. Free
transfer. Bd. ID: 34-NA, Corona Delta Bd.
4262
4263
A sum of money. Please call 842-4142. 4-25
Daughter-of-painter springing squared white with red, dot-bleite patterns. No fall-year old. Found daughter 140 years old.
TWO Instruments Calculator near First Southern Baptist Church—1918; & Naismith. **664-325**
Hilck (probably Lab) puppy found. 843-
4-24
JOBS • MEN • WOMEN. SAILBOATS
CRUSE SHIPS! No experience. High pay! See
Caribbean, Tropical, Europe, World Summer cane-
ter. Travel up to 80% off. Call (612) 854-9350,
60129, Sacramento, Ca. 93860.
4-24
JOBS: LAKE TAHOE, CALIF. *Fantastic trip!*
$179-$400 summer! Thousands of till needed.
Cabin, Restaurant, Hancock, Corsellus. Send
Mail to LAKEHORSE at LAKEHORSE
60129, Sacrific, CA 95800
SUMMER JOBNS. NEW! WOILD CRUSKES!
PLEASURE JOBBS! No Experience! Good pay! Caribbean, Hawaii, Bahrain, Send $39 for AR,
$50 for BA, $75 for CA, $100 for CB, $120 for CO, $140 for CE, $160 for DE,
$180 for EE, Sacramento, Cal, $9800
HELP WANTED FULL TIME. Some mechanical knowledge. Must be read and dependable.
Adult with over transportation to care for 8 pooled
children.
Career Opportunity for person to train with business and benefit established in a long term career. KU MBA program provides mature year round position with full benefits including salary to progress with training and experience. KU KU 846-4601, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri. Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer
Secretary—Program assistant, for busy office covering to large numbers of college students. Requires Bachelor's degree. Experience in student performance. Prior experience preferred. Personnel full-time position. Salaries $180,000. Apply in person by Monday-Friday. Fee of Opportunity Affordable.
Experienced painter. Interiors & exteriors, full-service design. Apply to interior 2200 nw 6th st b w 8. Apply at: 415-352-7900.
Assistant to the Dean, reporting to Associate in Academic Leadership, School of Business. This is an Assistant position for a junior or later June 1 and an older June 1 or December 1 position. Duties and responsibilities include administration of student development and financial procedures and systems, supervision of instructional equipment qualification is a baccalaureate degree requirement, qualification is a baccalaureate degree requirement, application deadline is September 27, 2015, and other details confirm Associate John Dixon Kernan (913) 863-2470. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Requests from all qualified people regardless of national origin, age or ancestry. 4-20
New taking applications for Foundation & Girls
Choir at the University of Oxford. Apply
applicant in position at Vineyard Manor, 127
Buckingham Street, London W1T 6ES.
Lawrence Open School is seeking a certified elementary teacher to work in innovative program, curriculum, and curriculum development desirable. Must have a Bachelor's degree from CSU or equivalent, or 523 Ohio. An equal opportunity employer.
Airbnb are now available for Rock Chalks in various locations, including Los Angeles. To obtain proof of quality, must be reasonable, well organized, and have a strong background and knowledge of Rock Chalks is desirable. Please visit rockchalk.com or contact April 24, 2018, at US. Application fees are due April 24, 2018.
Applications are now available for Rock Cliffs
Practitioners. Applicants must be responsible, have strong organi-
zation skills and a desire to make a contribution to be a student. Knowledge of Rock Cliffs
3190, Union Applications are due April 23,
1990.
KJHK Needs Contestants
for Pizza Eating Content
today between 10 a.m-5 p.m. 1120 W. 111th
...
...
Cook to work part-time, 10 a.m. or a morning-
Friday-12 noon, per weeks. Requires
per person waiting time off at Christmas. Spring
for person waiting time off at Christmas. KU is not
in session. Apply by July 31st.
Personal Office: 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday-Friday.
Permanent Office: 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday-Friday.
Opportunities: Affirmative Action, A-40
player
**STUDENTS:** summer employment Pinkerton's who do well taking applications from students who do well in the Great Kansas City area. To qualify for placement available and telephone in residence. Grand International Building, Room 265, Kansas City, Missouri. Bankruptcy Reserve Bank, Room 112
ENGINEERING GRADS, Positions $18,000 up
Never a fee to applicant. Call Bob Court,
725 or resume to Courtservice Px.
Service, Ks 620, St. Sue, State 100, Shaw
Miss., Ks 629
Did your Easter break have you with the summer job blows. We still have a full time work schedule available. You find out if you qualify, send name and address to: p.O. Box 2025, Lawrence, KS 66045 - 40435 or p.o. Box 2025, Lawrence, KS 66045 - 40435.
Students maintain in business, pre- and pre-
work hours per week. Make $500 per month. For interviews,
please e-mail: interviews@usm.edu
MAKE $32,000 THIS SUMMER. If you are here
to receive the training to release
Kipler 842-1823 for interview.
BUSINESS ADMIN GRAIS marketing & management positions $2500 up. Need a fee to apply. Must be an active member and receive it by Courtney Pfeil Service, 900 W Kid St., Suite 140, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Ks 64232.
Looking for nurses & full help to work in
the hospital, or working in a clinic. Must
have midwife, Contact Wendy Sutton at
516-374-8200 or wendysutton@sunnybrook.com
Legal & Child support secretary. Good typing skills and excellent communication skills but not required. Starting salary $520.00 plus all office of Douglas County District Attorney. Bachelor's degree required. Req. by April 31, 2028. Excellent Opportunity to work in the Legal & Child Support department.
Mature medical student or grad wanted. Job will require a Master's degree in nursing and job duties of care for persons with a condition and job duties of care for persons with a condition. Apply in person to AA 313 Hedland Terrace, Haymarket, WA 98405. Applicants must be qualified. Quantified position and women are preferred.
One of the mid-winter卧着 moved and storage one of the mid-winter卧着 moved and storage homebound people. Will train for position at home or only apply. Apply in person at 1269 Worcester or only apply. An equal opportunity employee at 532-151-400. An equal opportunity employee
immediate Need for Student Clerk-Task (minimum 500 employees) to perform employment through the summer and near new school year. Please contact me at number of manner form final recording data, and arrange for including typed test "Make writing application on Geological Survey Museum Hall" 1000 Avenue "Abbey" Geological Survey Museum Hall, 1000 Avenue "Abbey", Geological Survey Museum Hall, 1000 Avenue "Abbey". Mail Houl! Hall Great Opportunity Abroad.
One of the mid-west oldest nursing and storage companies in the country. Delivery and fulfillers Will train qualified DDUV requirements (farm workers) only need a three-year certification, Kansas or call 913-619-4800. An equal opportunity employer.
LOST
Landline television, radio and TV. **Repr:** 15, 17, 20
culinary retail and supermarket. **Repr:** 14, 18
banking and finance retail. **Repr:** 16, 19, 20
Brown heart radiating coat with property plot
with 180 acres, 5 m² per plot and by aerial clip 1144 Louisiana
county.
MISCELLANEOUS
THEISIS BINDING COPYING—The House of
Sherick's Quick Copy Center is headquarters for
thems' binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us
phone at 838 Male, or phone 426-3610. Then,
you.
NOTICE
DEATH! WHY BOTHER! EKANAR
The Key to secret worlds: 842-325, 842-1763
Wifering official to help with interpersonal wrestling or other activities may be on the order for ship by 24/7 Robinson, Rack Services, 109-877-5555.
J. HODGOW BOOKSELLER The global booksealer works in the publishing industry and power to help price books in all academic environments. We maintain a full library of books, including paperback and hardcover editions. We maintain a full school library. We stock books for 30+ major libraries. 7-10am - 4pm & 6-9pm - 8pm (Cloud Mondays).
VETS—will you eat your benefit? Macken
not Check campus Vetas 138 B Union 864-1478.
or 215-890-5626.
Rewind now 17 in Literature Driving school, where you can learn about driving. You may pass part of the transportation curriculum; do a lab or experiment.
RICKS BHE SHOP is now open 290 Railway
Street, New York, NY 10016. Call
plug, mugtick, verison 0328, Ventura-611-146
or www.ricksbhe.com
Gail Lushin counseling referrer has handed
through KU胃 864-1306 or Headquarters 811-
2596.
HAROUSON SPECIALS - 4:00 Mon, Tues, and Wed.
MAINS DRESSES - 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM.
MAINS DRESSES NIGHT - 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortion up to 12 weeks. Pregnancy tests, Birth Control, Counseling, Tailor Legal. For appointment call us at (800) 453-2690 or visit Overland Park, Ks
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing, Birth Control, Counseling. Tolls Lawgation. For appointment call (422) 452-3068, 4801 91st St., Owlerville Park, Ks.
Haley presents
the
conedy movie
"BYE BYE BRAVERMAN"
Sat. April 21, 7 & 9 pm
Dyche Auditorium
51 Members
51 St. Neumembers
JUNIORS Apply now for next year's Class of
2018. Declare April 20-19, 2017 at B.R.
Union Level 3, 1015 Washington Ave.
Balancing for special purposes (Business Hall, Hotel)
Balancing for special purposes (Hall, Business Hall,
Birth May, Open May) *Lunar Day, Monday only*
Balancing for special purposes (Monday, Tuesday,
Psychology buffet Stops and see Pai-Chi-Phyche.
Psychology buffet Runs Union-Level Level
PARTS ARE MADE BY NURTURE.
RODDE: Interview waited with pertinent testimony involved with case. Call Hardy at 811-3044.
...
KJHK's Annual Open House
Today between 10 a.m-5 p.m. 1120 W. 11th
7 Hours of Live Music, Prizes, Contests and Givesaways
Guaranteed Good Time! is FREE
...
CHIAROS PORCH IS NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING!
4-20
Dorothy's Inventive Arts, 1986 New Hampshire,
Dorothy's gift items for every occasion
7525 20
The Firing Ditchman will make the Perry Sees
the Picnic. Can't wait until 2018.
- Fores
THE TAN MAN MANN KHAIRI Only $9.50, this used picture of Tan Man setting on the beach with you. The TAN MAN TAN Call 843-1080 to order May 2nd Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 3rd Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 4th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 5th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 6th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 7th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 8th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 9th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 10th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 11th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 12th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 13th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 14th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 15th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 16th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 17th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 18th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 19th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 20th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 21st Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 22nd Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 23rd Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 24th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 25th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 26th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 27th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 28th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 29th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 30th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 31st Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 32nd Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 33rd Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 34th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 35th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 36th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 37th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 38th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 39th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 40th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 41th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 42th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 43th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 44th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 45th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 46th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 47th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 48th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 49th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 50th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 51th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 52th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 53th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 54th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 55th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 56th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 57th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 58th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 59th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 60th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 61th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 62th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 63th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 64th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 65th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 66th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 67th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 68th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 69th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 70th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 71th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 72th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 73th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 74th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 75th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 76th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 77th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 78th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 79th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 80th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 81th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 82th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 83th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 84th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 85th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 86th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 87th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 88th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 89th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 90th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 91th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 92th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 93th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 94th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 95th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 96th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 97th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 98th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 99th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 100th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 101th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 102th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 103th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 104th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 105th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 106th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 107th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 108th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 109th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 110th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 111th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 112th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 113th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 114th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 115th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 116th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 117th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 118th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 119th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 120th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 121th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 122th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 123th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 124th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 125th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 126th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 127th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 128th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 129th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 130th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 131th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 132th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 133th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 134th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 135th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 136th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 137th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 138th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 139th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 140th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 141th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 142th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 143th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 144th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 145th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 146th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 147th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 148th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 149th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 150th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 151th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 152th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 153th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 154th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 155th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 156th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 157th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 158th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 159th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 160th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 161th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 162th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 163th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. 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May 204th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 205th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 206th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 207th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 208th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 209th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 210th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 211th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 212th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 213th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 214th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 215th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 216th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 217th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 218th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 219th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 220th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 221th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 222th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 223th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. 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May 244th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 245th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 246th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 247th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 248th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 249th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 250th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 251th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 252th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 253th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 254th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 255th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 256th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 257th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 258th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 259th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 260th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 261th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 262th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 263th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 264th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 265th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 266th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 267th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 268th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 269th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 270th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 271th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 272th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 273th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 274th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 275th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 276th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 277th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 278th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 279th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 280th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 281th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 282th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 283th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 284th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 285th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 286th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 287th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 288th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 289th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 290th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 291th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 292th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 293th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 294th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 295th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 296th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 297th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 298th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 299th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 300th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 301th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 302th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 303th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 304th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 305th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 306th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 307th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 308th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 309th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 310th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 311th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 312th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 313th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 314th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 315th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 316th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 317th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 318th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 319th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 320th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 321th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 322th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 323th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 324th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 325th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 326th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 327th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 328th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 329th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 330th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 331th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 332th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 333th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 334th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 335th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 336th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 337th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 338th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 339th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 340th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 341th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 342th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 343th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 344th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 345th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 346th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 347th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 348th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 349th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 350th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 351th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 352th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 353th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 354th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 355th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 356th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 357th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 358th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 359th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 360th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 361th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 362th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 363th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 364th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 365th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 366th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 367th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 368th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 369th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 370th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 371th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 372th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 373th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 374th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 375th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 376th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 377th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 378th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 379th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 380th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 381th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 382th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 383th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 384th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 385th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 386th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 387th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 388th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 389th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 390th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 391th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 392th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 393th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 394th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 395th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 396th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 397th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 398th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 399th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 400th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 401th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 402th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 403th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 404th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 405th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 406th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 407th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 408th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 409th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 410th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 411th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 412th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 413th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 414th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 415th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 416th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 417th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 418th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 419th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 420th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 421th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 422th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 423th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 424th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 425th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 426th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 427th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 428th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 429th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 430th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 431th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 432th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 433th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 434th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 435th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 436th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 437th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 438th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 439th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 440th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 441th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 442th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 443th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 444th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 445th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 446th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 447th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 448th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 449th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 450th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 451th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 452th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 453th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 454th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 455th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 456th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 457th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 458th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 459th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 460th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 461th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 462th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 463th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 464th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 465th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 466th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 467th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 468th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 469th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 470th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 471th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 472th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 473th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 474th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 475th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 476th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 477th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 478th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 479th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 480th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 481th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 482th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 483th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 484th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 485th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 486th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 487th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 488th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 489th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 490th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 491th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 492th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 493th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 494th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 495th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 496th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 497th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 498th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 499th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 500th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 501th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 502th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 503th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 504th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 505th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 506th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 507th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 508th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 509th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 510th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 511th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 512th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 513th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 514th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 515th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 516th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 517th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 518th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 519th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 520th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 521th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 522th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 523th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 524th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 525th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 526th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 527th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 528th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 529th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 530th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 531th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 532th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 533th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 534th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 535th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 536th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 537th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 538th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 539th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 540th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 541th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 542th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 543th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 544th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 545th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 546th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 547th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 548th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 549th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 550th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 551th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 552th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 553th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 554th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 555th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 556th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 557th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 558th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 559th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 560th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 561th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 562th Supply of NEW KIT imbues in her hair. May 563th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 564th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 565th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 566th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 567th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 568th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 569th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 570th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 571th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 572th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 573th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 574th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 575th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 576th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 577th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 578th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 579th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 580th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 581th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 582th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 583th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 584th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 585th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 586th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 587th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 588th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 589th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 590th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 591th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 592th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 593th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 594th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 595th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 596th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 597th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 598th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 599th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 600th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 601th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 602th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 603th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 604th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 605th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 606th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 607th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 608th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 609th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 610th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 611th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 612th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 613th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 614th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 615th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 616th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 617th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 618th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 619th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 620th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 621th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 622th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 623th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 624th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 625th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 626th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 627th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 628th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 629th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 630th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 631th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 632th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 633th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 634th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 635th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 636th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 637th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 638th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 639th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 640th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 641th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 642th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. May 643th Supply of NEW KIT imbUES in her hair. 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Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Residents uncertain about development
BY MARTIN ZIMMERMAN
Staff Renorter
While an out-of-state development firm is launching its lavish public relations campaign in Lawrence for a regional shopping mall, the city's residents are saying they are unsure the proposed mall is either wanted or needed.
And a recent survey conducted this week by students in two reporting classes at KU indicates that Lawrence residents will be built, whether they like it or not.
The informal poll, which questioned nearly 400 randomly selected Lawrence residents, found that of those questioned, 48 percent favored the mail.
In response to another question, 53 percent were said certain the mall eventually would be built. Sixteen percent the mall development could be stopped.
"I gave up fighting city hall 10 years ago," Johnson said.
Among the skeptics of the mail was Mrs. F.A. Johnson, 638 Louisiana St., who said she saw little hope for herself among other opponents of the proposed mail.
Mrs. Paul B. Lawson, 2125 Vermont St., who has lived in Lawrence for 55 years, said she feared the possible loss of her beloved wife, live on the recently renovated downtown.
The economic effect of a large regional shopping center on the downtown business area also weighed heavily on others who responded to the survey.
"I'm afraid the mail will be built," she said. "The developer always gets his way."
Pat Atree, a resident of rural Lawrence who has shopping in the city for eight years, said she thought she could predict what would happen if the mail were built.
"The downtown would just die and shrivel up," she said. "I've seen it honeen before (in other towns)."
Soaring energy costs also were mentioned as one argument against the mall.
But energy prices, particularly the prospect of dollar-a-gallon gasoline by midsummer, were also given as reasons why people felt the mail should be built.
The problem, said several who favored the mail, is what they consider an advantage of the bookstore. Lawrence stores. The lack of variety has forced them to drive to Toppea or Kansas City to shop, they said, and with gas prices rising, the trips are setting prohibitively expensive.
But a majority of those who favored the mail said they were satisfied with the current merchandise selection downtown. Their hope, they said, was that a mall would help to drive down prices and increase foot traffic, including feeding parking meters.
"I like to shop where it's comfy," said George Hayes, a retired insurance man who lives in rural Lawrence, "and without parking tickets."
Other benefits of a mail that were mentioned included increased accessibility of stores for senior citizens, one of whom said she had lived in Lawrence for 68 years and thought streets are streets. Street had its hedday."
But a larger question looms over all: Will the construction of a regional shopping mail south of Lawrence be a wise move for a growing city that has already invested more than $1 million in its downtown?
The poll indicated that most who opposed the mail answered "no" to that question. The majority of the population was growing "too big, too fast" and that development of a mall would throw open the doors to business. It is likely that possibly hurting downtown businesses.
Others, however, expressed a hope that building the mail mould would Lawrence become exactly what the anti-expansionists are denouncing—a policy that only its own residents but also those from surrounding towns and counties.
Study cites benefits for Lawrence
Staff Reporter
Lawrence Square, a proposed regional shopping mall to be built in Lawrence, would generate a sales potential of nearly $39 million in its first year of operation, 1983, and eventually would provide 700 to 850 jobs a year.
By LORILINENBERGER
In a three-inch-thick volume presented to the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission this week, the Cleveland development firm of Jacobs, Viscous and Jacobs Co. presented these and other materials in the mail it hopes to build south of the city.
In addition, the volume provided a description of the mall development, an assessment of the market area, a study of the floodplain effects and a cost-benefit analysis.
Encompassing about 470,000 square feet, the proposed mall would contain about 60 floors.
stores at each corner of the triangular- shaded one-level structure.
Although the names of the mall stores have not been disclosed, the developers speculated that J. C. Penney, Sears Roebuck and Co. or Gayle would suit the company in large, well of one of those department stores should be equipped with an auto center, the study said.
THE OUTSIDE APPEARANCE of the moll promises beauty and grace, the plan said. Several color pictures of other Jacobs, Viscous and Jacobs mails were included in the report.
The exterior design of the structure will be carefully controlled so as to be harmonious not only with the various buildings but also with the overall surrounding areas," it said.
Live plants, foliage, dramatic sculptures,
tunnels, carpeted carpets, mosaic tile and
decorative stonework.
PARK AVE.
The development firm said in the study it thought Lawrence was an ideal spot for a feature film.
"a center of beauty as well as a center of commerce," the study said.
First, it suggested that Lawrence did not offer adequate shopping facilities for the kitchen.
"Our evaluation of the various retail stores which operate in the downtown indicate a considerable orientation to the student market," the study said. "No department store within the Lawrence market can be characterized as a full-line retail outlet with the normal range of merchandise items associated with a store of this type.
"THE VIOID IN THE retail inventory is of particular significance since it necessitates frequent out-of-area trips on the part of area residents."
Lawrence also is well located on Interstate-70 the study said, and is in close proximity to Interstate-I35, thus making it a small easy and convenient for most shopper.
Two additional factors making Lawrence especially suitable for a regional mall are the projected increases in the trade area population and the level of the average household income within the trade area, the plan said.
The trade area represents the region from which the shopping mall can expect to derive the bulk of its total sales volume. it extends 12 to 13 miles west of Lawrence, eight miles east of Lawrence and 25 miles center of the city to points north and south.
The mall site, if approved by the Lawrence City Commission, is 61 acres of land on the western side of Road. Last month, city commissioners annexed the land, saying anxionation would give them control over the zoning of the land, and it is zoned RS-1, or single family residential.
LAWRENCE IS EXPECTED to increase its trade area population from 102,036 in 1979 to 109,508 in 1983 to 117,000 in 1987. Average annual increase in the trade area currently is $17,657.
If the land is reoned for commercial development, one obstacle to the mall would
be lifted. If the mail is built, taxes generated by it will go to the city.
Annual property taxes generated by the mall were estimated at $286,000 to $331,000. Annual sales-tax revenues to the city were estimated between $182,000 and $223,000.
THE PROPOSED MALL plan included suggestions for roads and entrances leading to the mall. It proposed to make Armstrong Road a two or three lane thoroughfare and to instill traffic signals at the mall site intersection.
One area of concern to several planning commissioners, however, has been the potential danger of establishing commercial development on land designated as flood-
Sewage and water facilities for the mall already exist at the mall site, the study reported. A 24-meter sewer line and a 6-inch man worm could sufficiently serve the mall site.
But Jacobs, Viscasoni and Jacobs explained that the proposed mail would not be endangered by the Wakuraa foodplain that covers part of the 61 acres.
The company proposed that a 12.2 acre-foot retention basin be constructed to contain water runoff from the nearby waters of the Wakara River.
"In sum," the study said, "the proposed building improvements are planned to be elevated to an adequate height above the sea floor in order to eliminate the possibility of flood hawaii."
THE PLAN ALSO said that while portions of the parking lots and the roadways were within the fringes of the floodplain, they would be elevated to avoid being flooded.
The Cleveland development firm said in its study that additional money would be routed to Lawrence through the em-ployees construction workers and store employees.
The labor used to build the mall would represent 40 to 60 percent of the total construction cost of the mall. The average cost per square foot was $2,000 before the mall was completed.
His average salary would be $8.95 an hour in 1980.
Planner says mall could be detrimental to city
Building construction costs would be $84.04 a square foot. The mall is expected to cost $50.00 a square foot.
By JAKE THOMPSON
Staff Reporter
A regional shopping mail might feed public ekg more than satisfy community needs.
"I have been aware for several years that there is a strong element in the community who are planning consultants, said recently. "I don't know if it's an ego thing or what. Perhaps people feel Lawrence is not a big city without one. I am just practically opposed to it."
Jones, who masterminded development of Plan '95, the city's comprehensive planning effort, has called for greater transparency.
proposed mail in south Lawrence partially conflicted with the plan.
The mall, proposed by Jacobs, Viscioni and Jacobs, a Cleveland development firm, would be built on 61 acres at Highway 90 and the West Side Boulevard. The three large department stores and 60 shops.
"It is not in total conflict with Plan 95. It was agreed there would be some kind of development in that area," Jones said. "The plan did not anticipate such an intense concentration as a mail. It wasn't even considered."
Jones said the mall would hurt the Lawrence downtown.
"A MALL WILL have a negative effect on
Chamber of Commerce split over development
Staff Reporter
BY JAKE THOMPSON
The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce is a divided house—half its members support the development of a regional shopping mall and half of its stores. Road—the other half yelheymen oppose it.
The Chamber's solution for now is to pull its 1,150 members about the mall and wait for city recommendations before taking a stand.
"It is the kind of issue that could divide the community," John M. McGrew, Chamber Commission chair, said. "Our commission decides we need more and better shopping in that form, that may change things. It will be up to the city government where Lawrence needs a coming man."
The mail, proposed by Jacobs, Visconi and Jacobs Co., a Cleveland development firm, would contain three large department stores and about 60 smaller shops.
"WE'RE IN FAVOR of improved shopping for Lawrence residents and for strong downtown shopping simultaneously," McGrew said.
Formal support for the mall by the Chamber would be difficult because, although the Chamber supports economic development, it is a mall on downtown Lawrence. McGrew said.
The combination of the poll, to be tailed by May 1, and the commission's standpoint is that the poll will not be made.
McGrew said. But McGrew said the Chamber might not ever make a public announcement.
the central business district," he said. "How long it will last, I don't know.
McGrew's feelings were echeoked by Glenn West, executive secretary of the Chamber, who said Chamber officers were caught between opposition by downtown members and support from members working near the proposed site.
"The Chamber exists to encourage economic development in the community and to help the community live the good life." "We just don't know yet what this will do."
"The mail is a very difficult issue for us," West said. "As best as we can tell, our membership is split on it. We have not taken a position on it and it may well be that we won't be taking a stand because our membership is divided on what they want."
"I'll tell you this, any statement by the developer that says a mail won't have some effect or impact on the central business district is pure ponycock."
"I'll be real honest, I have done many studies and have criticized shopping malls before," Jones said. "From a gut feeling, it is not a logical site for a mail."
Some Chamber members have said that the mail is not consistent with Plan 96, the goal of the Nuclear Security Agency McGrew and West said that would not be the final determinant in the Chamber's
BOTH SAID they thought there was too little information from the developer about the benefits and impact of the mall to state the Chamber's position.
Jones said he based his charges on about 30 studies he had done on other cities with shopping malls. In every case, a mail had a negative effect on the downtown business
West said, "we are going to wait for more information from the developer, but we may need a bit of time."
So, for now, the Chamber apparently will sit back and wait.
Jones said he opposed a regional shopping mall because of his faith in the viability of
Before or after the KU Relays
Plan 95 provides guidelines, policies and goals for a controlled growth in commercial and industrial development, throughfare systems, transportation, public buildings and services, utilities, schools, parks and housing and neighborhood development.
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"We worked hard at getting formal adoption of city and county goals in developing Plan '65," he said. "So far it's working better than what they had before. The hard graphic plan they had before was not being followed at all."
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As chief consultant and organizer of Plan
Jones said that he could not predict the outcome of the mail issue—whether rezoning for the mail would be approved—or whether he would watch the commission's actions closely.
"I keep a close eye on things in Lawrence," Jones said. "At times it looks like you are dealing with personalities that change and you can't always be sure what they will do."
"Plan 95 does force the community to be involved and keep its goals in the commission's mind," he said. "That doesn't mean in the next few months all sorts of political chicacency couldn't go on with the use of the plan."
THE FINAL DECISIONS in economic growth for Lawrence rest with the community and the Lawrence City Commission, Jones said.
'95, Jones said, he was paid $55,000 for work he did from 1747 to 1976. Then, the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Board and public hearings and revised the plan.
Jones estimated the total project took four years and cost about $80,000.
"The commission would be well within its jurisdiction to use Plan '95 to deny the mail."
"I'm more than satisfied," he said. "If I had to do it again, I would go about it in the same way."
He said that although much money and time was poured into careful development of Plan '96 it was designed to be a guide and not the role.
15th and Iowa
FOOD DAY FORUMS Sunday, April 22 7 to 9 p.m. at University Lutheran Church
Soap Boxes on:
Nestle Boycott Telling Children about Hunger Enuf Is Enuf Farm Issues and Poverty
Featured Speaker: Mary Berg of Des Moines
The respondents were asked three questions: "Are you in favor of the proposed shopping mall south of Lawrence?" "Do you think the mail will bulk?"; and "Are opportunities for shopping in Lawrence adequate at this time?"
Office of American Friends Field Service
The survey of Lawrence residents' opinions on the regional shopping mall was conducted by members of a workshop entitled II class in the School of Journalism.
BREAK?
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Names were randomly selected from the Lawrence phone directory, and the nearly 460 responses were tabulated in 13 categories covering four variables: sex, age, length of residence in Lawrence (0-4 years, 5-9 years and more than 10 years) classification (KU student, KU faculty white-collar, blue-collar, clerical and other).
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City residents surveyed about shopping center
Some of the findings drawn from the survey are:
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Although men and women were almost equally in favor of the mail—about 50 percent of each group—more women bought items satisfied with current Lawrence shopping.
- People under 30 years of age tended to favor the mail more than those over 30, and the younger group also tended to be located in the current retail situation in the city.
- About 50 percent of those Lawrence residents of 10 years or more who were surveyed supported the mail. And that group was more satisfied with the current Lawrence shopping area than other residency groups.
- About 63 percent of blue-collar workers favored the mail—the highest of all occupations. The majority of blue-collar workers surveyed said they satisfied with the current shopping situation. KU students also heavily favor the mail. The average blue-collar were low in their support of a mail.
- All groups except white-collar workers approved of the mall, but only two-blue-collar workers and clinical workers—had a majority in favor of it.
- Of the 13 groups, only two showed a majority who was dissatisfied with current retail opportunities in their faculty and staff and clerical workers.
APPLICATIONS
are now being taken for: The
KU REPRESENTATIVE on the ASK BOARD of DIRECTORS.
Applications are available in the student senate offices and are due by April 31.
This person will be responsible for heading K.U. lobbying efforts in ASK and campus lobbying groups. This person will also represent K.U. on ASK corporation.
Paid for by Student Senate
HOLLAND
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
Vol.89, No.135
Friday April 20,1979
Lawrence, Kansas
kansas relays
spring 1979
a
With both the population and the city boundaries growing, Lawrence is busy looking at problems and planning its future as a larger city. The Kanan takes a look at the city's Plan 95, pros and cons of the proposed shopping mall, population predictions and other important issues facing the city.
b
After a year's absence, the Kansas Relays return for the 54th time, to a remodeled Memorial Stadium. The Kansan spotlights KU track, with focuses on former Relays greats Nolan Cromwell and Cliff Wiley, a look at the influence of foreign athletes and talks with KU track coaches Bob Timmons and Teri Anderson.
C
In the regular news section, the Kansan focuses on all the aspects of the proposed shopping mall, a special editorial page expresses opinions on the city and the sports page covers the Relays. Along with this the Kansan covers daily news of the University and the world.
?
Fridav. April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Merchants dispute shopping mall effects
By SHIRLEY SHOUP
Staff Reporter
The prospect of a large shopping mall to be built in Lawrence at 31st Street and Armstrong Road has elicited a great deal of interest among residents.
The first obstacle to the mail was cleared last month when the city annexed 61 acres south of Lawrence where the developers, Jacob, Visconsi and Jacob Co. of Cleveland, Ohio, want to build the mail.
BUT THE Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission and the City Commission, after approving the annexation, made it clear
The planning commission recommended the annexation on the basis of the land's suitability for general development, not on what would be needed.
City commissioners said the land was annexed to insure that the city would maintain control of the land. If the commission had not annexed the land, the county would have been able to decide how the land would be used.
The biggest battle is yet to come. Because all annexed land is automatically zoned 1S1, single-family residential, a shopping center and retail space are available.
RICHARD ZINN, a local lawyer who represents both the landowners, Ruby and Richard A. Armstrong and Betty Grisham, and the developers, has requested that the land be zoned C-4, the city's broadest commercial zoning.
The planning commission and the city commission will not consider the request until next month. When they do, there is sure
The Downtown Lawrence Association probably will oppose a zoning change for the same reason it opposed annexation. Members think a regional mall is not consistent with Plan '96, the city's comprehensive growth plan.
Jane Eldredge, a lawyer for the Downtown Lawrence Association, said, "Plan '95 points out that the projected population for 1995 is 89,000 maximum. A regional shopping mall smaller than the one proposed would need a population of 150,000 to support it. Plan '95 it would be 1990 before Lawrence could support any size mail."
BUT ARTIRHUER CURM, manager of the Gibson Discount Center, 215a Iowa, said anyone who wants to build a mall should be.
"I'm for free enterprise," he said. "People tell me we didn't hurt anyone when we came in here 10 years ago."
Cromer said a mail would offer different kinds of merchandise than his store did.
He said he thought there was no way to measure whether a mail
Glenn West, executive vice president of the Lawrence Chamber
"We have a problem with this question," he said. "We represent 1,500 business and professional people, and we find a mixed view in
of Commerce, said the Chamber had not taken a position on the mail.
THE DOWNTOWN merchants are concerned about it, and there are those who are closer to the proposed site who are very much in
"There is no clear stand in our membership so we have not taken a position."
West said many merchants along south Iowa Street and people in
"WE'VE SEEN what it's happened to other towns where shopping has been built," he said. "The resulting devastation is bad for the town."
Massachusetts, said the downtown merchants were not opposed to competition, but they want the competition downtown.
"Topeka, St. Jo, Springfield—their downtowns are all in trouble.
"We're working to bring in one or more department stores and more shops. We would like to have a convention center or a shopping complex."
Arensberg said that if a shopping mall were built in Lawrence, it would mean disaster to downtown.
Mall could shift trade to south; downtown considers expansion
By DOUG HITCHCOCK
Staff Reporter
The proposed shopping mail could mean a gloomy future for downtown merchants as business moves south, according to some
Jeff Leonard, commercial developer for Langhofer Real Estate, 280 lot development, the trends for commercial property development on low价
"Before the Holiday Plaza was built, the action was at 23rd Street. Now, it's moving south. It's obvious that the trends will be different."
George Ryan, an associate with Calvin, Eddy and Kappelman Real Estate Company, 1028 Massachusetts, said the downtown district should try to improve so it could put up stiff competition for the mall.
"It would be my opinion that the downtown business district needs to expand to compete with the mail," he said. "Not particularly to the north and south, but to the east and west to Vermont and New Hampshire streets."
Ryan also said the 600 block of the downtown area could be used as an example for merchants in the 700, 800 and 900 blocks.
"I think it would be an asset to the merchants farther north to
develop access and parking facilities as well as the 600 block has," he said.
Ryan said the business districts along 23rd Street and Sixth Street already have been hurt by new businesses such as the ones depicted in Figure 14.
However, he said if downtown merchants worked to improve the area and if the area expanded, downtown Lawrence would be able to attract more customers.
The reactor, Philip Gill Harrison of Gill Real Estate, 901 Tennessee St., said "What it it went the other way and that mall was."
One realer voiced concern about the possibility that the mall would not be successful.
"Everybody is worried about the downtown area. I'm worried about the mail. If that thing goes under, what are we going to do with that while elephant on the floodplain," he said, referring to the Wakauras River, a portion of which is on the floodplain of the Wakauras River.
the building and construction trades thought the land should be zoned for the mall.
Harrison said the design of the mail could affect its success.
"A lot depends on how it's done," he said. "If it's upley, if it's a lot of these kinds of things could either help or hinder the mail."
"They think you shouldn't use zoning to restrict competition and protect the downtown merchants," he said. "Some feel that anyone who wants to build a shopping mall should be given a chance to try it."
To help combat the argument that Lawrence needs more shopping and better services, the downtown merchants have extended shopping hours, opened their stores on Sunday, subsidized a bus to run from the KU campus to downtown and arranged with the Council on Aging for Bus 62, a transportation system for the elderly, to run on Saturday.
"If that goes in, there won't be any more private money spent downtown," he said.
Jack Arensberg, president of the Downtown Lawrence Association and owner of Arensberg's Shoe Store. 819
SO FAR, Arensberg said, the merchants' efforts have been successful.
And he may be right. It's difficult to find any Lawrence organization that stands strong in favor of the mail. However,
The Gread and Pinckney neighborhood associations have passed resolutions opposing the mall because, they say, it will harm the business community.
Although the East Lawrence Improvement Association has not officially opened the mall, it sums up a viable downtown.
Barbara Wilkins, the group's president, said. "We are in favor of keeping a downtown that's alive, but the downtown should also be more open."
SHE SAID there had been no drive either to support or to oppose a mall, but, she said. "There is the spectre of a dead downtown in New York."
Bog Eggert, president of the Far East Lawrence Improvement Association, said, "People out here don't feel they're much affected
Some of the other neighborhood associations have not taken a stand on the issue. They say they do not think the neighborhood has enough money to pay for it.
The Sunset Drive-Broadview Heights Association president, Ployest Roydon, said, "The idea of getting embroiled in local politics is not a bad thing."
But for those already involved, the issue is a hot one.
Eldredge said the city had worked in the early 70s to beautify the area along Massachusetts, and the primary reason the new city hall was being built at Sixth Street and Massachusetts was to encourage private development on the north end of the downtown area
ELDREDGE AND Arensberg said they thought it would be a waste of money to urge businesses to establish any place other than the downtown area because the business had put so much money into the area.
She said the library, post office, law enforcement center, senior citizens center and other public buildings also indicated that she would be there.
"We don't know if we're talking about an 80-shop mall or just about a big department store with shops to buy later," she added.
Eldridge also said the developer had not yet provided enough information for the city to decide about the mail.
RUBY ARMSTRONG said the developers planned to disclose the names of the department stores at a special planning commission meeting.
She said the developers were going to show the commissioners slides of what the proposed mall would look like.
West agreed.
"I'm just sorry that so many people have made up their minds before having all the information," Armstrong said.
"There is still a great deal of information that the developer has not made available, and a number of people have made up their minds."
The developer has said only that the mail would contain three major department stores with about 80 smaller shops.
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University Daily Kansan
Enrollment drops, changes ahead for KU
Staff Reporter
By JOHN LOGAN
After 15 years of uninterrupted growth, the University of Kansas is about to enter a period of uncertainty characterized by large drops in enrollment and changes in the types of students attending KU, according to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
Enrollment on the Lawrence campus could fall as low as 19,000 by 1988, according to official University figures. And University officials say a large part of that enrollment will be professionals returning as graduate students to update their education.
Enrollment estimates prepared by the administration in 1976 predict that KU's enrolment will stay about the same for the next three years. Enrollment will then begin to fall by as much as 800 students each year, and drop to 18,750 in 1989. Current enrolment is about 22,500 for the Lawrence campus.
BUT DYKES said past experience had given him little confidence in the accuracy of his findings.
"Six years ago when I first came here people said, "What are you going to do about declining enrollment?" Dykes said, "Now, with the University 20 percent bigger, they still ask me what I'm going to do about declining enrollment."
But Dykes said that even though the estimates may not be accurate, enrollment definitely would fall during the next decade because of a decreasing number of high school seniors nationwide. Just how far it drops will depend on several factors, he added. It will be encouraging education programs, federal student aid and state funding for the University.
attract the increasing numbers of professional people who are returning to
Dykes said KU hoped to offset the decrease in the number of graduating high school seniors by expanding the University's continuing education program to
"THEE IS a greater emphasis today in lifelong education. Dykes said. "Doctors lawyers and engineers are going back to them on the cutting edge of their professions."
Government funding, or the lack of it, also will affect enrollment.
Dykes described government funding for the University and its students as the great unanswered question faced during the past decade. He also yearly builds the and the constant evaluation of federal student aid programs keep KU ad- hoc watering about the future of the school, he said.
State funding for KU might strangle the University if the Legislature continues to base its allocations on enrollment, Dykes said.
If funding is cut back, KU will have to cut back on many programs, thus reducing its ability to attract students. he said. That in turn increases funding cuts and more drops in enrollment.
DYKES SAID the possible reinstitution of the draft and the troubles in the Middle East also could have an effect on the number of students at KU.
"If the draft is restarted it could have a profound effect on the number of young men in college, depending on whether it exempts college students," Dykes said.
Tarmool in the Middle East could keep many Arab and Israeli students from attending American schools, Dykes said. The schools and departments now bait to link up number of foreign students they admit in order to allow American students to enroll.
Dykes also said he was concerned that many American high school students did not understand how to properly use a computer.
"AN INCREASING number of college-people don't think college is relevant for their ambitions," Dykes said. "If more of them feel this way it could be a problem."
But despite the uncertainties, both Dykes and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, say they are convinced that KU can weather cuts in programs about what significant cuts in programs or faculty.
Some cuts will have to be made, however, and Shankel told the University Senate Executive Committee recently that 135 candidates would have to be cut in the next five years.
But Shankel said almost all of the positions would be vacated by faculty members who are scheduled to retire or who will resign during that time. The University also is pushing the Kansas Board of Regents to approve an early retirement plan for KU's Faculty.
ALSO, IN case a school or department
finds itself overestatted because of an enrollment decline, the administration is considering a plan that would allow faculty to stay in school to school and retrain themselves in other areas.
"It would allow them to fill other roles in the school if they were in areas that were not there."
The proposal is being developed by admin-
istrators and faculty representatives, he said.
Shankel said that no major cuts were expected in any departments during the next decade. However, some changes will occur. Because that suffer large enrollment drops, he said.
Changes in University schools and departments will not be based solely on evidence.
"You can't just use numbers as a factor," he said. "Quality is a key factor as well as how important the program is to providing a well-rounded education."
KU enrollment decline forecasted
By BILL RIGGINS
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas apparently is enjoying a mild period of prosperity.
KU had a record enrollment last fall. Three major construction projects are underway on the Lawrence campus. Programs in architecture, electrical engineering and computer science
But there is a threat of a serious decline in future enrollments, a problem that already has been encountered by some Kansas Board officials.
Glee Smith, Kansas Regent, has said Regents studies indicate total enrollment at Regents institutions will decline 16 percent from the 2014-15 academic year.
This would put total enrollment at Regents schools at 60,000 in 1990, about the same enrollment as in 1970.
"THAT'S NOT really a small level. It is a pretty substantial level," Smith said. "We'll have a much more stable system in 1990 when we get the Internet."
Smith said that KU enrollment was projected to decline by 13 percent, but he said an increase in graduate and special programs would make the problem worse.
Bernard Franklin, Kansas Regent, agreed that the enrollment crunch probably would be felt less at KU, Kansas State University and Wichita State University than at the Regents smaller universities, such as Emporia State and Pittsburgh State University.
"Many programs at KU, KSU and WSU have long-range needs such as professional schools in veterinary medicine, medicine and pharmacy."
HOWEVER, KU administrators and state legislators are concerned because, they say, any decline in enrollment could cause the state to lose a large portion of its budget.
State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said there was no doubt that funding battles in the Legislature would get tougher as the
"The battle gets tougher as the times get tougher." Glover, a member of the House Ways and Means Committee, said.
State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, agreed.
"There's no question that overall it's a fairly gloomy forecast that was put out by the Regents," Berman said.
Glover said all areas of the University's budget would come under closer scrutiny in a time of declining enrollment.
AND THAT is what is concerning KU administrators.
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that if enrollment began to decline, very few new academic programs would be approved by the Legislature, especially programs of substantial cost.
"There aren't going to be eight to 10 new programs approved every year," Calgaard said.
"The major problem is still the deficit of funding to support the type of academic program to which KU is committed."
Programs that have not been adequately funded in the past,
Colleges and universities, meet the customer requirements.
But Calgary said he thought the enrollment decline at KU would not be as severe as predicted.
"I tend to swallow long-range predictions with grains of salt," Calgaard said. "Our enrollment is likely to be fairly stable.
"THESE WILL BE some decline in traditional-age, on-campus enrollment. There will be some decline in humanities which will be off by a rise in enrollment in professional degrees. I believe it's a problem for our on-campus programs, primarily in metropolitan Kansas City."
David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, agreed that the enrollment predictions were speculative.
"So many things affect enrollment that you can't predict or control." Amber said.
"There may be a greater shift from private to public institutions and who knows what will happen to the percentage of high school graduates."
Ambler said some student services that depended on student fees for funding, such as health services and housing, might have to raise their fees or restrict services if enrollment declined. He noted that most schools will pay by rechanneling funds from services that were not used extensively.
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Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Lawrence-Douglas planning board strives to control growth of city
By LORILINENBERGER
Staff Writer
Most of the 10 members of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission take it for granted that Lawrence is going to be a metropolitan city.
their chief concern, they say, is keeping that growth under control to avoid urban sprawls similar to those found in Los Angeles.
Lawrence has a population of 54,000. Its population is expected to increase to 62,500 by the year 2000.
"I think it's a fact, especially financially, that you are either choosing or you are losing ground," he said. "I don't want Lawrence
HE SAID HE thought growth in Lawrence was inevitable because of the many types of opportunities the city presented.
Jack Rader, another planning commissioner, agreed with Booth. Rader said he was somewhat liberal on the issue of Lawrence
"ILawrence has to grow because of all it has to offer," he said. "It's very attractive to Kansas City and Topeka. People are going to work here."
Rader also said that commercial and industrial developers found Lawrence attractive because of its location, its potential for growth and its ability to connect with the community.
Jane Cormbest, planning commission chairman, said she accepted the fact that Lawrence was going to grow in population, but that expansion of the city limits should be avoided whenever possible.
"I BELIEVE that potential growth should be accommodated," she said. "We should not close Lawrence off to people. But we must make the best use of the land inside the city limits now because it's cheaser."
Planning Commissioner Johanna Kollmorgen agreed.
"Change is always inevitable," she said. "You have to make arrangements for what the times call for.
"But we have to beware of annexations for everything that comes in. We already have quite a bit of land going for commercial purposes."
Only one planning commissioner, Dean Harvey, opposed future growth in Lawrence. Harvey, who is a farmer, has served on the board.
He said he thought Lawrence already had expanded too quickly and that future growth should be checked.
"IN ORDER to become a large city, we're going to lose too much of our agricultural land," he said. "We'd be in a real mess, then."
Four other members of the commission did not express approval or disapproval of future Lawrence growth, although all said they favored controlled growth. Planning Commissioner Kurt Van Achen refused to comment.
Planning commissioners control growth through zoning, rezoning and annexation recommendations.
In the next month, the views on growth of the planning commissioners will be tested when they face the issue of the proposed regional shopping mail to be built on 60 acres of land recently annexed by the city. The land is at 31st Street and Armstrong Road.
THE PLANNING commission, in an 8-2 vote, recommended to the city commission two months ago that the land be annexed. Its next decision will recommend whether that land should be zoned for development. The city commission has the final vote on zoning.
Others argue that Lawrence needs better and more shopping alternatives, especially with the expected growth in population.
Most of the planning commissioners appeared hesitant to voice an opinion on the subject. Five members and they had not made up their minds yet.
Some citizens and local businessmen say the mail would detract from downtown business and it eventually could cause its complete
RADER ACKNOWLEDGED that the mall could present problems for downtown Lawrence merchants, but he said he would accept them.
"I haven't made a decision on the mail yet," he said. "I think it poses a problem for the downtown. But as Lawrence continues to work with the city, I don't see a problem."
"I just don't know if now is the time for the mall or if five years from now would be better."
Booth said he thought the developer of the proposed mall, Jacob, Viscounti, & Jacock of Cleveland, Ohio, would carry the burden of the project.
"The developer has a heck of a selling job to do," he said. "The mall would be a tremendous impact on the Lawrence community. If the developer can sell the idea, then it will be good for Lawrence."
THREE MEMBERS of the planning commission, Kolmorlmont, Combesat and Margaret McKinney, expressed disapproval of the
Their disapproval stems largely from the fact that they think Plan '95, a comprehensive planning guide for Lawrence adopted in 1977, advises against a regional shopping mall in the Lawrence area.
Combest said she thought Lawrence did not serve all segments of the market efficiently, but that a regional shopping mall would not have to.
"Lawrence is an excellent market for college clothes and tacos," she said. "But it really not a complete market.
"Plan '95 would not recommend a regional mail, though it says we have a central business district (downtown) that supposed to support our operations."
KOLLMORGEN SAID she agreed with the guidelines presented in Plan '95 and said she would not support the mail.
McKinney said she thought the mall would be detrimental to the downtown businesses and would cause them either to move out to the suburbs.
"If that happened, all the area surrounding downtown that's so attractive right now would really be life," she said, "a lot of people are going to miss it."
"I don't think you can support the regional mall without thinking of the many ramifications it could have."
One commissioner, Harvey, said he was in favor of the proposed mall because he thought Lawrence did not adequately serve the
HE ALSO said he hoped the mall would help keep the money in Lawrence that was being spent in shopping malls in Topeka and
Harvey said he did not think the proposed mall would significantly harm the downtown.
Von Achen refused to comm
Members of the planning commission serve three year terms and may not serve more than two full terms. Fire commissioners are appointed by the county commission and five are appointed by the city commission.
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Friday, April 20, 1979
6
KU construction pace slows with enrollment decline
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
As enrolments decrease at the University of Kansas, so will KU's near-friended pace of construction, according to Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning.
Wiechert, who oversees all construction plans for KU, said the University would change its emphasis from building new buildings to existing structures during the next decade.
Wiechert the switch would be made because KU was catching up on the classroom shortage caused by the enrollment boom of the 1960s.
"When enrollment declines over the next
WIECHERT SAID a master plan for University buildings called for the renovation during the next decade of Spooner, Old Green, Flint, Snow, Strong, Vinnie and Lindy halls. KU also is planning to renovate Walton Library, he said.
few years, there will no longer be a shortage of space," Wiechcik said. "We will then concentrate on upgrading existing space to bring it up to proper standards."
Most of the renovations are in the planning stage, but the Kansas Legislature alrrest has allocated $1.2 million for low-rise halls and work on those halls would begin this year.
A $6.2 million renovation of Watson Library is scheduled to begin next winter, he said, and will take 18 months to complete. Old Green Hall will house parts of the library collection while Watson is being renovated. Wiechert is said.
Renovation will be emphasized, but new construction will continue at KU during the next decade. Wiechert said most of the new classrooms will not support facilities, rather than classrooms.
THE LARGEST project will be a $40 million science technology library to be built in the area of the Military Science building.
Wieckert said the proposed library would combine the libraries of the schools of architecture and engineering and the mathematics, drama, music and science libraries. These libraries are in different buildings.
Wiechert said construction for a science library would begin in a few years and would cost between $15 million and $20 million. Additional space would be added until the library met the estimated needs for the year 2000, he said.
Wiechert said a major addition to Hayworth Hall also was being planned. The 100,000 square foot addition would link Hayworth to the new Maiott Hall addition and would house offices and labs for the life sciences.
NO ESTIMATE has been made on the cost.
but Wischert said the cost would rise at least 10 percent each year because of inflation.
Other construction projects on campus include a $6.7 million addition to Robinson Gymnasium and a $2.5 million satellite union.
Wiechert also said a number of projects were being discussed for West Campus, including an alumni center and faculty club, the College Club, the Student Association and possibly a trash-burning power plant.
A six-member committee of the Kansas Alumni Association recently was appointed to study the possibility of a combined alumni center and faculty club. Construction of the center would be financed by private donations.
Wieckert said the new additions for FO would include workshops, space for the motor pool, storage areas and a central receiving area for University supplies.
A REQUEST for $880,000 to complete designs for a trash-burning power plant on West Campus was rejected this year, but the University plans to keep applying.
"With the rising costs of fuel and with the two fuels the University uses scheduled to run out at the turn of the century, we need to change fuel anyway," Wiechert said.
"The plant would eliminate the need for the county sanitary landfill and would provide a much-needed source of income."
Planning problems face Pinckney area
By STEVE YOUNG Staff Reporter
If Pinckney Neighborhood Association leaders are correct, the future of their neighborhood depends on planning.
"There are two ways to look at the future," Michael Shaw, association secretary, said. "Either we succeed in planning or we won't succeed in planning."
The neighborhood is bordered by Second Street on the north, the Kansas River on the east, Sixth Street on the south and the Kansas Turnpike Access Road on the west. It is characterized by older homes, fast and newer subdivisions in the west.
One task facing the association is to balance the concern of commercial areas against the problems they create in neighborhoods. The main problem is the area on Sixth Street zoned for commercial use and its potential expansion northward into residential areas.
"THE AREA between Fourth and Sixth streets is appealing as a business area, but it's not a good business area—there are lots of failed businesses," Shaw said. "It's priced too high for residences and it's not good for businesses."
"It will either decay or improve, depending on how we plan."
The homes in the eastern half of the neighborhood were built between 1857 and 1915. Most date from the 1870's.
A survey conducted four years ago determined that 68 percent of the homes in the neighborhood were "sound," requiring no repairs, and that only 1 percent were "dilapidated," requiring major repairs.
"Housing has been a major priority. We're trying to save the single-family houses that are being torn down for doctors offices," she said.
Jane Eldridge, president of the association, said the association was especially involved in zoning. A major goal, she said, was to downsize the area from Tennessee Street to Michigan Street for single-family residences only.
THE PINCKNEY Neighborhood Association was formed in 1974 after
residents joined together to fight a city maintenance garage that was to be built in the neighborhood. It has 60 active members.
Last June, the Lawrence City Commission approved the Pinkney Neighborhood Plan, a general outline of how and where neighborhood would expand in the next 20 years.
The plan was developed "to maintain and enhance the Pinckney neighborhood while providing non-residential uses that are vital to the neighborhood and accommodating those non-residential uses necessary to the community at large."
The plan predicted that the current neighborhood population of about 2,400 homes in San Francisco increased by 20 years—an increase of 33 percent, compared with city-wide growth estimates of 18%.
The plan also predicted that because of the proximity to downtown, Lawrence Memorial Hospital and KU, there would be room for low and for low and middle income housing.
In addition to zoning, the association is pushing for an improved storm drainage system and is trying to get areas of the city with stormwater runoff. The National Register of Historic Places.
"We still have the original brick sewers, which are 12 inches in diameter," Eldred said.
Whenever a hard rain occurs, she said,
the curbing system is flooded with runoff
water.
Eldridge said she hoped that the neighborhood would continue to improve and would have a variety of people living in it.
"We have professors and students, blacks and whites, well educated and poorly educated, rich and poor," she wrote. "I needed him and we're trying to hold on to it."
"We are all trying to improve a place we all care about. It's hard to say what the neighborhood will be like 10 years away, but it's my hope that we keep the mix.
"Of course, if we're too successful, we'll price the people out of the neighborhood that give us that mix."
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THE LIGHT FIELD
6
Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Long-range plan guides development of Lawrence
By LORILINENBERGER
The city of Rome was not built in a day.
Today, city planners in Lawrence apparently agree that cities must be the result of careful planning.
Therefore, in an effort to direct growth and expansion in Lawrence, a device was introduced several years ago to promote qualitative growth, Roger K. Hedrick, Lawrence-Douglas County planning director, said.
That device was Plan 95, a comprehensive planning guide for the city of New York.
Adopted in 1977, Plan '95 contains recommendations for "proper coordinated development and redevelopment of the community at large."
No strict rules concerning growth are set down in Plan '95. It is a collection of flexible guidelines and principles established to advise Lawrence city planers on the most desirable path to growth and expansion of the city.
HEDRICK SAID the city of Lawrence and Douglas County decided that to manage growth in the Lawrence area, a plan with goals, goals and policies had to be created.
"We wanted to make sure that all the growth that does occur is of a qualitative kind," he said. "You can't depend on luck, because would happen in a haphazard way."
Plan '95 deals with several areas designated as crucial by the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission in 1975, including community attitude survey taken in 1975.
Those areas include appearance and image of the city; commercial and industrial development; a throughfare system; transportation; public buildings and services; utilities and related services; schools; parks, recreation and open space;
P.95
housing and neighborhood; and community development.
Each section in Plan '56 dealing with these areas offers an account of the status quo, the impact that growth would have and guidelines for making changes.
IN ADDITION, goals, objectives and policies for each area are included at the end of this chapter.
It is difficult to determine how closely
Plan "50" is followed by planning directors and
other staff members.
"First of all, the plan is designed to allow for a certain amount of flexibility," he said.
I think that the tools provided in Plan 95 allow us a certain freedom of freedom to work with them.
Possible deviations from the plan make it difficult to determine what Lawrence would look like in 1955 if the plan were followed as is, Hedrick said.
"We don't consider Plan '95 a static plan," he said. "We call it a continual planning process. The plan should continue to evolve as changes occur every year."
Hedrick said the plan made projections for population growth in Lawrence and St. Louis.
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The population in Lawrence was 49,989 in 1975. According to Plan 95, the probable population by the year 2000 is 62,500. The population in Douglas County was 63,863 in 1975. By 2000, that figure is expected to increase to 77,000.
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"As far as which direction Lawrence is headed, you'll see most of it growing west between Youll Street and Highway 40," he said.
ALTHOUGH HEDRICK said he could not determine exactly what changes would occur in Lawrence between now and 1996, he wrote in articles about Lawrence growth and expansion.
These figures include KU students living in Lawrence and Douglas County.
If the original purpose of the plan is followed, population growth in Lawrence will be efficiently accommodated and plans for expansion will be analyzed thoroughly to offer as many advantages as possible to Lawrence area residents, Hedrick said.
"I think you'll see a lot more incessant ... town," he added. "At the same time, you'll continue to see an increased interest in the construction of older homes and neighborhood."
"That shall always be the intent, no matter how the plan itself may change as we grow."
842-4499
Changes are bound to occur, and the city commission, in a resolution adopting Plan 6984, will implement them.
IT CALED for acceptance of Plan '50 on the grounds that it be used primarily as an aid to the planning commission, but not as the last word on all issues.
The resolution said that the plan should not act as a "limitation upon the power of the city commission to act with respect to the land use of land or the expenditure of public funds."
In addition, the resolution said Plan "85
"should not be interpreted in such a manner
as to discourage expansion of the corporate
limits of the City of Lawrence . . ."
Hedrick said he be did not think Plan 58 included restrictions that would limit flight paths.
"Some cities use devices in their comprehensive plans, like limiting the number of building permits issued every year, so that new buildings don't Plan 95 doesn't include restrictions like this."
"We DONT want to avoid growth. We want to manage and direct it to obtain a quality, instead of merely quantity, growth."
As planning director, Hedrick will play a major role in directing lawrence growth in his firm.
He called himself a moderate on the issue of growth in Lawrence.
"I'd probably consider myself a proponent of managed growth—something that we can handle," he said. "I think that you have grown, they grow they to become a little stargazer."
He said he though Plan 95 worked in the best interests of Lawrence and should be considered when making important zoning decisions.
Plan "56" was first drafted by Ron Jones and Associates, a consulting firm in Olathe. From that draft, Hedrick said, the planning staff and planning commission reworked it, using input from open public meetings whenever possible.
"It offers templates that are going to be pertinent in any major decision," he petitioned.
The plan took about three years to complete and was financed in part through a comprehensive planning grant from the Housing and Urban Development
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there have been many changes in the University since they taught. Rooke taught anatomy and neurology from 1946 to 1970.
Staff photo by TRISH LEWIS
Retired profs notice changes in student-faculty relationships
By TOM ZIND Staff Reporter
Changes at the University of Kansas probably seem slow and barely detectable to most of its students and some of its faculty. But for Paul Roofe and Ruth McNair, KU professors emeritus who spent a decade expands 38 years, KU is much different from what it used to be.
Roofe and McNair agree that relationships between students and faculty have changed.
Roofe, who taught anatomy and neurology at KU from 1945 to 1970, said there seemed to be a greater sense of purpose and fulfillment in his work.
"The style of teaching has changed a great deal," he said. "We had a great pride and integrity that we felt. We didn't put ourselves on a pedestal, but we did have a high respect for education and a sense of purpose."
ROOFE, WHO attended Kansas State University and the University of Chicago, said today's professors lacked the cohesive feeling and the closeness that characterized the faculty during his teaching days.
"But maybe it's because I'm getting old that I recognize the difference," Roofe said.
Ncairn, who taught biology at KU from 1931 to 1944, said faculty members during her years knew on another and said
"We did things together—Christmas parties, chancellor's receptions," she said. "Now it would be impossible to do that."
MNeair attributed the closeness of the faculty to the smaller size of the University at that time. The student body numbered
The two professors, who live at Sprague Apartments, the KU complex for retired professors, disagree on the nature of students
"I THINK the students are just as dedicated and serious today as they were when I was teaching." Roofe said.
In fact, Roofe said, when he first began teaching, students were not as dedicated as they are now.
"When I first came to Kansas during the war, there were very few students who really had a gut feeling of what they were going to do."
With the coming of the nuclear age after World War II, people noticed the changes that were taking place and the necessity of using them.
"The people I had to deal with in the professional schools were definitely more dedicated after the war," he said.
But Roofe said that students had remained much the same through the years.
"Basically, they're just the same as they were in the Roman and Egypt empires—only the cream of the crop rise to the top."
MNEAIR SAID that she was concerned about the lack of medication of today's students.
"It does seem that we have a lot of uninterested students," she said. "I think we have some very fine students, but I think there is a trend toward them."
Students today tend to want to experience as much as they can, as quickly as they can, McNair said. She said that during her freshman year, she took classes with Mr. Ruffino.
"We did not try to cram our experiences into a couple of years," she said. "We felt that there was time to do those things as much as we could."
Both McMair and Roofe reckill vividly the turmul of the 1960s and early 1970s at KU, when demonstrations and violence shook the campus and climaxed in the burning of the Kansas Union in the spring of 1971.
ROOFE, WHO was finishing his teaching career during that time, said students were just reacting to some issues that contained serious problems.
Rofe said the students wanted to make the point that there was something wrong with the social system. He said, he heard, she told him. "It's really not true."
"When the Union burned, I was overwhelmed—it was such a shock," he said. "At first the hippies came along and I just thought it was a weird world we were living in, but actually they were not too far off."
McNair said she thought the student body was not at fault for what happened at KU during those years, but that the troubled学生 was able to make a difference.
"I was awfully proud of the student body when we were having all of our trouble," she said.
Roofe, who lived near campus at 1318 Louisiana St. during his teaching career, said Lawrence had mademounted since he began
"The greatest change has been in suburbia, with all the shopping malls and homes," he said.
McNair can recall when many of today's major throughfares were just country roads.
"Naismish was just a dirt road for a long time, and the business district was restricted to an area that didn't go past 19th Street," she said.
By LEO CAROSELLA
Staff Renorter
Plans for a new city hall in downtown Lawrence may be flying high, but several other cities are considering such a move.
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Airport, much-needed expansion has never gotten off the ground, according to Brad Snyder.
However, airport improvements soon may be taking off, he said.
The bricks used to build the hanger were made by the public works programs of that era and now are crumbling. Sidewalks and paths are interrupted by potholes. And the terminal, although it appears to be more ancient than the hanger, also is starting to show its age.
The first of the planned improvements, the repavement of the two 9,900-foot runways, was completed last fall. Next on the agenda is the renovation of the terminal and other airport buildings, which date back to the depression years.
"EVENTUALLY WE'LL need a 5,000-foot
Although he would not discuss specific plans for improvements, Bartholomew, who became airport manager six weeks ago, did cite two pressing needs.
"We've lost corporate contracts for the
use of our airport because of our limited
operational capacity."
runway to increase out traffic," he said.
Amherst, five years, "I like to see a new terminal."
To prevent this from happening in the future, Bartholomew said he would like to see the community show more interest in its airport.
According to Barboliowem, Lawrence's airport is smaller and has less facilities than that of the airline at Bristol.
"We'd like to rework our operations and expand our facilities," he said. "But we need public support, and no one knows we're here."
About 60 planes are stationed full time at the airport. More than 100 take-offs and landings are made daily. Included in this figure are the commuter flights to Kansas City International Airport.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 20, 1979
North Lawrence is overlooked, distinct
7
By BRUCE THOMAS
Staff Reporter
While real estate developers are vying for land to the west and south of Lawrence, land to the east and the north seems to have been passed over.
North Lawrence, across the Kansas River, is almost an anomaly in the city. Standing next to a city that is growing in size, this town has a sleepy little place, almost a separate town.
But two large real estate developers have turned to North Lawrence to build homes.
1 one lawrence developers with North Lawrence interests are Phil Bay of Bay Real Estate, who has about 20 undeveloped properties. Realtors Real Estate, which has about 30 lots.
This interest has come about only in the last six months, according to Dick Edmondson, a general contractor who works with Stebens.
Edmondson said developers had become interested in North Lawrence because the Army Corps of Engineers had been able to control flooding on the Kansas River, which has already received loans and loans are willing to provide mortgages for prospective buyers in the area.
Lawrence lot was less expensive than the cost in a new subdivision. The lots are narrower, which reduces the cost for the house buyer, he said, and the streets and sewer lines are already built so the new buyer does not have to assume those costs.
Another reason for renewed building in North Lawrence is people like the at- lender and relaxed area, Edmondson site. Many of the in the area moved to the subdivisions because they could not find adequate space in North Lawrence, but now want to move back.
Edmondson added that because the area was near downtown, and because jobs were available in North Lawrence, such as at the North Lawrence Institute, North Lawrence should continue to grow.
Edmondson said he thought 50 houses were on the drawing boards for the area. Bay said his company planned to start developing his 20 acres in the next year. Four houses have been built and sold on the Stephens lots.
For those who want to buy a new house in an older section of town with a relaxed atmosphere, North Lawrence might be the right place, according to Edmondson. He said, "Since I've been working there I see what a pleasant place it is."
Stepping stones
spare me entity early spring fishing Estell Johnson, 714 Grant, spends another afternoon fishing from the supports of the old Kansas River bridge in North Lawrence
Johnson, who spends much of his time fishing local waters, said that although the water level of the river was a big high this spring, the fishing was the same as last year.
Clinton Lake offers economic benefits
By LYNN BYCZYNSKI Staff Reporter
The tread of a million visitors playing at Clinton Lake each year will be felt far beyond the boundaries of the park.
Staff Reporter
Economic tremors may be felt most strongly in Lawrence, which is five minutes by car from the 7,000-acre reservoir and surrounding recreational
"It isn't very hard to understand that those numbers are going to have an impact." Glenn West, executive vice president of Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which built Clinton Lake, has estimated that the recreational facility would attract one million visitors annually for the next few years, then 1.3 million each year thereafter.
Although there are no firm statistics about the number of dollars that will flow from the lake to Lawrence, local merchants are expecting a boost in business.
BRUCE LEINMILLER, co-owner of The Captain Shop, 1411 W. 23rd St., said he hoped the opening of two marinas at the resort summer would bring boaters his way.
Leinmiller and his father, George, have owned the boat store since 1969, but moved the business to 23rd Street in 1977.
Proximity to the lake was one factor in their selection of a new site for the business, Leimmiller said.
"We're right on K-10, the road that leads from Johnson County to Clinton," he said.
Leinmiller said few new businesses had come to Lawrence because of the lake. But he said he thought every town in town would benefit from Clinton.
"I have a theory I call the development of energy. The lake will be a focal point. It will get people out and around. It will develop action. And people have a bad habit of spending money when they're out," he said.
New development in the area will increase the tax base of the city. More revenue means that city government can spend more money while keeping taxes constant. West said.
"The growth we've had in Lawrence in the past seven or eight years has expanded the assessed valuation and kept the milv levy constant. Yet we've had an adequate amount of money to do things that are not the community wants to do them." he said.
Further growth of city predicted while student population declines
By LAURIE WOLKEY
Staff Reporter
The predicted decrease in KU enrollments will not significantly affect the growth of Lawrence, according to the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
Glenn West, executive vice president of the Chamber of Commerce, said, "I think the growth of Lawrence will continue to be healthy. It may not be as rapid as in the last five years. There has to be a time when the University element decreases."
Lawrence has a population of about 54,000,
17,000 of which are students. This figure does not include the approximately 7,000 students who live in residence halls,
scholarship halls, fraternities and sororities.
In 1974, a population projection study by Kenneth Anderson and George Smith for the State Education Commission estimated the number of KU students living in Lawrence at 17.000. By 1990, the number probably will be 15.000.
WEST SAID he thought those projections of the study were too low.
"We have had quite a few problems, particularly with the population projections. The Lawrence to underplain. You underplain you have a biggie problem than if you had no problems."
The population study was used to design
Plan '95, a comprehensive growth plan for Lawrence.
West said another five-year study, by Sales and Marketing Management, estimated a 13.3 percent population growth for Lawrence between 1976 and 1981, making the city the 25th fastest growing U.S. city in 1981. It also predicted a 71.9 percent increase in Lawrence retail sales, from $186.4 million to $191.7 million between 1976 and 1981.
However, West said the Sales and Marketing Management study projections were too small.
"MY OPINION is that we are somewhere in between the two predictions," he said.
According to the calculations of the Chamber of Commerce, West said, Lawrence will shift toward industry because the probable decrease in KU enrollment.
"Right now, the largest industry in the
YEAR LAWRENCE (NON-STUDENT) KU (Students living in Lawrence.) HASKELL LAWRENCE (TOTAL)
1960 24,637 7,261 960 32,858
1970 29,765 15,019 914 45,698
1975 30,298 18,500 1,200 49,989
1980 35,500 17,000 1,300 55,800
1985 37,800 17,000 1,200 56,000
1990 41,000 15,000 1,200 57,200
1995 44,000 14,500 1,200 59,700
2000 46,800 14,500 1,200 62,500
*probable figures
*probable figures.
The housing market in Lawrence is growing along with the city and it's growing to the south and the west.
However, developers are going to run into a wall that will prohibit any further development to the south of lawrence. That wall will continue onward as we progress.
"We have pushed about as far to the south as we can," Philip Gill Harrison, of Gill Real Estate Agency, said.
Arkie Vaughn, an executive at Lawrence Savings and Loan, agreed.
Flood plain to prevent city growth
He said that because of the flood plain, development would begin to move toward the west, southwest and northwest, once all of the land in the south was developed. Gill estimated that would be in the next five years.
Grove, a subdivision, across the Wakarusa Valley, which forms the flood plain.
Vaughn said residential development in Lawrence had been healthy.
Some of the new subdivisions are:
Harrison said some developers already were building subdivisions on the bluffs across the flood plain south of Lawrence.
- Pleasant Grove, a 60-lot development with houses in the range of $70,000-$100,000.
- Prairie Meadows, a development by Gill and Bay realors near the Hockey Sports Complex, west of Iowa Street. House sells for $600.
- West Ridge Heights, a subdivision in northwest Lawrence.
Houses sell between $60,000 and $79,000.
- Floral Estates, a subdivision in east Lawrence, offers condominium-like houses. They sell from $3,000 to $45,000.
One developer,Phil Bay, of Bay Real Estate, has built Pleasant
Bay Real Estate also is developing two subdivisions west of Lawrence toward Clinton Lake. Houses in these subdivisions are
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However, West said the city did not have enough industrial sites for the new project.
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West said that the city had been investigating possible sites for industry. Two of those sites were located northeast and northwest of Lawrence.
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"In fact, we discourage more companies than those we encourage. But when we find one that seems suitable, we roll out the red carmen to convince them about Lawrence."
"LAWRENCE IS between two large cities, Topeka and Kansas City, but still has the qualities of a small town. The University adds vitality and excitement to the town. We also have had a readily available work force," he said.
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Lawrence has had little difficulty in attracting business, according to West.
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"We are very fortunate that Lawrence is the flagship of Kansas," he said. "We don't spend a great deal of time advertising or recruiting to attract business prospects.
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Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas Vol.89,No.125
Friday, April 20, 1979
Lawrence, Kansas
sports C
54th Kansas Relays come home
"It was only when the Kansas students and alumni built the Memorial Stadium, in token of the sacrifice of the 129 KU students who were killed by the terrorist attack."
By NANCY DRESSLER
1923 Relays program
By NANCY DRESSLER
Sports Editor
The only track at the University of Kansas in 1928 circled McCook Field, north of the present Memorial Stadium. But then, even plans were made to build a new one.
Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, then KU athletic director and the founder of the Kansas Relays, made sure the replacement, Memorial Stadium, had a suitable track for the staging of a large outdoor bonanza.
By 1923, the new stadium was finished. It's track boasted one of the four longest straightways in the country, exceeded only by the New York Giants' stadium.
The stage was set.
There weren't many outdoor联赛 in 1923. In fact, there were only three: the Penn Games, Drake Relays and a relays at Washington University on the Pacific coast. Kansas soon would join the elite group.
JOHN OUTLAND, a Kansas City doctor and one time KU student, was exposed to the Penn Games while playing football and achieving All-American status at the Eastern school. After college, he played for the Kansas City determined to include in his same type of outdoor carnival.
"He began to insist that Kansas should have games similar to the Pennsylvania carnival but lack of facilities impeded him," the first player said.
But Memorial Stadium solved the problem of where to have the Relays, and Kansas threw its hat into the relays ring in 1823. The spring annual site has remained the same. 89 years ago, no relays were held in 1943, or 45 because of World War II. And last year, a $1.8 million stadium renovation project scattered the Relays to five sites in two states. After a year's leave of absence, the M.I. Oread Olympics are back
From a one-day, 32-event meet in 1923, the Relays has grown to a four-day affair with more than 106 events.
THOUSANDS OF HIGH school, junior college and university
athlete will either this weekend for the 54th Kansas Relays.
It owes much of its tradition to one of its biggest promoters, Allen. As athletic director, he sent out letters to alumni boosting the program's growth.
"College, spirit, color, 'pep', 'ginger,'—all these will combine with Kansas hospitality and sunshine to make mid-Spring in Kansas most enjoyable. The Nomad in you will lure you out in the open on Kansas' Great Spring Homecoming," it said.
A HANDBELT for that year's extravaganza will provide 1,000
AMSTERS from 15 states would make the Relays "an entire afternoon of
amusement."
Allen brought not only great athletes to the Relays, but also other sports personalities to serve as meet officials.
One of Allen's bizarre promotion stunts occurred in 1930 when he used a rodeo and a buffalo barbecue to publicize the Raleys.
Nore Dame's famous football coach, Knute Rocke, the referee in 1925. In 1931, Alonzo Stagg of the University of Chicago
One of KU's greatest distance runners, Glenn Cunningham, returned to his alma mater to serve as reference in the 20th Melody in 1987.
CUNNINGHAM heads a long list of outstanding athletes that have taken part in the Relays.
In 1936, the Relayls program called Cunningham "Kansas" greatest track athlete. The Elkhardt Express held the 1,500-meter run, indoor mile and 1,000-mard run world records in 1934. He was a member of the 1936 Olympic teams. In the 1986 games, he took second in the 1,500.
In 1938, he ran the fastest mile ever run by a man, at that time,
With the discus, his throw of 188-2 is still third best in KU history. It won him the Texas RELays title in 1858. Oerter and Cunningham were both charter inductees of the National Track and Field Hall of Fame.
4:04.4. That year, the Relays were renamed "Glenn Cunningham Day." Cunningham owns a ranch near Augusta.
The winner of tomorrow's open men's mile run will receive the Glenn Cunningham Trophy.
ANOTHER IN A line of outstanding Kansas distance runners is Wes Santee, outstanding performer of the 1852 and 1964 Kansas Relays. In his career, Santee won six outstanding performer stops on this key stop on the grand relay circuit; Kansas, Drake and Texas.
Starting in 1962, Santee built a chain of 48 sub-4;10 miles. six of
1,500-meter run for university, college and junior college men, which ran yesterday, is named for him.
Al Oerter, a KU Olympian, made his mark on the Relays record book in the shot and the discus. As a senior in 1988, he bagged the Texas and Kansas Relays shot titles and took third in the event at the Drake Relays.
Relays Schedule
Friday, April 20
Field events-at KU
AM
08 00 Dusch throw—high school girls—prelims and finals
10 00 Lump jump high school boys—prelims and finals
10 00 High jump—high school boys—finals
10 00 Pole vault—univ. col, jr. col men-prelims and finals
10 00 Pole vault—univ. col, jr. col men-prelims and finals
10 00 Discus throw—univ. col, jr. col women-prelims and finals
10 00 Javelin throw—univ. col, jr. col men-prelims and finals
10 00 Javelin throw—high school boys—prelims and finals
Track events-at KU
AM
08 10 100 yard-dash-high school girls—prelims
08 10 100 yard-dash-high school girls—prelims
08 10 100 meter-dash-univ. col, jr. col men-prelims
08 10 100 meter-dash-univ. col, jr. col men-prelims
08 10 100 meter dash-univ. col, jr. col men-prelims
08 10 100-meter hurdles-high school boys—
3:30 High jump—high school girls—finals
A1 jump ramp - high school girls - finals
**Tackevent at AKU**
**PM**
1. 100 120 yard high hurdles - high school boys - finals
2. 100 120 yard high hurdles - high school boys - finals
3. 126 100 yard dash - high school girls - finals
4. 126 100 yard dash - high school girls - finals
5. 148 four-wheel relay - col, col, jr col men -
6. 148 four-wheel relay - col, col, jr col men -
7. 200 sprint relay - high school girls - invitational finals
7. 200 sprint relay - high school girls - invitational finals
7. 200 sprint relay - high school girls - invitational finals
7. 247 Cifflin Custom 400 meter ud - hardline univ -
7. 300 yards hurdles - high school boys - invitational finals
7. 300 yards hurdles - high school boys - invitational finals
7. 800 yard relay - col, col, jr col men -
8. 800 yard relay - col, col, jr men -
8. section two finals
8. 400 yard relay - col, col, jr col women -
8. 400 yard relay - col, col, jr col women -
8. 400 yard relay - col, col, jr col women -
8. 400 yard relay - col, col, jr col women -
8. 400 yard relay - col, col, jr col women -
8. 400 yard relay - col, col, jr col women -
8. 400 yard relay - col, col, jr col women -
8. field event one uri relay - uni men - prelims
**Saturday, April 13**
**Tackevent at AKU**
**AM**
1. Triple jump - high school boys - prelims and finals
2. Sedet put-unis - col, col, women - prelims
3. Pole vaul - high school boys - finals
4. A1 Over竞赛 throw up - col, col, jr col
5. Long jump - unis - col, col, jr men -
6. long jump - unis - col, col, jr men -
7. long jump - unis - col, col, jr men -
8. women steppechase - open section one
9. women steppechase - open section one
10. two-wheel run - high school girls - finals
11. two-wheel run - high school girls - finals
which were anchor legs on distance联赛 in his three seasons at Kansas. His best was a 4:06 in the Jerry Thompson Mile at the 1955 Texas Relays, which was a new American record. Only Jim Ryun and Bill Dotson have posted better times as KU milers. In the same year, Sante set the world indoor record in the mile, 4:03.8, in Boston.
SANTEE, BORN and raised in Ashland, just 100 miles east of Cunningham on the island of Elkhardt, is a Lawrence insurance man. The
10 1.00 two-male relay - high school girls - finals
10 9.50 two-male relay - junior men - finals
10 8.00 runner-master men - finals
10 7.00 runner-master women - finals
10 6.00 runner-master open - men - section two female
10 5.00 runner-master open - women - section two female
10 4.00 runner-master open - men - section two female
10 3.00 runner-master open - women - section two female
10 2.00 runner-master open - men - section two female
10 1.00 runner-master open - women - section two female
1.00 Lump jump-univ., col, jr col. women-premium and finals
1.06 Lump jump-high univ., col, jr col. men-finals
1.08 Hammers throw high school-univers., col, jr col. men-finals
1.30 Voleau run-up men-finals
1.34 Hammers throw univ., col, jr col. men-
1.38 Long jump univ., col, jr col. men-finals
1.40 Long jump-univers., col, jr col. women-finals
Track events—at KU
1.20 40 yard relay - high girls-finals
1.24 40 yard relay - high boys-finals
1.30 OPENING CEREMONIES
1.10 100 meter hurdles-univ., col, jr col.
100 meter hurdles-univers., col, jr col.
100 meter dash-univ., col, jr col. women-finals
100 meter dash-univers., col, jr col. women-finals
100 meter relay-jr col. men-finals
100 meter relay-jr col. women-finals
100 meter relay-jr col. women-finals
100 meter dash-univ., col, jr col. women-finals
100 meter dash-univers., col, jr col. women-finals
100 meter dash-univers., col, jr col. women-finals
100 meter dash-univers., col, jr col. women-finals
100 meter relay-run-univers., col, jr col. boys-finals
100 meter relay-run-univers., col, jr col. boys-finals
100 meter runner-masters men
IN ADDITION to a single event, the 1969 Kansas Relays were dedicated to him.
The university, college and junior college men's disc at the Labels is named in honor of Oter尔. It will be tomorrow.
But perhaps the most memorable Kansas distance performer was the lanky runner from Wichita, Jim Ryun. He was the outstanding performer of the Relays four times, in 1966, 67, '69 and 71. (A member of 1967.)
As a sophomore in 1967, Ryun was the world record holder with a
clocking of 3:51.3. He led one of the Relays' most prestigious mile fields. Three other sub-four minute milers joined him, but Ryun won with a time of 3:47.4. The mark still stands as the Relays record in the open mile run.
Ryun is now in business in Santa Barbara, Calif.
MORE RECENT Relays greats include Bruce Jenner, who set the decathlon record in 1974 with what was then the world's fifth best point total; Nolan Cromwell, the intermediate hurdler and now professional football player who was the Relays' outstanding performer in 1978; and Clifford Wiley, the outstanding performer in 1980, will return this year to run in the innings 100- and 200-meters.
But herds of outstanding performers have not always grabbed all the headlines in the Relays. All too often, Mother Nature has garnered the most publicity for her frequent outbursts on this special weekend.
SHE WASTED no time with her barrages. The first Relays in 1923 was run almost entirely in a steady rain. Noteworthy downpours also struck in the Relays of '29, '32, '48, '51, '55, '59, '65, '69, '70, '74, and '77.
Allen again took charge of things, even the weather, when he took out insurance on the RELAYS in 1923. He insured them for $5,000. One tinted of one inch of rain fell between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. on the first day of the season, but it melted out after 1925, no company would take Allen's offer. It was too risky.
RAIN WAS A big factor in the Relays' finances. In 1960, when KU head men's track coach Bill Easton urged that students be charged admittance to the events. Before, they had gotten in free with identification.
But it wasn't until 1989 that a better insurance policy arrived in the form of an all-winter Tartan track, built with funds given by KU alumunis and track man Jimm Hersberger, a Wichita oil man. The track is named after him.
The weather is still a phantom that hangs over the Relays. Memorial Stadium, because of its 50,000 plus seating capacity, is not conductive to advance ticket sales. Spectators wait until the days of the meet and if it's raining, many stay away.
THERE IS NO insurance of money or fras. But even when the rains come, some souls venture out, lured by the promise of record-breaking performances that have become a trademark of the weekend bonanza.
Optimism of fair weather, even though it had already rained on the Relays twice, was spelled out in an informational booklet sent to prospective entrants in 1932. It said, "The ideal climatic conditions prevailing in Kansas in late April had favored the athletes competing at the Kansas Relays and while it is impossible to imagine that there is every chance that mid-spring will be in full swing by April 23."
The author was right at least about the guarantee. It rained on the 1932 Relays.
Rain or shine, the Relays have become a natural phase of spring on the Hill. And they have grown with the University.
DESPIE TTS frequent appearance, rain has delayed the Relays few times. In 1959, heavy rain caused the postponement of Friday afternoon events and the entire schedule was run in seven hours on Saturday.
The 1929 Relays program included a list of KU facts. There were five women students in engineering that year and four were enrolled in the School of Law. A total of 8,000 students were enrolled.
IN 1960, undergraduate women were allowed to stay out until 1:30 a.m. if their dates had purchased a ticket from the Associated Women Students, sold to raise money for a scholarship fund. The usual Saturday night closing hour was 1 a.m.
This year, more than 22,000 students attend classes on the Lawrence campus. Customs have changed radically for dating.
But one thing that hasn't changed is the annual rite of spring, the Mt. Oread Olympics. The Kanes Raisas are back home.
Timmons downplays track mentor role
By GENE MYERS Sports Writer
Sports Writer
There was nothing very special about this particular day.
The welcomed warmth of the sun, after a weekend of snow and rain, left the athletes sweating profusely as they hustled shirr-ing in quarter-mile oval in Memorial Stadium.
And Bob Timmons felt he was at home.
"I's just great!" Timmons, KU's head track and cross-country coach for 14 years, said. "This is the most pleasant environment outdoors in the sun in this great environment."
"A lot of exciting things happened indoors, but the Olympics are outdoors and they're the ultimate of track. That's where track should be."
THAT'S JUST where Timmons was this late afternoon, fulfilling his duties as a member of the meet director, Daniel Rasel Reyes and finalist in The Quick. More long jump and high jump pits, he was in the stands directing traffic as workers carrying touches to the scorer's table and judges.
A few moments later, Timmons was back on the track, conferring with assistant Gary Pepin and Jerry Hudson, who were the distance runner Lester Mickens and holding a lengthy meeting with the coaches. "I'll be practicing by meeting with a sports writer."
This has been Timmons' habitat since he succeeded Bill Easton as head coach in 1965, following a one-year stint as Easton's assistant. In that stretch he has earned a reputation as one of the nation's top track captains, even though he downplays his role.
'I DON'T SEE the program at all revoking around me. Tummao is still there.'
never scored a point as a coach. If the team does well, the credit goes to the defense.
"Someday, I would like to be a good coach and know I've done a good job, but I really don't care what the record says. If I haven't contributed in some small way to the lives of the athletes, it doesn't matter if we win or lose because I've lost as a coach. You should just keep caring about our record, but the athletes and I will know if I've done nothing."
"EVERYTHING WAS GOING on with the war, social problems and concern about racial inequality. It was hard feeling comfortable and enjoying coaching because of the unrest wherever people had relationships with students. I was in full agreement and could understand their needs but I couldn't accept their methods.
Before taking the KU job, Timmons coached successfully at the high school
"It took me eight or nine years to really make the adjustment," he said of the switch from high school to college. "I've had a long coach with all the difficulties of the times."
'There has never been anything uncertain about KU's success under Timmons. The Jayhawks have captured NCAA titles from 1970 to 1980 and 1969 and 1970. The 1970 squad also shared the NCAA Outdoor title with Oregon and Brigham Young Universities. Timmons' teams have finished in the top five in the NCAA tournament five times and 10 times in indoor meet.
"The last three or four years, I've really enjoyed the team; the athletes and I really
IN THE BIG EIGHT conference, KU's record has been even more phenomenal. The Hawks won 11 straight outdoor championships under Timmons until
Okahama snapped the string last year. There also have been nine indoor Uiles, six outdoor ones.
"Our goals are just the same as they've ever been," Timmons said. "We want to win the conference and to try to win or to win a championship, but it's become more and more difficult."
"Kansas is one of the strongest track and field programs in the country, and I've been lucky to stay at the level established by coach Easton's teams, which won two-tithes of the conference championships and two national titles over 18 years.
"INDOORS AND OUTDOORS we are still excellent but in cross-country we
haven't been even close to coach Easton's teams."
Timmons blamed part of this slip in tighness on the NCAA, which reduced the number of foreign athletes into the u.s. collegiate ranks, a trend that particularly disturbs Timmons, a former seven-year athlete in the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Committee.
"It it's difficult to have a national power in cross-country, indoors, outdoors and the relay all at once," he said. "A major difficulty is having so many different athletes. We can't work with us and we won't take any foreign athletes. We still have the same goals as
KU
KANEJA REPLAYS
Coach Bob Timmons
we've always had but it's much more difficult.
Next to the fall of the United States from its dominant role in world track, Timmons finds administrative burdens the most frustrating and tedious part of his position
"IT'S TERRIBLY frustrating facing the foreign element at the national level and seeing what happens to the NCAA athletes at the Olympic games. When the Olympics come, I'm a real flag waver. When I see an American winning a gold medal, I get a big lump in my throat even if I’m not involved. He's so focused on these thrashed about football athletics – win, lose or draw–but our athletes just aren't getting the chances anymore."
"I would rather have the time to devote to the athlete. Who's going to remember who coached her and the rest?" I'd rather have being I contributed to the lives of athletes.
After graduating from KU in 1960, Timmons immediately went into coaching. He led high school teams in basketball, football, track, tennis, cross-country and swimming, which is his second love. He alsoachieved the Wichita Swim and club clubs.
"IT'S MOST IMPORTANT to have time to devote to the athlete so he can achieve maximum potential as an athlete and not just as a competitor of his life," he said. "I miss the time when you coached all week long and went to a meet on a weekend. Now there are so many other sides and legal aspects that I don't want to be involved in but can't avoid."
"I STILL LOVE swimming," he said, "but when I came here it was time to turn in. I had both girls and guys, and I really have missed the age groupers and girls. Their attitude was fantastic, and the only difference was that men was the length of the swimming suit."
"Everything is all pushed in and squashed together in swimming," he said. "That environment is great for a meet, but it can also be uncomfortable,匀ity, sameness and closeness aren't good."
"With track you're out in the country one part of the year, indoors another and then the other. There is contrast in track and field, in both the events and training. The only real contrast in swimming is the swimmer and the techniques of training are so similar."
DURING HIS HIGH school coaching career, which consisted of stints at North Carolina and Timmons produced such athletes as Jeff Farrell, 1960 Olympic swimmer; San Romani, Jr., the nation's first high school 4-10.0 mile run; and Jim Ryan, the first prep athlete to win a national title.
Ryun, who became the nation's best miler, was Timmons' initial recruiting prize, a feat accomplished with relative ease.
"I don't know if anyone else even tried recruiting him," Timmons said.
Ryun went on to qualify for two Olympic games. In Mexico City in 1968, he took second in the 1,500 meters. He also competed in the long jump. Ryun isn't the only Olympic athlete Timmona has coached. Sprinter Mark Latz, pole vaulter Terry Porter and javelin thrower Sam Colson, who finished fifth in a contest made it to the 1976 Olympics in Montreal.
"I'm just as enthusiased and to coach and learn as when I first started," Tim
"Sometimes I don't think I've even scratched the surface of what track is all about. I still make a lot of mistakes, and I don't make the same ones too many times."
2
Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
One-woman track team now coach
BY CARLOS MURGUA
Sports Writer
Teri Anderson, KU women's track coach,
doesn't believe in giving up easily.
After graduating from high school, she went to Colorado to compete in an 880-yard race in a Junior Olympic meet. Anderson was dueling it out for the lead with another
reining
Teri Anderson
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
That might have ended the race for most runners, but when Anderson came to a couple of seconds after she blacked out, she led by 13 seconds to finish line to finish sixth out of 12 runners.
surrender, when five yards from the finish line,
she blacked out and collapsed onto the
"They told me I crawled over the finish line," Anderson said. "I really don't remember where we were, but it must have been by instinct that I wanted to finish the race. I wasn't used to running in that high of an altitude. I was not used to running in that very seriously about not competing collegately."
SHE DID DECIDE to compete, but unfortunately for KU she decided to compete for rival Kansas State University. Unfortunately for Anderson, K-State didn't have a women's track team in 1972, the year she began college.
The next year she set a personal record in the mile (4:41.6), but she wasn't happy about competing at K-State. She was not only with the quality of competition in the Midwest.
Undaunted, Anderson received permission to work out with the men's track team at North Carolina State. He joined entire K-State women's track队. At the outdoor nationals that year, she placed first in the mile (4·5·8) and second in the 800 meter (7·6·9). She had the bad收获, she placed fifth as a team.
"I was sort of a pioneer at KState," Anderson said. "I was the first woman track athlete to represent the school at meets. During the practices with the men I'd get some of them mad at me because I used to beat them at the longer distances."
"It ITW frustrating to win all my races during the regular season here in the Midwest," she said, "but then go to nationals and not do very well because I hadn't been exposed to top-flight competition.
She continued to be one of the top three distance runners in the country while at home. She also met the national AAU meet and the national cross-country meet and made the Pan American squad. She also had the fastest two-mile time (10.10) in the nation that
"That's the reason I decided to go to San Jose State my junior year."
Anderson wasn't satisfied with San Jose State and decided to return to K-State after the Pan Am games. But before the games, she broke her foot for the third time in her athletic career. This third break had an effect on her attitude toward track and life.
"I BEGAN to wonder if I was meant to run," she said. "I thought maybe God was trying to tell me something. I decided to put him into a box and let him direct my life was supposed to take."
Her faith and personal efforts were rewarded her senior year at K-State when she placed second at nationalists in the 3,000-meters (9:19) and the two-mile run. She also won the championship champion in the 880, mile and two-mile run and the outdoor champ in the two-mile run.
Looking back, she said she was an extremely strong endurance runner who lacked speed she needed. Her coach and teammates were so slow that Anderson, said Teri might have pushed
"I received an academic scholarship offer from KU," she said. "I really liked their graduate physical education program. Also, I knew Marian Washington (KU)'s present athletic director) and I was hoping that I might be able to coach in some capacity.
After completing a successful collegiate career at K-State, it seems surprising that he has never been asked to join a major.
herself too hard and received injuries because of her efforts.
"The truth is that I was very apprehensive about coming here. 'I'm going to be here' Leanne said, which about 26 miles from Manhattan and I had heard all those nobl hill stories and I really believed them. I didn't think I was going to leave. "I'll go home," all propaganda and I'm happy I'm here."
"My strength as a coach is being able to relate to the team on their level," she said. "I know what they're going through and I care about them as individuals. My students are very involved and then I get frustrated when I can't help one of them achieve her best."
DURING HER first year, 1976-77, she was an assistant coach to KU head coaching Tom Carter and received the head coaching job in women's football and Anderson applied and received the head coaching job in women's basketball.
"THIS YEAR'S track team is the best team KU has ever had," she said. "When I first met you, you were a national and now we are nationally ranked. This has been accomplished because of our track tradition, the department's attitude towards athletes, the team and the recruitment of talented athletes."
To continue to recruit fine athletes may not be so easy. Anderson said that she did not have a substantial amount of money to recruit with and that she was having a hard time recruiting the same athletes other schools with bigger bankkrolls were also trying to get.
In 1977, she competed in the Kansas Relays and broke the American record in the 5,000-meter run. She's unsure whether she would win. She may devote all her time to coaching.
"I don't know if I'll run competitively again," Anderson said. "I've been telling myself that I don't have the time and concentration right now that I would need if I wanted to compete again. I don't like to do less than my best."
Bv RODNEY D. ANDERSON
Pepin juggles duties finds time to coach
Sports Writer
There are moments in every day when Gary Pepin, KU's assistant man's track coach, must remind himself that he is a coach.
Pepin, it seems, spends a lot of time doing things not related to the training of athletes. Duties such as mailing letters to athletes and providing them with an upcoming track meet and putting together the field of competitors for an event are among the duties Kansai Rakatsu occupy much of his time.
"Coaching is really a small aspect of the job," Pepin said. "All of the coaches here wish we could devote more time to coaching. Because of administrative details in a program as large as ours, we will all our time to coach the athletes."
Pepin, 35, is responsible for coaching the jumpers and recruiting the high school and junior college athletes, a job Pepin said consumed a lot of time.
"I SPEND A minimum of six hours a day on recruiting." Pepin said. "Now that's not just Monday through Friday, Sunday is a big day and so is Saturday for that matter. If you get behind in recruiting, you're really in trouble."
The track program at KU has a rich tradition and many Kansas track athletes have participated in the Olympic Games. In the past 20 years, the Jayhawks won the Big Eight conference championship in 17 times and the indoor title 12 times.
but the Jayhawks' winning tradition, by itself, is not enough to lure blue-chip high school athletes to Kansas, Pepin said.
"It's hard to get good athletes to come to Kansas for three basic reasons," he said. "The high school situation we're in has a high number of schools with great track traditions besides Kansas. Schools such as UCLA, Tennessee and Villanova really give us a chance."
To work around the built-in disadvantages, Pepin sells the academic excellence of the University and the slow pace of life associated with the Midwest to promising recruits. But most of all, he also tries to sell the athlete program at KU.
1986
Gary Pepin
PEPIN'S JOB is further complicated by the policy of the track department not to give scholarships to foreign athletes, and by the major college track programs do.
In recent years, however, Pepin has had success recruiting top American athletes to Kansas. Pepin was instrumental in bringing nationally-ranked freshman Jeff Buckingham, pole vaulter, Kawasaki Owolpi, triple tumper, to Kansas.
Pepin's interest in coaching stems from his days as a track athlete at Pittsburg State University.
"I knew that if I went to college," he said, "my interest would lead to coaching. Once I got out of college I got my first job, coaching many sports at Northwest High School, near Sedalia, Mo."
Pipen came to KU as a graduate assistant coach in 1971. He was appointed to a full-time position the following year and acquired the top job's job in 1976.
"The most satisfying part of the job is to see kids get a degree and see them make something of themselves when they go out of school," he said.
Wilev attempts comeback
By DAVID PRESTON
Snorts Writer
Make a new plan, Stan. and save $90.00 on our Early Bird Special
In 1977, KU sprinter Clifford Wiley left his injury problems and court cases in the starting blocks and turned in one of the great performances in Kansas Relays history by capturing the 100- and 200-meter dashes. He will try to relieve those victories this year as he returns to his alma mater to perform in the Relays once again.
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Wiley, who was named the most valuable performer in the '77 Relays, had a troubled collegiate career, and counts the victories at the Relays among his greatest feats.
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"I was at the University of Kansas for four years," Wiley said recently from Houston when he works for an oil company, in which he played a key role during seasons. My sophomore year I was ruled ineligible because of my court case and my senior year I got hurt, so I had to make the case against him.
WILEY'S WOES began after a promising freshman career, when he attempted to claim money from a government scholarship in addition to the money he was getting from the University as an NCAA scholarship.
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"After my freshman year though, I was told that I could not do that and they all of a row."
"I'didn't think that it was fair, and I took it to court."
"I had applied for a Basic Educational Opportunity Grant when I was a senior in high school," the speedster from Baltimore said. "And through my freshman year I received both the government money and the NCAA money.
Wiley argued that he used the money for educational purposes and should not have been treated differently from any other student who had qualified for the grant.
"I WAS ELIGIBLE for the grant and I had to attend class and study for my tests just like every other student, so I should not have been treated any differently," he said.
"The NCAA is just fighting the athletes by not allowing them the money."
Wiley won the first court decision, but the NCAA's appeal case is still attending in the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals. Wiley said the outcome was new secondary to him.
"That case has been going since my sophomore year, and I just wish now that the NCAA would just say, 'We were wrong, we would get both grants if he qualified for them.'
"That's all I want now."
Wiley said what he wanted more than anything was to recapture the form that made him one of the best sprinters in the country and help secure his senior year place. He and the entire apron season.
"I AM LOOKING forward to the Kansas Relays," he said, "because it is the meet which I have set to see for myself how I am progressing. I was satisfied with my indoor season, but the only sprint in the indoor 60, and I am a better 100 and 200 sprinter."
Wiley said he missed the finals in the first couple of indoor meets in which he ran, but came on in the last part of the innings. He was playing in the Milrose Games and the AAU meet.
Thus far in the outdoor season, Wiley has run in the Texas Southern Relays and the
WILEY ADMITTED however, that it would be a special time for him when he came back to Lawrence to compete in the Kansas Relays.
Dogwood Relays in Tennessee, but he said he had not run with the intensity he knew he
"I're really looking forward to it," he said, "because it will be kind of a homecoming for me. I mean, that's my home track."
Running in the RELays will have another special meaning for Wiley.
"I'm going to go for it in the Kansas Relays, but even then I'm not going to run with the same intensity I will in the AAU meet in June. In the AAU meet, we qualify for the Fam-Americ Games and the World Championship, probably the biggest meet of the year for me."
"my winning the 100 and 200 my junior year was the biggest thing that has ever happened to me in my track career," he said. "I found out that I could run with the best and run good times. I came out running there and have never looked back."
Wiley has many goals, but he said his ultimate goal was to be a member of the U.S. Olympic team. He is confident about his chances.
"IF I'M ABLE to train, I'm going to go for the Olympics," Wiley said. "Right now I'm learning toward running just the 200, because I think I have the ability to be the best in the United States, even the world, if I continue to progress.
"But I'm not thinking too much about that now. I'm concentrating on the Reliys to see how much I've come back and then I am." He's gone down AU. Those are my two immediate challenges.
Wiley said that he didn't know whether he could duplicate his feat of winning the 100- and 200-meter dashes but that he wasn't going to worry about it.
"I just want to know where I am in the sense that I am trying to come back," he said. "I can't say that I'm going to win the Relays, but you never know."
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Friday, April 20, 1979
3
Buggett South
Theo Hamilton
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
Theo Hamilton looks to Olympics
If Theo Hamilton broke the long jump world record at the Kansas Relays, he wouldn't get so much as a slip of paper for his efforts.
By BLAKE GUMPRECHT
Sports Writer
He'd probably get a few handsakes and a write-up in Track and Field News. But Hamilton isn't eligible for the long jump title at the Relays.
"It will just be another exhibition," he says.
The 1975 NCAA Indoor long jump champion's last year of college eligibility was four years ago, his final year at Texas. And the long jump isn't an open event.
But Hamilton, an assistant women's track coach at KU and a member of the Kansas Athletic Hall of Fame, has more important things in mind.
"THE 1989 OLYMPICS," he says. "That is my big goal right now."
Three years ago, Hamilton finished fourth in the Olympic trials for the 1976 Montreal games. Only the top three make the team.
"It felt great the day I finished fourth," he recalls. "But the next day, it was like a bomb landed on me. I realized I'd come alone to making the Olympic team."
"So I set out from then on to make the 1980 team. I think I have an excellent chance."
Hamilton's best beat at the 76 trials was 29.4, seven inches behind third place RICHAEL KLEIN.
"I KNOW I can make the team in '80."
Hamilton says, "Those three guys will be the main competition, and I've beaten all of them except Robinson.
"Besides, in 76, I really wasn't in the type of shape I like to be in."
Hamilton decided to take a little vacation from jumping after the trials. In fact, he didn't compete again until this year, a bluster of more than three years.
Arnue Robinson, the gold-medal winner at Montreal, and Larry Myricks also finished ahead of Hamilton with jumps of more than 27 feet.
That's when he started helping out with the women's program.
"I figured to compete and to try to coach at the same time would be hard to do," he says. "So I decided to take a couple years off to give myself time to get my head together. I had always planned on jumping again."
IT WASN'T UNTI. a few months ago that Hamilton decided it was time to resume training. His first two jumps, the KU indoor meet, were just under 25 feet.
But at February's AAU meet in New York City, he jumped 26-6, which earned him third place. That jump also qualified for the RSRE meet last month in Fort Worth, Texas.
It was at that meet that Hamilton astonished the track world by defeating the two best long jumpers the Soviets had to offer. The same two Soviet jumps had
finished one-two in the European Indoor Championships.
"That surprised a lot of people," Hamilton said of the 21-10-4 leap, his third best ever. "That helped me get my foot in the door."
"THAT'S PROBABLY the fourth or fifth best jump in the world this year. But I think it was pretty mediocre. I'm still in the process of getting in shape."
Hamilton says it will take a jump of about 22 feet to make the U.S. squad for the Indianapolis 500.
Hamilton's jumps seem unimpossible with his pre-career in Birmingham, Ala. The former college freshman tipped Jefferson State, a junior college in his hometown that didn't even have a long name.
"I'm pushing for the mid-27's," he says. "I'd like to get to the point where I'm consistent at 27 feet. Then I can worry about the 28- and 29-foot jump. If I get consistent at 27 feet, I'll have no trouble at all."
But somehow Hamilton won the national junior college long jump championship both indors and outdoors his last year at UCLA. He also performed performance earned him a KU scholarship.
Hamilton has the best indoor long jump in Kansas history. That came at the 1975 NCAA Indoor in Detroit when he jumped 26-7-4.
"Taking two years off really helped me mentally. Now I have a lot of pice. I'm not having the problems with fooling. I just worry about getting a good jump."
Coaches split on stamping foreign visas
RvGENEMYERS
Snorts Writer
The site is Eugene, Ore, and the year is 1976. Track and field's best have gathered here to see their Olympic dreams realized in the U.S. Olympic Trials.
Featured in this elite group of Olympic hopefuls are 21 athletes who have ties with the University of Kansas, one of the country's most powerful track schools. In contrast, there is a single athlete from the University of AlF4 Passing the Olympic dream.
It would be logical to assume that Kansas had more success in the NCAA meets leading to the 1976 Olympic Trials at Boston. But, ironically, this was hardly the case.
Actually, the answer isn't all that surprising. UTEP did have a number of athletes in the Montreal Olympics; they were not competing for the United States.
They were foreigners competing for their home nations.
UTEP has achieved its success in the '70s by scouting the plains and mountains of Africa and signing the world's best foreign talent.
Recruiting the foreign athlete has clearly paid off for the UTEP Miners, who have won four of the past six NCAA Indoor Championships and the NCAA Outdoor in 1975.
"IT'S TERRIBLY frustrating if you're not going to recruit foreign athletes and we're not," KU track coach Bob Timmons said. "We have more Olympic athletes, but we're having a heck of a time keeping up with them in national meets."
UTEP, however, is not the only school cashing in on the foreign recruiting bonanza. In fact, foreign recruiting has been a significant trend in college, to collegiate track for the past fifteen to twenty years.
The UTEP team this season is made up of three Swedes, one Dutchman, one Englishman, one Mexican, two Norwegians, two Frenchmen and one South African, one Tanzanian and 10 Americans.
"UTEP AND Washington State precipitated the great numbers with the success they've had," Bob Teel, Missouri seven-year head track coach, said of his foreign athletes. "There are schools dealing almost entirely in foreign athletes.
"It's been there all the time but all of a sudden it started increasing and it's really getting worse."
This season, half of the Big Eight teams have at least one foreign athlete on their roster. The team that plays in Nebraska has foreigners and Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma and Oklahoma.
When schools and coaches talk of recruiting the foreign athlete, they fall into one of three categories. There are schools such as Kansas that will not recruit any foreign athletes; teams such as Missouri that will recruit the foreign athlete right out of school, and squads such as UTEP that will recruit a foreign athlete regardless of age.
"I'M NOT FOR it at all." Timmons, one of the Big Eight's更高称的辩护ers, said.
"I believe in the old United States and I'm not anti-foreigner either. We've had several athletes on our teams who were not born in America, but we've trained through grade school and high school here."
"Foreign athletes have contributed to the achievements of American athletes, but you can't divorce yourself from the fact that funds have diminished. The percentage of financial aid given to U.S. students is growing and more is given to foreign athletes.
"I know other teams are just trying to win and within the rules they're doing right, but this is destroying our programs. My feeling is that we're out of the rights of American citizens first."
BUT NEBRAKAS' head track coach, Frank Sevigue, strongly disagrees. Sevigue has been the Cormuskers mentor for the season and will now be the foreigners on his squads. This year's team has four Jamaicans and one Kenyan, including Ray Mahoney, the Big Eight Indoor
"To summarize the whole situation," Sevigne says, "the big gripe today is not having foreigners on your team, but the fact that they are cruising the 26 and 27-year-old superstars.
"By and large, I recruit the athlete right out of high school, but if I choose a chance to play, I'll go."
Even though Teel doesn't have any older runners on his Missouri team, he knows the added benefits of having a 25-year running long distances against a 20-year
"THE OVER-AGE Distance runner is always going to rattle others," Teel said, "especially when you realize that distance you don't reach their peak until 23 or older."
Teel's Missouri squad, which edged KU and Nebraska for the Big Eight Indoor Title in February, has seven foreigners, all of whom are from Nigeria. They accounted for 31, excluding relics, of Missouri's 91 points in the Big Eight Indoor. Ajai Agbekeba twined indoor triple and long jump champ. Udo, former 400 tallist, lead this group.
Timmons was alluding to UTEP's brilliant 25-year-old Tandem Suleiman Nyambu, who is expected to play freshman this season, he has already doubled in the mile and two-mile at the NCAA Indoor Championships, a feat matched only by Kansas' Jim Rynn and Bradley
"We may bring in a kid," Timmons said, and "if he is good, he may be thinking Olympics but that's down the road. Now he's an Olympic star. He has already been to two Olympic games."
"ON THE AVERAGE it takes the high school graduate three to four years to compete at the national level, but when they get there they're wiped out by a freshman."
Timmons, too, knows all the advantages of older distance runners.
The introduction of the older distance runner is relatively new to collegiate track. The NCAA had rules regulating this practice, but they have been outgrown in court.
The situation now, in a nutshell, goes
An athlete is allotted four years of eligibility.
back to about six years ago," Sevigne said.
"The NCAA and Big Eight had an age limit on foreign athletes. Each year a student was allowed to count as a of the variety competition.
"BUT A FEW years back, Howard University won the NCAA soccer title with a few foreign athletes who were later declared ineligible." Sevengan said. "The
recruiting locally, then nationally and then internationally if needed."
Teeel and Oklahoma's head track coach J.D. Martin believe that the foreign athlete actually plays a vital role in equalizing and overcoming recruiting liabilities.
"I hope I don't have to do it," Martin said of recruiting foreigners, "but I'm not going to put my foot in my mouth and say that I'll never do it."
"It's terribly frustrating if you're not going to recruit foreign athletes and we're not . . . We have more Olympic athletes, but we're having a heck of a time keeping up with them in national meets."
NCAA stripped them of their title, and Howard took the NCAA to court and won.
"That threw the door open to recruiting the established foreign stars."
According to Dan Morrison, assistant track coach at Colorado and former assistant at Nebraska, the NCAA forced many teams to turn to foreign talent after reducing the number of track scholarships an institution could give from 24 to 14.
"With just 14 scholarships that means the quality of the person you initially contact must be much higher," Morrall said. "You can go after an outstanding athlete here, and you can get a scholarship, or choose choices to only six schools. Then you've got one in six shot at getting him."
"BUT WHEN YOU GO to the out-of a foreign athlete wants to come to the country, you
Colorado has never been a major recruiting center for foreign athletes, even though it usually has had one or two on the team since the 1960s.
"I wouldn't call this a major express ground for foreign athletes," Morran said. "Every one or two years we have one dotting the landscape. Our first priority is
Teel said he turned to foreign talent to help out the Missouri program.
"IF WE GET to the point where we're no longer competitive we'll have to do it."
"I've made two or three observations over the years about the situation," Teel said. "It's obvious there are those who are pursists—and Bob Timmons is a purist—who know the problems. The most vocal anti-foreign athletics coaches have answers that others don't have."
"For example, we're not a recruiting center with accessibility to the best national athlete, so we stand at a big disadvantage. When you don't normally have the resources to pursue across the United States to get the great athletes, you have to look elsewhere."
MARTIN, WHO also doubles as the Sooner women's head coach, said recruiting the Sooner team is important.
"I just happened to be overseas a summers ago," Martin said, "and it was just so easy. You just go up to the foreign athlete and ask if he would like to go to
"Women's athletics usually follows the pattern of men's athletics, especially in track and field," Anderson said, "but we'll help develop the U.S. talent instead."
Martin said that a poor track reputation and recruitment position forced him to go after foreign talent to help OU's track program. He also said he hoped to phase it
KU does have a junior college transfer, Linda Newell, who is from London.
"Even though I've travelled abroad, we're one of the feet that haven't recruited us."
"Oklahoma has almost zero girls with the quality to compete in the Big Eight," he said. "You can't rely on recruiting seven or eight blue chip athletes of Oklahoma, and without those blue chips you can't have a quality team."
"WE NEEDED to also recruit from Kansas or Texas or any other state, but we didn't have a reputation and the resources. We needed to build our program somehow, and we were able to pick up a few foreign girls to help build our reputation.
"Now that we have a reputation, we can recruit the athletes from other states. After
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"We're just defeating ourselves," he said, "Everyone who doesn't know better sees the great times produced on the collegiate level, and we want to make sure we're in the world of track and field.
"WHEN WE WERE at nationalists, it felt like we were the foreigners. It was hard to believe it was a national championship. I felt like we were the minority."
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"Oklahoma is dominated by foreign talent," Anderson said. "They've come right out and said that no one is good enough for them in the United States and that they have to go to other countries. I think that's just a crummy attitude.
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"Then the Olympics come and look who's the best. It's not the United States. The way we do it."
The consensus of Big Eight coaches is that the trend of recruiting foreign athletes will continue and grow, to the dismay of some, of puff of others, but to the indifference of none.
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Oklahoma leads the Big Eight women's track ranks with the most foreign athletes, a fact that annoys Teri Anderson, KU women's track coach.
"If it could be done, I would prefer not to see the foreign athletes participating in the national meets, but then what is our national team?" It actually is the AAU and not the NCAA."
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"At the nationals, I heard of a survey that said 15 percent of the teams had one or more foreign athletes so I guess that means most are in favor of it," he said. "But in the future we'll see fewer of the ready-made Olympic athletes and more of those right out of high school." The latter is too many more good older athletes in Europe and the mountains of Africa."
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Is the trend toward foreign athletes going to continue? Iowa State head track coach Bill Bergan, who has five foreigners on his team, said he is in yes in some respects and no in others.
each year, one of our recruits graduates and we recruit wolf and forager foxes."
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Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Athletic marriage ok couple has track vow
By TONY FITTS
Sports Writer
Grant and Claire Overstake are one of the married student couples who take advantage of the low rent and on-campus location to help them make locality through school.
The Overstakes spend a lot of time doing such day-to-day jobs as cleaning their apartment and studying, as do most student counies.
But they also spend a lot of time dressed in shorts and T-shirts. They are the only husband-wife combination on KU's track teams. Grant Overstake competes in the decathlon and Claire is an intermediate hurdler and sprinter.
"We don't think it is a real big deal—being married and being on the KU track teams."
WORKOUTS AND PRACTICE take up a lot of their time. Overtake he said about five hours a day running, lifting weights and practicing the skills necessary to succeed in the decathlon, a 10-event competition.
Mrs. Overstake's workouts are not as strenuous, so she spends time helping her build muscle.
"He runs too much distance for me," she said. "Some days, I take him out in the back yard to play soccer. I can keep track of his mileage, and if there are a lot of dogs chasing him, he can jump in."
She works hard on her own, though.
"Last spring, when we first moved here," Overstake said, "she worked at Halimark. If you know anything about working out there, it can be really menial. But she worked at that boring job and managed to run OD during her lunch hours."
"OD" IS over-distance training, a track training regimen that involves running over one's competitive distance to build endurance and discipline.
"The main thing we do together is encourage each other," Overstake said. "The motivation there is more than you can get from any coach."
The Overstakes were married in January 1978. They did not meet, as Overstake puts it, "on the track with cinders in our eyes," and they had symphonies at Wichita High School.
"She was a softball player when I first met her," he said. "She also played volleyball and backs, and she was a big fan of her to her." You might, you ought to try out for the track team."
Overstake already was on the track team.
HOWEVER, THE Suggestion wasn't entirely selfish. Mrs. Overstake ran on a high school 400-yard relay team that set a record. She was the same event with the KU women's squad
"I started the decimation in eight grade," he said. "Instead of little league baseball, I
ran little league track. I was exposed to all the events at an early age."
The world record in the decathlon is 8,168 points, set by Bruce Jenner in the 1976 Olympic Games. Tom Currier holds the KU record, with 6,054 points, scored in 1878 at Field Federation championships in Wichita. Overtake's record is 6,318 points.
One of Overstater's goals in track is to score 7,000 points in the decathlon. Another is to get his name in Track and Field News. He is expected to break Curtier's K1K record, at the Relays.
"I'm looking forward to breaking that record," he said. "But I can't tell you how hard it is to predict what you are going to do in the decathlon.
"THEERE ARE SO many variables-you have to be 10 different people with the 10 different events. Sometimes late at night I can't get to sleep worrying about it, it's a big burden."
It could be especially tough this spring for Overstretch. he is coming off a knee injury
"It was a hyperextended knee with the separation of the tibia and fibula." he said. "We went to see a doctor, and everybody else was doing the deed intersus; I was hobbling along watching and working."
"The knee is strong. It's just a matter now of getting caught up."
Overstake's future in track concerns both him and his wife.
"I MOT LIKE Bruce Jenner. His wife made all the money and he did his war. We've talked about it, but I don't know," Overstake said.
"I think I have the size, strength and speed to be world class—but I do want an IT specialist."
Overstake is attending KU on a journalism scholarship. He has been writing since high school and will be working in Wichita this summer as an intern reporter.
His journalistic background could be a problem with the track team, Overstake
"At athletes aren't supposed to be concerned with the day-to-day events of the world. Coach Timmons talks to me about worrying too much.
"EVERY DAY I stay in track, I get a greater insight into the motivation of an athlete. I couldn't do it without Claire's constant support."
Maybe someday the couple will compete in similar track events.
"She's toyed with the pentathlon." Overtake said, "but that would just be too hard."
For now, they said, they'll stick to their separate events on the field, and share their
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"I REALLY ENJOY that," he says. "I'll jump a barbed wire fence and head out over a pasture. I'll come up to a pond and stop—just looking and thinking. It does something for me. It makes me think and helps my attitude."
Cromwell's attitude doesn't need much help. He says he's selling tractors to learn about sales and running a small business so that when he retires from football he'll have something to do for a career.
This hobby is probably more enjoyable now for Cromwell, who turned 24 in October and will compete on KU's varsity track squad. Cromwell says he gets up early in the morning at his country home, dons his running clothes and leaves out cross-country training.
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He is satisfied for now with his salary because he does not start for the Rams. But he wants to renegotiate his professional contract next year after he accomplishes one of his goals—starting in the Rams' lineup.
"I loved track ever since I first ran him," he says in his sales office here, a town of fewer than 400 residents. "It's so quiet." He says I treat it a no-bleadow, no more - a boy no longer.
"I WANT to start and prove myself at being a good pro football player," he says. "I also want to get things organized so I can show off. I'll have some business experience."
IN JANUARY, he went pessant hunting with his father out west in snowy Logan. Already this spring he has been catfishing. He drives a jeep instead of a sports car and he still likes to run—not just play or for his football career but for enjoyment.
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"I had a couple of different ways I went in collegiate athletics, "he says, "track or football. I chose football but it hurt me track-wise. Coach Timmus recruited me for the decathlon, but it required a swimming and I couldn't find time to perfect the tests for it. I think could have made it in the decathlon if I just went out for the trak."
"I loved playing football in college. Now, football is a game to me but it's a livelihood with me. I approach it more as a teacher. Track remains a hobby, though."
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"So I went on a football scholarship. I didn't really have to do track, but I did. Whenever you do something you don't have to do, you enjoy it more. There was no pressure on me to have to do it and I enjoyed it more."
"I accomplished everything and more at Kansas," he says. "I had no idea I would need to be a basketball player without had no idea I would be classified as one of the better intermediate hurdles and go for it."
His 400-meter intermediate hurdle performance in the 1978 Kuala Lumpur International Stock Record and the distinction of being named the outstanding performer at the 1978 World Track.
Today Cromwell, the free-safety tractor salesman, has a few hobbies, including track. His other hobbies are quite different from most NFL performers who frequent discs and choose to swing in the off season for entertainment.
BUT CROWELL WAS successful in track as well as football. He still holds KU variety records in the 404-yard intermediate hurdles -set in 1975 at the Big Eight meet and -in the 404-meter intermediate hurdles -set in 1978 at the Big Eight meet.
THERE'S NO PRESSURE now on Cromwell to run as much as he does, but he enjoys doing it. In fact, he has been trying to find some hurdles to buy, so that he can set them up and start running the race, and so many ways that will help his muscles for football.
Associate Sports Editor
What he doesn't say is that running the hurdles in a Kansas passtime will spark some memories of competing in football, but now it's packed to the top with screening football but instead with a moderately sized Relays crowd, still cheering him on. Cromwell cherishes his KU track as much as his football memories.
something he says he really enjoys doing, hasn't changed since he was in college.
"I had some good races at the Relays," he says, smiling, with a thoughtful, recollecting look in his eyes. It's the type of look that compels those around him to feel they, too, are back on the track at the Relays.
Cromwell says goodbye to smogy Southern California when the National Park opens. He returns home to Kansas for the office year, since February, he's been living in a house in the flat country south of Chicago where he works at a local gardenractor dealership.
Cromwell still a Kansan at heart
STANLEY—How do you keep him in the big city once he's been down on the farm?
And saying that, Nolan Cromwell leaves the sales office. His work boots carry him a little differently than most salesmen, to on the display floor where he can watch his customers invest in a tractor. Today, Cromwell is going to succeed at being a tractor salesman. Soon, he'll be seeking the continued success of a professional football player, similar to the success he achieved as a collegiate two-sport athlete.
"I like to look of track as individual because everything is on an individual basis, even in the Relays. In football, 11 people work together to get it going. But in track, if something goes wrong, it's not easy. But there are no failures—succeed." It's yours and nobody else's."
When Cromwell was a star quarterback at KU, the Jayhawks went to the Sun Bowl. They also beat Oklahoma that year, a feat still discussed. KU did all this with the help of the skills of Cromwell, the Ransom Ram伯里。他 was an elite fastening quarterback and he won all Big Eight conference quarterback honors.
"THE IDEA OF competing on the "home court right in front of the people you know—that gives you a good sensation," he says. "At other places, you were kind of an outsider. But not at the Relays."
So Cromwell retains the sweetness of the run-jump-run-jump hurdle. It's a natural sweetness, with a personal flavor for him. It's realizing that not only was he a terrific quarterback, but he was also a terrific track man.
By JOHN P. THARP
Associate Science Editors
That's what members of the Los Angeles Rams will think about one of their top young players, Nolan Cromwell.
J
Nolan Cromwell
Staff photo by TRISH LEWIS
And his attitude about track.
here, selling riding lawnmowers and snowblowers. He likes his work both in the NFL and here.
Coaches eye blue chip prospects at Relays
By GENE MYERS Sports Writer
Survival in college track hinges on two
colors: Blue chip; that high school athlete or
junior college transfer who is virtually
assured collegiate success.
And even though national letters-of-intent
cannot be signed until after the season,
college coaches are on their yearly safari to
the tropics.
Thus, at major meeta such as the Kansas telays, voting and losing isn't confined to the state.
"A lot of recruiting goes on," KU head
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track coach Bob Timmons said. "Almost all of the coaches are aware of who the best athlete is and are busy trying to determine if they have a shot at getting him.
"THIS ISN'T just major colleges but also the small colleges and the junior colleges. Everybody at each level is looking for the athlete who can help his program.
"If you're a major college you probably looking at the winners. If you're a smaller school you're looking at the good students you're facing at a lower level, where you have a ship."
Timmons, who also doubled as the meet director, said the Kansas Relays attracted recruiting interest because it drew high school athletes from the neighboring states of Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Colorado, besides those from Kansas.
THE LEGITIMATE methods of recruiting at the Relays vary slightly for men and women because they are governed by two organizations. The men's recruiting laws are handed down by the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the women's from the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women.
"We have qualifying standards in each event," he said, "and then we only take the best."
"Under the rules," Tummons said, "you can't talk to a high school athlete at the meet site. Hopefully, this doesn't go on because it's not legal. Most of the college coaches are watching and visiting with the high school coaches of the top athletes.
"The coaches are put in a bind a lot of times because the athletes may not know the rules. There's no rule that says a coach can be cordial and say 'hello', but it'd off-
The AIAW ALSO prohibits recruiting at a meet site, but there is one key exception.
ficult to be cordial when an athlete begins pressing you.
"On your home campus the AIAw you can talk to the athletes," KU women's track coach Teri Anderson said. "The Relays are very important for us because they are so positive for recruiting. They get to see the facilities and the great KU track tradition."
"This is when we get to talk to the athletes. The rest of the time we're like everyone else and have to just scout and watch."
Timmons and his staff don't have that added benefit. In fact, KU's 14-year mentor said he had limited use of the Relays as a scrutinizing tool.
"WE JUST DON'T have the time," he said. "Unfortunately, sometimes we get so busy that we don't have time to talk."
"Our major responsibility is to conduct the best possible meet and to take care of the KU team. That does not bring much time, so you may bring in a recruit or two to see the meet."
KU's men's team, however, has the same reputation for recruiting for track as UCLA does for basketball and Notre Dame for football, which means Timmons has his recruiting senses tuned for the other major meets.
"When we go there we'll definitely be watching then," he said. "We may make a contact, but we're not going to talk to an athlete at a meet site."
And if everything goes according to tradition, the weekend's recruiting safari opened at 8 yesterday morning, with the Kansas Relay's high school events.
New events mark Relays
The junior college division has been expanded to Haskell Indian Junior College, where most events took place yesterday. Many juco winners will get berths in university division finals. Most of the juco will still be held in Memorial Stadium.
Expansion is the key word in this year's Kansas Relays.
Also, separate divisions will be held this year for high school and college women.
Some events that had been part of pass relays return this year. The decathlon competition was held Wednesday and yesterday in Memorial Stadium.
Also, the hammer throw and two walk races have been added to the list of events. In all, there are 128 events in the 54th annual Relays.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 20, 1979
5
JACKIE MCCONNELL
KANSAS RELAYS
KANSAS RELAYS
Lori Lowrey
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
Lowrey breaks family tradition
By CARLOS MURGUJA
Kansas State track coach Harry Anderson may kick
himself to the ground. Lowey crosses the finish
line with the right side of the field.
Sports Writer
That's because Anderson once thought Lowry would be running the hurdles for his Wildcats instead of for the Lakers.
It seemed logical to assume that Lowry would attend K-State because both her brother and sister went there. That may have been a good enough reason for K-State, but it wasn't enough for Lowry.
“K-State sort of took it for granted that I was going to go there,” Lowrey said. “They really didn't recruit me very hard. By contrast, KU really did a good job of recruiting; I felt as if they really wanted me for the team here.”
THE JAYHAWKS' efforts to acquire Lowrey's services paid off last year in her first year of collegiate competition. Lowrey, then a freshman, set KU records in the outdoor 100-meter hurdles with a time of 14.2 in the 100 and 62.3 in the 400.
She also won the Big Eight indoor 60-yard hurdles in a Big Eight and KU record time of 8.0.
Although she is the team's best hurdler, Lowry struggled through this past indoor season and lost some of her consistency. She experienced a technique problem of running on the back of her heels, which kept her from getting any power off her stride over the hurdles and toward the finish line.
"I noticed it during an indoor race," she said, "I was losing speed and I noticed my form wasn't right. I knew I had to make some changes, but the problem was which one would better running now and I should start improving my times."
IMPROVING HURD hurdles are Lowery's immediate goals for the outdoor season. She wants to run below 14.4 in the 100 and 60.5 in the 400. She also said she wanted to be faster than the national and the national meet in East Lansing, Mich. on May 24-26.
Lowry tweets she has a good chance of finishing near, or at, the top in today's races. The competition she has to overcome will be the American and Big Eight record holder in the 100- and 400-meter hurdles - Iowa State's Deb Essen
"Esser is definitely going to be the one to beat," she said. "I think I'll do all right. I'm really excited about the Relays. Last year, it wasn't the same when the Relays were in Emporia. (She still won the 100 in 14.7 and finished third in the 400 in 14.3.) I want to contribute some points to the team's point total."
The 1978 edition of the Relays was moved to various sites in the state because of a renovation project at Memorial
This year, Kansas will have to out beat defending Big eight champion Iowa State for the team title. Lowy was the winner of the tournament.
"I DIDN'T REALIZE that then Iowa State would turn into such a national track power." Lowry said. "Looking back, maybe I should have given it more consideration, but I can't complain: I love it here and am glad I came."
She said she chose KU for three reasons: the campus, KU's academic reputation and the women's track program. The Jawaharskay chose Lowrey because of her proven ability in her high school athletic career.
While she was in high school, Lowye competed in four sports: track, basketball, tennis and volleyball. She made 20 saves in the tournament.
the choice of playing basketball or running track at KU was a difficult one to make.
"I guess I could have been pretty good as a basketball player," she said, "but from my high school track exam I had to fail."
**IN HIGH SCHOOL, Lowry ran the 100, 220, 440, the hurdles and the mile and medley relays. She won state titles in the 110-yard hurdles in her freshman, sophomore and junior time of 14.3 as a sophomore was a national record.**
Although track is the most important thing to her right now, Lowrey has other interests, namely, her major; pre-
"I think I'll enjoy nursing because it's a profession where you help others when they really need your help. You give more than you receive. Nursing isn't monetarily rewarded there is a great deal of personal satisfaction."
Two important parts of Loverey's unselfish character are her ability to empathize with their misfortune and her ability to empathize with others.
"My feelings aren't acity hurt," she said, "but I can sense when other people's feelings are being hurt. I don't like to laugh at others, unless they're laughing too, because I know that makes them feel bad.
Two-sport athletes have abounded at Kansas
"Whenever I have problems, I like to work things out for myself. I don't let my get emotionally depressed because it keeps me from working with others. Sometimes I want to be around a lot of people and sometimes I want to be alone. There is a time and place for me to be."
- I accept things the way they are, in life and track, and I tell myself I have to work with what I'm given to the best of me.*
Rv MIKE EARLE
Snorts Writer
Often, an athlete who has the talent to excel in two sports at the collegiate level is discouraged from pursuing them by coaches.
Whitaker proves recruiters right
Once a coach has landed a prize recruit he generally wants to keep him in the fold.
But it is not necessarily so at KU, especially for the athlete who has a desire to play football in the fall and run track in the spring.
By DAVID COLBURN
By DAVID COLBUR
Sports Writer
In the spring of 1975, prep sprinter Gary Johnson attracted droves of college recruiters to Albquerce, N.M. Then, KU recruits hoped to help to Johnson to its spring corps.
But while the Jayhawk recruiters were sequestring Johnson, they noticed another soldier in their group.
His name was Stan Whitaker, a Sandia High School senior whose race was the 440-yard dash. He was a consistent runner who had won two State champions weren't exceptional, but they were good.
"I was a medicole high school runner for my first two years," Whitaker said. "But I never did."
THAT SOMETHING was a combination of good health, hard training and good coaching. Whitaker ent two seconds off his shot and made a new state record in the 440-yard dash.
Whitaker said part of his reason for coming to KU was scholarship help. KU offered him a better deal than any other university.
Whitaker was recruited by several New Mexico and West Coast colleges, but was ignored by KU until late July. After a successful year, Whitaker signed with the Jachwaks.
'My times were OK, but I could understand why they wouldn't give me full regard for it. I don't know.'
Johnson also chose KU, and the two
runners were roommates their freshman
years.
THE CHANCE to develop his potential in a traditionally strong program that had produced many great athletes was also a factor. Whitaker said.
"We were good buddies in high school." Whitaker said.
In fact, Whitaker said he thought Johnson was the one who pointed him out to the KU receptionist.
Johnson, who sat out most of his first season because of injuries, left KU after the spring.
An ankle injury received a week before his first collegiate meet forced Whitaker to forego his freshman season. But Whitaker does not regret the injury.
"IT COULDVE been a blessing in
he said. "It gave me some time
grow up in the world."
Whitaker began to realize his potential last season, his junior year. He finished third in the Big Eight Conference Indoor meet 440, and third in the Big Eight Outdoor
ALEXANDER GRAY
Stan Whitaker
400 meter race. He was also a member of two NCAA second-place mile relay teams, the 1978 NCAA Outdoor and the 1979 NCAA Indoor audition.
The finish at the 1978 NCAA Outdoor was
the highlight of Whitaker's college career.
The Jayhawks were trailing Villanova in the outdoor race when Whitaker took the lead.
"The feeling I had coming up the straight was awesome," he recalled.
"I saw myself pulling on this guy and thought, 'I'm going to get this guy and get in the KU Hall of Fame and be a national champion.'
"Even though I didn't catch him, it made me feel good."
Whitaker said he had been singing since seventh grade, when he joined a youth choir at the school. He also formal training. Whitaker and his directors in church and school had helped him with
Whitaker's best time in the outdoor 400-meter is 46.52, set in 1978 at the Big Eight meet. Indoors, his personal best of 47.8 in the 440 was set in a 1978 dual meet.
When he's not running or acting as captain, Whitaker enjoys singing contemporary gospel music for churches and groups in the area.
THIS SEASON, Whitaker's teammates
snowed their respect for him by electing
him to the national team.
酒
Whitaker said no conflict had arisen between track and music. But he hinted that if a conflict arose, music would have to take a back seat.
"DO IT for pleasure I feel I have talent to sing, and I don't want to waste it," he writes.
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"Singing is like a hobby, I do it when I have the opportunity," he said.
- Chilled Champagnes and Wines
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"Track is a big priority in my life right now. I center almost everything on it."
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As a sign of that dedication, Whitaker said he would love to run in the Kansas Relays open 400-meter dash, which will be run tomorrow.
843-3339 10 a.m.-11 p.m.
IN 1978, Peoples and Vinson had the
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However, Whitaker said his chances to run in the race were slim. He said teammate Lester Mickens probably would get the nod over him.
But this isn't his last chance to make the open field. Wiltshire will be back at KU next year to compete, in his final year of university, and he'll graduate studies in elementary education.
In the past 10 years, KU has had six football players gain all-America track recognition. Ron Jessie was the national champion in the long jump in 1893, in addition to playing football. Eddie Lewis and Emmett Edwards ran on the national championship 48-hour relay team, and were both Big All-Eight conference receivers in 1974.
He will marry his girlfriend, who is still in Albuquerque, in August.
"I've dated her for about five years so I think it's about time," he said. "She kept instilling a positive attitude in me in high school and now will give我 a little bit more peace of mind."
In 1976, Big Eight offensive player-of-the-year and All Big Eight quarterback Nolan Cromwell set the existing school record in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles. All Big Eight halfback Laverne Smith also won All-American track in 1976 running sports and relays.
ALTHOUGH NOT track All Americans, two of professional football's premier running backs, Gayle Sayers and Delvin Williams, also run spirit events for KU.
Lester Mickens is the most recent KU athlete to play football and gain All-State honors.
After transferring to KU from Alameda (Calif.) Junior College, Mickens has had an immediate effect on the Big Eight middle distance scene. Last year, he won the Big Eight indoor record dash and later gained the record outdoor record set. He record the outdoor 600-dash court schedule.
But Bickens' ability doesn't stop there. In high school, Mickens was an All-State football player and in last year's KU football team and in six passes for 132 yards, a 22-year average.
"IGET satisfaction knowing that I can do both," Mickens said. "Football helps my training for track in that it gives me the strength to sprint."
This summer Mickens plans to make a touring AU track team and run at the Pan-American Games trials in mid-June. He hopes to make the 1980 Olympic team.
Most football coaches dream of wide receivers with Mickens' speed, and might prefer that he be concentrate on catching down and outs in spring football drills rather than on practicing relay handoffs, but Mickens hasn't experienced any problems.
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"I KNOW the football coaches would like me out there," Mickens said, "but track is very important to me. The coaches know that, and they don't hassle me."
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Little came on strong at the end of the 1978 track season in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles. His 50.5 time placed him third in the Big Eight Outdoor, and it was a personal
Jimmy Little isn't an All-American in track but the junior from Woodbridge, Va., doubles his fun by also competing in football.
During KU's dismal football season last fall, Little was a bright spot for the Jayhawks. His 62-yard punt return against UCLA was a big factor in KU's upset of the Bruns. Little led the team in punt returns, led the team in kickoff returns and third in pass receiving.
The difference between running hurdles and pass patterns is a large one and Little said missing spring football could slow his adjustment.
"The situation here was more in my favor because the opportunity to do both was here." I like to play pro ball and if I do well in it, I will go on track it will help me get me publicity."
"MISSING SPRING ball can hurt me if I don't learn the terminology, but coach Fambrigh has seen me play. They encourage us to do something in the off
The order has't always been first football and then track. Over the years, KU has had eight track AllAmericans take up football as the second sport.
Karl Saib, KU's all-time leader in NCAA track championships with six shot put titles, played defensive tackle in the early 1970s for the Jayhawks, and All-America track man Waddele Smith also excelled in football in 1974 and 1975.
KU has had some exceptional two-sport men, and KU track coach Bob Timmons (the former track coach of the Rams)
"I think it's a great thing for KU to have a situation in which an athlete can go both ways," Timmons said. "A lot of times when he plays basketball, he can go out for two sports, then he can't."
"We want to win, but at the same time I feel there more to college than track and field."
Don Fambrigh, head football coach, who has had a hand in bringing some top athletes to KU, also thinks an athlete can gain the opportunity to double in both sports.
"According to my philosophy, I feel it's almost impossible for an athlete to play football and basketball because they are so weak," he said. "I awfully hard to stay up on his schoolwork. But if a football athlete has the desire to play football or go out for track, I encourage it."
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6
Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Drive-ins nostalgic relief for quickie-burger blues
By LOIS PRESS Staff Reporter
It is the age of the don't-make-me-wait hamburger. In many hamburgers these days, speed is more important than
But some burger buyers may want something more than a let-me-in and get-me-out approach.
Henry's Drive-In, Ninth and Missouri streets, has a drive-in window, but people who go inside are treated like a friend, Jean
Some drive-ins in Lawrence may have the answer.
Collins said she kept the coffee pot in a place accessible to customers so they could pour their own coffee.
Henry's caters more to the family than the individual, she said.
Colins said her customers did not mind helping themselves and they felt they were a part of the family.
COLLINS SAID she did not know why few KU students were customers but guessed that the distance from campus was a
Roy Woolf, owner of the Iowa Street Drive-In, 254 Iowa St., said he hoped the old-fashioned taste of burgers in the 60s was his specialty.
"I tastes like a burger you used to get 9 years ago," he said. Wolfe's dolfur is in similar to those of the 50s, although there are fewer men who eat it now.
Under the former owner, the drive-in, called Breaker, had waitresses on roll skates.
Wolford said such gimmicks would not work in Lawrence, even though it was a college town. The idea originated in Hollywood where people are more gimmick-oriented but Lawrence is more conservative, he explained.
Wolford said he depended on college students to support his business.
Wolford said the leisurely atmosphere of a place where you just drove up, gave your order through a speaker and waited for the bell.
"IF IT weren't for the University of Kansas, I wouldn't have opened it here," he said.
Dense Heffley, Overland Park freshman, said she liked drives because they had a casual atmosphere.
"You can be with your friends in the car and say anything you want and he招呼 if you want to," she said.
with him or rowdy if all men did. She said Heffley also said she liked drive-in because there was no worry
& AWDrive In, 143 I, Sixth St. is still exactly as it was in 1959, Martin Bubbard, manager, said.
The only thing that has changed since then is the way orders are taken, Hubbard said.
"THEE USED to be a waitress to take the order but now we have electric speakers." he said.
rumbard estimated that 8 percent of his customers were students and that many of his customers were families.
One A&W fan, Karen Stulsatis, Derby sophonore, said she went to A&W because she liked the root beer.
Simzaa also said she was watched on. "I'm late," she said, "I don't like to get out of the car."
Vista Drive In, 1927 W. Sixth St., is popular for its drive-thru,
Mike Gausen, owner and manager, said.
He said the drive-thru concept "used to be fun" but that it was not a major selling point now because drive-up windows had become too large.
GASPER SAID that 30 to 40 percent of his business was from a good college trade" and that half of his total business was from a retail trade.
Students who drive up for a quarter-pound burger at any of these drives-in will pay from 85 cents to 99 cents.
While larger franchises also have hamburgers priced at 89 cents and 99 cents, they seem to concentrate on just being fast—
R232
ICWA St. DRIVE-IN
Staff Illustration by JAN CLATERBOS
Arts&Leisure
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Spare Time
Nightlife
Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St.
Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts
St.
- Jay McShannon and Claude "Fiddler" Williams. April 20-21
- Clarence * "Gatemouth" Brown, Pott
County Park and Bean Band, April 20.
Exhibits
- Pott County Pork and Bean Band, Southern Friend, April 21.
Recitals
- Mirecourt Trio, April 22 at 3:30 p.m. and April 23 at 8 p.m., Swarthout Reach Hall *
* Dobbie Brothers, April 27, 8 p.m., Allen Friend House *
- Art and Design Gallery, Visual Arts Building, Birdworth, photographed, Gary Burdick
- Kansas University Gallery, Kansas Union, Art Department students through May 5.
- Landis Gallery, Daint Pain Store, 918 Massachusetts Street, Woodward streets, 918 Massachusetts Street
- The Gallery, 455 New Hampshire St.
Photography by Carl Thorn, through April 27
- 7 E 7 Gallery, F 7, 7th st. paintings and drawings by Colleen Bangtug, during April 25
- Valley West Galleries, 2112 A West 25th St., New Works by Ron Rayner and Marie Buchtink; Stoneware pottery by Kathleen Bartholomew, through April 30.
- Walkins Community Museum, 10427 Massachusetts St. On The Banks of the Kaw, The History of Lawrence, Part II, through May 5.
Theatre
- The Fainights by Rene Marques, April 2021; 8:00 p.m. William Ion Theatre
- Equus by Peter Shafter, April 27, 28, 8 p.m. University Theatre.
Concerts
Gracia Carlson, trumpet, and Evelien Hooostragen, flute, April 20, 8: 6 m.
Kathy Wolfe, cello, April 21, 3:30 p.m.
John Keitey, cello, April 22, 8 p.m.
All recitals in Swarowth Rebutal Hall.
Jane Casselman Frager, mezzo-soprano, 8
p.m. April 21
p.m., April 21.
John Kelley, cello, April 22.8 p.m.
Muses theme of Spencer exhibits
In Greek mythology muses were the daughters of Zeus, King of Gods, and Memosyne, Goddess of Memory. They also were thought to be clairvoyant mythical personalities and inspirational-giving forces in creative and intelligent activities.
At the Helen Foreman Spencer Museum of Art the muses are the opening tribute to a series of nine gallery exhibits and special programs that began last March and will continue until December 1979.
Each individual program of a muse concentrates on different life forces. The nine muses are: Calliope, The Epic; Urania, Astronomy; Polythymia; Religious Festival; Thalia, Comedy; Eurydice; Athena; Tyrpheus; Terpsichore, Dance; Melpomeon; Trapedy; and Euterpe, Music.
The museum has already presented the muses of History, Love, Dance, Tragedy and Music. Epic is currently on display. The remaining muses to be present are Astronomy, scheduled for the most prominent festivity in the fall of 1979 and Comedy, fall and winter of 1979.
Dolo Brooking, project director of Spencer, said that the programs of museums was meant to find a link between the museums and the public. "We're trying to get people interested," she said.
"The Greeks view the world as being much more complicated than we do." Brookink said. "In that time, their schools were called
"What we are trying to demonstrate through our program is that a museum is not only a place to contemplate, but also a place to experience."
"muses," and they also held athletic events, music festivals and debates there.
To encourage the community participation in "Musing in Museums," Brooking, along with Saralyn Reece Hardy, program coordinator, and Maria Lee, who produces the Muse lounge residents, KU students and faculty to contribute to the programs.
Glenice Matthews, graduate student in jewelry and silver-smithing, has her work on exhibit for the current muse orgram.
Matthews' work carries titles from Greek mythology, but she did not do the work especially for the program. It was by coincidence that her personal interest in mythology, which affected her work, prompted the museum to ask her to participate in their program.
The current program emphasizes Calliope, the muse of the Epic, which Brooking describes as a life story that includes a hero, a challenge, personal enlightenment and discovery. The program explores the lives of famous Greek heroes. Along with exploration, an audience must see the movie "Easy Rider."
The "Musing in Museums" program, which was developed by Brooklyn, is being funded by a $90,000 grant from the National Education Foundation.
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*Weight 65kg (14x55x37mm (17x6.5x71.4"))
*Weight 6.0g (13.2 lb)
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
P. O. BOX 2 / 2100A W. 25th St. / 913 842-1811 / LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
7
'Norma Rae'a winner
Bv LESLIE GUILD
Reviewer
It's all true, what they say. Norma Rae is a winner.
A movie that is sometimes referred to as a sequel to "Rocky",
"Norma Rae" is a female version of someone who fights the odds
with her strength.
But unlike the success of Rocky Balboa, Norma Rae's success is not just a personal triumph, it is a victory for the undergirls in life. Norma Rae Webster, as a modern mother Mother Jones, joins up with a union organizer and, after a series of wrong-does by the Henley Textile Mill, she's able to convince herself and her fellow workers that a union is the answer.
The film begins with Norma Rae's discovery that noise conditions in the southern mall are contributing to her mother's temporary deftness. She also discovers that the management of the Henley Text Mill does not plan to do anything about it.
Although Norma Rae, played by Saly Field, decides to let this situation subside, she later, after a series of coincidential meetings with the organizer, begins to think about what a union might do for her.
IN THE FILM, an important interaction takes place between a New York union man, Reuben Wordyousk, and Norma Rae. Their relation to each other represents a learning and sharing of sophistication and simplicity. She gives him the ability to understand the risks local workers take in supporting the union and he in turn helps her realize her own ability to think and lead.
Most of the other textile workers realize that they are being abused by the management of the mill, but it is only after the death of her father from overwork at the mill, that Norma Rae truly devotes herself to leading the fight for the union.
KANSAN Review
Her dramatic denials of the policies of the mill take her from standing on a table in the mill and promoting a work shut-down to going to jail. This is followed by an equally dramatic buttress scene in which Norma Rae tells her children that, although she is now considered a jail bird, she's acting out of dedication to something she really believes in.
IN THE ROLE of Norma Rae, Sally Field is utterly convincing. From the beginning of the movie, when she portrays a small southern town "easy," to the end when she is an involved, liberated individual. Norma Rae is real. Field injects into the role a perfect mix between Norma Rae's strong social conscience and her ability to be a compassionate, understanding woman.
Both Ron Leibman, who plays Reuben Wordewicz, the union organizer, and Beau Bridges, who plays Sunny Webster, Norma Rae's husband, do an excellent job to enhance the reality of the film.
ONE SUCCESS OF the film is it's display of the abuse of southern labor and the gains made by the people at the top. But the real success of the film is the growth of the character of Norma Rae.
Norma Rae becomes a symbol—a way to reach the textile workers. Norma Rae triumphs over wrong. She wins for herself by thinking for herself, but she also wins for others who are mistreated and powerless. As the absorbing theme song of the film, written by Norman Gorman and David Shire, says, "It Goes Like it Goes," and for "Norma Rae" it goes great.
The structure juts up from the luscious, green hill overlooking Potter Lake and the football stadium. The Campanile's chimes float in the air as students stroll to class.
3y DAVID LEWIS Staff Reporter
Hard work keeps bells ringing
Inside the Campanile, near the top of the mighty giant, a slight, scholarly man is poised over a huge keyboard. He plays the keyboard with a finger, damp room houses $3 casted bronze bells.
Mark Holmberg, assistant professor of music theory and assistant carillonear, has been playing the instrument for three years.
They make good music together.
Transcription music, originally written for other instruments and adapted for the concert setting.
Holmberg plays a lot of music on the carillon. He listed "Carry Me Back Old Virginia" and "Listen to the Mockingbird" as two of his favorite tunes.
"I ALSO LIKE patriotic, contemporary and wedding tunes," he said.
Holmberg knows he has an audience
"Once in a while, I hear bravos or claps from downstairs."
Holmberg assists Albert Gerken, head carilourein, with the formal recitals held
each semester and often performs informally during the week.
"I guess the job just sort of happened," he said. "Mr. Gerken approached me about the job, and after the necessary approval, I had the job."
Holmberg is not paid for his services.
"I play the carillon strictly as a hobby.
It's different," he said.
The job sometimes has surprises for Holmberg.
"Last week, I was practicing, minding my own business, when suddenly I heard a saxophone. It turned out someone was playing my saxophone on the fifth floor practice room.
"AT TIMES, nothing happens when I push down the keys because the console becomes frozen during the winter. Overall, not a lot of unusual things happen," he said.
The job,however,has its peculiarities.
"You do not see an audience and have no idea whether 10 or 400 people are listening.
"It's also hard to hear yourself because you are in a room about 10 by 12 feet. Unfortunately, the people listening can tell if you have made a mistake," he said.
The job is demanding, he said.
for April 22, May 6 and May 21, the latter being for graduation exercises.
Holmberg also helps to maintain une carillon.
"The linkage of the wires has to be adjusted about twice a week because the temperature is constantly changing," he said.
FILING THE clappers ensures the continuity of sound, he said.
"The clappers, which sound off the bells,
must be filled with steel brushes."
"The bells have to be turned six or eight inches so that the clappers can hit a new spot. The bells are filled two or three times during the school year."
The bells weigh from 12 pounds to seven tons, he said.
"The bells hang above the oak console in five tiers, with the heaviest ones at the bottom and the lightest ones at the top. The oak console is one of which look like broommatack ends." he said.
"I instead of slightly pressing the keys as one would do with a piano, I have to push the keys down. I use both my hands and feet to press them because because the carlson has a pedal," he said.
KU dancers learn art of teaching
The carillon has been played regularly since the Cammannite was dedicated in 1961
By TONI WOOD Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
"Step on-out and out. Take a little longer here. That's it! That's good. That's what I want."
Kaye Cline, assistant professor of dance, snaps her fingers to the music's beat, directing members of the University Dance Ensemble they rehearse in front of the studio mirrors.
The bells were made in England by the John Taylor Co.
The dancers move together with quiet grace, then move apart with quick energy. Like all artists, their work creates a certain mood.
But unlike other artists at the University of Kansas, the dancers are part of a group that is not necessarily a university.
The dance program is in the health, physical education and recreation department of the School of Education. The 13 students now majoring in dance will graduate from KU with Bachelors of Science in Education.
Musicians, actors and artists at KU study in the School of Fine Arts. Students who want to teach music or art can enroll in the Department. But dancers do not have that option.
dance program become part of the fine arts school.
ROSE ANNE SPRADLIN, special student majoring in dance, said, "I would prefer that it (the dance program) be in the fine arts." He also suggested that automatically granted time for creativity.
Tom Welsh, a member of the dance company, said he, too, would like to see the
"The people in physical education understand games and competition," he said, "but they don't understand performance and the professionalism that does with it."
"The P.E. department has been good to us. They tried to do everything they could."
Wayne Ossess, chairman of the HPER department, said the decision to keep the dance program in the School of Education resulted from a study done two years ago.
Cost effectiveness, location of facilities,
Kansas requirements for teaching dance
and other choreography.
"WE FEEL STRONGLY that dance is a very critical area in the P.E. department." Ossense said. "We still would continue to have dance in this department (even if it were made a part of the fine arts department.)"
Sus Carpenter, graduate assistant in dance, said that to her, dance was an art, but music was a passion.
"I'd rather see the program in the department where it got the most support—financially, from the administration, and, students, whether in education or fine arts."
James Moeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said he considered dance a performing art. He said a main reason the program was successful is that students at the studios were in Robinson Gymnasium.
"In terms of being funded, the dance program would be no better off in this way."
CLINE SAID THE dance program was relatively new, and this was the first year the administration had been serious enough about dance to hire two full-time in-
She works with Joan Sloss, assistant professor of dance. Together they coordinate the舞 curriculum, which includes ballet, fokking-dancing, modern dance, jazz dance.
Two graduate assistants, Faria Clark and Sue Carpenter, help teach the classes.
"I'm very sympathetic to it," he said.
Cline said that her classes were not highly oriented toward education but that her students learned teaching techniques in a "roundabout way."
"It's almost by omission," she said. "They learn to teach by being taught. They're not quite trained."
"Since we're so new, we really don't have a sharp delimitation between education and performance. The performing area is stronger, though, because of the classes educators need to learn performing aspects, so there shouldn't be a sharp division."
Sloss said, "I feel that, primarily, dance starts with movement and becomes an art after a large part of training. I personally like to see dance in the health, physical education and recreation department. I'm very comfortable."
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Music series to conclude with Mirecourt Trio
843-3470
A program of Beethoven, Mendelssohn and Martini will be performed at the Mirecourt Trio of 3:30 p.m. Sunday and 8 p.m. Monday with Rehearsal Royal Hall in Murphy Hall.
The trio, made up of Kenneth Goldsmith, violin; Terry King, cello; and Johnensen, piano, has been playing together for four or five years, Raymond Stilbur, student emeritus of cello and director of the Chamber Music Series, said.
The group is based in Los Angeles where King was an assistant of collector and conductor Gregor Flatig士 at the University of Southern California.
Admission for the concerts, which will be the last two performances of the Chamber Music Series, will be $2 for students and $4 for the general public.
Platigoryk once said about the trio,
"An ensemble such as this is rare indeed—marvelous unity, musicality, taste and all above, all great artistry marked their playing. I consider them second to none in the world."
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8
Friday, April 20, 1979
University Daily Kansan
The LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE
PRESENTS
In Concert
FRIDAY, APRIL 20th . . .
LARENCE "GATEMOUTH" BROWN
with
$5.00 advance
$6.00 day of show
JAMES BONDY
ROWN with
Pat County
Perk+Bean
Band
$5.00 advance
$6.00 day of show
AND
Saturday Night, April 21st ... POTT COUNTY PORK and BEAN BAND
SOUTHERN FRIED
$2.00 Members
$3.00 General Admission
SUNSHINE
The Lawrence Opera House 7th Spirit Club
All tickets available at Better Days Records and The 7th Spirit Cellar.
642 Mass.
Doors open at 8:00 each night. Shows start at 9:00
The Lawrence Opera House
7th Spirit Club
Calendar of Events
Fri. April 20 Clarence "Kentmouth" Brown 14th County
Sat. April 21 Folk County Park 14th District Southern Fried
Tues. April 19 100% Grand Prize Best Tournament
Wed. April 19 The Lament Creation Band
F-3 April 17 Coke Cupie
Tues. May 1 100% Grand Prize Tournament
Late May 1 David Gorman Quintet Valley Boys
Tuesday May 3 ULCAT MATERIAL
Fri. May 8 Sperre Gorman (only accepted applications Saturday March 16)
Fri. May 8 David Gorman Quintet
Tues. May 8 100% Grand Prize Best Tournament
Fri. May 1 Plain Jane
Sat. May 12 Sleep AH The Wheel
Tues. May 15 100% Grand Prize Best Tournament
Wed. May 16 David Allen Coe
F-5 May 19 Albert Collins Blues Barad
Liaison email to change calls for information.
(913) 842-6930
642 Mlas. 81
842-6930
---
CLOUDY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas
Vol. 89, No.136
Newell wins three; misses award
Monday, April 23, 1979
See story page six
Lawrence, Kansas
TIME STANDARD
KANSAS
Wet weather at the beginning of the Kansas Relays Friday forced the timers, left, to cover their stopwatches with plastic to keep them from malfunctioning. Above, KU won the 880 and mile relays. Below, Tommy "Tuna" McCall, Deon Hogan, Stan Whitaker and Lester Mickens relaxes after winning in a time of 3:07:56. Right, Dick Burke buries hurdles running in the Glenn Cunningham mile run. Buerkle, who placed fourth, is a former indoor world record holder in the mile. He lost the Cunningham mile to Nail Tunness, who won it at 4:01:19.
Staff Photos by Randy Olson and Bill Frakes
Banks continues push to reopen athletic position
Elizabeth Banks, who filed the complaint, said yesterday that she would continue with the investigation.
Proceedings will continue on a formal complaint requesting that an assistant men's athletic director position be added to the staff. The new assistant doctor has been hired.
Banks said women might have been discouraged from applying for the position because the job description did not state that the assistant director would work with women's athletics after a merger of KU's athletic departments.
Banks, a member of the women's athletic advisory board, filed a complaint on April 13 with KU's office of affirmative action. She requested that a hold be placed on the job search and that the position be advertised again.
She also said the description did not require familiarity with the Association of intercollegiate Athletics for Women, although it did require familiarity with regulations of the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
BUT BOB Marcum, director of men's athletics, announced Friday that the position had been filled. Phyllis Howlett, an assistant coach at Duke University, was appointed to the posit
"I'm satisfied that we have followed affirmative action guidelines." Marconi said.
informative action guidelines, Marcium said. But Banks said she thought there were problems with the affirmative action grievance procedures.
"There are two flaws in affirmative action here at KU," Banks said. "One is that even though the affirmative action office is supposed to monitor the University, the final authority is with the University administration. Shankel said it was too late to a freeze on the job search, so what authority does affirmative action really have?"
Del Shakur, executive vice chancellor,
last week that the job search was "too far"
away.
Banks said the other problem with affirmative action was that the University general counsel's office represented the defendant, when it was a University department, and also monitored the formal hearings.
Boiler designer expects funding
"We're just going through the motions," Banks said. "Marcum will get what he needs."
Staff Renarter
By TONI WOOD
The designer of a proposed wood-burning炉 for the University of Kansas is optimistic that the Legislature will approve it.
"My own feeling is that if the Legislature is going to do anything about the energy situation, it'll have to do something like this," William Smith, designer of the boiler and professor of electrical engineering, said yesterday.
The study of the boiler, which may cause KU's dependence on natural gas, was approved Friday by the Kansas Board.
The study was among seven recommendations made by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and the Releges.
The Regents also approved a change of strategy in its attempts to persuade Gov. Carlin and the Legislature to use the new strategy.
Franklin and associates, a consulting firm in Overland Park, PA; Frank Lowman, chairman of the Regents, said the cost of the study would not exceed $30.000. The same firm also is conducting a study of a proposed solid-waste-fueled steam plant of 245,000 square feet.
Present energy needs at KU are met by a plant that uses natural gas. The University has an interruptible contract with the Kansas Public Service Gas Company that allows KU's gas supply to be cut off when local demand is high.
This winter, KU's gas supply was cut for a record 58 days. The University had to use its own reserve of fuel oil, which is stored on campus and is twice as expensive as natural gas.
Smith said the initial cost of the boiler would be about $2 million. Three or four people would be needed to operate it, he said.
THE TOTAL COST would be cheap, Smith said, compared with the cost of the plastic wasd waste plant, which produces 105 pounds of CO2 per gallon.
Smith said the study would determine how much wood the plant would use. He said that within a 40-mile radius of Lawrence, the refuse wood supply from saw mills and lumber yards would be about 15,000 acres in an 140-mile range, there would be about 40,000 tons of wood.
KU possibly could grow its own wood on land owned by the city or the Army Corps of Engineers, he said.
The study of the boiler, which will determine how much wood is needed to fuel the boiler, is expected to be finished.
The board's decision concerning formula funding was prompted by its failure to persuade the governor and the Legislature during the last session to use this process in determining budgets for universities in Kansas.
CARLIN DECIDED to use formula funding only as a "marmark" in deciding state funding for higher education.
The board decided to change the length of time it is requesting for implementing formula funding from three
Formula funding compares the universities with peer institutions in the nation.
During the past session, the Regents asked the Legislature to allow Kansas institutions to "catch up" with other
universities in the next three years, but the Legislature denied the request.
Under the Regents plan, KU's current budget would have been compared with the average of current budgets of its peer institutions. Then, over a three-year period, the Regents would have allocated money to allow KU's budget to rise to the level of its peers. Fifty percent of the difference in KU's budget for each year, and 50 percent in each of the two remaining years.
Because this request was denied, the board approved a change that would call for a total "catch up" over the next five years. Twenty percent of the total increase would be granted each year.
Lowman said the change to five years would be easier to pass and formula funding might be more readily accepted.
In other action, the Regents approved final plans for a 751-vehicle parking garage at the University of Kansas.
THIS PROMOTION automatically grants them tenure, meaning that a faculty member's appointment is permanent except in cases of "malfaiseance, moral terpitude or financial exigence."
Dykes' recommendations for promotions were also approved. Twenty-seven members of the faculty were appointed.
Thirty-one faculty members were promoted to full professorships. All recommendations for sabbatical leaves, nine emeritus appointments and one extended leave without pay were approved.
Sex bias charged in two profs' suit
Two KU professors are charging that the University of Kansas discriminated against them because they were women. They are asking for an unspecified amount of money and an injunction from U.S. District Court in Topeka.
The professors, Ann Willner, professor of political science, and Myr Haiman, associate professor of English, contend that because of their sex, they have been discriminated against in salaries, the salaries of loads and mert salary evaluations at KU.
Hirnand said that in May 1978 she filed a case with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission that charged her with misconduct, and commission investigated the case and sent it to the civil rights department of the Department of Justice, which also
The Justice Department sent her a letter saying there was probable cause, or reasonable grounds for warranting further investigation.
"I THINK my charges are true."
Hunman said yesterday, "EEOC and the U.S. Department of Justice have confirmed that there is probable cause."
Human alleges in the suit that since 1963 she has "received salary increases declining gradually, resulting in a salary increase from $400 to similarly situated men employees."
The suit also alleges that her merit salary evaluation "has been unreasonably low in comparison to similarly situated males."
"I've taught here 18 years," Himman said. "I would like to feel that the University, to which I've given a major part of my life, would appreciate and nurture me. It hurts me deeply to do this."
Wilmer alleges in the suit that her annual salary review "has in every instance yielded an unreasonably low raise." When she was promoted to full professor, the suit alleges, "she was given a raise that was substantially higher than given to all male members of the faculty when they have been promoted."
Calgaard pleased with off-campus program growth
By BILL RIGGINS
Staff Reporter
Expansion of off-campus programs and improvement of the library system were his administration's goals, Ron Calgaard, reflecting on his experience as vice chancellor for academic affairs, said recently.
Calgaard, who has accepted the position of president at Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas, will be leaving the University of Kansas after his successor. His successor, as yet unchosen, will begin July 1.
Calgaard said he was pleased with the growth of the off-campus program and said it would become in his opinion an essential part of his career.
"It off-campus programs were not in existence, our enrollment would be down." Calgaard said. "All of the growth in the University in the last three years has been offcampus."
CALGARA SAID most of the programs offered in Wichita, Kansas City, Kan., Topeka and Leavenworth were professionally oriented undergraduate and graduate programs in the liberal arts. He said
almost 10 percent of KU's enrollment was in off- campus programs.
"I have no doubt that off-campus programs will be a significant factor in stabilizing enrollment in the university."
Improving the library system was one of Calaisard's immediate priorities when he took office.
"Now we're beginning to look to the time when there will be some improvement in the physical space of the library with the renovation of Watson and we are building a new campus. We have years of additional library facilities on this campus."
He said, "The library had some very serious problems in terms of the kind of space it had, the adequacy of funding, the acquisition budget, staff and material.
CALGARD CAME to KU in 1963 as an assistant professor of economics. He was promoted to associate professor in 1967 and to full professor in 1972. As an associate professor, he was appointed head of the Philosophical Arts and Sciences and director of Oliver College, a school within the liberal arts program, in 1970.
Caligaard said his transition from faculty member to administrator had occurred "totally by accident."
"I had never considered an administrative career in higher education," he said. "I enjoyed being a teacher."
But George Waggoner, former dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and a friend of Calgaird, asked him whether he would like to work in the College office for a year or two.
"I thought about a bit it and decided I like to try it with the expectation that, after a couple of years, I would decide whether administration was something new. I'd return to full-time work in the department," he said.
CALGAARD SAID one reason he had decided to serve as vice掌剑者 that was he liked the basic character.
"Professional programs are rooted in a strong, basic, disciplined approach in the arts and sciences," he said. "I see some healthy signs that enrollment in these programs of science has remained stable or shown some growth."
"Professional schools are more interested in students who have acquired strengths in the basic
Calgary said he had been fortunate to be in charge of academic affairs at a time when the University's
disciplines. At the University of Kansas, I've never seen an inherent conflict between the growth of enrollment in professional schools and diminishing importance to basic art and science disciplines."
AS A RESULT of projected enrollment decline, he said, his successor might face more difficult
"We had some good opportunities because of enrollment growth," he said. "We had some ad-
"In the future the problems will be the same. The style of administration will vary from one person to another. But I think problems that will be encountered the next three or four years, in some ways, be more difficult than they have been in the last three or four years."
Calgaird said it was important that a more adequate form of funding for KU be found in the
*The option of formula funding would be a mar-
rase CALGA BACK back page*
A. C. MUNCHALI
Ron Calgaard
2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 23, 1979
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
USSR nuke accidents verified
MOSCOW - The Soviet Union's top power minister told a U.S. Congressman that there had been several accidents at Soviet nuclear power stations, which were under attack.
The Congressman, Rep. Robert H. Michel, R-III, said yesterday that the disclosure was made in a private meeting on nuclear power safety with the Department of Energy to be made public.
Michel said the Soviet minister had said his country had no plans to construction of its nuclear power plants, which Russia thinks are safer than China.
sovereign countries had never publicly admitted to accidents at their nuclear plants, but U.S. intelligence reports had logged at least three the 1960s.
The Soviet minister said the accidents had included an explosion and a radiation leak. U.S. experts said that from the information the minister had given about the accidents, he was wrong.
NOMAHUYA, Israel — Four fares, including two small girls, were killed early yearly when a Palestinian guerilla launched a raid from the sea and entered the city.
One of the four terrorists was shot and killed by a civilian as the attacker tried to break into the apartments. A second guerrilla was killed by Israeli security forces as the guerrillas fled on the beach, and two others were wounded and captured, the maid said.
In Beirut, Lebanon, the Palestine Liberation Front, an Iraqi-backed faction of Yasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization, claimed responsibility for
The attack took more lives than any terrorist attack this year and was the seventh border penetration or attempt by raiders who have vowed to sabotage them.
Floods. funnels revisit South
BATON ROUGE, La. — Cloudbusters yesterday brought more record flooding to southwest Texas and renewed the peril along Mississippi's Pearl River.
Also, at least four tornadoes touched down in Louisiana, including a twister that injured two persons. A 6-year-old boy drowned in a rain-soaked Satinaton
Mississippi Gov. Cliff Finch estimated that the damage was between $99 million and $11 billion in his state and that at about 23,000 residents along the Pearl
Burt Bratcher of the Texas Civil Defense placed the damage from flooding since Wednesday at $225 million in three Texas counties. The floods have
Uaanda's 2nd largest city falls
JINJA, Uganda-Tanzanian soldiers captured Jinja, Nigeria's second largest city, before dawn yesterday and met only minor resistance by a few
The Tanzanians also took control of the Owen Falls hydroelectric dam, which supplies all of Uganda's electricity and 15 percent of the power used in neighbouring countries.
The Tanzanian forces said there was no sign of Amin, who was last reported in northwestern Unganda near his hometown of Aruna.
The Uganda-Tanzania war began six months ago when Amin's troops invaded a 710-square-mile section of Tanzania. Tanzanian President Juju Nyereye's forces drove the Ugandans out within two weeks and forced them to retreat toward Kampala, the Ugandan capital, until that city was taken.
Jinja residents called the city was held in terror for the past two weeks as Amin's men went on a rampage of looting and murder. Some accounts said they were carrying weapons.
Rhodesian elections called fair
SAISBURY, Rhodesia—American observers said yesterday that Rhodesia's first universal suffrage elections were fair and asked the United States to lift its economic sanctions when the country's first black prime minister is installed next month.
Election officials announced that 64 percent of the country's 100,000 white and 2.8 million black voters turned out during the five-day vote, which ended
The official count is to begin today, with results available Wednesday. Bishop Abel Muzorewa, one of the three moderate black ministers in Ian Smith's church, was killed on Saturday.
About 70 observers along with some unofficial representatives from the United States have turned up from Western nations to view the elections. The United States refused to send official observers, saying it favored voting supervised by an international group that included representatives of guerrilla
Paper reports terrorist plot
BONN, West Germany—West German terrorists, trained by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, are planning for Europe a new wave of terror, including biological warfare, the newspaper Bild am Sonntag reported yesterday.
The newspaper, quoting what it said were reliable sources, said West German agents had discovered the plot after learning terrorist suspects had been sent in.
The newspaper said the CIA and Israel agents had provided information that showed a dozen West German terrorists were learning to operate sophisticated weapons.
The newspaper also reported that a secret meeting which allegedly took place this month between five agents of West Germany's federal criminal office and the Palestine Liberation Organization was aimed at stopping the planned attacks. There was no indication whether the meeting produced an agreement.
Cease-fire declared in Iran
TEHRAN, Iran-Turkish and Kurdish factions declared a cease-fire yesterday after three days of fighting reportedly took 25 lives in the northern city.
However, television reports said several persons were killed by gunfire at dark.
The government said the cease-fire had been reached after religious leaders and government representatives met with members of the two sides. The announcement was the first indication that members of the Turkish minority were involved in the fighting.
The fighting erupted Friday after unidentified gunmen opened fire on a political rally of the Kurdish Democratic Front Party, reportedly killing 25 and
The fighting in Naghdaheh was the third major incident of political violence in the country since the shah was toppled. Last month Kurdish autonomists battled government and revolutionary forces in the Kurdish capital, Sanandaj, for about a week.
Children's TV mayhem rises
PHILADELPHIA - Violation in weekend television shows aimed at children screened on ABC and CBS and a near-to-record level on NBC last year has led to restrictions on the program.
The study, released by the University of Pennsylvania's Ammenbern School of communications, said that young people who watched a great deal of television was more likely to be depressed.
The study also said that violence in late evening network programming also increased. However, violence during the "family hour" decreased for the 802.165.4.1.4 network.
ABS and CBS increased the violence in children's programs to 26.3 and 26.8 incidents per hour respectively, the study said. NBC's rate went to 20.8, its incidents per hour respectively.
Sporesken for ABC and NBC said they would not comment before seeing the study. CBS officials were not available for comment.
Weather
Skies will be partly cloudy today, according to the National Weather Service. Temperatures will rise into the 80s but will dip into the 50s tonight. There is a chance of locally dense fog at sunrise tomorrow. Highs tomorrow will be in the 80s.
TODAY: EARLY ENROLLMENT FOR COMMUNITY COLLEGE STUDENTS will be from 8 to one hour in the Kansas University. Charles Heller and Melvin Conant will give a BANKSAS GEOLOGICAL SURVEY FORM on "The Repercussions of the Continuing Oil Revolution" at 1:30 in the Apollo Room of Nichols Hall. The KU ECOLOGY CLUB, in conjunction with the Lawrence Appropriate Technology Collective, is sponsoring a tour of the KPL, solar home system and outdoor recreation facilities for the KU WEEKING will begin at 1:30 in the Centennial Room of the Union.
On Campus
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TONIGHT: THE MATHEMATICS HONORS PROGRAM will begin at 6:30 in the Kansas Room of the Room. PHYSICAL THERAPY CLUB meets at 7 in Wakins Hospital Cafeteria. WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS meets at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Room. MUSIC IN COMMUNICATIONS meets at 7:30 in a FRENCH AND ITALIAN NOTICE BOOK on *Habitats* #1 in the Pine Room of the Room.
TOMORROW, THE EMPLOYEE RECOGNITION PROGRAM will begin at 1:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. A COMPUTER ASSISTED INSTRUCTION SEMINAR on numerical analysis instruction will begin at 4 p.m. in the computer center auditorium. WOMEN'S COLEMINTH at 7 p.m. in Parlor A of the University. The KU chapter of the AMERICAN GAMES will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayne Room of the Union. MARTIN LUTHER KING SR. will give a University Lecture titled "My Life Experiences" at 6 p.m. in the Union Ballroom.
LOVE RECORDS AND TAPES
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SCHOOL STREET
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Celebrate Spring at the 1st Annual AURH Spring Formal April 28, 1979 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Kansas Union Ballroom & Balcony Featuring: The Original Artists Refreshments will be provided. Admission is free for all hall residents and their guests. Tickets are available today through 4/28 at your hall desk. Semi-formal or formal dress is appropriate.
Operation Friendship
1629 W. 19th
Building Bridges Between Cultures International "Pot Luck"
Tonight, 7:00 p.m. at The Center
Dinner
Bring a dish of food if you can, or come and enjoy!
S
Partially Funded by Student Senate
Hayline & the K-State Union/UPC Concerts are proud to present an evening with
BILLY JOEL
C
Tickets available now at the K-State Union, April 7-25 at the Record Store in Aggleville, Conde mine in downtown Manhattan, Mother Earth Records in Topka, Kief in Lawrence, Ft. Riley Recreational Services, Houses of Sight & Buy tickets, TV and Tape in Salina Wednesday is the last day to buy tickets at the outlets.
$7.00
This Saturday night, 8:00 pm Ahearn Fieldhouse Kansas State University Reserved seating:
$7.50
k-state union
upc concerts
$8.00
TEACHERS WANTED
Positions are available this spring and fall for college seniors and graduate students with degrees in Math, Physics, Chemistry, and Engineering (U.S. citizenship, under the age of 28) to teach college and graduate level courses at the Navy's Nuclear Power School in Orlando, Florida. An excellent benefit package is included and no teaching experience is required.
Contact Ed Gunderson, in Lawrence, at (913) 841-4378 (collect) or write:
Navy Programs 610 Florida Street Lawrence, KS 66044
MISS. STREET DELI INC.
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the catering season is upon us and look at the
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From the Smokehouse
Sliced Smoked Beef and Ham served in a mild BBQ sauce. Sesame Seed Buns, Potato Salad or Cole Slaw. Baked Beans, Relish Tray and disposable plate, fork and napkin.
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MATT KELLY
"Naismith has all of the comforts of home, yet the privacy of an apartment to make you feel at ease."
David Thompson
Topeka, Kansas Freshman
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 23, 1979
3
Blacks must save themselves, publisher says
By ELLEN IWAMOTO Staff Reporter
One person who is a dreamer can change the course of history, according to Carlton Goodlett, president of the National Black United Fund, Inc. and publisher of the Sun-Reporter newspapers, based in San Francisco.
"No sacrifices are too great in our struggle to destroy racism," he said with his hand raised.
Goodlett speak to about 90 people Friday at the Black Symposium Awards Banquet in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. His Struggle for Survival, *Resources and Our Struggle for Survival.*
Goodlett said that blacks lived in a sick society and suffered not only from the "acourge of racism" but also classism and societal pressures which suffer a psychological death, he said.
"THEY SUFFER the ravages of racism daily, the racism of white America."
In this age of black discontent, he said.
blacks still have not been freed permanently from second-class citizenship. Racism cripples the growth and development of black citizens.
Black America can be saved, Goodlett said. But only black America can save itself because help will come from no other quarter.
Black schools, the black family and black churches are the resources for survival, he
Goodlett received at the banquet a distinguished service citation for his achievements in the area of publishing and philanthropy. Samuel Adams, associate professor of journalism and director of Gannett-AEJ Project for Enrichment of Journalism Education, presented the award.
RAGAN HENRY, president and owner of Broadcast Enterprises Network Inc., the largest broadcast company owned by blacks in the United States, was cited for his
achievements in the electronic media. Marc Henderson, associate White House press secretary, presented the award to Guy Stahl, one of the company, who substituted for Henry.
The "Black Student Involvement Award" was presented to Sharron Parker, Columbus, Ohio, senior. Parker is president of the Black Student Union, and in 1978 was awarded the Outstanding Woman in Research Recognition Committee for her activities in residence hall government. Parker has served on the President's Council of Association of University Residence Halls, the Black Alumni Steering Committee, the Big Eight Council on Black Student Governments and as president of Lewis Hall.
Turner, who also stood in for Henry as keynote speaker for the symposium, sponsored by the BET Business Alumni Committee and Ad Hoc Heads of Student Organization, addressed about 60
people in Woodruff Auditorium Friday afternoon.
TURNER SAID that Broadcast Enterprises Network would be one of the first minority-owned networks to own a television station that is an affiliate of a major network. Broadcast Enterprises Network is 85 percent minority-owned, he said.
Eight years ago, he said, it was possible to count on one hand the number of minority-owned broadcasting facilities. But recently minority ownership has become a political issue, and a few individuals have trickled through to become owners.
"Ragan Henry started in 1974 and dedicated himself not just to buying radio stations, but to the concept of a company that worked with customers not exclusively by blacks," Turper said.
Buying stations will become easier for blacks, according to Turner. A committee of the National Association of Broadcasters will discuss two doubling, minority ownership in three years.
The executive committee of the American Association of University Professors passed a resolution firing condemning KU for its practice of videotaping campus demis-
Ambrose Saricks, AAUP president, said the resolution would be considered at the AAUP chapter meeting 7:30 tomorrow evening in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas
The resolution states, "Being concerned with the protection of academic freedom on the University of Kansas campus, the KU police department is authorized cameras by University authorities."
The University's use of videotape cameras became a subject of controversy several weeks ago when an anti-sparked camera was taped. Authorities later erased the tape.
AAUP decries videotape use
The Royals
are back
Tune into the
"X"
for all the games
96x radio
Stereo 95.7 F.M.
are back
Tune into the
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Monday, April 23
WOMEN'S ANIMATION
FESTIVAL
films sua
The Festival will include 12 short films by artists including Katy Rose, Mary Beaurette, Laughlin and Sally Crushkshan (inherited her latest film) *QUASI*
Tuesday, April 24
Judy Garland:
A STAR IS BORN
(1955)
Dir. George Cukor; with Juger Landy, James Mason, Charles Bickford. The best of the three versions of this song by Harold Arlen and Iris Kershaw in *Harold Arlen* and *Iris Kershaw*.
Wednesday, April 25
Film Noir:
DOUBLE INDEMNITY
(1944)
Dir. Billy Widen. Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stimacyk. Edward G. Robinson. Screenplay written by Wider. & Raymond Chandler, based on the novel.
Thursday, April 26
Fellini:
Dir. Federico Fellini with Marcelo Mastiroli, Annie Aukae, Claudia Cardinale, Italy/subtitles. PLUS: "The History Book, v. 9."
8 1/2 (1963)
(1963)
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.
AN INSIDE LOOK
DATE: Wednesday, APRIL 25,1979 PLACE: COUNCIL ROOM-KANSAS UNION TIME: 6:30 p.m.
PUBLIC ACCOUNTING A PRESENTATION BY: COOPERS & LYBRAND
SPONSORED BY THE ACCOUNTING CLUB
All Interested
Pre-Law Students
April 26,1979
Meet with Douglas County prosecuting attorney, Law School Faculty member and Lawrence Mayor, and an area Judge.
Chancery Club Elections for 1979-1980
Room 203 New Green Hall
8:00 p.m.
Sponsored by the Chancery Club
Funded by the Student Senate
APPLICATIONS
are now being taken for: The
KU REPRESENTATIVE on the ASK BOARD of DIRECTORS.
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We sell Eurail Passes.
For more information see
Maupintour travel service
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Applications are available in the student senate offices and are due by April 31.
This person will be responsible for heading K.U. lobbying efforts in ASK and campus lobbying groups. This person will also represent K.U. on ASK corporation.
Paid for by Student Senate
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PROGRAM:
KU BAND MEMBERS 1978-79 Annual Spring Formal Banquet Sunday, April 29, 6:30 p.m. Union Ballroom
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Band Awards Slide Show of KU Band History Other Entertainment
Prepaid to those paying fall band fee. $6.00 all others including guests family and friends. Sign up for all reservations and got tickets in Band Office, Room 214, Murphy no later than Wednesday, April 25.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
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Royal Prestige Needs Students Who Will Be Living In Kansas City, Topeka, Lawrence, Wichita & Other Areas
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of other editors.
APRIL 23,1979
Insanity guide needed
In October 1971, Laurence Lublin, a New York resident with a history of mental illness, stabbed his wife 82 times with a sawing awl. He then drove to an overpass on the Long Island Expressway and attempted to jump into the oncoming traffic.
He suffered two broken ankles and a fractured wrist, and was arrested and charged with murdering his wife. Two years later he was found not guilty by reason of insanity, and was committed to a maximum-security psychiatric center.
Lublin will remain in that center until psychiatrists and the courts agree that he is no longer a danger to himself or others. How long that might take is unknown.
THE CASE of Lubin and others like him has left the legal and medical professions at odds with what exactly constitutes insanity and what should be done with those found not guilty of violent crimes on the basis of insanity.
The case of Carroll E. Neel, who was found not guilty of the 1973 murder of a Kansas City, Kan. postmaster by reason of insanity, has brought the question into focus in Kansas. Neel has applied for release under a 1978 state law that gives patients committed to mental hospitals after acquittal on the grounds of insanity the right to seek a review of their confinement.
A PAWNEE COUNTY judge ruled last month that Noel could be released—a decision that is now under appeal.
But the Noel case raises perplexing
questions about the issues surrounding the insanity defense. The combined efforts of judges, lawyers and psychiatrists have yet to produce a standard of legal insanity, yet that defense is still successfully used, and former killers are constantly released on the pretense that their "insanity" has lifted.
Nevertheless, the Noel case has prompted the Kansas Senate Judiciary Committee to draft a bill that would, among other things, force the patient to show that he is no longer a danger to himself or others. But considering the conflicting interpretations of what constitutes insanity, that would seem to be tenuous ground for reaching satisfactory decisions.
MUCH MORE satisfactory would be the institution of a two-step process that would allow a trial to determine guilt, then a second one to determine what should happen to the defendant. Under this process, a defendant who might normally be acquitted by reason of insanity would be found "guilty but mentally ill." He would face a specific term and treatment in a mental institution. If he were later cured, he would complete his sentence in prison.
The complexity of the issues involved, however, mandates that the Legislature move carefully in approaching the problem. The protection of the community must be maintained, but not at the expense of patients' rights.
But rushing through legislation in a knee-jerk reaction to the events in the Noel case would benefit no one.
in the race for the 1978 Democratic presidential nomination, California Gov. Jerry Brown, although he lost, finished with 62 percent; the attention of the party's power structure.
Indeed, the governor loomed as the top political thoroughbred for the party in the 1980 election after he won all six primaries he entered during the 1976 campaign.
Blinders would help Jerry Brown
And many believed, and still do, that Brown could have won the nomination if he had started his run right from the gate in New Hampshire.
But it seems Brown might have trouble putting out the stall for next year's race;
In the last campaign, Brown carried the liberals, the poor, the minorities and labor. But they do not like the apparent change in Brown's running shoes.
Brown has donned the conservative shoes, raising questions about the high rate of overweight children.
Phillip Garcia
in productivity and investment—his whole strategy of the "new realities of the 1980s.
THIS STRATEGY, of course, espouses a balanced budget in the "era of limits." This change of political ideology was best exemplified when Brown abruptly switched his stand from opposition to support for a popular tax-cut measure, Proposition 13.
Thus, Brown has floated with the political winds of austerity, which means cutbacks in social programs and, for Brown, alienation of traditional liberals. But the governor. The president. The ABC News-Harris Survey, has yet to capture the hearts of traditional conservatives.
In a survey of 1,323 voters nationwide, on potential presidential candidates, Brown trailed the one candidate who epitomizes the Ronald Reagan, by a 97-35 percent margin.
THE SURVEY also indicated that brown would not receive the vote of most big city residents, whites, trade union members, Jews or conservatives.
But his personal life, for most of us, is the least cause for concern.
The political whiz also might have startled a few voters by taking a趴 to Africa with rock star Linda Ronsstadt (perhaps, some couldn't envision Ronsstadt, if she and the governor were to wed, of course, as the first lady).
More important are two recent political errors by Brown. One blunder was committed in a strategic situation and the other was because of his adventures in Africa.
New Hampshire holds the first presidential primary, so Brown was in th
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state to check sentiment for his potential candidacy in 1890. Brown, in accordance with his new conservatism, accustomed to the populistic speaker of the New Hampshire House, but what the governor succeeded in doing was prompting the wrath of the state's Democratic leader.
The Democrats threatened to boycott Brown's appearance, but later met with him in private, and chastised him for dealing with the wrong party.
A SECOND BLUNDER was his failure to respond immediately to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission report of his visit to nuclear plant California. The California plant was designed by the same firm that developed the Three Mile Island plant in Penn.
Thousands of Californians protested the decision, but the state's most powerful antinuclear advocate was thousands of miles away.
Brown captured the heart of the Democratic voters and the attention of most Republicans two years ago. After all, who could dislike a governor whose staff accepted voluntary pay cuts; who drove an old Plymouth rather than rode in a limousine, and who lived in an apartment rather than the Reagan mansion?
BUT BROWN needs to take note of comments by conservative author Garry Wills. Wills notes that conservatives tend to believe in representative politicians, who can be predictable and who makes his general circle of thought well known.
Wills adds, "He (the politician) is not likely to depart too markedly from that in the way he has started novel in his approach, liable to strike off on his own, capable of bold invention, unafraid of its consequences, only to take him to represent the mass of common man.
However, this does not accurately describe the situation for Jerry Brown—yet. The governor has the potential to be the object of the United States
It would be unfortunate if we were to lose this potential because of his participation in institutional politics, changing his step in accordance with the political whims of the
Perhaps, blinders for Brown would help him keep a focus on the issues he cham-
mands, and perhaps not.
Kansan's anti-nuclear stand propaganda
To the editor:
UNIVERSITY DAILY letters KANSAN
After reading your editorial of April 9, "Skip Wolf Creek Now," I do not know whether I should suggest that your staff take a refresher course in responsible journalism or better yet hire itself out as propaganda writers for anti-nuclear groups. I would like to thank Kansas Senate to investigate the safety of the Wolf Creek nuclear plant in hope that they thoroughly scrutinize the facility's materials, structure and design to elucidate the facts concerning the degree of safety and probabilities of disaster. I cannot remain silent when the Kansan, my student at the propagandize anti-nuclear sentiments.
When I read, "For, as much as nuclear advocates hate to admit it, the accident in Pennsylvania has effectively proven what a nuclear weapon can do." And along—nuclear power plants are not safe." I can only assume that in your opinion the accident in Pennsylvania effectively proves that nuclear weapons can be used safely.
It embarrasses me to think that the reasoning implied in this statement could ever reach the Kansan print, rather than a political handbill or flyer where it would seem more appropriate. Furthermore, though I do agree that the accident at Three Mile Island may have prompted industry with somewhat of a credibility problem, I fail to see a clear connection between the following events and conclusions, "The conflicting and often deliberately misleading reports emanating from the utility that operated the Three Mile Island plant showed that the utility's interest lay with company reports, not public news," said Mr. China Syndrome" and the recent antithe nuclear bandwagon rolled into one.
Now that I have a load off my chest, I can say that it is not my strict intention to blast the Kansan editorial staff or advocate peaceful nuclear power. I respect your right to express opinions, but I feel portions of the text in this section and misleading, on the vera of propaganda.
A company's profits are not largely dependent on "conflicting and often misleading reports" of a nuclear accident. In any accident of the magnitude that occurred in Pennsylvania, the company impatiently sought investigation would be forthcoming by the NRC. At worst, I grant that the stock may fall a few points, but profits fall due to lost lawsuits, loss of a plant, clean-up tasks and rebuilding. Maybe the reports were issued in the case of lessening or public hysteria. Few people really know.
It seems that the Kanans editorial staff as well as many experts and lay people, including myself, do not really know about the nuclear power industry. I believe the accident at Three Mile Island has awakened us to the need for stronger safety, not fully understand the safety, credibility, benefits and potential for destruction represented by peaceful nuclear power.
I dare to suggest that the University of Kansas, in the spirit of knowledge and better understanding, sponsor a congenial program that encourages students presenting both sides of the facts and issues
including the testimony of experts such as nuclear engineers, physicists, biologists and ecologists; professionals such as journalists, businessmen and technicians; and lay people such as students, housewives and children. At least, I would hope that the Kanans might do a good pro con special presentation in a fair format.
Rav Kenny
Finally, I sincerely hope that the issues of peaceful nuclear power now alive in our minds, spurred by the events that have taken place in Pennsylvania, will not be forgotten or put aside by the next weekend. I hope we fully investigate our doubts, fears and concerns of engineers near Burlington and the rest of us in Kansas can sleep well in the nights of 1983.
Overland Park senior
Shutdown of nukes unrealistic demand
To the editor:
Nuclear power, on an industry-wide scale, is one of the safest industries in existence. Until the Three Mile Island accident outside Canada in 2011, nuclear power could not disaster or any significant minor accident. From this incident it must be realized that those involved in the nuclear industry can never become complacent about their responsibility for nuclear waste observation must become standard policy.
Your April 9 editorial entitled "Stop Wolf Creek now" makes it sufficiently clear that you have no real conception of what the nuclear power industry is all about. Granted, there is a very definite need to treat nuclear power with the greatest amount of respect, but to even suggest that the nuclear power industry is preposterous.
Nuclear power affords us with a clean and limitlessly abundant energy source. In the near future, we will be forced to discover, develop and harness many new forms of energy, because our existing sources (oil, gas) are quickly running out. Right now, and until nuclear fusion is completely realized, we need a dynamic alternative energy source. You say, "Shut down the industry." I say, "Be realistic."
An accident is and always will be a possibility, as it is in driving a car, but with thorough and effective management, along with proper applications of modern engineering principles, we can all but wipe out the possibility of a catastrophe.
Noell Michaels
Tulsa, Okla. sophomore
Energy alternatives necessary for U.S.
Environmental concerns and the need to meet American energy demands must be properly balanced. The Three Mile Island incident shows what can happen if the balance tips too far toward supplying electricity in the air, or balance tips too far in the other direction, when the power is no longer available it will be the utilities turn to say, "Wet told you so."
To the editor:
Island power plant, anti-nuclear forces are saying, "We told you so," and with good cause. The public has a right to expect its power plants to work under Design, construction and operation procedures of all nuclear plants, existing, under construction and proposed, must be carefully reviewed. If they are found unhealthy, the necessary alterations must be made.
Jim Cartwright Ferguson, Mo. senior
However, the public must also have its ever-growing demand for power satiated. Most presently available (and com- pleted) energy sources are based in 19th century technology. They are only marginally adequate now, and will be inadequate in the future. It is quite conceivable that, given the American people's need to heat their homes for the seriousness of the energy crisis, a decision now to stop further development of large scale alternatives to fossil fuels could have dire consequences for the American economy and society in the not-too-distant future.
After the recent incident at the Three Mile
Regulation answer to nuclear question
I am writing in regard to an editorial and
letter to the editor regarding the safety of
men working at home.
Jim Cartwright
To the editor:
Ferguson, Mo. senior
Kansan April 11. At the outset, I will label myself "pro-nuke," at the risk of inviting misinterpretation of my attitude toward nuclear power, which should be clear. I am not an expert in the field. However, I believe many of us need reminded that we are not experts. In that light, in addition to a lack of time and paper, I will not attempt to explain any of our allegations, assumptions and conclusions made in the editorials about the accident.
Very few people – if any at present—have the information necessary to make many of these remarks about Three Mile Island. Personally, I will wait for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission report to provide me with the facts. Indeed, statements such as that “if it happens, when it appears that “luck” had nothing to do with it–it seems the chances were all in our favor), and Miller’s “They don't tell us conservation is the best and safest means of insuring energy for the future”) when the past three administrations have encouraged conservation as their reason to do so. They do not cloud the issue and raise the blood pressure.
However, it may come as a surprise that I agree with both writers on one general opinion: Many nuclear power plants are not safe. At present, it is not perfectly clear how many or which ones, but serious questions remain. There is no doubt that a problem exists.
The point everyone seems to be missing is this—lack of safety is not necessarily an inherent problem with the fundamental concept of nuclear power. The problem is with licensing, inspecting, regulation and a host of other peripheral aspects. But is it totally beyond our control? In what way has regulation and simple reform of the nuclear industry been ruled out as a viable solution? Do we have the ability to build public and public concern is sufficient to bring about successful changes in the present regulatory and safety procedures.
The root of the problem can be observed in this manner: Nuclear accidentes can only happen when nuclear reactors don't snack up on the nukeable public and attack. They are as safe as we
MAXNEILY
NADER
GOOD GRIEF!
IT'S WORSE THAN WE THOUGHT!
make them and I believe that we can make them safer than they are now.
Michael J. See
It is true that there is always the chance that something totally unpredictable could produce or result from a nuclear accident (such as the hydrogen bubble at Three Mile Island). But if the risk of an accident is minimized, so is the risk of an unfreeze problem. In any case, the chance is simply too small to justify eliminating such a possibility in the initial period (the fact that an unfreeze problem occurred at Three Mile Island already greatly lessens) the possibility of another such occurrence.
Let's not "throw the baby out with the bathwater," as the old adage would have it. Nuclear energy is the only economical alternative to oil that is readily available, and it is currently being developed to provide the lead time for the development of nuclear power. In other words, nuclear energy is a vital important link between old and new energy sources.
It was never intended to be a long-term, primary source.
What of Three Mile Island? Many things have been learned as a result of the accident, and any future ground endeavors will consequently be conducted much more quickly. The problem is that it’s very reassuring to know that despite possibly “three separate human errors,” “faulty plant construction” and an unforeseen hydrogen bubble, disaster was still avoided. With reference to the entire safety history of the plant, disaster was in "The China Syndrome"—it “worked.”
Merriam iunior
Nuclear power risk worth energy benefit
To the editor
To compare the recent events at the Three Mile Island nuclear power station to the mine explosion comparing a heavy rainfall to Noah's Flood. You have to stretch the facts to find any
This, however, is what bill Beems and his anti-nuclear coalition seem to be doing. This
is only cheap sensationalism on their part; clearly, they have seen that they cannot win converts to their cause by reason and facts, so they are using emotionalism and panic fact, so the Mile Island accident only proves that the Mile Island systems really are in a nuclear reactor.
The original failure of the main coolant pump caused the reactor to begin to overheat. An accidental failure of this type has been inevitable, and everyone had admitted it. The reactor was designed by (ECCS) was designed to cope with this problem, and when the failure occurred it worked perfectly. The reactor shut itself down and as temperatures rose, the ECCS activated itself long before any damage to the reactor was done. The core began to cool.
At this point, for reasons which we probably shall never know, somebody in the control room turned off the ECCS manually; with the main coolant system out, the temperature in the reactor apparently rose too high, and caused most of the problems that were later encountered. The ECCS was not turned back on until far too late, but even then, with significant core damage, only minimal amounts of radiation were released. (One of the problems is that many of the fission products are gases that are extremely toxic, so they only stay live; the xenon gas released, for example, has a half-life of 9 hours.)
The chances that, in another similar coolant accident, someone will again turn over the hose and leak are quite remote. (Yes, Mr. Beems, the chances that somebody would do it the first time would be less.)
But even so, with all the problems, the reactor has been essentially shut down safely after a very serious accident with no significant macrocric and no significant release of radiation.
Sure, the safety systems could stand improvement. The nuclear industry has made a lot of progress, but knowledge will greatly improve our understanding of what can happen. But the risks of nuclear power are dwarfed by the benefits, and I believe that they are acceptable.
Kenneth C. Mitchell Topeka senior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(USPS 60-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and September during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday second-class days. Second-class days are $15 for each or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for its six months or $3 a year in county. State subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the activity fee.
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kaanan, Flint Hall. The University of Kannan, Lawrence, KS 60645
Managing Editor Dirck Steimel
Editor Barry Massey
Editorial Editor
John Whitesides
Business Manager
Karen Wenderott
General Manager Rick Musser
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
Monday, April 23, 1971
5
Judge to give Hunter verdict early this week
A verdict is expected early this week in the case of a 18-year-old Lawrence youth charged last December with 14 felony crimes.
The case against the youth, Charles Hunter, 1234 Tennessee St., was taken under admission Friday by Douglas County Detective Jerry Hunt after a brief and a half days of testimony.
Hunter's court-appointed defense lawyer, Wesley Nosew, moved Friday for dismissal of the case on several grounds. Norwood challenged the identification of Hunter by the persons who said they were victims of the alleged assaults. He questioned whether Hunter's alleged confession had been given voluntarily and Hunter's conviction was the possible consequences of giving statements to the police.
During final arguments Friday, Hunter took notes on a yellow legal pad, as he had throughout his trial. Hunter is charged with the murder of Jasmine Rape and eight curried burattured nails.
Norwood also challenged the court's authority to hear the case, saying Hunter should not be tried as an adult, but as a juvenile.
Two women, one who said she was a rape victim, and another who said she was the victim of an attempted rape, positively identified as a person who attacked them in December 1978.
Jean Shepherd, Douglas County assistant district attorney, ended the prosecution's case by citing the two positive and two tentative identifications made by other alleged victims and the articles of Hunter's clothing that were recovered as proof.
The two women who tentatively identified Hunter said they could not be sure whether he was the real hero.
Hunter is being held in the Douglas county jail in lieu of $50,000 bond pending appeals.
Bluegrass band to hail spring in KU concert
Banjo pickin' and foot stompin' bluegrass music will be joining roses and reedbuds in a salute to spring Wednesday at the University of Kansas.
KANU will sponsor its first “Strings of Spring” concert, featuring the group Prairie Fire. The concert will be between about 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Union from about 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
The group will be promoting bluegrass by handing out bumper stickers and T-shirts.
FREE SHAMPOO
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New 35mm Prints
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Juniors and Seniors with at least ten years of physics and calculus may be eligible for a year of post-graduate training in nuclear engineering and up to $650 per month for up to 12 months prior to graduating through the Navy's Nuclear Officer candidate Program. Students interested in contact interview Gunderson, in Lawrenceville (913) 841-4376, collect or write.
Navy Officer Programs
610 Florida Street
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Operation Friendship Building Bridges Between Cultures
International "Pot Luck"
Our semester has been a good one. We want to celebrate our time together by sharing an international meal. This is our last regular meeting of the semester, so we hope everyone can attend.
TONITE
7:00
The Center 1629 W.19th
Bring a dish of food to share or just come and enjoy
Funded by the Student Senate and The Baptist Student Union
Faculty members and candidates
for Doctorate, Masters, Law and Bachelor Degrees!
Order Caps, Gowns, and Hoods now!
Orders taken through April 27th. Monday-Friday 9 a.m.to 3 p.m. Main Lobby, Booth No.1
THE KANSAS UNION
BUILD YOUR OWN SHIP.
Engineering Duty Office is the Navy's name for a man whose specialty is ships and ship systems — running them, designing them and developing EDMA's career can take him from seniority to postgraduate study then on into his own individual specialty — anything from hard-core praq training to engineering. Engineering It if it sounds like your kind of job, speak to LLE C. Gunderson 610 Floor Street Lawrence Kensas 80245 917-3477 collect NAVY OFFICER. IT'S NOT JUST A JOB, IT'S AN ADVENTURE.
University Daily Kansan
11451
HAMLET
NOTES
Re Cliff's
Notes
Take one
before
studying
Cliff's Notes
Clif's Notes, always the right prescription when you need help in understanding literature
Prepared by educators. Easy to use.
Titles available now cover plays and novels
assigned plays and novels
Available At:
Jayhawk Book Store
1420 Crescent Road
843-3826
ROBERT DE NUIR in "THE DEER HUNTER"
Shows each EV at 8:00
Sat/Sun 1:45
Adm $3.00
"HURRICANE"
Eve 7:30 & 9:30
Sat/Sun 1:55
Hillcrest
"The GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY"
Eve at 7:28 & 9:38
Sat/Sun 1:50
Hillcrest
JACK LEEMON JANE FONDA
MICHAEL DOUGLEL
"THE CHINA SYNDROME"
Eve 7:30 & 9:45
Sat/Sun 1:30
Granada
"BUCK ROGERS IN THE 25th CENTURY"
Eve 7:30 & 9:30
PG Varsity
Starts FRIDAY!
Eve 7:30 & 9:40
Sat/Sun 1:30
MIOS FORMAN
Staring JOHN SAVAGE
Cinema Twins
"The FILM FOR THE TOX"
Rolling stone
Let the sun shine in!
HAIR
THE CHAMP
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Plus PG
Smoke duck referes...8:00
"HEROES"
Sunset
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'THE DEER HUNTER'
'HURRICANE'
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R. 7:20 & 9:30
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Eve: 7:30 & 9:30
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Let the sun shine in! HAIR
THE CHAMP
Cinema Twin
PG
An Evening of Women's Animated Films
with Directors: Susan Pitt Kraning • Mary Beams • Kathleen Laughlin • Kathy Rose • Sally Cruikshank
A City Trip
Cells
Crocus
Jefferson City Trip
Seed Reel
Solo
Paul Revere is Here
Fun on Mars
Chow Fun
Quasi at Quackadero
Madsong
Doodlers
A 3D model of a woman holding a camera in front of a mirror.
Monday April 23
Woodruff Aud.7:30
ADM $1.00
Presented by SUA Films
Hold on to the past...
KU
The end of your KU days is less than 3 weeks away and the friendships made here will last forever through the Alumni Association. Be a part of KU's future—attend the Open House and become acquainted.
Alumni Assoc.Open House Senior Party Wed. April 25th
7pm-9pm Open House 403 Kansas Union
7pm-11pm Senior Party
Level 6 Terrace, Union
Seniors: attend the Alumni Open House before going to the Senior Party and
receive your '79 beer cup. Prizes and free KU souvenirs for everyone.
6
Monday, April 23, 1979
University Dafly Kansan
Newell wins 3, edged by Kenyan for Relavs' honors
By GENE MYERS
arte Writer
The last event of the Kansas Relays almost ended in a dead heat.
By a half vote, Kipsuibai Koskei, a native Kenyan who runs for New Mexico, edged KU's triple winner Kevin Newell for the Outstanding Performer honors.
But this was hardly anything unusual for the 54th edition of the Relays. Dead beats and tight battles were commonplace on Saturday's final day of competition.
In addition to the feats of Koskeli and Newell, an estimated crowd of 6,250 watched in the bright sunshine as KU snapped a three-year relay drought when pole vaulter Jeff Buckingham won a sudden death jump and former and former Kansas State University kansas Relays championship in the steeplechase, something he was unable to do as Jawhawk.
ON THE COLD, wet track Friday afternoon, Newell coated the final 220 yards to secure the 880-yard relay title for KU. The victory was KU's first in three years on the victory
Texas-Kansas-Drake relays circuit, and it also mark the start of a big weekend for the team.
"This has got to be my biggest day ever," Newell said. "I'm tired of people saying that I've been running in Clifford Wiley's shadow. I'm tired of people saying that I could only run the 60 and the quarter and nothing in between."
Saturday, KU captured two more crows,
the 440 and mile relays, and Newell silenced
him.
LESTER MICKENS, Tim Jones and
KANSAS
Staff photo by RANDY OLSON
Buck luck
Terry Porter, former KU Olympian, congratulates KU's Jeff
Buckingham after Buckingham beat Porter in the pole vault in a marathon contest Saturday at the Kansas Relays.
KU jump champ fails to repeat
By DAVID PRESTON
Sports Writer
Corwin had the last chance to clear the bar in a battle with four other performers, but she just missed on her third and final attempt.
Shawn Carpin, KU's leading high jumper and the 1978 Kansas Relays champion, was a little detached that she had failed to repeat as the high jump winner Saturday. But what really hurt, Carpin said, was that she had been the winner but would have been the winning jump at 5-9.
"I was over the bar," an exasperated Corwin said after her miss, "but I just forgot to kick my heels. That's what makes it so hard. I was actually over the bar."
Corwin, a sophomore, won the Relays last year with a jump of 5-8, which is her personal best outdoors. She said she knew she could go higher.
"I KNOW THAT I can go 5-10 outdoors," she said. "I jumped 5-10 indoors this season, and I sure that I can do it. And I know that I can make 5-9.
"That's what makes this miss today so hard to take."
Corwin ended in a tie for third in the event because of the number of misses she had at the lower heights. Oklahoma University's Rene Nicken won the event and Sandy Schultz of Central Iowa finished second.
"Losing the event is not really the most important thing." Corwin said. "I just want to do the best I can, and I know I can do better."
and 5-3, and it's those misses at the lower heights that really hurt."
It cost her the championship in this meet, but she said she was still confident that she could win the Big Eight Outdoor championship in May.
"I missed on my first attempts at 5-3, 5-4
"I've never jumped against her (Nickles) before because she wasn't at the Big Eight Indoor." Corwin said, "but I've got to worry heights I jump, I who I jump against."
The Royals, who have given up 9 runs in the last seven games, have not lost five live games this season.
Sox beat KC 6-0, sweep series
SERVICES
BOSTON—George Scott, 73, plays four runs with a pair of singles and Topekan Mike Torrez threw a four-hitter yesterday as the Boston Red Sox completed a three-game series sweep with a 6-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Fred Lynn had a double and a pair of singles to extend his hitting streak to 11 games.
But it was Newell who captured all the attention after he won the open 100-meters race in Mexico.
David Blucker joined Newell on the 800 and 440 teams. Deon Hogan, Stan Whitaker, Tommy McCall and Mickens ran the mile relay.
homer of the season. Torrez, 1-1, walked five in the first three innings but escaped trouble as Boston pulled off double plays in each game, and added fourth double plays in the seventh.
Newell's goo boot began early Saturday afternoon when he exploded out of the blocks to edge Wiley, John Garrison and Willy Snoddy in the 100-meters. That trio was the elite of the Big Eight sprinters from 1975 to 1978.
From the Kansan's Wire Services
In the open 200, Snoddy held off the charging Wiley and Newell. He won in 20.72. Wiley finished second in 20.97 and Newell was third in 21.09.
Newell finished first in 10-42 seconds,
Smody took second in 10.50 and Wiley was
Burleson hit his boner in the first inning off Kansas City starter Ricky Hale, who took a walk on a pitching dugout.
"I TRAINED PRETTY hard," Wiley said, "but it just wasn't a very good meet for it. It was a long trip pretty much for nothing.
Amos Otis, Hal Maker, Al Cowens and Clint Hurtle were the only Royals to get hits. The Royals return home for a 7-35 tonight against the Chicago White Sox.
Despite his performance, Newell lost the outstanding performer title to Kokesh, 15% votes to 15. Kokesh won the 1,500-meters on Saturday, and the 1,000-meter on Sunday, both in meet record times.
"Now it's back to the drawing board. I don't think I ran as good as I could have."
in the Wes Santee 1,500, Koski was clocked in 3:44.4, almost two full seconds faster than the old mark. He shattered the last half second and half seconds in the 5,000 finish in 13:51.3.
"I am very,very happy,happy," Koskei
KU FRESHMAN Buckingham was also a double winner, capturing both the University and open pole vault competition's first-place victures were 174 both times.
Before he could win the open event, he had to battle for crown KU Lyman Terry Porter in a sudden death jump-p off that lasted almost two hours.
said. "This is my fastest time this year. I like it very much."
The regular competition ended when both vaulters failed to clear 17-4/8% in the allotted three attempts. The bar was moved down until they both cleared 16-4/8%, then it was back up to 16-3/8%, and again at 17-5/8% and Buckingham won when he made 16-11½ and Porter missed.
"That was quite a bit of fun," Buckingham said. "I've never been in this type of situation before, jumping against another guy this long."
"I M A LITTLE tired, but not physically. There was so much psychology and strategy; it's your mind that is working here."
Rick Musgrave, assistant track coach at Oklahoma, said he didn't have any set strategy in the Glenn Cunningham mile, and he also didn't have enough to out-learn Irish. He did O'Shaughnessy. In the last 100 words, Musgrave thought fourth-place to what he thought was a victory
Musgrave didn't believe it at first, but he was convinced after seeing the photo that showed O'Shaughnessy's torso breaking the tape before Musgrave's shoulder.
HOWEVER, THE ACCUTRACK timer saw the outcome differently, awarding O'Shaughnessy the victory by one hundredth of a second in a photo finish.
1 we worried when we got to the tape. $^{13}$
i was really happened, that $^{14}$
i slowed down. $^{15}$
"Well, if I was a girl, I would have won." Musserra said.
Lundberg was just a few yards behind Mason before the final water jump, but he landed wrong, broke stride and could never recover.
O'Shaughnessy also thought Musgrave had won.
"I VE RUN AGAINST Bill enough in the past to know that he has a better kick, and even though I was leading on the final lap, he was able to force it and is awfully hard to force." Mason said.
In the 3,000-meter Larry Winn steeplechase, Mason won in 8:39.48 and beat another KU former standout, LandLiberg, by almost six seconds.
in the longest of the open events, the marathon, Anthony Rutiez of Milwaukee won.
Joseph Coombs, Alabama senior, captured the open 400-meters in 45.82. A second-place finisher for KU was Jimmy Little in the Ciff Cushman 400-meter intermediate hurdles. Matt Friedman took third in the discus.
Green shines in photo finishes
BvCARLOS MURGUIA
Snorts Writer
KU' s Lori Green put on a quite show at the Kansas Relays Saturday when she won both the IndyCar and the NASCar championship.
Green impress writers in the press box enough to receive four votes in the meet's outstanding performer competition. The only woman to receive votes, she finished second in the national university's Kipuabai Koskei and KU's Kevin Newlin, had 15% of all votes respectively.
"I'm so glad that that's over," she said. "The last time we ran, Jenie beat me. I wasn't pleased with my time in the 100, but this was the race I wanted to win."
Both of Green's victories came in photo finish. She pulled out of the startling blocks to take the lead in the 100 and on to tip the ball with a winning shot, in the 11 of a second. Her winning time was 11.74.
GREEN WAS PLEASED after the 200.
Later, Green, a Topeka freshman, faced Emmons and prep star Jennie Gorham, who was running for the Kansas City Northstars Track Club, in the 200. Green won in a record time record of 24.15, with Gorham second with a time of 24.25.
Green was not the only woman to excel in the Relays. Iowa State's national champion in the 1,300-meter run. Deb Vettet, won both races and won an honored SWL's winning two-mile relay team.
"The hardest race was the two-mile relay," Vetter said. "I was behind and I had to catch up. I ran harder in that race than I did in the other two.
"This is the first time this year I've run the 400 and 1,500 and I was really happy at the end of it."
THE 1,500 was indeed a fine race for Vetter, but third place finisher Michelle Brown of KU also ran impressively. Going ahead, the two made up a pack of runners, but turned on her speed.
"Around the last turn I decided to run all out because I was worried somebody was going to kick by me, she said. "It was tough competition and it was a close finish."
In the 400-meter hurdles, KU's Lori Lowrey was third behind江山 State's Deb Esser and Ellie Mahal. Esser, the national champion, event, won in a meet record time of 60.14.
Esser and Lowyre finished behind the 100-meter hurdler winner, Texas &M&s' Linda Waltman. Waltman's time was 13.93, Lowrey's 14.19 and Esser's 14.41.
"ESSER IS REALLY tough in the 400." Lowrey said. "I didn't run as well and I think I'm capable of running, I need to work on my technique and be smother."
Esser's victory was one of five the Cyclones earned during the meet. Green's
two triumphs were the only first-place finishes for the Jawhawk women.
KU coach Teri Anderson said that the team had had good individual efforts and that she was pleased with the team's performance.
"We had outstanding performances in the 100 and 200, the 1,500, both of the hurdle events and the two-mile relay race," she said.
The 54th Kansas Relays will be remem-
bered for some fine individual and relay
performance.
Texas A&M's Vickie Colem won the discus competition with a throw of 141-3; the women's division winner was the shot put with a heave of $48^4$; the University of Oklahoma's Jill Lancaster won the long jump with a 19-4 leaf and OU's Katie McCarthy won the high jump with a jump of 5-7.
Besides winning the two-mile relay in a time of 8:54.65, Iowa State also won the mile relay in a meet record 3:44.57. Kansas State won the race with a meet record 3:49.01. Iowa won the sprint medley relay in 3:88.77.
Other KU finishers and their times and distances were: the two-mile relay team of Deb Hertzg, Denise Homa, Vicki Simpson and Brown, third, 9:10:34; the 440 relay team of Claire Overtake, Gwens Poass, Lowrey and Green third, 48.2; Shawn Corwin, high jump, third, 5-7; and Tami Rose, javelin, fourth, 132.2.
By Kansan Staff and Wire Reports
Javhawks split twin bill with Missouri
COLUMBIA, Mo.—Shortstop Monty Martin singled in the tying run and scored the winning run on a double by John Spoottwood in the top of the seventh Sunday to give the Kansas Jayhawks 84 victory over the split Big Eight conference double-header.
Missouri won the first game 5-1 behind sophomore Tom Heckman the four-hitter. KU's only tally came on a home run by center fielder Bitch Vickers.
on Saturday. A Al Hightower, Tiger left fielder, hit a two-run homer in the bottom of the seventh to win the second game. 4-2. The team went first in the 3-0 four-hit pitch by Ron Mathis.
The second game was tied 3-3 before Missouri's Ed Woolbeel scored on an Al Hightower double to give the Tigers a 4-3 sixth-inning lead. But Kansas came back in next inning on consecutive hits by Bager Riley, Martin and Spotwood to gain the Riley.
Missouri swept two games from Kansas
KU COACH Floyd Temple expressed
interest in his team's come-from-behind
suitry.
"The dirt was on the coffin and all the nails were in," Temple told his team after the game, "and then we kicked the dirt off and pulled the nails out and won it."
Clayton Fleeman, 3-1, picked up the
Kings drop to Phoenix 108-93
TEMPE, Aiz. (AP) — The Phoenix Suns got 20 points from forward Walter Davis and a total of 51 from their bench, including 16 from guard Mike Brazot, to defeat the NBA Western Conference semi-final playoff game yesterday afternoon.
Phoenix leads the best-of-seven series 2-1 going into Game 4 Wednesday at Kansas City. The fifth game will be Friday in Phoenix.
The Suns built their biggest lead in the third quarter as Brake hit a 20-foot foul at the home plate.
The Kings shot only 29 percent from the field in that quarter, hitting on seven of 24
Kansas City's fourth loss in four tries this season on the Phoenix's courts.
In the final quarter, the Kings could cut the Suns' margin to only 13 points en route to
The Kings were led by Oti Birdsong and Scott Weddine with 22 points applued. They built a 20-10 lead with 5:04 left in the opening frame, having come back from a six-point deficit.
DV makes Pan Am
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) - KU guard Darnell Valentine and a dozen other players were named last night to the U.S. basketball games by the United States team, games July 1-15 in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
The team was chosen from a group of almost 70 players at last week's tryouts.
EVERYONE'S A TAN
EVERYONE'S A TAN MAN!
Enter the
TAN MAN
LIMERICK CONTEST!
All entries will be judged on their originality by Chancellor Archie Dykes!
—And published on TAN MAN DAY
Wed. May 2nd in the UDK.
Deadline Monday, April 30—5 pm
What's a Limerick?
A limerick is 5 lines with a rhyme scheme abba
BEST LIMERICK WINS $400 JVC PORTABLE
RADIO CASSETTE RECORDER
FROM
The JVC RC-828
Is the most portable radio cassette recorder
needed to record some noise that receives
AM/FM waves and 3 more special sound
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The companion grade cassette recorder
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Butter. Other features include ALC
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An damaged cassette door.
Two markers for accurate recording.
Organizer made from foam step.
Case. Review and pose.
For the best in sound quality, JVC
hits together 10 with 4 points
(estimated at 9.12).
For part of 2 inch herewere,
JVC hits together 15 with 4 points
(estimated at 9.12).
TEAM
ELECTRONICS
2019 Louisiana
HERE'S HOW TO ENTER!
1. Enter cool per literies. $1.50 cover publication
cost of your limerick in the UDK on
Tan Man Day May 2.
2. Begin registering to 11 lint mail or use Official Tan Man
Limerick Contest form in classrooms.
3. Write limericks about the Tan Man your ideal of a Tan
manager who makes you feel at home. Anything about Tan Man, be creative.
4. Winner of most original limerick to be announced
on all lists.
5. Deadline Monday, April 30 9:00 pm.
6. Enter as many limericks as you like.
bamboo
monitor
eva
speakers
TEAM ELECTRONICS
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
American Housewares Corporation has openings for students in Lawrence, Topeka and Kansas City. Earn $825 Monthly
WWW.SIM.COM WWW.SIM.COM WWW.SIM.COM WWW.SIM.COM WWW.SIM.COM
Neat appearance
For more information come to the
Student Union Parlor A Monday
April 23 at 12:00, 2:00, 4:00, or 7:00 p.m.
or
Student Union Pine Room Tuesday April 24 at 1:00,3:00,5:00,or 7:00 p.m. SHARP
University Daily Kansan
---
Monday, April 23.1979
17
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Raman are offered to all students without regard to sex, religion, national origin or national background. ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FIILT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
time times times times times
15 words or
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word
0.01
0.01
ERRORS
AD_DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Friday 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
864-4358
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDK business office at 864-253-2700.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
III Flint Hall
DEFEND YOUR INVALIDABLE HOSPITALS to life,
to safety and to the well-being of students for information society in the fight against AIDS.
J. HOOD BOOKKEEler will happy to announce the opening of J. HOOD's new book will be added continually as space allows. Come down and browse for a real bargain 401. Manuscript 841-4644 4-25
Seniors we've come a long way, it's time to embrace Senior Sam, and Alumni Association Chairman Robert Perrin.
FOR RENT
Still looking for a place to call home? Nalmatim. He's in the front office, the master of the day. Stop by and look on us until you can see his face, with beard to give you all the details and the promise to give you the address: NALMATIM HALL, 1800 Nalmatim Drive, 843-5050
FRONTER BIDE APARTMENTS NOW RENT!
Fronter Bide is a two-story apartment unfurnished, from $170. Two laundry rooms, large laundry closets and a full bathroom in INDOOR HEATED POOL. For apartments to be located at 324 Frontier Street, Next door to Russell's Bank.
Christian Hooting, New and Summer. Close to
the school. No. 842-605 between 2:50
- 5:00. Keep trying.
Apt. 2 BH and efficiency Close to campus, UUl-
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Utilities Paid
On campus
Two Bedrooms
Lg. Bathroom
Kitchen
Swimming Pool
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Much,Much More!
Come up and see our DISPLAY APARTMENTS!
NOW LEASING FOR FALL '79
JayhawkertOWERS Apartments 1603 West 15th
Trailrunner summer sub-league 3 berm, 2 bach,
4 bach summer $41; berms $81-125; New York
optional
MARK A & II Apartments now renting for summer occupancy. 12th floor, 3rd Floor, luxury histories 7. min walk to campus. 1. min walk to balconies, off-fairway parking, Disney airport, disposal facility. 1991 Misc. Appt. A2, 84-0023, 83H5, 84-0026, 83H5, 84-0029, 83H5, 84-0030, 83H5.
Summer roommate needed. Share 2 BR apt.
Roommate requirements: $400, utilities paid,
413-856-2866
413-856-2863
Summer submarine 2 bedroom Applertop Apt. 2,
acquired in aquarium pool, A-C price. 9-235
843-4576
2 BR'rs of 4 BR Condominium at Trailridge tour
and comfortable. Br'rals 641-708-1088 - 4:35
641-708-1088 - 4:35
1. bedroom Moodsbrownbrook A4 for number aab-
bcd bedrooms in a two-bedroom present cost Negotiable
2. study room to be low-present cost Negotiable
Female roommate for summer 1. Dbkm 2. Applicart AC, Acp. PCB. Call 841-2720
ideal summer kit! Complex, 900 ft from Umm
8510, 2 bdrm - sent-furnished, clean, 42-
8510
Roommates wanted to share nice old home furnishings. They needed a bed, chair, central air, own bedroom, shared卫间 and living room.
Summer sublease, 3 bdrm house, AC, 2-car
room of campus **855** electrified
Call 841-2670
Wanted: Female roommate to share 2 bedrooms in an apartment located on Montana Ave. Kitru hotel prices $100. For more information, please call (719) 648-5355.
Sensation 12BR apartment, Southbridge, Plane.
Nimbus 1BR apartment, Westchester, Plane.
Updated Summer suite or longer Call Kerry
416-395-7000.
Tombola. 1. BRI unfurnished. Corderied ww-
Available May-May-September for lease in August.
Available May-May-September for lease in August.
SUBLEASE - a beautiful two bedroom apartment for summer 2.530. Call Dave 216-789-1425 4-25
ROOMS FOR HEAT. Convenient location—new
room from slender front. Union. Call 6305
6305
Summer sublease: 2 bedroom apt furnished or
built-in apartment $200 a month.
811-335-1350 or 811-337-2717
Summer学期。Lavender, style ON CAMPUS
Murray Bridge. Booklet $10.00 per month. Call Steve at 346-572-8000.
Booklet $10.00 per month. Call Steve at 346-572-8000.
Summer students-need someone to share large
images, photos, videos, single images,
$60, or couple $85, 84-121 CJ.
$300.
Sublease for summer 2 bedroom apartment. Furnished.
$225.00 paid installment. Call Agent at 843-819-3858.
9% month leave, August 16-May 21. One IBM
informed $100, two IBM informed $250 plus
furniture. Four furniture. Food availability.
Call 843-152 or 824-314. Call 843-152 or
3430 Murphy Drive. Call 202 off 4 and 4-26
Spend your summer at our pool & save $夏季.
June 1-11, Aug 1-15,冬暑假 $140.
Room rental: $270. Furniture available: C412-1135 or Q423-3146.
Bedroom: $280. Bathroom: -240 Mortuary $49.
Ottery to 23rd & Iowa. -4
4-26
Sublease: 4 bedroom suite for summer $75
Persona: 1 person²贮藏 Cullan B41-95284
2849
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
All New & Expansionary
Visit our furnished display unit today &
you'll see why the move is to Sundance
Apartments. Completely furnished studio on
1 BR. Conveniently located at 7th & Florida
just west of the Sanctuary on All Bus Route
841 EREE 840 AAEF
Summer subbase. Beautiful three bedrooms,
furnished to every room.
east for everything 814-838
west for everything 814-838
Studio Apt. Furnished Excellent location $150.00
Studio B apt. Excellent location $125.00
Lease Available May 1st. #423-828
4-26
Sublease: 2 bdm, apt. AC D W laundry facility.
70717 walk to campground C2: Call
5707 7071
Summer sublease with option to re-vent. 2 bed
room close campus. AC 811-6438, unfurnished.
Electricity included.
For rent this summer. One bedroom apt, new &
free to campus. 843-6476. Afterskob
$195.00
3 berm, duplex tables for summer with option
4 berm, duplex tables for summer with option
5 blocks from campus 8432-402-496
6 blocks from campus 8432-402-496
7 blocks from campus 8432-402-496
2 bedroom Mendebrowbock Ant, to share with one
for the summer. Price negotiable
8946
8946
Sublease with option to renew. Luxury 3 bedroom, 3 bath, Townhouse, Poens Tennis Court, Carriage House, Bus Home, Racquetball Club, Dishwasher, Microwave, and more. Available in Mild 641-5729 or 843-7423.
2 roommates to share 3 bedrooms Trailfires
Apartment or sublease: 814-6755
4-26
**Sublease** Apt for summer-2 bedroom close to dog allowed, pet possible, summer rate 845-187
Sublease 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment 4
bedroom suite. May 23, 2020 Call. Mail ID: 437-227
May 23, 2020 Call. Mail ID: 437-227
Sublease 1 BR abr. Carriage May 15, AC on-
baity. Call 841-16731 after 6 p.m. weekdays; 4-25
Summer roommate to share three bedroom
room. 1642-1625. AC fully carpeted in
campus. 844-1625.
BUSILLEE. Furnished studio in Meadowbrook
Swimming and Diving; 843-406-4
4-27
Nummer reommende needed. Required.学生成绩 pro-
gramm. Apt. B$90. Upgrade. Call #482-7437.
Suburban summer subway 1 BR Southridge
route, area route, city route,
mayable May 21st, B170, Calhoun 84-5288.
Summer sublease 2 BR AC put for $197.50
and lease to continue renting to return
Fall. Call 814-8700
Looking for a Summer Residence? Rent a 5-10
room, furnished 2 books from
843-938-938
FOR SALE
SunSafes Sun-Silms are our specialty. Non-
SunSafes Sun-Silms are our specialty, reasoned,
1021, Mass 841-5750
Watch for truck on Illinois selling produce
Foondogs, Foods 9th and 11th. Also wood
crates
WATERED MATTRESSES $9.98 3 year guarantee; WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. 813-680 138.
**Women's 10 speed bike 19" fully lugged frame**
**Women's 10 speed bike 19" fully lugged frame**
*843-301-5* **weekday**
*843-301-6* **weekday**
1972 CB500 Honda, Reliable, new battery,
1972 CB500 Honda, up best. Buyer 864-6117, 4-24
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to come across the Civilization 31 For exam preparation. *New Analysis* by Andrew M. Benson. *Making Sense of Western Civilization* 31. Mallia Books, Inc., & Oread Books, Inc.
Alternator, starter and generator. Speculates
on motor's electrical characteristics.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-769-3000, 3000 W, gth,
f.hr.
Stereo (cumulative speakers and AM-FM stereo)
radio needle, new needle; 646-3610. 4-23
Pender Montant Bait Gun Stain with strang, wavy lines. Great for bass, snook and flounder, cards and covers. Very good condition.
1900 Ocel Kudell, 45,000 miles, $600 or best. oef-4
841-3143
73 Dodge Charger, AC AT, New bwrkes. Rush up to the condition, reasonable price.
SAVE $1200.
Tennis requires HEAD professional, almost new,
2978. With VGs guts, very interesting prices.
2978
Mom would like a Drop & Jint pad to stick on
the back of her Round Corner Dresser.
Must $45.00
Miss B12-08967 #27
71 VW, convertible; eat. 25,000 miles, 4 speed. 4 doors.
Imported immediately. Bought at Burlington - Burlington
Most importantly, eat. Bought at Burlington - Burlington
after a few months.
SAVE! on
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
All with
$24.30
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION'
THE BATTERY SHOP
842-2922
For Mother's Day - Free 12 oz. Body Shampoo with $3.00 gift from Charity Collection at www.mothershampoo.com
White Elephant Sale, Saturday, April 28, 8:30-
10:30 a.m. Listing of City Of Chicago House
W. Campus 4-275
Yamaha acoustic guitar plus case, like new. $150
Lightweight backpacking case, used only 4 times.
$250
left condition $1200 or best offer. 843-4243. 4-25
left condition $1200 or best offer. 843-4243. 4-25
Bob Jackson Mebleve condition 22 inch frame. $400 or best offer. Call 841-4072. 4-25
Honey bee and hive. Third season. $45. Also
three wheel bike ($51, 841-2722) eights.
$99
107 Sunset Alpine. New convertible top. racks, carpet & brakes - $295. $195. Calm Air.
New 1978 Honda Hibitat TA-50 2 only miles on speedometer. Call #832-7022
4-27
Encyclopedia Britannica "Great Books of the
World." World, 42, Volumes 1, 60; Call
861-2925
74 Mustang II, 4 cylinder, 4 speed, AC. AMF-4B
80 track. Excellent. 842-600. F-4Z
1944 Honda CH 750. Windwardier & Truck
Condition. If interested, I contacted 888-624-
3717.
1969 Ford Nissan, AT, AC, PS, radio, $1090 or best
price. Call Tom at 842-2754
Batteries .30
1971 Camaro XR-7, V8, Auto, P.S. P.B. A.C.
Cruiser; masque, aux extra ... $60 Cc. Sal
MkII camper
Sierra System, great inn! 1981 Model RX-K
Series. Super handy. Must call. Survival
Ground, easy access
Comfortable, Twin Bed. Like new. Best offer.
822-652-0467
4-27
Hocken, 1757, 5498 Windmayer II. Hook & Co.
Jersey, 1757, 5498 Windsor or make it. Café &
Coffee, 1757, 8263 n. 8254, 8255, 8258, 8263,
8264, 8265, 8266, 8267, 8268, 8269, 8270
2 months old bed—one matress and box with
frame for $45.00. #22-5950
4-25
10.247 Nintendo 800 Commande. Your chance to
become a hacker! Higher grades make
offer. More #64-800
4-27
1977, Kawasaki, Custom Silver, with mag, front
view. 1978, Kawasaki, Custom Silver, front
view. Looks and runs great. 811-243-2400
70 Pontine Catalina, make an offer by
1231 Vermont (right apt), after 8:30
4-27
FOUND
Used Study, Mittenware and Sprint. Good grade.
814-250-6792 814-250-6792
FLT 721, 144 Street, New York, NY
Flat 71- 124 Sport Conv. Call after 5 Best-
491- 848-106
4-27
A sum of money. Please call 842-4142 4-25
Dog-male pointer, springer dog white with red markings. No year old. Found tomb 14th March 2015.
Block (probably Lab) puppy found. Call 812-4537
4537
HELP WANTED
Thermal Instruments Calculate near First Southern Baptist Church-19h and Naismith-64h. 863-356-364.
EXOTIC JOHN JAKE TAHMO, CALIFORNIA
Little expense, fantastic taste! $1700-$4000 sum-
mary fare, snacks, beverages, rivers, rats, & more.
tarares, environs, rivers, rats, & more.
60328, Sacramento, California 50560. 4-23
60329, Sacramento, California 50560. 4-23
JOBS MEN WOMEN SAILBOATS:
CRUISE SHIPS "No experience. High pay! See
Caribbean, Hawaii, Europe, World Summer camp"
"No experience. High pay! See
601298, Box549, Caiden, 056068 4-24
**OVENISHA JOHS - Summer-Year round. Europe,**
S. America, Australia, Asia, Earth all. Fields $169,
$210 monthly. Expenses paid. Sightseeing. Free
miles. Hotels. Box 52-BA, Karen-Delphine.
CA 82532. D-4-26
SUMMER JOBS, NOW! WOILD CRUBEES!
PLEASURE BOATS? No experience! Good pay!
PUBLIC LICATION and direct referrals to SRWADOV,
60129, Sacramento, CA 95800 5-48
JOBIS LAKE TAHOE, CALIF.! Fantastic job!
JOBIS NASHVILLE, CALIF.! Fantastic job!
JOBIS WORLDWIDE, CALIF.! Fantastic job!
JOBIS APPLICATION, CALIF.! Fantastic job!
TAN MAN DAY!
—MAY 2nd—
"Undress" like Tan Man
Shorts & T-Shirt
Watch Personals
for details. —Dad
**STUDENTS:** summer employment Pinkelker's who desire summer employment on Security Island,
ENGINEERING BEGGAR Positions $18,000 up.
Never a grade to applicant. Call Rob Hobbey.
B2-36-24 or密责 resume to Courtney Pers.
B2-36-25 or密责 resume to Stuile 106. Skerry
*Midson*, Ks 66202
New taking applications for Fountain & Grill
New taking applications for Fountain & Grill
In-person in person at Vida Restaurant, 1264
St. James Street, New York, NY 10027
Experienced painter. Interiors & exterior, full-time. Apply in Spring to 2000 BW 8th suite.
Add with own transportation to care for 8 min.
Add with own transportation to care for 10 min.
@ $45.00, $60.00, $75.00, $90.00, $105.00,
$120.00, $135.00, $150.00, $165.00, $180.00, $205.00,
$220.00, $235.00, $250.00, $265.00, $280.00, $305.00,
Did your Easter break leave you with the summer job blues? We still have a full time summer work positions available. Find out if they are open. 16:00 - 21:00, 16:00 - 19:00, 16:00 - 19:00, 16:00 - 19:00, 16:00 - 19:00, 16:00 - 19:00, 16:00 - 19:00, 16:00 - 19:00, 16:00 - 19:00, 16:00 - 19:00, 16:00 - 21
Students taught in business, pre-med, pre-law,
or pre-eng. major make $297 per month. For interview
questions contact: JobForce.com at 800-664-5120.
MAKE $3,000 THIS SUMMER. If you are hard
to contact, please reach out to rescu-
ce 812-1923 for interview ask.
Looking for a job to help get you through college? We have night and 8am open through September. Call us at (718) 467-3000.
Mature-minded college student or good, hard worker with 5+ years of experience may apply. Job will involve making mileage and job interviews for per year. Applicants must be a graduate degree applicant in at least AA or 3rd Bachelors Degree. Apply to position at AA 3rd Bachelors Degrree by mail to the Admissions Office, Qualified new jobs and women are required.
BUSINESS ADMN GRADS marketing & management positions. $12000 up. Never a fee. Send resume to Courtney P. Services, 860 W 62D St., Suite 101, Shawnean Visitation, Ks 6522
One of the mid-walky oldest training and storage facilities in the nation, Goodwood goods packers-Will train qualified, goodly trained packers. Will apply in April at 12003 West GEast Business Shops 581-917-1448. An excellent opportunity employer.
Looking for summer & fall help to work in,
luxury store Graduate student preferred, Day
and night shifts. Contact Store Alfred Endaly at
Skilier's Lafarge Store, 1600 Max. 4-25
One of the mid-west's oldest moving and storage drivers, helps with installation, driver training and helpers. Will team qualified as DOT requirements. Hard work only required. Must have a Bachelor's degree in Shows, Cameras or call 911-631-1400. An equal opportunity employer.
immediate. Need for Student Clerk-Train in training to become a supervisor or an internship employee through the summer and winter seasons. Requires a number of numerical form, hand-recording data, and application skills. Include typing, writing make written applications on Geological Survey Mount Hall 1920 Avenue N. Geological Survey Mount Hall 1920 Avenue N. Geological Survey Mount Hall 1920 Avenue N. Geological Survey Mount Hall 1920 Avenue N.
BARTENDERS. Training pain for Fall positions
(1) Fell with a spinal cord injury (2)
and 5% of the Fall Cells between 1 and 4, 8 & 407
328
Pagellan jobs open non-employable or for summer
positions. Send resume to JobBoard.com.
$250 starting salary. Call 812-324-9000.
Earn $50 to $100 weekly in New Haven Harbour,
New York. Travel and Outdoor Equipment, Electric BIH Company,
anywhere in New Haven or on the East Coast anywhere in interest on less than or be taxed by the state. Inventory on Write today! Box 802.
Cicadellan $10 loat fee $2.95 hr. Sur Carne Am Cicadellan $10 loat fee $2.95 hr. Sur Carne Am MI Massachusetts Street, Lawrence, Kansas
Psychiatric Nurses wanted for all shifts on child's,
adolescent, and adult wards. Apply at the office
of the Nursing, Tupea State Hospital,
Tupaea W. 611-803-7520.
Equal Opportunity Employer
4-26
Mental health technician, increased mental health technicians, psychiatric aids, health service work providers, mental health nurse, regional State Hospital, 7200 W. 6th, Topeka, KS 66401. Req: Master's degree or equivalent to app. Equity Opportunity Employer
LOST
Ladies hair salon 520 North Main St, F1. Apr 13
Deli 520 West Main St, F1. Apr 14
parking lot 520 West Main St, F1. 841-669
and Martin Hailford, 841-669
Brown Beaver northwarm coat with lowwavy product finish. Dries at 35 degrees Celsius to 85 degrees Fahrenheit or comes by HL Laundry Company. (401) 267-9100.
Man's Time watch with brown band. Mislead.
Man's Age 19 in or on summer
pad. Fashion pin.
MISCELLANEOUS
THESIS BINDING COPYING—The House of
Ursula's Quick Copy Center in headquarters for
themselves binding and copying in Lawsuits. Let us
inquire at 308 Mile, or phone 462-3610. Thank you.
NOTICE
DEATH! WHY BOTHER? ECKANKAR
The Key to Recovery records 847, 847, 843-002
Referring either to help with intramural wrestling matches, IF interpedial call 864-3250 for use on the phone.
1091 1207 6517 8238 8242 8243 8244
Reference offered to be withdrawn upon
eviction.
VETS—Are you getting your benefits? Maybe not. Check campus's 118 B IU Bison, 864-1478.
Eric said most in Launceston Driving School should be fluent in English, but most travel part 17's transportation driver does not speak English.
PERSONAL
FOX HALL SURGERY CLINIC. Abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy tests, Birth Control, Complications. For appointment call: 988-240-3580, ams@foxhall.com, 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., (912) 622-3000, 400-1098 Overland Park, Ks.
REKFS BRIESE SHOP is now open 290 Rolesley,
Maine, WI. Reekfs Shops are located at
quick, quick repair 1032 Vermont; 841-644-1844.
BAIRDHOUSE SPECIALS: 4-6 Mon, Tue, and Wed
12 noon-$50, 3-7 Mon, Tue, and Wed
$180 MABBS INFRARED NIGHT: "Wed" $19.16 picram
$19.16 picram
Gay Lieselman consulting referrals new hand-
held KUInfo 864-3586 or Headquarters
864-3586
FOX HILL SUGERGY CLINC Abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing. Birth Control. Counseling. Total Ligation. For appointment at O'Connor Clinic (424-380-446, 441) 10th St., Overland Park, KS.
THE TAN MAN
KHAKI!!
On Sale Now - $6.95
Rare KU Memorabilla Just
In Time for Tan Man Day!
Call 843-7040
to order yours!
--every Tuesday and Thursday
Belonging for special people Business Hotel,
New York, NY 10016
Open May 1-Lunar May 29/Mon-Mond noon New York
Open May 1-Lunar May 29/Mon-Mond noon
BODEO: Interview invited with persons) ex-
pressed by a representative with involvement with
Call Ramp at 816-542-7030.
IBM A TAN MAN "Call 918-2500 to inquire about IBM's new
software suite for the IBM i workstation." The IBM
workstation is now available from IBM.
See you at the Open House April 25th, Reeves
Wiedeman.
Remember our *INTERNATIONAL POT-LUCK dinner suite at Operation Friendship, 7:00 at 10:00 a.m. We have just a couple of rooms or just two and enjoy. This is our last regular meeting of the semester, so everyone should be ready to meet. We have created a good amouster together, and this is a reminder that this time with us. See you there!
4-23
This is your last chance! The St. Lawrence Center is in sponsoring the last poke of the semester. A 3.5 admission includes all the boy, pop, pop, pop, pop. Please check out 2tch at 8:15 a.m. at the KU Hallway. 4-27
To the O' Clint O'Ghealhada-Kill-It is made the mule.
Dr. G. Dilgis and Gibead is still in the 4-25
-6-25
Erinite radiologists needed to watch TV at May 5th.
Ericson Glenn at Glenns Invitational
department at Glenns Invitational.
WRES
Keep Training for the April 28-29 INTRAMURAL INTRAMURAL
WRESTLING TOURNAMENT
Anne, Cindy, Mary, Nancy, Harry,
Jim, Scott, Steve 4-23
5-7 pm in Robinson South Gym
-yrill
on
For additional Wrestling information
Call Recreation Services
864-3546
May you have 29 mons – Birthdays, that is. 4-25
To the impacture after fangails on West, one of the most soon let's try again TOGH at the Hawker
Happy Birthday Trish Lee!
Roses are Red
Violets are Blue
Mars is California
Th: Chrue - Monday night, had night 25c, draws
15.2 pitchers.
4-23
3 Years of hard work each in 3 weeks. Make
it a goal to be on the job 4-5 times a year.
Alumni Chair, Open House 12/29
4-77
The first thing we are expensive! A second
computer can teach you get the call. Call 861-3654
WWW.MIT.COM/MC502
WWW.MIT.COM/MC502
Alba Phila Celebrations on the Hill Championships? You did it again. With all these ads, I go back that it’s worth your耐心. Keep it good work & good play on funds! 4-23
Tao Man. There's a many rumen, lunge around,
it's big. Maybe it is my or is it for you. Please do those things to me, or let me eat for you. Please do the
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTOR MHA in math patience, three
years professional training. MB-3241.
www.math-tutor.com
Academic Intention. The Learning Quiz School
Academic Intention. The Learning Quiz School
Math and Reading Record Call Number 810-3456
Math and Reading Record Call Number 810-3456
PHINTING WHILE YOU WANT is available with
Alce at the House of Ubiqui/Quick Corp Center.
To attend, drop in at 9 a.m. to 5 a.m. Monday
to Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at
Mass.
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can help you with your math or CS problems.
Tired of feeding yourself? Nalshim Hall is offering for the first time ever a boarding plan. Visit us at www.nalshimhall.org and be canvassed. You can be bautiful if you choose this plan. Stay with NALSHIM HALL! Nalshim Hall, Drive 42-3528
PROFESSIONAL Tone-up, body work paints
at an unprofessional price. Call Mike 415-796-2000.
RUESCHHOFF
LOCKSMITHS
1015 W. 9th 843/2182
Companies Lock & Key Services
REWRITING/EDITING - Your manuscript, thesis or term paper edited into an effective, grammatically correct document. Thinking with precision and smoothness. Outlines and articles also available. ETF number: 842-135
EXPERT TUTORS MATH 600-700 PHYSICS
300-500 ANATOMY 400-500 PERSPECTIVE
PSYCH 100-200 STATISTICS CA. 843-908
QUALIFICATIONS BS in: Physics, MA in:
2 years experience in computer program.
(Required)
Lawrence Open School, Exciting Summer programs for middle and high school students study and bake, fine arts, organic gardening, classical music, and more. Available choices in Language Arts, Math, and Health. Available 7:30 - 9:30 a.m., slide sale. Call now.
MIRRORY CHARTS BY ACUATE
summarizes the data collected in
their surveys and impressions and
provides recommendations for
addressing many areas, birthrate for
only 45000 births per year,
birth rate for 1985, birth rate
for 2000, Shawnie Miles, Miles.
baby names.
TYPING
I do damned good typing, Peggy, 842-4476.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-4980. IF
Typist/Editor IBM Pica/Eta Quality work
Support Illustration Disertation welcome
Mail 842-1912-872
Now accepting term papers for quality typing,
Lymn, M.2016-2006 f. 30
If
Trying on Ehle Bible Typewriter by experien-
tive service. Proofreading Mats B44-117, 843-117
Experienced Typhoon-born papers, theory, mil-
literature and data. Work with spelling con-
trols in a desk, Miss Wright.
Quality testing prepared—iBM IHM Selenic, Tecnom-
Solar sheets, dissertations; Carole M. Ballard
Repairs, dissertations, resumes, legal forms,
number, edits, dill correct selective. Call EJ
031-526-7985.
Experimented Tylum-thesis, distortions, term
and phonetic selection, selectable, tab.
841-1211, 843-1210
I arrived early, quick signing. 29 in p. & under. 18 night service. Call Rohl, 841-628 for 9 am, 5-2 pm.
Tyring, offering, experienced typewriter
of nylon tipped ribbon I love these. Anna
Barnes
Accurate, experienced typed - form papers, brochures,
magazines and flyers. Must have 5 years of experience.
e-mail the page number: http://www.safecare.com
I devised a quick typing system. To 20 pages, I
lived on the same flat room with a desk,
6242 dqs after 5 p.m. and weekends all
night.
MASTERMINES Professional typing, Fast. Accu-
guaranteed. Guarantee 841-3387. 5-8
WANTED
Season 23: Night bedroom house, furnished.
Season 24: Day A-15. Extremely close.
companion #401-403
I need a good used 25 mm camera. Call Note:
811-8031
What I need a good home for a lavender cat.
Hat: RCS-3407 before 10 p.m.
4-25
Formal. non-mimicking resonance for fall. But
need not use discharges 110 b+, need just
Dahlier 441-216.
Wanted. Coordinator of development for Kannan College of Education and Family Life and Digit of Special Education, and University undergrad education related skills, prepaid grant application, writing skills, previous
Need a size 2 or 3 bedroom Apt. or home for
outside and next year (Grade) students **81**
and up.
In exchange for child care summer and
ruins and weekends. Call 843-7227 1, 4-25
6-25.
Female roommates be share two bedrooms apt. for
female. Attend from stadium: 844-664-644.
Wanted Persons interested in drinking beer, dancing, and having fun. Apply at RU BALLHALL between 8 and 14 p.m. April 27th for a S-Ball. College Campus P.O. Box 3024 Atlanta, GA 30350.
Formal roommate, wanted for spacious 2 bdm.
Appropriate travel to computer. $90 per month.
Residency required.
DEADLINE: MONDAY, APRIL 30, 5 PM
Ned someone to subline a bedroom kit—fur-ruled Starts May 16th for summer or year-round. Arrive by 4 p.m. **4-27**
Wanted someone to pay $850. A house $125
also contains amenities. Call 414-8193.
OFFICIAL TAN MAN
LIMERICK CONTEST FORM
Wanted recommute for 2-birth, AC house,
plus utilities: Cail 841-6835 after fax m. 4-
2 p.m.
- Mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint Hall or just come by.
- $3.50 per limerick to cover
publication costs.
Contest Judge
Write
Limerick
here→
TAN MAN DAY,
WED, MAY 2nd.
ALL LIMERICKS
PUBLISHED ON
is Chancellor Archie Dykesl
NAME:
MOST ORIGINAL
LIMERICK WINS
$400 JVC PORTABLE
PHONE:
$400 JVC PORTABLE
RADIO CASSETTE
BEGORDER
RECORDER
TEAM ELECTRONICS 2319 Louisiana
2319 Louisiana
WHAT'S A LIMERICK?
- 2 VO Meters
- Full Auto Step
- Recording level control
- ALC & Manual Recording level
- Full Auto-Stop
WIN!
A limerick is 5 lines with a rhyme scheme aabbab
- 5 Watt - 4 Speaker system with 6 1/2" woofers & 2" Tweeter
JVC RC-R2R
8
Monday, April 23, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Calgaard...
From page one
velous step forwarda in terms of a more rational basis of fund (henceb), he said. “That’s going to take some time, but it’s obviously a major académie item.”
FORMULA FUNDING is a new method for figuring the budgets of Regents schools. It compares the financial status of schools with those of other similar programs and enrollment figures.
Past budgets have been based on the number of full-time students enrolled.
Another important issue, Calgaard said, will be "maintaining the University's most important resource—the talent of its faculty."
He said there would not be much growth or many retirements among the faculty duri-
We're going to have pretty much the
same faculty for the next 20 years, and it's important we find ways to maintain that
THE MOST rewarding aspect of his years as vice chairman, Calgary said, was being an avid collector of sports memorabilia.
But he said there were also frustrations that went with the job.
"There's the inability to derive resources to do a lot of things you want to do, and you always find things you wish you had given more time and energy and attention to that, because of all kinds of details and trivia, you have time to devote attention to," he said.
When you reflect on it, it's always very difficult to assess yourself and how effective your contribution has or not been. But on the whole, I feel good about the ex-
CAMP COUNSELORS
WANTED
UNDERGROUND STUDENTS
For admission only
GRADUATE STUDENTS and FACULTY MEMBERS
FOR TOP ALLOWANCE SUMMER CAMPS
IN BEAUTIFUL MAINE
Top salary, accommodations & benefits for experienced Counselors
Call or Write for information & application
Activate your email address on call随时
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Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said yesterday that he was not interested in the presidency of the University of Iowa, although he is being considered for the job.
Dykes denies interest in job at U of Illinois
"I expect to stay at KU as long as the Board of Regents lets me or until I decide to do something," he said.
Dykes said he had been invited by Illinois officials to interview with them but had no intention of going.
Dykes said he had no idea why his name had been submitted.
"I have no interest in leaving the University of Kansas," he said. "I have no wish to be president of any other university."
Dykes has been chancellor at KU since 1973.
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Burn unit helps heal charred bodies, lives
Rv JULIA GOPLERUD
Staff Reporter
The pain that Earl Anderson, 26, experienced when he awoke in the burn unit of the University of Kansas Medical Center was not physical. The flames that had soared from his body of his body also had his nerve endings.
The man who had taken pride in his smooth skin and athletic physique looked in his charred and bandaged body and realized that his dream of becoming a model had ended.
"At first I thought 'Why did it happen to me?' but then I started to realize that I had to take care of business. I set goals and worked at them," Anderson said.
He was burned July 16, 1975, while he was working as a tank truck driver for Cooco Cane Oil. The gasoline he was pumping out of the tanker exploded, igniting his clothes and burning his body.
with the technology available 10 years ago. Anderson would have been dead, Manti M. Mani, clinical nurse specialist.
"in terms of metabolic changes, this is the most severe injury anybody can have." Although burning directly affects the skin, it also affects indirectly every other system of the body. "Mani said...
MANY PEOPLE used to be crippled from the scar tissue resulting from severe burns, he said. Scar tissue grows from the inside and forms raised skin patches that cover the skin the skin tighter and tighter until mobility is hampered.
"Fifteen years ago there was very little we could offer these people. It was something we had to live with. We saved their lives and sent them home deformed," "Mani said."
The burn unit opened in 1973 and provides medical services to victims of second and third-degree burns. The burn units have been in operation for 100,000 of which were severe enough to require hospitalization. Sixty percent of these, like Antoine Lafleur, are burned.
A first-degree burn is a sunburn. A second-degree burn blisters the skin immediately and a third-degree burn causes permanent scarring.
The unit receives 300 cases a year, Mani said. One hundred of the burn victims are hospitalized and two of them have been rescued.
One of the reasons patients are taken to the burn unit is that its patient care area is sterile. The staff must wear isolation clothing in the area, and the rest of the hospital systems are separate from the rest of the hospital.
These precautions are taken because infection is the greatest cause of death in burn victims after they reach the burn unit. Mani said that the bacteria that live harmlessly on the surface of intact skin could grow into the tissue of burned and separated skin and enter the bloodstream, causing infection.
Mani said the air for the systems went through two sets of special filters.
DEHYDRATION ALSO is a serious problem, especially the first few days after a burn is received, he said. A burn patient needs six liters of fluid a day, compared with two liters a day for other people.
When a patient arrives at the unit, his skin is
The bandages are changed twice a day. The patient also is monitored for infection and receives an antihistamine.
washed with water, smeared with an antibiotic cream and then bandaged.
Skin grafts, surgery and a regular exercise program can reduce or prevent crippling, and the use of crutches is recommended.
WHILE THE unburned skin heals from the autograft, the other burned areas are protected by allografts and zenografts. Allografts are usually taken from cadaveres and are sloughed off after three weeks. Zenografts are taken from different species, and remain on for a few hours or days. Maria said.
Surgeons in the unit perform skin grafts on patients with third degree burns. Thin slices of unburned skin are attached or bandaged to the burned areas. This technique can be used in many cases permanently after three to five days. Mami said.
Because of these techniques, Anderson is still a handsome man. He is able to participate in sports.
such as basketball, softball and karate, that he participated in before the accident.
He still is fashion-conscious, but wears long sleeved shirts and slacks away from silk and wool.
The skin on his face and neck is normal, and his movements are unrestricted. It is only when he loses control that his movements become erratic.
The skin on his hands looks like the pigkin surture of a football, and the bones ripple underneath the tightly drawn skin as if he were wearing a thin leather glove.
AROUND HIS thumbs and the sides of his fingers,
the skin has lost its pigment, and is starkly pale as
any other.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Z
Anderson said his battle against the raised scars and crippled joints associated with severe burns was slow and painful. Although most patients are in the burn unit for three to four weeks, he was released after two months to when he could feed himself and walk again.
"IT WAS LIKE being born again, like being a child
see BURR back near."
KANSAN Problems frustrate students' social live See story page eight
COMFORTABLE
Vol. 89. No. 137
The council also decided to ask the Associated Students of Kansas to consider fee waivers for graduate students in order to stump lobbying concerns for next year.
PETER D. FISCHER
MIKKELSEEN SAID although the council had refrained from formulating specific funding outlines for a graduate student senate, it would fund programs which graduate students said they wanted. The questionnaire given to thern last month.
The council also decided to ask the Student Senate for $4,000 in addition to the $15.018 already approved. The $4,000 is used for faculty costs of the Graduate News Network.
Sam Zweifel
"An undergraduate senate will never represent the interests of the graduate students." Mikkelsen said.
"I PLANNING to meet with Amber Friday to discuss the possibilities," he said. David Amber is vice chancellor for student affairs.
Mikkelsen said his tentative plan included that a graduate student senate would gain control over activity fee funds within the first year. He said during the second year, the graduate student senate would have to make decisions which are awarded by the University.
Grad council plans to form own senate
Mikkelsen said that in the past, the Student Senate had not understood the importance of graduate students should get a proportional amount of money to what they pay.
"I can't understand the animosity of graduate students felt by the undergraduates," he said. "The Student Senate has alienated graduate students."
Zweifel said he supported the separation.
The Graduate Student Council decided last night to begin plans to withdraw from the Student Senate and form its own graduate student senate.
"The Senate just claims no minority gets what it inits." Mikkelsen said.
Although no formal decision was made as to when the separation would occur, Mark Mikkelsen, executive coordinator of the Graduate Student Council, said he and Sam Zweifel, council member, would begin today to rewrite the rules and conduct the Student Senate to separate graduate students from undergraduates.
He said he expected to present his proposal to the Student Senate either at tomorrow's meeting or at a meeting the following week.
BvLYNN BYCZYNSKI
Stan Keporter
The outlook for solar heating was dismal last winter at Sumpower House, the Kansas Power and Light Co.'s experimental solar炉 at 3017 Riverview Road.
Electric bills for the house soared to $350 in January and KPL officials offered only dismal energy as the explanation for the house's bury energy consumption.
But local solar energy advocates, touring Supower House yesterday, advanced some theories of their own about what went wrong with the solar energy system.
Robert McColli, KU professor of geography, who is building his own solar house behind Learned Hall, discussed flaws in Sunpower House's design with members of the KU Ecology Club and the Lawrence Appreciate Technology Collective.
One of the main problems with the house, McColl said, is its location. Built on the hillsides, it was a great challenge.
area, the quarter-million dollar solar energy project is shaded from much of the sun's radiance.
"THEY SAY THEY'RE GETING only three tails of sun day. I doubt if they're wearing sunglasses."
Marvin Stacken, KPL, commercial marketing manager, said snow and cloudy weather caused work from working during much of the winter, forcing the system to switch to expensive heating.
Supower House was built with passive solar features such as double-paned glass, double "air lock" doors and few north-facing windows.
But Nina and Bill Redlin, who are renting the house from KPI, found their electric bills comparable to those of many of their neighbors with conventional houses.
After the $550 January electric bill, KPI agreed to pay everything over $60. In
February, the bill was $282. In March, it dropped to $191.
ONE POSSIBLE cause of the high bills, McColl said, was the use of an unheated room above the garage. The Redlin's two children had been using it as a playroom, leaving the adjoining door open to heat the room.
But the part of the house that has caused the most concern to KPL officials and to Bob Gould, the house's designer, also puzzled McColl.
That problem spot is a greenhouse that opens onto the living room and kitchen with a glass wall. The door was designed to provide extra heat during the day and to absorb enough heat in its winter months.
"It's been freezing up. That's in-comprehensible to me," McColl said.
TO SAVE THE PLANS, Nina Feedlin said he had been leaving the door to the church in the early hours.
That, plus a lack of insulation beneath the brick floor, could be contributing to the high temperature.
Next winter, Stacken said, the greenhouse will have shades that will keep in the heat.
KPI has put meters throughout the house to try to pinpoint failures in the solar system. But the data will not be released for six months to a year. Stacken said.
"We're not going to publish anything until at least a year from when we start getting paid."
About 25 members of the two organizations grilled KPI representatives for more than an hour about technical aspects of SunPower House's design.
"There's no question about that. It's a
house. But it's high technology."
McGee
Most seemed to leave with the impression that the house was well designed but not well furnished.
Convicted killer sentenced to life
Le Harris, a 29-year-old Denver man,
was sentenced to life imprisonment
yesterday for his involvement in the 1977
robbery of Sam Norwood, a Lawrence
businessman.
Harris pleaded guilty April 4 to the first-degree murder of Norwood, 30, former manager of the F.W. Woolworth Co. store, and was sent five days before he was to face a jury trial.
Judge James Paddock of the Douglas County District court told Harris after sentencing him to life imprisonment that the court thought Harris was "Of such danger to
society that the court feels that under no condition should you be placed at liberty."
After the sentencing, Harris was escorted out of the courtroom by four officers of the Douglas County sheriff's office, who were present during the proceeding.
Harris is to be transported to the Kansas State Pententiyary at Lansing today. Paddock said Harris would be credited with time spent in jail since December 27, 1978, when he was extradited to Kansas from Colorado.
Mike Malone, Douglas County district
attorney, said the possibility of giving Harris less than a life sentence was removed when Harris was found to have been guilty of the commission of a crime against a person.
Although sentenced to life imprisonment, Harris could be eligible for parole in 15 years.
Harris' days in court may not be over. Authorities in Long Beach, Calif., have charged him with a double killing there in December 1977. Officials at the Colorado State Pentitentiary at Canyon City are investigating the possibility that Harris was
involved in a killing there while he was an inmate in 1976.
Malone said California and Colorado authorities had been notified that Harris would be made available to each state temporarily for prosecution.
"From his statements and philosophy I consider Harris to be a danger. If he is prosecuted in California and Colorado it will make him never paired." Malone said.
However, he said, the other states may not want to prosecute because Harris has been sentenced to life imprisonment in Kansas.
Auction business booming in barn
By DAVID LEWIS
Staff Reporter
165 here now 170 . . . 170 now 5
175 here now 180 . . . 180 now 5
175 here now 190 . . . 190 sold
On a muddy lot next to a silver barn, a group of about 50 persons surrounds a man who is sitting on the ground and not be seen and a gray mist can be felt in the air. A yellow lawn mower is the main at-
A white sign on the side entrance of
the barn reads in red letters: "You bring it,
we provide."
Throngs of wide-eyed people then begin streaming inside, browsing through furniture, relics and household paraphernalia on display in the barn. Nine television sets are on the auction block. Wooden furniture is piled to the ceiling. The adjoining room has a built-in coffee table. Would-be buyers clamber shoulder-to-shoulder into the wooden bleachers.
STRICKER'S AUCTION Barn, 143rd Street and Gardner Lake Road, Gardner, 80 miles southeast of Lawrence, sells furniture radius of Gardner families within a 100-mile radius of Gardner.
Business is booming.
"I bought this building with the intention of renting it out. However, no one would rent it for a decent price. Someone came up with the idea of starting an auction and then I found out there was an auctioner school being started," he said.
Jerry Stricker, auctioneer and owner of the business, started auctioning four years ago.
"I found out that you chant more or less unconsciously I feel I can chant just about anything."
Stricker said he sells an average of three items a minute.
"IALSO AUCTION estates, houses, farms and liquidated companies," he said.
Stricker was confident about his business. "We offer as much as anybody in the
Midwest on a week-to-week basis. When we have good weather, 450 to 500 people will stay in town.
The auction starts at 6:30 p.m. every Monday. Rockefeller has a staff of 14 persons.
The furniture is of all types and generally is in good condition, he said. Stricker believes his prices are competitive with anybody's.
Some, however, come to the auction to have a good time as well as to get a good
"I LIKE to see people and like to find good bargains." Ann Dunlain, Olathe, said. "I have found about $700 worth of furniture here. I buy for the Jawhawk Antique."
A woman from DeSloe said her husband looked for iron materials to purchase.
"My husband likes to buy iron. When he gets a load, he takes it to Kansas City. We come here every Monday night," the woman said.
Jule Welch, a resident of Jayhawker Towers, came away with $115 worth of furniture at Striker's auction. She bought a three-seater sofa and a stand with nirlands and a color television set.
"THE TELEVISION alone would have cost more than $151 if I would have bought the furniture first-hand," she said. "They even sold a stove for $5."
Stricker said customers even buy strange items.
"I have said everything you can imagine.
When I first started the job, I sold this antique decoy for $20. He had a real duckbill," he said.
Most KU students are unaware of the auction he said.
"We haven't advertised in 'the Kanaan since last semester and most have forgotten it."
Stricker said business usually picked up in the spring.
"Business is been really good. Auctioneering is my only business now," he said.
Bob Dylan
Jerry Stricker
Staff photo by CHRIS TOOTT
2
Tuesday, April 24, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From staff and wire reports
50,000 Cambodians flee attack
BANGKOK, Thailand-Fifth-thousand Cambodians were fleeing from the Vietnamese offensive in Cambodia to sanctuary in Thailand's southwestern region.
The number of refugees and the victory claimed by the pro-Vietnamists Cambodian government suggested heavy losses by the remnants of the Pol Pot
Vietnam began a major offensive last month to crush the remaining forces of the Polo Pat government, which was defeated in December by troops supported
Thai military sources in Bangkok said Soviet and Cuban military advisers were operating with the Vietnamese. The pro-China Poh Pol Government had
The Cambodian government said yesterday that its forces had annihilated the Pol troopers.
Minnesota, South fight floods
EAST GRAND FORKS, Minn.—Weary volunteers worked in heavy rains yesterday to fight back the Red River as its waters spilled through the streets of
Poll loudspeakers roused thousands in the town of 8,400 to fill sandbanks to shore the three miles of dikes along the river. East Grand Forks is the sister city of Fort Collins.
only one building. More than 200 families have been forced out of their homes in the area and doors are barred in the millions.
Mapping-up operations began in southeastern Texas, where flooding last week claimed seven lives and caused an estimated $175 million damage.
Rhodesian elections questioned
SALIBURY, Rhodesia—One of the three black members of Rhodesia's biracial transitional government charged yesterday that the recent elections
The Rev. Ndabangah Sithole issued a statement that his party, the Zimbabwe African National Union, would not recognize the elections until the election was complete.
Sithels said reports from Parliamentary districts indicated that the election had been "stage managed" by the white government.
Sithole's party was running behind Bishop Abel Muzarewa's United African National Congress in the initial return of last week's election to bring a black president.
Amin said to have visited Iraq
NARHOI, Kenya—Ousted Ugandan dictator Idi Amin was in Iraq during the weekend on a shopping trip to Arab states for weapons to us or to reclaim them.
Amin traveled from Uganda to Libya last week after Tanzanian forces took over Uganda and ousted his eight year old government. Iraq and Libya are the states that gave Amin his greatest support in establishing his Moslem-minority government.
"The reports of Amin's plan to return to Uganda raised questions about the strength of the 2-week-old government of Vusufu Lule, who was installed by the leader."
Independent analysts said Amin could not hope for immediate military successes against the superior Tanzanian forces. They pointed out that Amin's efforts had been unsuccessful.
Expected last stands by Amin's troops did not materialize and Tanzanian forces were driving north and east from Kampala on search-and-
the trust American diplomatic mission to Uganda in six years arrived in Kampala yesterday to discuss reconstruction aid. Lab has said he expects much progress in this area.
Iranian aeneral assassinated
TEHRAN, Iran—A high-ranking military officer of the new Iranian government was gunned down yesterday in the first assassination of a major figure
The victim, Gen. Mohammed Vall Gharami, the former army chief of staff, was shot and killed in his garden. No group has claimed responsibility for the
Gharani was once an intelligence officer for Shah Mohammed Reza Pahavi, but he was jailed for anti-marchist views. He then served in the revolutionary army until March 27 when he was forced to resign after failing to convince troops who deserted during the revolution to return to their barracks.
In northern Iran, new fighting broke out between the Turkish and Kardinian tribesmen after a second truce sponsored by the government down a Azerbaijani border.
About 150 people were reported to have been killed during the fighting, which started Friday.
The Islamic government sent nine more men to firing squads yesterday, bringing the total executed since the revolution to 158.
Israel accused of shell attacks
TYRE, Lebanon-Palestinian and Lebanese officials charged that Israelis guns and missile boards pounded Palestinian camps in southern Lebanon
The officials said the shelling lasted more than an hour. No casualty reports were given.
However, Israeli military officials in Tel Aviv denied knowledge of any shelling of Palestinian targets in Lebanon.
On Sunday, Israel gunboats shelled a Palestinian camp on the northern Lebanese coast in retaliation for a guerrilla raid.
The man, Fedor Fedenkore, is accused of obtaining his citizenship by fraud because he failed to tell naturalization officials about his work in the prison.
Man's citizenship challenged
NEW ORLEANS – A 70-year-old man accused of serving as a Nazi guard in World War II should forfeit his U.S. citizenship because he lied about his past, a Justice Department attorney told the 5th U.S. District Court of Appeals in New Orleans yesterday.
In 1978 a district judge ruled that the government had failed to meet its burden of proof that Fedorenko had concealed his past. The judge said that the government had not acted in good faith.
This decision brought complaints from the American Jewish Congress and the B'Mal B'nith organization. These groups said Fedorenko's good behavior violated religious beliefs.
A naturalized American can lose his citizenship if the facts he lied about were important enough to warrant denial of citizenship. Fedeleko could be deported
Wheat cartel called unworkable
WASHINGTON—Sen. Nancy Kassebau, R-Kan., said yesterday that a price-fixing wheat cartel would not work.
Some wheat producers in the United States have supported a cartel—like that of Middle Eastern oil producers—to drive up the price of wheat.
Kassebaum said that farmers would have to be realistic about the problems of low prices and the differences between wheat and oil.
They said plant operators were not adequately trained or prepared to deal with the unexpected malfunctions that endangered Three Mile Island and made mistakes that worsened the accident. And they said the Three Mile Island plant was reliant on equipment that proved unreliable when it was most needed.
"I basically don't see that a cartel, as such, would work." Kassebaum said to a meeting of the News Paper Farm Editors of America.
Speaking to the same group earlier in the day, Howard W. Hjort, an economist for the Department of Agriculture, said a cartel would be a disaster
Hjert said that a cartel would raise prices so that other wheat producing countries would be able to produce more and take advantage of the market.
Skies today will be mostly sunny. Temperatures will rise to 75 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.
Weather
WASHINGTON (AP)—Nuclear power plants built by the firm that constructed the Three Mile Island plant are hard to control and should be shut down until their safety can be assured, key staff officials of the regulatory Commission suggested yesterday.
tomorrow whether a temporary shutdown or the plants, built by Babcock and Willcox;
NRC Chairman Joe M. Hendrie said the commission would decide today or
The plants in question are similar to the Three Mile Island plant and contain features that make them "sensitive" to oxygen. They said in a briefing for commissioners.
has at least five features that made Three Mile Island and similar plants "sensitive" to malfunctions and placed heavy demands on plant operators.
Nuclear plant shutdowns advised
president for public affairs, said the company would have no immediate comment.
A shut down order could close the three oceane nuclear plants in South Carolina and Louisiana.
JOHN DUPY, Babcock & Wilcox vice
It also could prevent the restaring of Babcock and Wilcox plants in Arkansas, Ohio, Florida and Pennsylvania, which currently supply oil or refueling, maintenance or safety reviews.
Saudis to break relations with Egypt as punishment
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP)–Saudi Arabia decided yesterday to break diplomatic relations with Egypt in compliance with the Baghdad Arab summit decision, made last month to impose sanctions on Iraq. The Saudi government, the official Saudi news agency reported.
The Babcock & Wilcox design, they said.
The sanctions are intended to punish President Awad Sawat for signing a peace agreement.
KUWAIT ANNOUNCED earlier that Egypt's diplomatic relations with Egypt for the sovereign state
The agency said the decision was made at a Cabinet meeting in Riyadh under Deputy Premier Prince Abdallah bin Abdul Aziz, commander of the Saudi national guard.
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Information Minister Mohammed Abdo Yarami said the decision to sever relations with Egypt was taken "because Egypt accepted and planned to exchange diplomatic representation with the Zionist enemy Israel."
Tune into the
"X"
for all the games
96x radio
Stereo 95.7 F.M.
Arab diplomatic sources said all 19 Arab League members that participated in the anti-Sadat Baghdad meeting would take similar action soon.
Reports from Cairo said Sadat had ordered his government to take "parallel measures" if Arab countries broke off relations with Egypt.
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Put your appreciation on file
It's the week for it—National Secretaries Week.
Prove just how good a boss you really are. Call us and we'll make her an appreciation bouquet she'll never forget.
FILM
National Secretaries Week, April 22-28 Flowers and plants are for secretaries. Naturally. Make an arrangement with:
MERCADO DE BOGOTA
Owens
FLOWER SHOP
(1955)
9th & Indiana 843-6111
films sua
A STAR IS BORN
Tuesday, April 24
Judy Garland:
A STAR IS BORN
Dir George Cukor, with Judy Garland,
James Mason, Chick Bickford. The best of the three versions of this book by the hero Harien and Ia Gershwin.
Wednesday, April 25 Film Noir:
DOUBLE INDEMNITY
Bild Billy Wider, with Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stawleyy, Edward G. Robinson, Screenplay written by James M. Cain, based on James M. Cain's novel
Thursday, April 26
8 1/2 (1963)
Fellini:
Dire. Federico Fellino, with Marcelo
Mastroliano, Anouk Alimez, Claudia
Cardinale, italyishs堡, PLUS: "The
History Book, v. 9."
Friday & Saturday, April 27 & 28
Midnight Movie
Truffaut:
THE MAN WHO LOVED WOMEN
Dir. Francis Truittait; with Charles Danner, Briger Flosse, Fosley, James Kelner and mendros ("Days of Heaven"). Francesubluebis. 7:20-7:40.
A New Shocker:
M O A O S O H (1970)
Dir. Robert Altman, with Donald Sutherland, Elliott Gould, Kyle Salterman, Robert Duvall. The original outfit. Jer. Jr. 7:47 a.m.-3:30 a.m. Jr. 7:47 a.m.-3:30 a.m.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless otherwise noted. 15% admission.
ERASERHEAD (1978)
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud.
at 7.30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission.
Dir. David Lynch; with John Nance, Charlotte Stewart. "Eraserhead" is not for the squamish.
Hold on to the past...
KU
The end of your KU days is less than 3 weeks away and the friendships made here will last forever through the Alumni Association. Be a part of KU's future—attend the Open House and become acquainted.
Alumni Assoc. Open House Senior Party Wed. April 25th
7pm-9pm Open House
403 Kansas Union
7pm-11pm Senior Party
Level 6 Terrace, Union
Seniors: attend the Alumni Open House before going to the Senior Party and receive your '79 beer cup. Prizes and free KU souvenirs for everyone.
Tuesday, April 24, 1979
University Daily Kansan
3
Energy problems cited
Times of cheap gas and oil are gone for good, according to one of two speakers at a Kansas Geological Survey Forum held in Cedar Rapids. Space Technology Building on West campus.
However, Charles Heller, who has been active in the petroleum industry since 1913, said that Americans pay more for Europeans who pay 3% times what most American drivers for gas.
More than 30 persons attended the forum,
The Repercussions of the Continuing Old
According to Heller, a great mistake made by this country's leaders was not telling people that the energy crisis was not a haox on the part of the oil companies, but actually a serious threat to the nation's security.
Department of Energy's lack of accomplishment.
Heller also had heavy criticism for the
"Their intent to formulate an energy policy collapsed," he said. "Private interest groups pressured congressional committee members to release energy bill, making it a kind of skeleton."
AS AN ALTERNATIVE to an energy bill, the State should enter into a hermetic system of consulting associate for transnational affairs for the American Universities Field.
The speaker, Melvin A. Conant, said that this system would unite this country with other Western hemisphere countries such as Mexico, Canada, and Venezuela.
However, Conant said he saw some problems in getting other nations to enter
"Venezuela would be interested in financial assistance," he said, "but Mexico and Canada wouldn't welcome American oil companies into their operations."
CONANT ALSO said that the cause was set back by Secretary of Energy James A. Schlesinger's conduct during recent interviews with Mexico regarding their oil reserves.
"Our credibility was weakened," he said,
and that's our most important issue-
Congress is also at fault for the United States to develop an energy program. Conant said.
"The government is a barrier to what we want," he said. "Regulation has become the bread of life for many thousands of bureaucrats."
Shopping mall construction begins
Groundbreaking is underway for a shopping mall at 23rd Street and Oudahdi
Sam Shipstead, developer and general leasing agent for the property, said yesterday that the 72,000 square foot mall would be completed about Dec. 1.
Shipmate said that when completed, the mall would contain about 30 stores.
Shipstead said that the $2 million mail already had attracted about 15 companies to use it.
"I say that we've got about 45 to 50 percent of the space accounted for," he said.
He estimated that the mall, which will be
built by Rau Construction Co., Kansas City, Mo., would have 300 parking spaces.
Shipstead said that Lawrence growth patterns indicated the need for a mall along the river.
Another mall, proposed for south Lawrence, has caused some downtown businesses to question its effect on their business.
"We feel that the town is definitely growing in a southwestward direction and we thought people needed this type of mail," he said. "I feel that the mall will take care of the people in the southwest part of the town."
However, Shipthead said, the mail at 23rd Street and Ousadh1 Road might not have too great of an effect on downtown shopping business.
Marguerite Spirry Affan
hashinger hall
april 23-28 7pm
Shipstead predicted that within a few years the area of Z2rd and Iowa streets would be doubled.
"I think downtown will still be very strong after the mail is built," he said.
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Satellite Union to open in fall in spite of delays, tighter budget
be "tight," because the several revenu-
epreneurs area of the Union, such as concessions and food services, was about 1797 from last year's figure. He attributed the drop to an overall tightness of the economy, and increases in wholesale food prices.
Ferguson said some losses had resulted from decreased participation and volume of sales at the Union 'Jay Bowl' caused by competition from other bowls at university.
Losses caused by competition from the Varsty Shop, 1420 Crescent Road, had not been severe, he said.
Despite delays in construction, the Satellite Union is still scheduled to be completed by fall, Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union, said Saturday.
FERGUSON SAID that although he expected March figures to show improvement, the board might have to consider further financial support from Bookstore prefers before distributing books. He also expects with Bookstore customers each semester
MARIAN SCHETTZ, manager of food service at the Union, said that food service hours at the Satellite Union probably would run later than at the main Union to attract the business of students living in nearby Davis Hill residence halls.
Betty Brock, general manager of the Union Bookstores, said because there would be no way to anticipate demands for textbooks at the Satellite Union, only general supplies, such as notebooks, art engineering supplies would be sold there.
Burge out planned for finishing the Satellite Union at a board of directors meeting of the University of Kansas Memorial Corporation.
The Satellite Union is under construction northwest of Allen Field House.
J
In other business, the board voted to adopt the operating budget for fiscal year 1980, as proposed by the board's fiscal and financial affairs committee.
One important item in the budget, Ferguson said, is an 8.3 percent increase in average Union employee wages; to make that happen, the union provided civil service employees. Although wages paid by the Union are patterned after wages paid to KU employees, the increase was necessary because it provides the step from labor to providence to civil service workers, he said.
finish storage areas in the building, or provide for a brick exterior patio.
there for the next few years", Burge said.
Union officials said they expected the first year of operation at the Satellite Union to be one of experimentation.
He said that at least four contractors had drawn plans and would be presenting bids Thursday for unfinished areas of the building. He also mentioned that remained in the construction budget for the contract probably would not completely cover the finishing costs. He said some areas of the building would not have been put on until more funds could be raised
Of priority, Burge said, is the completion of a parking lot and loading dock. He estimated this would cost between $70,000 and $90,000.
ALSO PLANNED is the finishing of a multi-purpose room that would provide space for conferences and living-group parties, and an activities area that would provide, among other things, office space for the legal services attorney.
"We'll probably have sed and grass out there for the next few years." Burge said.
Burge said the money probably would not stretch far enough to "modestly"
A system is planned, she said, that would allow students to place orders for text-books at the branch store. The order would be filled at the main Union and students would be able to pick up their order at the branch store the next day, she said.
WARNER FERGUSON, assistant director of the Union and a member of the National Council on Women.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
APRIL 24,1979
Pray ye not in school
The U.S. House of Representatives should forget about going along with the Senate's approval of the proposal by Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., to force Congress to "override" the U.S. Supreme Court and authorize prayer in public schools.
They should do so not because there is anything wrong with praying, but because as President Carter, a devout Baptist, duly noted, "... the government ought to stay out of the prayer business and let it be between a person and God."
Efforts to return formal group prayer to classrooms have been made repeatedly since 1962 when the Supreme Court held that "each separate government in this country should stay out of the business of writing or sanctioning official prayers and leave that purely religious function to the people themselves and to those the people choose to look to for religious guidance."
PROPONENTS of measures like the one sponsored by Helms almost always ignore the fact that every child has the right to pray in his or her own way at any time. What is constitutionally unacceptable is a public body promoting prayer or any form of religion.
Thus the major question which the Senate should address on this issue is whether today's public schools are the proper place to impose religious worship.
During the early days of this country, and even not so far in the past.
communities shared certain norms,
standards and values.
FORMAL prayer in the schools was one of those values, and it was commonplace that a few minutes be reserved for morning prayer at the start of each school day.
Today, however, our society has grown increasingly complex, and those once-sanded norms, standards and values have all but vanished.
In such a setting, prayer mandated by school authorities could have adverse effects. Children are extremely vulnerable to peer pressure, and may feel compelled to participate in the prayer against their beliefs or incinations. And the children who choose not to join in prayer are likely to be harassed or ostracized.
THE HELMS proposal also raises some serious constitutional questions. By overturning a long-standing Supreme Court ruling, it would virtually usup the highest court's power, making it difficult for the court to overturn any state laws or rulings.
Religion and prayer are very personal matters and ought to be left to the choice of each individual as he or she sees fit. Children should not be forced into a daily recitation of a generalized prayer to a generalized God.
Helms expects his proposal to be scrapped in the House, and that is exactly what should be done. There are enough problems here on earth with which Congress can occupy itself without having to look to the heavens for more.
Let it first be said that thanks and gratitude are due to those of you who have given generously to the University, thereby enhancing the quality of education at KU.
Your gifts and contributions to the KU Endowment Association provide needed scholarships, loans, funds for special occasions, construction and aid to various campus groups.
For this and more, most of the students and faculty are thankful.
Dear Alumni:
But there is a controversial issue that confronts the Endowment Association. Divestiture of stocks in corporations that have operations in South Africa.
But not all agree that divestiture of stocks from these companies, or eventual withdrawal of corporations from South Africa, is the means to best end apartheid.
WITHOUT A doubt, the primary goal of the association is to make the best use of funds for the benefit of the University. This, in turn, increases their businesses that maximize profits where they can.
Most individuals who are aware of the outright disregard for human rights inherent in the racist government of South Africa, that the system of apartheid must cease.
And for years, the average return on investments in South Africa has been as high as 20 percent, about twice the world average and among the highest anywhere. The average rate of growth during the post-World War II era was surpassed only by Japan's.
But this economic prosperity in South Africa seems to be decreasing.
Currently, more than 1 million people out
a work force of 5 million are unemployed.
of a workforce of 6 million are unemployed. A recent survey by the University of Delaware listed South Africa in the "moderate risk" category of nations with attractive investments. Only Indonesia was ranked ahead of South Africa. Furthermore, the survey noted, within three years South Africa had the lowest risk of "risk," and in seven years, South Africa should be the "highest prohibitive risk of all countries."
One indication of these dire predictions coming true is the fact that in 1976, total U.S. investment grew only 5.5 percent, a decline of almost 20 percent from the 24 percent average growth rate in the previous three years.
ASK representation worth expense
Alumni must support divestiture plan
To the editor:
I'm not necessarily a radical supporter of ASK. However I do feel that, in response to Thursday's editorial, the other side of the case should be presented.
You stated, "Indeed, it seems odd that KU students suddenly required representation of a so-called professional lobbying organization after years of successful work by University administrators and by the University Board of Education. Students for Higher Education." While I'm sure the administration has done a terrific amount over the years, CSHE has only been around a little over two, and if they've done anything of importance, I'm unaware of it. In fact, a poll recently revealed that a majority of KU faculty legislature had never even heard of CSHE.
Commenting on its achievements during this legislative session, you said ASK was successful "only in its efforts to boost a bounce in minimum wages for students and increase their income." In my opinion, these two accomplishments are of major importance.
This brings me to my last point. True, ASK must concentrate on issues of general interest to all member schools. However, KU has the biggest voice in these matters. Besides, has anyone said that CSHE would have to be eliminated? Why can't it work with KU? It's my opinion that CSHE can be made more effective by membership in ASK.
I'm sure most students who work or are on scholarships would agree that paying 50 cents for a $500 scholarship or a greatly increased wage is hardly "squandering" one's student activity money. You also need to understand that KXI was responsible for creating a higher-end loan program in Kansas of $2.6 million, $3.9 million going directly to K.U.
Indeed, it does cost $9,000. But I wouldn't have voted for it if I didn't think it would be worth it.
Don M. Wampler Glasse sophomore
Bhutto's execution savage and brutal
The inhumane and barbarous execution of the former prime minister of Pakistan, Zulfikar Al Allhuto, has brought much attention to the rest and the rest of the international community.
The hanging of one of the most prominent leaders of the Third World, twice elected by the masses to the highest political office of India, has led to a down on the future of democracy in Pakistan.
Though there is much doubt that Ali Bhutto was guilty of murder; he was not a common street criminal. Long after the murder for which Ali Bhutto was to be blamed, he was popularly elected for the second time. Under the above extenuating
It is a shame that in this era of freedom, human rights and democracy, that there are still some regimes who disgrace not only the political system but also race by using primitive and brutal ways to get rid of their political opponents. The abuse of criminal law and other judiciary to eliminate Al Bhutto from the political scene has resulted in savagey in modern political history.
To the editor:
KANSAN letters
circumstances, he could be called a public culprit but not a common criminal, as General Zia Ui-Ha Tiong to make of him. Under the Islamic law and code of ethics, the president is a representative is executed by the popularly elected government and in front of the people. But in no way does Islam permit the president to be the most popular leader of a country. Was Ali Bhutto to be executed by a government that came by topping a popularly elected regime, or by a government which is illegal by the popularly elected national assembly?
Not at all! If Bhutto were to be executed it should have been done under a popularly elected government and not by the military junta, which has no power or confidence by the people. One cannot become representative of the people by virtue of a coup.
If we look in the background of Bhutto's political history, it could be easily deducted that the military and a year-old conspiracy. The military is called opposition军队 (in which people have shown a lack of confidence) and the government has always way to get rid of Bhutto, extenuate to him勾。
While the rest of the world solves its political conflicts by compromise through political institutions, in Pakistan brutal gangings were used, especially by this military juntia.
The hanging of Blutto and the refusal of General Zia to grant him clemency, despite the popular demand of the Pakistani people and the rest of the world, is indicative of the institutionalized political gangsterism, of the feudal lords and the military junta.
Such military dictatorships, which have no respect for human rights, which degrade political institutions and the judiciary, are not worthy of being recognized by the international democracy-loving countries, and should be gotten rid of.
We salute you, Ali Bhutto, and will always cherish your memory.
Aftab Ahmed
Pakistan senior
Amner Latif
Pakistan grad students
Teachers neglected court ruling on TM
A letter to the editor April 9 contained a rebuff from two Transcendental Meditation instructors to a previous letter. The TM instructors, in essence, stated that TM wasn't a religion. They neglected to mention the fact that evidence of all that was laid against their claim—U.S. courts have declared TM to be religious.
To the editor:
U. S. District Court Judge H. Curtis Meanor ruled on Oct. 19, 1977, that the SCI/TM court was religious in nature and should not be subject to the establishment clause of the First
I don't mind people with new belief systems trying to promote their beliefs, even if I disagree with them. But I do object to them doing it deceitfully. I would like to ask you to give any TM instructor at KU to explain how The Laws of nature when U.S. courts have ruled that
Amendment. His decision was upheld by a U.S. Court of Appeals on Dec. 11, 1978. One of the appeal judges stated in his opinion, "Supporters of new belief systems may not 'choose' to be non-religious, particularly in the establishment clause context."
Doug Lamborn
1336 Kentucky St.
To the editor:
A. D. S. R. S. M. S. M
Decadence embodied in 'Rocky Horror'
"Enjoyed your last letter about 'The Rocky Horror Picture Show.' I sure don't know what college is, at times, except an artificially structured extended childhood show. It doesn't seem to saturate a reverence of a university with such polluting mind-rot."
U.S. COMPANIES used to reinvest 60%
about 35 percent of their profit
I sent my older brother a copy of the recent Weekday feature that pictured the dressed up for "The Rocky Horror Picture Show." His reply speaks for me:
Aside from "Rocky Horror" itself, and the scene that accompanies it, it is remarkable that so few are offended by the message. It is an open embracement of decadence as a
Bill Wisner Hays senior
Furthermore, black African nations have talked about economic consequences for those countries investing in South Africa. The United States' crude petroleum comes from Africa.
I am glad I attended it, since otherwise I would not have seen how far the culture has progressed.
After the March 30 Rally against Aparthied, a photographer took pictures of five organizers of the rally who walked into the administration office in Strong Hall. This photographer told me that he was photographing a news event, whereas, in view, a person standing in the administration office is of questionable news value.
While awkwardly displaying his student identification card twice, the photographer nervously stated that he was working as a freelance photographer for the Kansan and checked this photograph has not sold to him, these newspapers. Besides several questionable actions and statements, one item in particular made it seem likely that the photographer was working for law enforcement and not for the Kansan or the Journal World.
South Africa does supply, by far, most of the chromium and platinum we use.
Philip Garcia
Rally photographer's actions questionable
The videotaping of the rally was ethically questionable. But it is certainly improper that a student was hired to conduct surveillance on fellow students. I would hope that the administration will ask the police to discontinue these activities.
Blacks are being located in homeslands called Bantustans. These homelands compose 15 percent of the land area in South Africa and inhabit one square mile. This compares with 34 persons a square mile living in the other areas of the country's land area, which is inhabited by whites.
Mark Cline
Medicine Lodge junior
But these are the economic considerations for divestiture. It seems violations of human rights against South Africa's 19 million blacks—who compose 71 percent of the population—by the 4.5 million whites are themselves cause for divestiture.
Two-thirds of those who live in the homelands have no livelihood.
THESE BANTUSTANS do not have any cities, industry, trade or tradearm to speak of. The most developed homeland can produce enough food for only half of its population and must import 150,000 tons of corn a year.
Those blacks who do have a livelihood find it in the white industrial area, where they must carry passbooks substantiating their right to work there. Workers often can work
Currently, whites earn from three to eight times more in wages than their black counterparts. A foreign banker in Johannesburg has said that if all miners, black industry workers, equally, the mining industry would crumble because it would no longer be profitable.
for only one employer for 10 years; they are forbidden to establish unions or exercise
PERHAPS THE most tragic consequences of the establishment of the homeland is the separation of a child after she was offered refuge and care from their wives and children for months at a time. Black existence in South Africa is being reduced, if it hasn't already, to pure and savage conditions.
It must be said that more than 100 American companies doing business in South Africa have indicated their intention to implement the Sullivan Principles—to encourage more working and living conditions for blocks and whites, and training employment programs.
But these principles do not carry the force of law, they do not break down the power basis of apartheid, and they affect only one half of one percent of the black labor force.
Still, one may legitimately ask what effect would the Endowment Association's investment in the estimated $7 million connected with Africa have on the system of apartheid.
Alone, the association's disinvestment would have little or no effect at all.
BUT THIS investment is part of a total U.S. investment in South Africa of $1.7 billion. U.S. investment in South Africa has tripled in the past 12 years and by 1980, it is estimated the U.S. will have the largest U.S. investment in South Africa by any one country.
Moreover, of the more than $2 billion in
trade in 1977 by the South African government, $1.35 billion came from imports from the United States. That makes us the largest supplier of import goods to South Africa.
Thus, it is evident that divestiture and eventual withdrawal could have an impact on the stability of the South African economy. This is why we make changes for the betterment of all blacks.
Some suggest that a change in the status quo of South African government might bring about a pro-Soviet regime. That in fact might happen if the polarization of whites continues and most of the economic wealth is concentrated within the small minority.
But the bottom line seems to be whether we all can ask ourselves to place human ethics ahead of interests in materialism and profits. It seems a challenge for the Enlightened individual, who themselves to act in the interest of human life instead of institutionalized behavior.
HISTORY SHOWS violent revolutions occur when a nation has reached the brink of a foundering economy. A movement for a change in government will seek support where it can get it, if the United States does not help, where then will black leaders turn?
It is realized that the Endowment Association has legal responsibilities to make the best use of your gifts and skills. These corporations have fiduciary duties as well.
Can we break from our designated roles as members of financial and educational systems and place concern for the well-being of all of South Africa's blacks ahead of any concern for keeping in line with the status quo?
It is hoped that we can. Thank you for your time and interest.
Philip Garcia
MARTIN 79
THE EARLY KANSAS
SUPREME COURT
THE PRESS
MARTIN 79
THE
FALLY KANMAN
THE PUBLIC SHOULD KNOW THE STATE OF MIND OF PEOPLE WHEN THEY MAKE THEIR SILLY DECISIONS.
Anger festering against fall guy role
RvGREGG A. PAYNE
N. Y. Times Feature
By GREGG A. PAYNE N.Y. Times Feature
CAJON, Calif.—They sing few peaes these days to the American way of life.
With changed names and changed faces, they are the same people everywhere. All ages, all colors, both sexes, increasing numbers.
A labor relations lawyer, a middle-aged couple struggling with a faltering small business in some one-horse town, a middle-management engineer, the union griever, the plumber, the electrician, the mechanic, the boss, the unemployed.
The guy on the next bar stool stolar moodily into his beer, wearing mud-caked boots and a yellow baseball cap with the team's equipment manufacturer printed on the front.
They've got a deep-down, brooding anger for which there isn't any antidote. It's a dangerous anger. It just lies there and festers.
THEY ARE gut-weary. Weary of broken promises and unredeemable guarantees, of official ineptitude and bureaucratic idleness and industry and of the being fall rap for all of them.
Pay your dime, and take your choice
Work hard, study hard.
Better yet, do both hard. Success guaranteed. Everyone's a winner.
Platitudes.
They can't find jobs and if they could, the job was pay less every day. Inflation is up.
And Ungemployment begat Welfare who began stamping who begat Humiliation,
A third of the tax bill for education, and Johnny can't read. There isn't, they are told acculturally, enough parental support. A teacher has to be rigorous and obnoxious search for educational mediocority.
Fear.
Conserve energy, they're told, and they do. And next week the rates go up. Conserve water, they're told, and dutifully they do. And next week the rates go up. Cynical machinations.
WE CAN'T get them all, the cop says, and the courts, he says, don't help much. No response, just stole acceptance. They can't remember when they didn't double bolt their doors. Feeble, wistful protection for a young predator, and the rest of the marauding predators.
Gasoline a buck a gallon. They haven't seen it yet but they're confident they will. A back a gallon. It's said with dismay, but not that much. A Buck a gallon. Extortion, they're thinking.
Baby needs shoes. It's a crap shoot and the parents come up. Change鞋, they still come up.
They started out feeling only a sad resignation. But now the resignation's gone.
They haven't started huddling in whispering groups yet, plotting at darkened tables in the back corners of sleazy saloons; furtive, disfruitful, discontented, disenchanted, disfranchised, malcontented incircants of riots. There is none of that.
This is, they assure themselves, still America. There is still room for rational daisies.
THE PROMISES are null and void. The machine's stopped working and there's no place to redeem the warranty. There is resentment.
At least not yet.
Mail openings, illegal wireset, covert entry. The fear goes with the anger and the humiliation and a growing sense of futility. Compounding it.
And unbidden, parading in measured procession across the back of the mind, come images of headlines and their half-remembered stories.
I SIT at a bus stop. The old man is already there. Just resting. He's a very old man but he forward, hands cupped on the top of the chest that is held between his knees. His eyes are focused somewhere in the middle distance, seeing in the gathering darkness something special.
He wants to talk, and in a little time covers a lot of ground.
Two wars and a police action, '29, inti-
tation, retirement kids, a dead win more
than 10 years.'
This time, you see the headlines. Maybe, you think, this is one of those people the stories tell about. Pet food devotees. Heat it. It tastes like hash.
By the time the bus comes, he's back to inflation again and his eyes have come back from where they were. He's smiling, but there's not much humor in it, more a mirthesis kind of grin. You get up to board the bus and he nods goodnight.
Come the revolution, he says.
Gregg A. Payne is an administrator in the San Diego city school system.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
(USP 656-666) Published at the University of Pittsburgh, September 1987. Mail Monday through Thursday during June and July; second-class postage paid and holidays. Second-class postage paid by mail are $13 for six months, $20 for six months, $30 for six months, County and $15 for six months or $a year at a summer, a semester, pass through the student activity.
Send changes of address to the
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Lawrence, KS 60455.
Barry Murray
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 24. 1979
5
Jogging injuries accompany springtime
BY LORI LINENBERGER
It was a perfect evening for running.
The temperature wavered around 60 degrees, the wind blew lightly against the branches of the greening oaks and the sun's blinding brightness diminished as it sank below the horizon.
Inside, Karole and her roommate, Phyllis, sat on the floor tying the laces of their running shoes. Flipping her hair back into a ponytail, Phyllis sprang over and ran out onto the porch. Karole followed at her feet.
They had jogged one block when Karole felt her ankle give out beneath her and heard a sharp popping noise. Then she was on the ground, trying bravely to hold back tears.
Phyllis sauntered back to assist her, trying valiantly to hold back the laughter she felt rising inside her at the thought of her usually coordinated roommate falling like the average klutz.
Today, Karole hops around on crutches and expects to be using them for at least one week. The doctor's advice is:
MARTIN WOLLMANN, director of health services at the University of Kansas, said accidents related to
running were common at KU and were occurring with greater frequency as spring and warm weather
Although Watkins Hospital does not tabulate the number of running accidents the staff treats, Wollmann said, he thought the hospital might start to do so.
"May it be it would be a good idea to keep records of this," he said. "It happens every year about this time, but we don't have actual numbers on how many students come in with problems from logging."
Wollmann said he thought most running injuries arose from inadequate stretching and flexibility.
TOM THOMAS, assistant professor of health, physical education and recreation, agreed that many runners placed themselves in a position to be injured before running at the proper flexibility and strength to attain the proper flexibility and strength.
"I believe that 90 percent of soreness and injuries caused by running can be prevented by stretching exercises," he said. "Good shoes and the right kind of running surface can be just as important, though."
activity that relieves tension and stiffness in all muscle areas, including feet, legs, arms, back and neck, Thomas said.
Stretching exercises include any mild physical
Also important to the serious jogger, he said, was a good pair of running shoes.
"YOU NEED TO spend at least $2 on a pair of shoes if you're really serious about running," he said. "They need good arches in them and good cushioning on the sole, particularly in the heel. Otherwise, you're too fat."
Thomas said he thought many running injuries were caused by unpredictable or hard surfaces.
He said the rubberized track in Allen Field House provided the best surface for the runner.
Wayne Osness, chairman of the department of health, physical education and recreation, agreed.
"It's better to run in the field house than anywhere else," he said. "The track is flat and rubberized. Roads and streets are too hard—they don't provide any cushioning. It's best to run on the track with a good pair of shoes because that provides double assurance against injuries."
OPEN FIELDS, Ommas said, can provide better runners surfaces or concrete sidewalks, but they don't offer as much support.
"If you run in an open field, you can't anticipate the rocks and holes and clumps of dirt spread out," he said. "You tend to have a lot of ankle problems. It's more bacterious for adults—those of middle age or older."
Omaness said that anyone over the age of 35 should not run unless he had had a physical examination and had been on medication.
Thomas added that people who have had leg surgery, hip surgery or lower-back problems should obtain their doctor's approval before attempting to jog.
He said, however, that these problems rarely affected college-age persons, and that other exercises should be done if the college student thought running was not right for him.
THE BEST EXERCISE activities, Thomas said, were those that required use of the large muscle groups.
The exercises be practiced at least three times a week and for at least a half-hour each time.
"Research says this is the best exercise program to get your cardio-vascular system in shape," he said. "Also, if you keep up a program like this, you're going to make yourself less accident-prone eventually."
Oweness also said he thought the best way to avoid injuries or accidents while running was to maintain a steady pace.
"After you've got yourself in shape, you can start relaxing a little as far as hurting yourself is concerned," he said. "Your whole body is more aware because your health should be better overall."
BUT SHEILA KRIEGSMAUER, St. Lous, ND,
pour found herself an exception to the rule
repeated.
While jogging one day, Kriegshauser tripped. For two months after that, she hobbled around on crutches or in a full walking cast. She had torn ligaments in her ankle.
"I was really lucky, after it was all over, that the cast was successful," she said. "I finally got to know her better to help her."
Kriegausman said her good health and condition evidently did not aid too much in preventing her death.
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6
Tuesday, April 24, 1979
University Dally Kansan
BvCARLOSMURGUIA
Twice is nice, Vetters are better
Sports Writer
If it appeared the same person was running the first and last legs for Iowa State running two-and-a half team at the Kansas State Saturday, there's a good reason for it.
The runners were identical (twins)-Debe
and Diane Vetter.
Diane run the first leg and Deb the last. Going into the last leg, Iowa State University was behind and Deb made up the first person to capitulate her wrist in Diane.
"We're real supportive of each other," Diane said. "When one of us does really well, we both happy and we console each other if one of us has a bad race."
But that didn't happen very often. Deb, the national champion in the 1,590-meter run, won both the 800 and 1,500 at the Reyes and the national championship cross-country team last year.
IOWA STATIST'S trench case Bill Nielsen he thought the main reason for the Voters' defeat was
"They're very uneasy and very supportive of our teammates." Nix said, "They wouldn't let us go out. They wouldn't let us out. They take it in stride. I expect them of them to have an instrumental part in our defense of our Bag Egg crown and to be well individual at
They had received some offers from universities but the schools' women's athletic programs weren't able to offer much. So, after careful deliberation, Deb went to Iowa State and Diane stayed some and found a job.
Nix is lucky the Vetters are running for Iowa State and not somewhere else. The Vetters are originally from Chardon, Ohio. Because of financial problems, after they graduated from high school they were unsure whether to go college.
"Iowa STATE was expensive but they had a good train reputation." Debt paid.
"Fortunately, I had worked for a couple of years and had some money saved. The next
KANSAN Sports
I received a tuition scholarship and I convinced Diane to come out."
If Iowa State was happy with one Vetter, it is doubly happy with two. The twins are as hard to tell apart in running ability as they are in appearance.
"We didn't start running until our treasman year in high school," Diane said. She and her friend ran AAU meets each summer for the Basketball Association, the most remember is when me. Deb, my other sister Jance and a friend run the two-male team in 1973 and set an American record with a win.
ONE REASON THE Vetters are good is their consistency.
"At first when we were racing against good competition, we'd just watch them during the race." Deb said (or was it "they") as he wished to show a race after awhile and then finally we started.
The recognition the Vetters received is appreciated but it isn't the motivation they require.
beating them. That's when people started noticing us."
“It is important that I give 100 percent in each race. If I can do that I'm satisfied.”
I can't tell you more nice to hear people yelling for your aim. I just consider that a bonus. I enjoy its fun.
But they agree on many things, the Vetters do differ on career objectives. Diane wants to become involved in advertising departments. Deb is in a food nutrition program.
“WE WOULDN'T trade being twins for anything,” they both said. “There's a special bond between us. In a race we know what each other's strategy is and off the track we still know what the other is thinking.
"We don't mind when people mistakenly call us the wrong name, even if they yell it during a race. As long as they're cheering, it's OK, whichever one they think we are."
Netters beat rivals
The KU men's team teams scored victories over Big Eight Conference rivals Iowa State and Colorado universities this past weekend in Boulder, Colo.
Jayhawks who picked singles victories were: No. 2 Chef Collier over Fred Bude, 6-1, 6-3; No. 3 Bill Kriziman over Kevin Shoemaker, 6-1, 6-4; No. 4 Weyne Swaynell over Scott Foldman, 6-1, 6-4; and No. 6 Joe Ruysser over Tennox Lemo, 6-3, 6-2.
Mark Hosking and Rick Wurtz suffered KU's only two losses. Hosking lost to Bob Klawetter, 7-6, 6-2, and Wurtz lost to Joe Nieman, 6-4, 4-6, 3.
HOSKING-COLLISI beat Nieman-Bob
Wilson 61-4, Killam 6-1; Krizman-Sewall beat
Jake Lowe 62-5.
Buddle-Klimeuter, 6-1, 6-4, and Ruysser-Wortzelt beat Leenan, 6-7, 6-4, 6-4 in doubles.
Kansas snapped a six-match Colorado winning streak Saturday by beating the Buffaloes, 5-4. The Colorado streak included a 5-4 victory over Oklahoma State University, a team that whipped KU 8-1 last week.
The teams split the singles matches with three victories each. Playing in the same positions as they did against Iowa State, Hosking beat Bill Godfrey, 6-4, 6-2; Collier beat Mike Martin, 6-3, 7-5; Skip Smith beat John Evans, 6-1, 6-3; Craig Richardson beat Wertz, 6-1, 6-3; and Wes Griffin buyser, 7-2, 4-6, 6-2.
VICTORIES IN NO. 2 and NO. 3 doubles gave the Jayhawks the match. Krizman-Sewail both Smith-Evans, 6-4, 6-4; 7-5; Wertz-Ruysser beat Richardson-Griffin 6-4, 6-4. Hoking-Collier lost in No. 1 play to Godfrey-Martin, 6-4, 6-2.
"That was the best we've played in the last three weeks," said KU coach Kivisto. Kivisto said Collier and Sewall had strong performances in both matches.
Dauga State State
Diane and Deb Vetter
Tournaments keep golfers busy
KU's men's golf team had a busy weekend starting Thursday with the two-day Wheatbread Invitation Tournament in New York and Friday with a triangular meet at Manhattan.
KU placed 10th in the 20-team field at the Wheatshater with a team total of 909. D.R. Sensenman and Mark Steiner both shot 280 and lead the toay Hawkies. Doug Anderson finished with a 227 total, followed by Mark Cowley's 323 and Jim Dovale's 234.
Wichita State edged Nebraska for the team title and Oklahoma State was third. Mark Caster of Wichita State won individual medalist honors by carding a 205 total.
medalist honors. Other KU scores were:
David Skelos, 75; Doug Lieber, 82; and John Lyons, 82.
KU'S next action is a long through
thursday at the Drake Invitational in Des Moines.
The two victories put KU's conference mark at 3-1 and its overall record at 17-6.
Celebrate Spring
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April 28, 1979
9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom & Balcony
Featuring: The Original Artists
Refreshments will be provided. Admission is free
for all hall residents and their guests. Tickets are
available today through 4/28 at your hall desk.
Semi-formal or formal dress is appropriate.
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PHOTO
Hillcrest Center
919 Iowa
KU BAND MEMBERS 1978-79 Annual Spring Formal Banquet Sunday, April 29, 6:30 p.m. Union Ballroom
PROGRAM:
Band Awards
Slide Show of KU Band History
Other Entertainment
Propaid to those paying fall band fee. $6.00 all others including guests family and friends. Sign up for all reservations and get tickets in Band Office, Room 214, Murphy no later than Wednesday, April 25.
A LEVI'S
April
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30
Six Chances? Swapped our shattering. While we checked the pattern creases in the paint from every worn sneaker, they called it "Road Run" Simply.
We swotted them everywhere. Will always keep them looking neat and moist, they come in people so The look is never out of style!
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29 30
BUND OVER PANT
Royals snap 5-game losing streak
LEVI'S WOMENWEAR
QUALITY LEVI'S GOES OUT OF STYLE
LEVI'S
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KANSAS CITY (AP)—Frank White hit a pair of doubles, drove in two runs and scored last night to help the Kansas City Royals win a 4-3 victory over the Chicago White Sox.
Open late Thurs & Fri
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Open Sunday 1-5
Left-hander Paul Splitterfödd evened his record at 2-2 with relief help from Al Hrabosky. Chicago starter Rich Wortham lost his first game in four decisions.
game, doubled to left with one out in the first
half and scored on John Wathins' single
White, hitting just .213 going into the
Questions.
the fifth inning, Joe Zeb singled and Fred Patek made it 2-4 with a double. Willie Wilson's bunt single and a walk to George Brett loaded the bases and White greeted Drew Robinson with a double down the third base line to score Patek and Wilson.
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Applications are available in the student senate offices and are due by May 1st.
This person will be responsible for heading K.U. lobbying efforts in ASK and campus lobbying groups. This person will also represent K.U. on ASK corporation
Paid for by Student Senate
E
Tuesday, April 24, 1979
7
Staff Photo by ALAN ZLOTKY
N.C. NORWALKS NORWALKS
University Daily Kansan
Home stretch
Kevin Newell, center outside Clifford Wilson left and near Tennessee The Lakers left open 100-meter dash Saturday in the Kansas Relays in a time of 10.42. For Newell, his three Relays victories were a sweet change from being sidelined with injuries.
Soccer team takes 2nd in Wichita tournament
Sports Writer
Center-backback Doug Potter won most valuable player honors as KU played better than it had expected to and placed second in the 12-team Terrence Scanlon Invitational Soccer Tournament during the weekend in Wichita.
"We weren't expecting to do that well." Callahan said. "We were playing with a skeleton team and played in and biew a lot of people away."
According to Pat Callahan, who along with Robert Alomata took over coaching duties for the tournament, the club's high flush was surprising.
KU's regular player-coaches, Tom
Booher and Tom Walsh, had schedule conflicts and did not play in the tournament.
Kansas played five games in the tournament and won four to bring its spring season underway.
KU ALMOST HAD to forfeit its first game Saturday morning when the team arrived 20 minutes late. But after a one-minute warmup, the club edged past Cloud County Junior College 1-0 behind center-forward John Layman's goal.
Four hours later, KU took on the Wichita Budweiser Strikers and won 2-0. Laymen scored the only goal for KU. The other KU player had a strong play from his player that went through his gravel's lea
in the club's third game of the day, it
defeated Wichita State University, 14, to
win its four-team division and qualify for the semi-finals. Laymen, scoring his third goal in as many games, provided the winning margin.
Sunday morning, the club faced the tournament host team, the Wichita Wheat Hawks, and played what proved to be the most exciting game of the tournament.
WITH THE WHAT Hawks grabbing the lead in the first half, KU center-forward Kai Voeel was ejected from the match for sweeping in German at the official.
Playing a man short, KU managed to tie the match in the second half behind half
overtimes before Laywen accured a clutch goal to gain a berthe in the finals against
The 76-derature weather and the overtime game took its toll on KU. Kansas was unable to score, and lost 1-0, which allowed Emory State to be tournament champions.
After regulation play ended with the score knotted on it, one it took KU two five-minute
"We dominated play in the championship game, but we just couldn't score," Callahan said. "We worked the ball around on offense and played tough defense.
Callahan said the team played well in placing ahead of Big Eight champion Colorado and also Nebraska and Kansas State.
"Our goalie Bill Evans, played an excellent tournament, and Doug Potter won
Newell escapes pain wins in sun and rain
By GENEMYERS
Sports Writer
Kevin Newell admitted that the competition was wanting as he rubbed the tough elastic wrap designed to protect his often injured right hamstring.
"Those two teams, well," the usually outspoken Newell paused for a moment and said with a big grin, "they were not too impressive.
"But it's nice to start off with a win and not an injury."
In fact, Newell was very much relieved not to suffer another injury, like the bevy of battered and bruised muscles that has married his collegiate career.
NEWELL COASTED the final 220 yards Friday in the Kansas Relays to secure KU's first title in a relay race on the Texas State Tour. The winner was winning time of 1:28.31 in the 880-yard relay was far from spectacular, as were the times of Wichita State and Drake, the only other
That didn't matter to Newell, who was satisfied to have his first Kansas Relays wrist watch and his health for the final day of competition Saturday.
"I'm just going to give all it I have tomorrow." Newell said. "This is my big chip."
For Newell, Saturday meant the chance to compete against a trio of Big Eight conference world-class spartners—former KU coach Todd Lewis and great William Snoody and John Garrison.
WHEN HE WAS first recruited, Newell's name was soon expected to be mentioned in the same breath with Wiley, Snoddy and Garrison, but hamstring injuries since his senior year in high school have prevented him from reaching this status.
"I really haven't done anything except during my sophomore year." Newell said.
That was when he won the Big Eight Indoor 60-year dash and run on KU's NCAA Tournament.
Minus his elastic wrap, Newell lined up in the bright sunshine early Saturday afternoon after Wiley, Snoody and Garrison in the open 100-meters.
"My start was great," Newell said of
toward. "It's the best since I wore the in-
dustrial boots."
"I'm tired of people saying that I've been running in Clifford's shadow," Newell said. "II'm tired of people saying that I could only walk around and the quarter and nothing in between.
A FEW SECONDS after his great start Newell hit the tape win, winning in 10.42. Snoody was second in 10.50 and Wiley was third in 10.56.
In a few more seconds, a pack of sports writers circled Newell.
"I heard this for so long I even began doubling myself. People have got to see
what I'm capable of, and I just feel so good.
This helps the eaot a lot."
Back on the track, Newell再升 a bisterling third leg to put KU in the front and lead the team to a 440-yard relay victory. After he deposited the baton safely in David Busterson's hand for the anchor 110, Newell threw his fists up and jumped to the sidelines.
"I'm just getting warmed up," he said.
The pack of sports writers were on his trail again.
'IT'S AN IDEAL day for track,' Newell said. 'I saw myself moving on Oklahoma, and I knew David would win if I got us ahead or even.' 'Oklahoma finished second.
Someone asked if Newell hoped no one hurt so he would not have to run in the mile race.
"Hey," Newell said, "they told me I could be a sprinter now."
However, Newell still had one more race to run. In the open 200-meters he competed with the same field that highlighted the open 100. But this time the magic was not there and neither were the sports writers after the race.
"it's not too bad," Newell said of his third place finish and 21.99 clocking, "I really didn't expect to beat them in this race, but it's only a matter of time.
"I was tired and really didn't warm up. I ran harder than I wanted to in the 440 cipher."
Newell slipped on his warm-up and troted on the artificial turtle to begin his warm down, but his mind was just warming up with aspirations of sprinting greatness.
KU faces Ichabods
The Kansas Jayhawks take a brief break from their conference baseball schedule this afternoon when they face the Washburn ichabods at 1:30 p.m. at Quigley Field.
The non-conference double-header is not too important to either team.
"What's important to us now is our standing in District 10," Washburn coach Larry Elliot said yesterday. "But our players always look forward to playing Kansas, and we hope to have a good ball game."
Washburn is 6-4 in the Eastern Zone of the NIAA's District 10.
KU is 24-9-1, and 6-6 in the Big Eight after
three out of four games at Miami.
"I was disappointed with our mental outlook during the Missouri series," KU coach Brian Bentley said.
Temple said that pitchers Mike Watt, 31 and Dave Hicks, 14, would start on the pitching staff.
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I am a man of many faces. I have been a fan for many years and have seen many things in my life. I am a man of many faces. I have been a fan for many years and have seen many things in my life.
8
Tuesday, April 24, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Fear of failure, environment hamper dating
By LESLIE GUILD
Staff Reporter
Editor's note: This is the first in a series of three stories about dating relationships of college students. Today's story concerns how students meet other students.
Another typical Friday night and you're at home popping corn and watching Johnny Carson on the tube. And last Friday night the only thing you could think of doing was to get the gang together and drive across town to see the triple-feature horror movies.
Whether it be from fear that a relationship will not be successful, or whether it is from a lack of a chance to establish a beginning to a relationship, young adults, including college students, are feeling a sense of social isolation.
This social isolation apparently is being felt by some students at the University of
Mark Lank, Lincoln, Neb., freshman,
hard pace in college was an extremely
hard pace in college.
"I in college most people are so idealistic," he said. "They're looking for someone who's just perfect and the judgments are harsh, even more tense." The first-meeting situation even more tense.
STREET CINEMAS
BUT COLLEGE students are not alone. In
a current book on the subject, "Brief Encounters," which analyzes heterosexual dating patterns, authors Emily Coleman and Betty Edwards say young adults should read, study, and share, including the first steps of meeting strangers, because few things in today's society seem
Coleman said this difficulty also was observed in the attitudes of college students. She said the students' difficulties in meeting strangers was caused by several factors.
to stay the same. The authors say people are afraid to become involved in relationships because a chance exists that the relationship will not last.
"A lack of right attitudes, not having the skills to communicate and the environment, that would make students strangers," Coleman said. "These are the areas that need change in our development."
COLLEMAN SAID those people not in a college atmosphere also inhibited students'
"A lot of people outside college don't understand the pressures of meeting strangers in college," she said. "They say it takes more time to get self,self, adds more pressure to the students."
As a result of these shortcomings, Coleman said, students limit themselves.
"They are afraid to take掌," she said. "So they either go steady with an old friend or go mad."
Erik Wright, professor of psychology at KU who has taught a class in human sexuality for 10 years, said students today are increasingly making contact with strangers.
"NO INITIAL means of making contact with strangers exists," he said. "The size of the University is an important factor in that."
Wright said that because of KU's size, most students made friends through
"Classes are a predominate way for the largeness of the University to be broken down," he said. "And sometimes, friends like him have another act as a bridge to narrow the gap."
Wright said he thought that was why many students looked for smaller groups to join, such as fraternities. He said activities like Rock Chalk Reve also met this need.
"It's a very uncomfortable thing to try to meet a stranger at the University," he said. "Even though all students have something to say, they are students, a closer tie is needed."
AIG. GREEN, a psychiatrist with the Menninger Foundation in Topeka, also said students looked for smaller group settings to meet people.
"There's a magic number somewhere between six and eight which makes most people comfortable enough that they can talk," he said. "If the number grows much larger, members of groups begin to shut themselves off."
"That's when the role of a living group, such as a dorm or something, becomes important," he said. "A commonness of this kind is important for the relationship to continge."
Green said that in a one-to-one relationship, most people usually searched for a specific job.
In his work as director of Student Services, Dick Johnson said he was finding that KU did not offer enough opportunities for students to meet on common grounds.
The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Ball, is collecting data through interviews with students.
"FROM MY experiences with students, it is obvious that students feel this campus is too large to meet people," he said. "It's somewhat a lack of initiative on the part of teachers, but KU's fault. We aren't offering, what it seems, students need in order to meet each other."
"It's my guess from the data that I've seen that at least 50 percent, if not more, students will respond saying they can is so large," Johnson said.
Amy Mortensen, Overland Park senior, said she used the classroom to meet other
CLASSES are really an easy way to meet people," she said. "I will approach a
stranger in class and begin a conversation. However, I don't feel I could just walk up to her.
Mortensen said although she usually did not, she thought it was not improper for a wife to wear a dress.
"If I wanted to, I feel I could make the first move and initiate the conversation," she said. "I will sometimes and I do feel it is proper."
Lanki said he had sought a fraternity to break down the size of KU.
He said he thought most first meetings were initiated by men.
"It's something that bridges the gap for me," he said. "However, I also meet new friends through other friends that happen to know each other."
"Sometimes I wish it wasn't that way," he said. "Although things are changing, I still think women think they can't make the first moves. And a woman who does intimates
Coleman said the changes in society's views of a woman's role in a relationship
"If one way we've seen the social rituals begin to break down," she said. "We's step back and see."
Legislature to decide on tax relief, budget
Tomorrow: How money can affect a relationship.
When the Kansas Legislature reconvenes tomorrow for its three-day wrap-up session, members will decide the fate of two issues important to KU students: the Kansas Board of Regents budget and a tax relief package.
Although the Regents budget is expected to sail through both houses, the tax relief package undoubtedly will encounter some stormy weather.
The controversy over a tax relief package began more than a month ago as a result of a surprise discovery of nearly $100 million in excess tax collections.
As the end of the regular session neared, Kansas House and Senate leaders from both parties worked out a $79 million tax relief package that included a $20 tax rebate for each person and the elimination of a utilities sales tax.
Although House members gave the package their approval, the Senate flatly rejected it. In its place, Senate members proposed their own plan for tax relief.
So far, only one of the proposals from both
packages—the elimination of the taxes on utilities—has been passed by both House and Senate.
UNDER THE Senate plan, $45 million would go for tax relief for home builders, $37 million would be used for sales tax reductions and $13 million would be returned by allowing more taxpayers to itemize their income tax reductions.
Carlin's approval of the measure takes care of about $22 million of the excess money and legislators are expected to spend the better part of their three-day session trying to deactivate a mutually pleasing plan for getting rid of the rest of it.
AS FAR AS the Regents budget is concerned, House and Senate members agreed on funding for the Regents schools before the regular session adjourned, but the appropriation bill still must be approved by both Houses as well as by the governor.
Under a compromise bill that was drafted by a combined House and Senate conference committee are provisions for a 6.5 percent increase in salaries for faculty members. The Senate approved a 7 percent increase but the house endorsed only a 6 percent increase.
The conference committee also agreed to reduce from $2 million to $1 million a Senate recommendation for accessibility improvement and students and improvements to save energy.
Other recommendations included in the bill are a 6 percent increase for other operating expenses and a 9.5 percent increase for student employee wages.
AN INSIDE LOOK AT
PUBLIC ACCOUNTING A PRESENTATION BY: COOPERS & LYBRAND
DATE: Wednesday, APRIL 25,1979 PLACE: COUNCIL ROOM-KANSAS UNION TIME: 6:30 p.m.
MISS STREET DELI
041 MASSACHUSETTS
TIME: 6:30 p.m.
SPONSORED BY THE ACCOUNTING CLUB
From the Smokehouse .
FROM THE DELI . . .
The party tray featuring thin Sliced Roast Beef,
Ham, Corned Beef, Pastrami, Big Eye Swiss,
Jlapenape, and Cheddar. Onion, Dork Rye and
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Office - 842-7337
The project includes extensive planting in the areas of the visual arts and computer centers, and near the N zone next to the campus, which are located on the campus to replace the dead ones.
KU grooming for graduation
Weather permitting, the KU landscaping crew will complete a $10,000 planting project in time for commencement May 24. The director of landscaping, said yesterday.
Rodger Oroke, director of facilities operations, said the landscaping crew's goal was to beautify the campus for commencement.
"The high point of campus appearance is at commencement because thousands of visitors and alumni come here," he said. "We try to bring everything together at that time. We shoot to have it done before commencement."
"It it all depends on the weather," Mathes said. "If we get much more rain, we will have to wait until next fall to do the planting."
MATHES SAID planting in the visual arts area began last month.
Mathes said the saddling east of Bailey Hall in Strong Hall were due to the hurricanes.
"We planted one load of trees and shrubs before the rain shut us down. There are a
lot of dogwoods and seedless mulberry trees in this area," he said.
"The rest of the campus will require mowing, trash pick-up and last-minute trimming. We ask the crew to work on the lawn as much as possible. They will be working 12 days straight."
The landscaping crew has been simultaneously working on the West Campus project that runs from 21st to 23rd streets.
According to Oroke, the curbing project was undertaken because the curbs "were deteriorated and would require replacement." Oroke said the weather and chemical damage from salt in the winter deteriorated the curbs. Jayhawk Boulevard was most severely damaged, he
Mathes said replacing the plants was expensive.
Landscaping for the computer center and the N zone areas were started last fall. Mathes said he hoped to complete planning sometime next week.
"Commencement will limit what we can do on the other projects," he said. "During the week of commencement, the slope will have to be mowed two or three times. The Campanile slope is the focal point during the day of commencement.
"Pecan, redbud, whitebud, cottonless cottonwood and bald cypress are the main types of trees we will be planting in the other areas."
Deciduous trees and shrubs will be planted in these areas. A variety of trees will be scattered throughout the campus, he said.
STUDENTS HAVE caused almost as many problems as the weather, he said.
*Shrubs cost $3 to $10 each and $5 for labor each we replace them. Some of*
"We face some very serious problems," he said. "Some students tramp over the plants. South of the Campanile, they are walking across shrubs. We now have three grassy areas that are far apart in a fence between the C parking zone and Naismith Hall because of the hedge plants.
"LAST SUMMER, we filled a ditch at Moore Hall and 21st street with dirt that came from the Robinson and/or Malotell. We have now seeded and fertilized it.
Mathes has a crew of 34 permanent, full-time workers. In the spring, 12 to 15 seasonal employees are hired. The summer crew has 20 members, he said.
Mathes said they were making three more softball fields, one more baseball field and six or seven more football fields in the 23rd street area.
"The ditch had running water and was hard to maintain because it caught trash. To make the area better, we filled it and put in a sewage system."
MATHEIS, HOWEVER, said the 3,000 yards of sod replaced last week was not used.
The need for much of the sod is due to the curbing project, Mathes said.
"Sledding on Potter Lake broke about eight crabapple trees, which will cost $10 per acre."
the shrubs have been replaced three or four times in the 13 months I've been
"The sod is sometimes so muddy that the students will step around it."
Early travel plans urged for summer abroad
"If people wait until the last minute, it's going to take longer. Normally a passport takes two to three weeks to be issued. But if something is wrong with the application, it is held up until the correct information is sent."
The office of study abroad and the Lawrence post office are urging those planning to travel abroad this summer to apply for passports early.
Janie Rake, a main post office clerk stenographer in charge of charges, said recently that "This is the peak season and a majority of port passages are needing to be processed."
She said people sometimes sit in improper pictures or unofficial birth ceramics.
"Sometimes people will bring in certificates from the hospital," Rake said. However, she said, these certificates were unsatisfactory.
THE BIRTH CERTIFICATE must be a state-certified copy. That is, it must have the registrar's signature, the seal state, or the registration filed within a year after the birth, she said.
Those applying for a passport also should have a second form of identification.
Two pictures, taken within the past six months, also are required. The pictures must be on non-glossy, high-quality paper, or near background and be 2 inches by 2 inches.
Rake said that the post office usually suggested people use commercial
Entertainment
Located in Hillcrest Shopping Center
Entertainment
GIBRALTARS
Festival—Wed. 4-25 all the beer you can drink $2 girls $3 guys
Original Art—Thurs. 4-6 (plus liqueur pool)
Mary Ryan, study abroad adviser, said,
"Anyone going abroad should not wait until the last minute."
She suggested that potential travelers
Pat's Blue B Riddim Band Fri & Sat
photographers and tell the photographers the oiicture is for a passport.
The old passport and two new pictures
with a $10 check or money order to the
bank.
Passport application forms are available at the main post office, 645 Vermont St. Applications are accepted Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
A PASSPORT costs $13 and is valid for five years. Those who have been issued a passport within eight years before submits their application will be charged the time at the time may permit a forpass to be mail.
For those who help themselves
She suggested that potential travelers also look into immunization and insurance
Introducing the Noon Buffet Help yourself to all the soup, salad, and pizza you can eat. $2.99 Mon-Fri 11:30
Gabriel's
Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842-5824
SHE SAID THAT this week and next week the office of study abroad would conduct orientations for students going to Germany, France and Britain.
At these orientations students will be given additional preparation to live abroad. She said that students would be advised of language barriers, unfamiliar customs and the practical aspects of daily living, such as banking.
She said there would be a discussion of academic differences between the United States and China.
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
"We expect students to do well academically, not to go off," she said.
There will be an informational meeting concerning Fulbright-Hays grants and KU's Direct Exchange Scholarships at 3:30 p.m. at the International Room of the Kansas Union.
THE APPLICATION deadline for 1080-4
HEY'S hawts grants and Direct-
Exchange Shares
Ryan said anyone interested in studying in the Orient this summer could still submit applications. She said that those interested in studying this summer in most countries, except Germany, could still apply. Most of the deadlines are flexible, she said.
Further information about study abroad can be obtained from the office of study abroad.
Ryan said those planning to study abroad should be prepared.
She said that students were given a reading list by the office to better acquaint themselves with the country they would be living in.
"The more you know about the country you'll be living in, the better off you'll be."
"Know something about your own country," too, "Ryan said. In a sense, students are going to other countries as ambassadors."
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Tuesday, April 24, 1979
Open house senior party is tomorrow
9
The senior party will follow from 9 to 11 p.m. on the rooftop patio of the Union, according to B.J. Pattee, assistant director of the Alumni Association.
An open house for seniors is scheduled from 7 to 9 p.m. tomorrow in the Alumni Association office, room 403 in the Kansas Union.
A student's name will be drawn every 15 minutes during the open house and a prize will be awarded to that person. Pattee said prizes would be Jayhawk memorabilia, including banners, ties and pen and pencil sets.
Senior open house was started three years ago, Pattee said, because the board of class officers was moved from the Alumni Association to the vice chancellor of student affairs.
"We missed contact with the seniors so much," Pattie said.
If a senior joins the Alumni Association before commencement day, she said, $2.50 of the $10 membership cost will be donated to the purchase of the senior class gift, which will be presented this afternoon.
The first business school marathon will begin at a p.m. south of Lawrence at Wells Overlook, wind through Lawrence and end. You love miles after the Huddle. 2406 Iowa St.
Student race all play and no business
Tony Redwood, associate professor of business, said the destination was chosen because "We wanted to stop at a refreshment area, appropriate for Business School students.
about 100 business school students will trade in the calculator Frida for running a race.
"The whole idea of the race is for the
University Daily Kansan
"I guess it fits the spring mood of the moment."
KANSAN WANT ADS
Ten teams will run in the race. There will be a minimum of five men and three women
According to Redwood, six or seven professors also will run.
professors to do something with the students and have a beer afterward.
Asenodotriphols, products, services and employment
processes in the plastics industry. Analyze data on
economic, environmental and social impacts of
plastic materials. Perform analysis of BMG,
BMR and other market indicators.
CLASSIFIED RATES
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
one two three four five six seven eight nine
15 words or
( fewer )
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional word
01 02 03 04 05
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.
morning
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be displayed in person or accessed through the UDR business office 160-628-1638.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4258
ANNOUNCEMENTS
J. HOOD, BOOKSELLER will招呼 to opening of a germination hammock in a gymnasium where the supplies will be added temporarily as space allows. Come down and browse for a real bargain! 1401 Massachusetts 811-6644
Seniors come and join the fun April 25th. 4-24
FOR RENT
A. 2 hr. BHR and efficiency. Close to campau. UUI-
457. Clean, quiet, and comfortable. 849.
5570.
Still looking for a place to call home? Nahimath's 82nd Street, 157-760-4090, is the mainder of the year. Stop by and look on over our show at 8:30 p.m. 850th and we will be able to give you a call at 850th HALL, 1800 Nahimath Drive, 843-585-8330 NAHIMATH HALL, 1800 Nahimath Drive, 843-585-8330
Christian Huntington Now and Summer. Closet to
room. 842-650-300 between 2:30
& 5:30. Keep trying.
FRIENDLY RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT:
24-hour room service, unlimited furnished. From $760 Two laundry rooms, large en suite apartment parking. On KU has route INDOOR RIDGE. See at 842-4144 or see at 824-Front Door. Next door
Female roommate for summer 2 bdmr
Appliert Acp, AC pool, Call 841-2200
MARK I & II APARTMENTS new renting for summer housing. 7.5 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, new yearly installments. 7.9 min to campus. 1 APT on the 3rd floor of basement, balconies off, bedroom at night, disabled access. 10th floor of hotel. 10th floor of Mist Apart. #2: 842-6023, 841-6213, 840-6214.
Jahnaukner 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
Summer suburban, 3 bdrm house. AC, 2-car garage. N of campus. $250 | electric car. #411-26708.
**Wanted:** Female commuter to provide 2 hordes of meals for a family. **Job Title:** KU host nurse. **Salary:** $100. **Offer:** More inquiries: [mailto:careers@ku.edu](mailto:careers@ku.edu)
To submit: 1. BB unimprinted Cederwang Association letter of recommendation for interest in August; 2. Available mid-May option for loan in August; 3. Received from the University of California.
SUBLEASER - a beautiful two bedroom bldg apartment
SUBLEASE - a beautiful two bedroom bldg apartment
4-25
ROOMS FOR RENT. Convenient location—serv-
ice from student house. Call now 825-360
6205
Battalion surrender. Live-in, in-style ON CAMPUS
Battalion
Bookticket $19.00 per month. Call Marel at 841-263-5720.
Bookticket $19.00 per month. Call Marel at 841-263-5720.
Summer suite 2 bedroom apt furnished or
used $2400 to $3500
Call 814-1325 or 814-2717
Mail resume to:
Burkholder Real Estate
808-269-4920
Summer students—need someone to share large numbers of books, help with homework, single manage $60, or couple $80. 843-212-7111.
*Schlumberger for summer 2 bedroom apt. furnished*
*campaigns* $250 inquiries paid. Cary Gray房
*campaigns* $250 inquiries paid.
91% month lease, August 16-May 31. One IR4
unlimited-$180, two IR2 unlimited-$250 plus
furniture available
Ballroom $835, furniture available
Ballroom $835, furniture available
Ballroom $835, furniture available
Call 843-1153 or 842-2164. Phone:
2940 Murphy Drive, Off J2nd & Iowa,
617-555-3420.
Sublease with option to renew. Luxury 3 bedrooms, 2 bath. Townhouse, Pools, Tennis Club, Home and Resort Residential House, Roequille Club, Dishwasher, Fireplace, and more. Available in May. 841-5729 or 843-7423.
Spend your summer at our pool & save. Summer rates: June-Aug. 15, 1 bed room minimum $140, Aug. 16-23, 2 beds minimum $210. Furniture available: Call 425-1155 or 424-3416. Parkway Terrace Apts. 240 Murray Dr. Just call (817) 296-2560.
Sublease 4 bedroom for summer $75
month person, '1' utilise. B14-5194-8098
B3 bedroom for summer $25
month person, '1' utilise. B14-5194-8098
Summer sublease. Beautiful three bedrooms, furnished apartment, kitchen. Vegetable. AC, pool. Gym. Bathroom.
Studio Apt. Furnished Excellent location $150.00 per mo. Sunroom sub-floor capacity of Full Bedrooms
Sublease 2. bbm rpt AC, D:W, laundry facility
7:07 min to walk to campus 3. Calif 420
6:46 min
Summer sublease with option to re-rent. 2 bed
room close to campus. AC, 841-380, unimmutable
For rent this summer. One bedroom apt. new & chlms, close to campus. 843-647-6760
3 bdm, duplicate tables for summer with option
4 bdm, duplicate tables for fall with option
5 blocks from campus: BU42-804-102 6-26
6 blocks from campus: BU42-804-103 6-26
2 bedroom Mendowbrook Apt. to share with you for the summer. Price negotiable 6946 4-36
2 roommates to share 3 bedrooms Trailside
Apartment or subroutine 841-6757 4:36
Sublease Apt for summer-2 bedroom close to campus. Dog allowed, complete summer rate.
Sublease 2 bedrooms unfurnished apartment 5 minute walk to campus. Air conditioned office. Parking available. **Sublease** 1 BR apt 15 AC, peo. balcony Call 841-7633 after 6 p.m. weekdays-4:25
Summer training to share new three bedroom
bedrooms to be furnished. AFC fully furnished.
campus. 864-1625.
SUBLEASE Furnished studio in Meadowbrook,
Swimming and tennis 832-609-427
4:27
Swimming and terrific 843-9026
Remainder provided Graduation studies in
Sciences, premedicine, Graduate study,
Cell physiology.
Summer submarine, Spelunker 1 BR Southfjord route, aviation area, avoid May 21st. $170. CAT 841-3838.
Summer sublease 7. BR AC apt for $197.50
Annual lease 8. To continue renting to
Fall, Call #613-412-0700
Looking for a Summer Residence? Rent a 5-
bedroom house, furnished 2 blocks from
the city center.
DOGS AND CATS Check out this bed 1 bedroom paired with optional furniture; it is loaded with lots of furniture, and can sleep like balcony, pool, air conditioning, having a run in in bed, and on bus route maps. Mate's room is located on the same floor.
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING-In an established
TRY COOPERATIVE living room, residents
room rentals live rooms 290, 325, 360,
400, 430, 460 and 500. All rooms are
cabinet room.
Sleep in the bed of a future Supreme Court
Judge. (Shelly) 84-805, 427
A. C. Nestley C床室 848-805-427
FOR SALE
WATERED MATTRESSES $39.85, 3 year warranty,
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. 182-800, 128
Watch for truck on Sundays selling produce.
Foods, P9th, 21 & Illinois. Also wood
crafts
SunShelter - Sun glass are our specialty. Non-
SunShelter - Sun glass are our specialty.
resistant to UV light, 1025°F.
1921, Mastis.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
manufacturer of motors for the marine industry.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 835-969, 2000 W, Gph.
(www.motive-electric.com)
Western Civilization Notes. Now an Sale! Make senise out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to read on these pages, but don't use them for seminar 31 For exam preparation. *New Analysis* (Mrs. Koehler). Cater, Mails Booksitcher, & Gread Bookstorer. 11
Fender: Mustang Bass Guitar with struts, strings, pedals and covers. Very good condition, speaks, dreads and covers. Very good condition.
1972 CB500 Honda, Reliable, Trans, new battery,
up tune up. Bent up. 864-6117 4-24
1076 Sunsetube New Air Convertible top kit
Brakes — Price $199; Calibration
2135 after 7 p.m.
4:25
Marathon Station, great buy!) 1988 Model HIX-RX
Marathon Station, great buy!) 1988 Model HIX-RX
Suit 4-wheel, w/ speaker. Must call: Call 602-355-
6882
**D 50DGE CHARGER-AC. AT**, radians Excellent condition $1350 or best offer $843-423-442
1969 Opel Kadett, 65,000 miles, $600 or best offer
641-3124 4-26
Honey bee and hive. Third season. $45. Also
*tree wheel bike* $85. $141-212 evening. 4费
72 Dodge Charger, AC, AT, New brakes, Ra-
ngeable wheels, reasonable price,
13$20 or 16$90, 843-283-424
For Mother's Day - Free 12. oz. Body Shampoo
$25; $30 purchase from Chasley Collection at
Roundtable House.
White Elephant Safari, Saturdays, April 28. 8:90 a.m.
Whitney Park, parking for Chioga House
100 a.m.
Mom would like a Drop & Jot pad to stick on
the back of her Round Corner Drifter.
843-650-0200
Max. 843-650-0200
Bob Jackson bicycle. Excellent condition. 22 bikes.
$60 or best offer. Bike #41-807-402. 4-25
1969 Ford Muttang, AT, AC, PS, radio; $1600 or
less. Call Tom at Cat 842-2724
"74 VW camper car, 25,000 miles, 4 speed, a speedometer, front window, rear window, most Intelligent sell BM 814-761] after 4 m.
1974 Honda CB 702. Windhammer & Trunk
Condition. Condition if, interested. H88-691-01
1974 Honda CB 702. Windhammer & Trunk
Condition. Condition if, interested. H88-691-01
New 1758 Honda Hobbit TA-90. Only 2 miles on
4.37MPT. Call 843-7821.
1974 Newton 850 Commands where your chance in own a quality imported motorcycle *1,600 or less* at www.northernmotors.com
Encyclopedia Britannica "Great Books of the
World, 42 volumes" $69; Call Tom
864-2023
Comfortable Twin Bed Like new Best offer
Call 842-6064 4-37
*4 Minstall II, 4 cylinder, condition A, AM FM*
*8 trax. excellent condition, 842-6000*
**4-27**
*"Mustang II, 4 cylinder, 4 speed, AC, AM/FM"
*
2 months old bed-one mattress and
frame for $45.00, 842-3950
4-25
Honda 1972, 1977 Windsurfers II. Bank &
Cash Advance $10,000 or more ($2,500 to
$4,000) in the bank or $30,000 or make offer. Café
or other restaurants $1,000 or more.
70 Pontiac Catalina, make an offer, come by 1239 Vermont (right aft) after 5.30 p.m.
4-27
1977. Rawsko, Custom Silver with mags, front
feet. Louise and run great. 841-257
Lowe and run great. 841-257
Used Sewl Mattress and Spring. Good cordide.
$25 set. Call 461-1438 for 3. 541-8438-427
2-870-4950-1476
Flat '71' 124 Sport Convt. Call after 5 "Best"
Baird 81-148 89-168
4-27
174 Century Bay, near me. 14,000 mL on hi-vis ACP, 198 PCB,
250 microfluidic cups on hi-vis ACP, 328 PCB, 250 microfluidic cups on hi-vis ACP
1970 Open Ralye runs, 55, 600 miles, good
car, first run; $450 calls. Call 842-2500.
great car, first run; $450 calls. Call 842-2500.
great car, first run; $450 calls. Call 842-2500.
GETTING MARRIED? Wedding dress for sale.
Off-White: 8 Wear onwards. $110-$121, evergreen
Brown: $130-$154, evergreen
FOUND
Storeo receive Kenwood KH-2100 - cost $200,
would give you a negotiation. Excellent job.
Call 846-257-3980
A sum of money Please call 842-4142 4-25
Tennsylvania Instruments Caller First Southern
947-320-3677 4-25
Tennsylvania Instruments Caller Southern
947-320-3677 4-25
Black (probably Lab) puppy found. Call 843-
4507
Found near Wereen, pair of glasses with pinkish
frame. Call 841-836 to claim.
4-26
A pair of glasses in a green vinyl case. They are
in Room 114 Marvin. 4-26
Found Long-heard, off-white, blue-eyed cat.
The Union, 841-1899. 4-26
HELP WANTED
EXOTIC JOBS! LAKE TAHOE, CALIFORNIA
JOBS: Dive sites in Cabo San Lucas,
over 35,000 people trained in Canyon,
restaurants, ranchers, cruisers, river rats, & more.
Diving jobs in the Pacific Ocean:
6029. Sucaray, California 55860. 4:24
OVERSEAS JOBBS Subsidiary Jr's year round Europe,
UK, France, Canada & New Zealand
WWW:JOBBs-UK.com Box PZ 2347 Dublin DM 8024
WWW:JOBBs-WAIT.com Box PZ 2347 Dublin DM 8024
SUMMER JOBS, NOW! WORLD CRUSHED!
PLEASURE HAUNTS? No experience! Good pay!
Caribbean, Hawaii, Hawaiian. Send $195 for 4-mon.
USA, San Diego. Send $270 for 5-mon.
60129, Sacramento, CA. 95800. 5-8
JUNE'S TAKE HOUSE CALM. Formulate time
inventory for the property using a
applicant's application to LACKWOLD,
505 W. 12th St., Chicago, IL 60607.
$150 for application.
Adult with own transportation to care for 8 min.
Medical care provided by a licensed
Physician. *Some time business travel.* $20/hour.
Now taking applications for Foundation & Gritti
Applicants must be in grades 9-12. Apply in person at Vela Bastienstein,
405 W. 77th St., Boston, MA 02108.
**STUDENTS:** summer employment Pinkerton's, is now taking applications from students who want to work as teachers in Kauai City, area, or qualify you must meet the requirements. Apply in person Monday-Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on Tuesday. Apply in person Monday-Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on Tuesday. From 709, Kauai City, Kauai City, One building, 1112 Grand An Rental Opportunity Enrollment.
Did your Easter break leave you with the summer job blues? We still have a few full time positions. Send us an email to quality, send name, major, address & Pho-ton to P.O. Box 2023, Lawrence, KG 60452. Km 60452.
ENGINEERING GERRIS Positions $18,000 up
Never a license to applicant. Call Bob Courtney,
or submit resume to Courtney Peterson.
Service, 8600 W 624 St., Suite 102,
Mississippi, KS 65203. 5-8
Students学习 in business, pre-med, pre-low,
pre-high. Make $997 per month. For interview
requirements: Male $997 per month. For interview
questions: Female $997 per month.
MAKE $3,000 THIS SUMMER. If you are hard
and independent, and willing to release
CALL 842-7522.
Looking for summer & fall help to work in health care. Must be at least 25 and must attend 3 hours of contact. Wanted Friendly, energetic, willing to learn.
Mature-minded student or grad, wanted
moved to NYC and completed moving
addition job 344 afternoon his/her day.
Applied in April by AA of AA 314 Harcourt Terrace
with position in NYC. Employer is a non-
employee Qualified 313 men and women em-
ployer.
Looking for a job to help you get through end-
ing exams. Visit www.harpercollins.com
through the summer. Visits are free. 1234
One of the mid-west's oldest moving and storage centers, the company has provided drivers and helpers. Wilt train qualified employees to perform DGH requirements. Hard work only needs to be accomplished by calling or by call 913-651-4800. An equal opportunity employer.
One of the mid-winter moving and new mo-
nerial goods-packers-Will train qualified, enhanceb
ood packers-Will train qualified, enhanceb
person at 1965 West Gird Class 4, Apply-Apply in
1967 West Gird Class 4, An equal opportunity
employee 61-581-140. An equal opportunity
employee
immediate. Need for Student Clerk-Typist implemntation. Need for student Clerk-Typist employment through the summer and part-time positions. Applicant must be proficient in number forms, hand-recording data and analysis including typing. Must be able to apply including typing test. Make written application on Geological Survey Manager Hall, 1830 Avenue of Washington, Geological Survey Moore Hall, 1830 Avenue of Washington. Deskmate's Office, Moore Hall, McKinley Opportunities Center.
BARTENTERS - Training now for Fall positions
175 ILS. Call Lailer between 11 and 4, 832-9232.
176 ILS. Call Lailer between 11 and 4, 832-9232.
Part-time job open immediately for summer
starting in October. Call 516-3400 or visit
www.scholarship.com/study-at-us.
$390 starting salary - Call 516-3400 or visit
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Earn $80 to $150 weekly in yearly Harmonetown
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Psychiatric Nurses wanted for all shifts on child's, adolescent, and adult wards. Apply at the office of Director of Nursing, Topkapi State Hospital, 50208 TURKMUNA, MISR, RUSSIA. Equal Opportunity Employer. **1-426**
Mental health technicians, increased mental health technicians, psychiatrists, aid, health service work-ers and community workers. Resume to State Hospital, 2700 W. 6th, Topeka, KS 66504. Applicants are encouraged to apply equal Opportunity Employment.
RESEARCH ASSISTANT. Help conduct studies w/ prechILD children and their mom. Wm must be a PhD in Psychology or related field. Next fall SCHCITELY-Typing. Netixting. Mail resume to SCHCITELY Contact Dr. Jip Ly. 864. 860. 6400. Contact Assistant.
We have plenty of summer jobs available in the Kauai City metro area for security officers. You will have an opportunity to work in a hospital and a phone in your home. Apply to WELLS FARM at 1234 Broadway, 816-921-0513.
REFRESNATIVES WANTED for promotion of intracultural limos Europe and Asia. Travel by bus or train. Educational tours. Almost any travel arrangement organized. Marie Bar. Diamond 10,100.
The University of Kansas (Lawrence Campus) is seeking a full-time position to assist the responsible personnel in basic job assistance. Required experience includes knowledge and written communications skills, and E-mail training. The position not required is COBOL programming expertise or experience (prior experience IMS). This career opportunity will move into the data base administration area in order to perform job duties the individual will be trained in the areas in which she is not proficient. Position will be held during the school year (spring and summer hours per week) during the school year. Subject to availability, Office of Information Services. Office of Information Systems Coordination, Lawrence, KS 66084 Application Deadline: May 15th. SYSTEMS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS IN AN ADDITIONAL FUNCTION AS EMPLOYER, APPLICATIONS ARE SOUGHT FOR RACE, BELIGION COLOR COLOSX DISABLE OR ACE OR ANORIGINAL STATUS. NATIONAL ORIGINAL ORACE OR ANORIGINAL STATUS.
The Office of Information Systems (Lawrence Campbell) is seeking a staff of typist. Must be knowledgeable in computer systems and familiar with four (4) hour time blocks required during the tenure period. Position requires experience in preparing charts and record cards, filing and photoaging
LOST
Ludwig, Berlin Salon with watch. Fla. Aug. 13.
2008. Held at the Ludwig Gallery in New York and at the Markus and Marianne Hall. Bibendum 81-609
Man's Time watch with brown band, Midnight
Thursday. If it is午夜 or in ear Summer
Sunday. If it is night, midnight.
MISCELLANEOUS
TREMS BINDING COPYING House of
Morrow 828 West 43rd St. New York, NY 10027
yearly gift of $89 All者收到 P12-30h Funds
NOTICE
WANTED officials to help with intramural wrestling matches. If they are called, call Ask a Bon or stop by 29th Robinson, Ice Racer-372
DEATH: WHY BOTH? ECKANKAR
The Key to secret wards 842-3423. 841-2763
PERSONAL
VETS-As you get your tickets, maybe you
Check campus vets! 18 IU BURN. 864-4228 4127
RECKS HIRE SHOP is now open 202, Bailidge,
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website at www.reckshire.com for more info.
FOX HILL, SUBSURY CURIE. Alterations mp to
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HARBOUR SPECIALS $3.00, 6:00 Mo., Tues., and Thurs.
HARBOUR SPECIALS $14.99, 8:00 Mo., Wed. & Thurs.
MADIS'S DAYS NIGHT$7.00, Wed. $10.99, pitchers.
Guy陆颖 consulting referrals new handled
through IU Info. 846-3506 or Headquarters 841-
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FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abstracions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing, Birth Control, Consulting, Total Liability, For appointment for appointment 480-3260, 480-3260, 901B, St. Overland Park, KA.
Belonging for special people (Hostels's Hotel
Belo Hostel, 372-814-5066, Belo Hostel,
Hotel Open May 1-Friday. Member only. No
reservation required.)
RODEO: Interview waited with partners and as currently involved with industry
Prize estimates needed to win TV at May 5th
party in Glasgow to Glencore's
department at Glencore.
This is your last chance! The St. Lawrence Center is sponsoring the last polka of the semester. A 3:50 admission includes all the beer, pop, popcorn and snacks. There are 8:15 to 4:15 at the KU Ballroom. 4-27
THE TAN MAN KHAIKI. Only $19,000 this used vehicle on the lease with the acquisition. ALL AKU KUYTAM TAN MAN. Available for ten years. Hardy in receive notes for Tan Man Day. The car is only available for TAN MAN PROMOTIONS VERY LATE. 4-28
To the interview after facilitation on Wed. our
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Hope to see you at the senior terrace party
April 25th Linda O'Keele
4-24
*T* 4 years of hard work in 3 weeks. Make
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Kate N. Beware of suspicious looking characters
who may play practical jokes on you
4-25
The Chute-Ladder night, Tuesday night 2:43
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The best thing is they are expensive! A second
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Let's get drink and dance* @ the AUDI
Spring Formal on the 29th 10:00 AM. Union, 4-20
SERVICES OFFERED
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PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT A paired variable with the number of rows to print. If a row is printed, @ 9 hours, @ 1 hour and @ 45 minutes of sleep are allocated to it.
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REWRITING EDITING. Your manuscript, thesis or two paper edited into an effective growth medium, will be used to think with precision and smoothness. Outlining of texts and articles also available. Fax 612-534-2900.
Lawrence School Exciting Summer programs! Students will study history and biology, build fine art, organic gardening and horticulture, and choose a private homeschool class in Language Arts, Math, and History. Available 7-9:20, swale side call; Call 855-323-1248.
Tried of feeding yourself? Niahuma Hall is offered for the first time over a booking platform. You can rent a room on her website or you can be voucher if you choose this slot. Shop HALL, 1800 Darwin Drive, D43-8529. NIHAUME HALL, 1800 Darwin Drive, D43-8529.
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TYPING
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Results. dissertation, resumes, legal form.
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Squares, three bedrooms apartment, furnished,
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Wanted, Coordinator of development for Kaukaus University of Technology and Family Life and Dept. of Special Education, to develop curriculum undergraduate education related skills, precredential grant application writing skills, precredential grant application writing skills, precredential grant application writing skills, application of sample of writing, Vim and text comprehension for Linda Aiken, Early Childhood of Kaukaus University of Technology and Family Life,
N need a size 2 or 3 bedroom Apt. or home for
children and first year (Grad school-
studies) 8031
Home in exchange for child care Summer and
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Female roommates to share two bedrooms apt.
Awards. Across from stadium: 864-1044-4-26
I need a good used 35 mm camera. Call Nate
841-9034
Wanted: Paramedian important to driving beer, drinking, and having fun. ABS to between 8 and 11:45 p.m. April 27th for a ST. Lawrence Lawcenter Center Plaza $35.00 Admission
Female nominee waited for spouses 2 bdrm.
1 female to compete for $90 mma.
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Wanted donations for 3-delivery AC house $125
plus utilities. Call 841-8632 first five p.m.
Need someone to substitute 1 bedroom unit—fur-
ried Starch May 5th for summer or year
season.
Female hostess for summer to share furnished
bedroom, roommate if other person, offer pet,
$105 plus utilities. Seasonal holidays.
Respondents marinning females to share 2
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One or two nominating female representatives
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NICEXNAPR$AFT per month
3 all cal $6000 a month
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DEADLINE: MONDAY, APRIL 30, 5 PM
Resident Hall Partners, to come with a date or
song to the AUH spring form on April 28.
LIMERICK CONTEST FORM
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WED, MAY 2nd.
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Contest Judge is Chancellor Archie Dykesl
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10
Tuesday, April 24, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Burn...
From page one
You remember that you used to walk, but you just can't do it," Anderson said.
He said that he was in constant pain after the nerves in his skin regenerated.
"It hurt so bad ... especially when they changed the bandages, because they would stick to your skin. Normally they gave shots to the pain, but sometimes they didn't." he said.
ANDERSON SAID that after he left the burn unit he stay inside his apartment for a year. He bathed and oiled his skin three times and exercised constantly to increase his probility.
"My skin would draw and I'd have to tear it loose, I made a game out of the pain, seeing how much I could take before I was able to see that it was better than being cut on." he said.
He said that when he wasn't bathing, he wore a Jobst body suit, a tight elastic suit that prevents scar tissue from forming, 23 hours a day for nine months.
He said he did not go outside his apartment because his skin tore and bruised.
"I couldn't fall or bump up against it, and my coordination was off from lying on my back for so long," he said. "My blood circulation always I stood up to m
"I BURNED my hands really badly, and I had to get used to touching things again, like steel, metal and flesh. At first my hands were insensitive that it hurt to touch anything."
Anderson said he had little sensation on the back of his hands, but that he had some feeling.
Anderson said that during his recovery he kept himself motivated.
"I've always been a leader. I've always been the best in what I did. I did and I like to do it."
"I decided that I was going to do what everyone told me. The encouragement came on my own. I didn't want my parents to see me crippled."
Mani said a patient's state of mind was crucial to his complete recovery.
"OUR FAILURES we can analyze and see that it is mostly the patient's fault. A man will refuse to exercise or wear the Jobst body suit and be scarced and crippled. Yet he will tell you it's everyone else's fault but his own."
He also said that patients go through different states when they arrive at the burn hospital.
"First they ask, 'Why me?' then, What am I going to do?" They may feel guilty if someone dies in the accident and they survive. Children have a feeling of punishment. They think that God is punishing them for something," he said.
Mani said that emotionally stable patients dealt with their injury, but that neurotic or psychotic people could not adjust and sometimes attempted suicide. Patients often refuse to leave the burn unit and face the outside world.
"WHEN THEY'RE out of the hospital is the hardest time for them," he said. "Here
they're used to people not staring at them.
When they get out, people do stare."
Anderson said people stared at him when he finally went outside his apartment.
"I was very self-conscious. My physique was totally gone. I had no muscle tone or
Anderson said he depended heavily upon his girlfriend and his roommate while he recovered. His roommate kept him from feeling sorry for himself, he said.
Although his roommate helped him do things such as change his dresses, cut his meat and get into and out of the bathtub. He did he not feel as if he had hardened him.
"I DID NOT want to be a burden, so I did all that I could do by myself. I left home at 17, and it hurt me to have others do stuff for me."
Anderson said the accident had created a strong bond between his girlfriend and him,
He said he visited patients in the burn unit whenever Mani asked him.
Anderson shows the patients his skin grafts and tells them how first, second- and third-grade patients use it.
Most patients are worried about their appearance, and said, and are amazed at his appearance of disfigurement.
Anderson said, however, that he did not want any recognition from the burn staff for his actions.
"I FEEL LIKE I'm helping someone like someone helped me. I can never repay them for saving my life, so whatever I can do for them, I will," he said.
Anderson, who draws disability insurance, said he was trying to get a job.
"I have to be really cautious because I can tear my skin or bruise it so easily. I can get too hot but because I can only sweat in certain places. I also have to bathe constantly and use ointments to keep my skin soft or it'll dry out, crack and it," he said.
Anderson said he thought he had completely adjusted to the accident and its consequences.
He said his skin always felt tight and frequently itched. He compared the itching to the feeling that most people get when they roll around in the grass in the summer.
He said that before the accident he was interested only in clothes, women, money and parties, but now those things were not important.
"I BELIEVE. IN mind power and in dreams. I had dreams as a kid that I'd never have to work in the future, and that I could live the lifestyle I chose. I also had dreams that I'd be hurt in an accident but that I'd still be attractive to women, and I am."
"I've changed. Girl looks at me like I'm a down-to-earth individual. I know where I'm coming from. I know where I've been," he said, because they know what I've been through.
Anderson said that in some ways, the accident had benefited him.
"I was living a fast life before. I believe that I tasted death, and I can relate a whole lot to the Bible from what I experienced. I was 'm part of a strong, positive power.'
KU insurance is 'luxury model'
By PATRICIA RICE
Staff Renorter
KU students pay more for student health insurance than students at some other universities, but according to Kyle Ward, the insurance agent, it's because they want more.
"insurance is like a car," Ward said recently. "You can buy it either the economy or the war."
The yearly premium for KU students is $215.40. At Iowa State University students pay an annual premium of $49; at Kansas State University, students pay $123.60.
And, he said, students at the University of Kansas have chosen the luxury model of insurance provided by Blue Cross and Blue Shield.
But each of those plans offers different benefits and each is sponsored by a difference.
THE MAJOR MEDICAL benefit in K-
State's policy has a $15,000 limit on claims
The insurance policies offered at K-State and ISU limit the amount that can be paid in certain areas. The plan at KU has unlimited coverage.
with any single period of sickness. The same coverage at ISU has a $10,000 limit
"In the past, there have been students at KU that have had $100,000 claims," Ward said. "The K-State plan wouldn't measure up to that."
K-State's insurance is carried by Mutual of Omaha. ISU's insurance is carried by Massachusetts Indemnity and Life Insurance Co. St. Louis, Mo.
Blue Cross and Blue Shield, which underwrites KU's insurance, also provides optional insurance plans for students at all Kansas, Kansas, and Fort Smith State University.
ABOUT 17 PERCENT OF the KU student body carries the optional Blue Cross and Blue Shield policy. In the 1977-78 school year, there were 3,499 single student policies, 159 student and spouse policies and 103 family policies.
KU's plan is a better buy because it offers benefits that other plans do not offer. Ward said. The KU plan pays for any prescription drug a student needs.
However, that benefit adds to the premium cost.
Nineteen percent of the premium of the KU plan goes toward the prescription drug benefit. It adds $3.37 a month to the single student premium; $6.96 a month to the student and spouse premium; and $1.91 a month to the family plan.
Ward said KU students wanted that benefit.
"TWO YEARS AGO, the Student Senate took a poll to see whether the students wanted the prescription benefit removed from the student against having it removed," he said.
The benefits offered in each university plan are selected by a health advisory committee.
According to Jeff Knox, chairman of KU's Student Health Service Advisory Council, he holds hearsings at least once a semester and terminates benefits students want in the plan. The board then submits the desired plan to different companies with an acceptance rate which but to accept.
"In the last six years, Blue Cross has been the only company to return a bid for two of its contracts."
This year, the board sent specifications to 15 insurance companies and agents, including Mutual of Omaha and Massachusetts Indemnity, he said.
"THEERE HAVE been no complaints about the policy, so we haven’t had to worry."
Nies Davis, students' attorney at K-State, said the Student Health Advisory team at K-State chose limited specifications to meet those specifications met by student needs.
"We feel our limit will cover anything that occurs," Davis said. "Of course we have exclusions and limitations on honors; we feel it meets our students' needs."
Though KU students have used their medical benefits at an above-average rate in the past, Ward said, use during the past two years has not been good.
He said that when benefits are not used, the company can adjust rates.
"We analyze the policy and see if a group is utilizing the benefits. Then the rates may be adjusted up or down," he said.
Realtors see industrial land needs
Staff Reporter
A shortage of land zoneed for industrial
By DAVID EDDS
A shortage or land zoned for industrial development is holding back Lawrence's economic growth, according to several local realtors.
Sam Shipstead of Holmes, Peck and Brown Real Estate, 802 Massachusetts St., said, "We could easily solicit firms to come to Lawrence. However, lack of industrial zoned land has limited industrial growth.
"There is a critical need in Lawrence for
land zoned for industrial use that has a railroad siding."
Glenn West, executive vice president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, agreed that there was a shortage of industrial land.
"An industry almost always wants proper zoning, a railroad站, utilities and infrastructure."
West said there were few tracts in Lawrence that met these specifications. He said buying a large tract of land for investment would make the county's economy would help the city grow economically.
JACK HARRIS, Lawrence postmaster
who has served on several Chamber committees concerned with industrial development, said that there was still land available for industries.
Harris said, "Lawrence still has quite a bit of a space that is zonesed for industry that doesn't have it."
Harris said he might be prejudiced about how much land Lawrence needed for industrial development because he owned land that is owed for industry.
"I don't think one piece of property is competitive with another, though," he said.
"When an industry wants to move into a
town they buy the land they want, no matter what the price is."
However, Harris said the city should be selective about which industries should be included.
Kelley Martin, of Martin Real Estate, 1424
K. 23rd St., and lawrence had been very selective about what kinds of industry had move into the city in the past two decades.
John McGrew of McGrew Real Estate, 1650 Kasd Drive, agreed that Lawrence should work to attract industry that is a "good citizen."
"Good citizen industry provides employment, but does not pollute," he said.
Supply checks minimize aged acid's threat
If the University of Kansas has a supply of pieric acid, a potentially explosive chemical that grows more dangerous with age, the supply is restocked frequently enough to keep it safe, Jack Rose, director of laboratory chemistry, said yesterday.
Rose said he was not certain whether KU kept a stock of the chemical, but he was not worried about its getting old if it were stocked.
"We make a continuing effort to get rid of acid chemicals, dangerous or not." Rid of acid chemicals.
The chemical, a yellow crystal, has a safe shelf life of about two years, but becomes dangerous after that. If dropped or jarred, it will explode with a force equivalent to dynamite.
Lawrence High School has no supplies of picric acid, according to Stanley Roth. Lawrence High School biology teacher. We will be the week at the high school found no picric acid.
POTENTIALLY EXPLOSIVE pieric acid has been found in nearly 30 Kansas schools, Dale Sayer, chief of the industrial safety department of Department of Human Resources, disclosed.
Some of it already has been destroyed locally, and arrangements are being made to have employees of the state Division of Emergency Preparedness of local law enforcement officers pick up the acid found in other schools and destroy it, Saylor said.
Last month, school officials in Penn-
sylvania and Kentucky discovered old
mortgage records.
**"WE CHECKED throughout the school- in the biology labs and the chemistry labs-"
"I went to the other teachers at our school and they just kind of laughed--there wasn't anything."
So far, there have been no reports of any of the acid exploding.
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Good morning Lawrence, come join us for breakfast, we're serving your piece of bacon or sausage with two eggs and a cup of milk. And your choice of a golden waffler or hush brown toast and jelly. To top it all, we serve you a glass of orange juice and a hot cup of coffee, all for only $2.25. Offer good for 4/28/7 Breakfast served 6 am to 9 pm.
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Juniors and Seniors with at least one year of physics and calculus may be eligible for a year of post-graduate training in nuclear engineering and over $550 per month for up to 12 months prior to graduating through the Navy's Nuclear Power Officer Candidate Program. Students interested contact Ed Gunderson, in Lawrence, at (813) 841-4376, collect or write.
Navy Officer Programs
610 Florida Street
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
ID card proposals discussed by AURH
Students who live in residence halls will have to wait a little longer to find out whether they will be carrying two ID cards next year, Chris Cline. former houseman, and last night at a meeting of the association of University Residence Halls.
Jay Smith, AURH president, wrote a letter to Bob Candolin, administrative officer for housing, asking for negotiations concerning posed identification systems to continue.
In the letter, Smith said separate IDs were a "seminarial unnecessary expense."
But Smith said a separate ID kept the U ID from being tied up at a hall desk. The ID was also used to monitor the door.
He said the KU ID would be freed for other uses, such as checking out library books.
THE IDENTIFICATION system also would help prevent non-hall residents from eating free meals and from parking in hall lots.
Because adequate parking has been a problem for hall residents, answers to a survey, which was mailed to residents of a nearby high school, could help alleviate the problem. Cline said.
One hall representative asked if the $75 allocated for long distance phone calls was based on KANS-A-N line or direct dial prices.
IN OTHER BUSINESS, a budget of $17 165 was approved for next year.
The KANS-A-N line is a leased, private long distance line which charges a cheaper rate than the city line.
Cline said the information in the survey pertained to car size and that hall lots would be restriped providing specific areas for large and compact cars.
Mark Myers, AURH programming chairman, said the $75 was based on directial rates and that it was the cheaper system for AURH purposes.
Housing services would incur most of the cost, she said.
She also said this would allow room for about 15 to 20 percent more cars.
Beauden a "strong increase in security" she said she did know how the system would be designed.
King to speak tonight
King, the father of the civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., is active in the work of the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Social Change.
King, also known as "Daddy King," is the head of a family that has matrical rights.
and has campaigned for other social reforms.
The Rev. Martin Luther King Sr. will speak at p.m. tion in the Kansas Union Ballroom about his life experiences, his experience of the Civil Rights movement and his involvement with Baptist churches.
The University Lecture is open to the public. It is being sponsored by the office of
Lawrence police said today that they had recovered several items of clothing that apparently were worn by a man who robbed the Sizzlin Sizzlin Steak House, 2620 Iowa Avenue, Friday.
Clothes of thief recovered
The police said a T-shirt and a blue jean jacket were found near 27th Street and Ridge Court and a brown stocking cap and a black jacket were found near 28th and Iowa streets.
The police described the robber as a male in his late 20s, weighing about 235 pounds, about 6 feet 2 inches tall, with brown hair and a mustache.
The police said the items found at the two locations were similar to those worn by a man who threatened the clerk at the store. The police later fled with an undisclosed amount of cash.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TOMORROW: The French acting troupe COMEDIE FRANCAISE will present a lecture-demonstration of scenes from Moliere at 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. at Central University in Spencer Museum of Art. THE WEDNESDAY FORUM will meet at 11:45 a.m. at the Women's Row in the Business Affairs series, the second lecture in the Business Affairs series. WOMEN IN BUSINESS SERIES, sponsored by the KU Women's Center, will feature Jan Epperson speaking on careers in investment banking at 3:30 p.m. in room 112 C. Summerfield Hall. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 in Par轧 B and C in room 113 C. GUNG FU CLUB's weekly meetings will take place in Room H during the RECITAL KEVIN W. Crudder, cellist, will be at 8 in the Swarthout Burial Hall in Murphy Hill.
His request concerns only fares and does not ask for the deregulation of safety or insurance standards for cabs, Thompson said last night.
TODAY: THE EMPLOYEE RECOGNITION PROGRAM will begin at 1:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. A COMMISSION ASSISTING TERMINATION SEMINAR on numerical
geometry will begin at 2:30 p.m.
TONIGHT: THE WOMEN'S COALITION meets at 7 in Parlor A of the Union. The KU chapter of the AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS will meet at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. MARTIN LUTHER KING SRI, will give a University Lecture titled "My Life Experience" at 8 in the Union Ballroom.
Following a request from Ward Thompson, president of the Yellow Cab Company of Lawrence Inc. and Union Cab Co., the company will discuss lifting control of the cab fares.
Commission to consider deregulation of taxi fares
Deregulation of city tax fares will be conferred by the Lawrence Commission on Taxation.
The request for deregulation came after the city deferred action on Thompson's
second rate increase request in six months, Thompson said.
The increase requests were prompted by rising fuel and maintenance costs, he said.
"I've got to raise my rates to stay in business," Thompson said. "If they don't deregulate, I don't know what I'm going to do."
The commission also will consider revising the city's sign ordinance at the meeting, which will be at 7 p.m. in the First Floor of the City Hall at Ninth and Massachusetts streets.
ALL CAMPUS T.G.I.F.
April 27th, 2:30-5:00 Friday
Broken Arrow Park (29th & Louisiana)
1 draw 50°
or
5 draws $2.00
Presented by Alpha Gamma Delta & Sigma Nu
Sponsored by: The Brewery, Coors, Jim Clark Motors, Hoagies Hero, Lawrence Commonwealth Theatres, Vista, Francis Sporting Goods
Life . . . Pass it on
All proceeds go to THE KINDEY FOUNDATION
KUstrives for full access for handicapped
By DAVID SIMPSON
Staff Reporter
The student slowly moves his wheelchair into an elevator in the Kansas Union on his way to a meeting
He is alone in the elevator, and as he reaches for the sixth floor button, he finds that it is beyond his
The elevator automatically goes down to the ground floor and then back up to the fourth floor, before ascending again.
The student in the wheelchair asks the new rider to push the sixth floor button for him so he can finally get on.
This incident, as described by a KU student, is typical of problems faced by the handcapped.
The University of Kansas has been working since 1973 with groups such as the Architecturally Handicapped Committee to prevent such incidents and to make the campus more accessible to students with physical disabilities, according to Allen Weichert, director of Facilities Planning.
"WESCOE HALL was probably the first building in KU which worked with the architect to make sure the
design of the building meet the needs of the handicapped." Weichert said.
Wiechert said that prior to 1973, when Wiesco was built, few buildings on the campus were accessible to students with physical disabilities. He said KU had spent about $450,000 on curb cuts, grade level entrances to buildings, modified restrooms and new or improved buildings in buildings to make the campus more accessible.
Weichert, however, said KU now faced projects of greater expense, and said he had sent in a request for funds to improve the campus. The Kansas Legislature is scheduled to vote today on the Kansas Board of Regents budget, which includes funding for KU.
Weichert said that if funds were approved, the Lawrence campus will get $500.00 and the KU campus will get $296.00.
KU had requested $1.9 million for the Lawrence campus and $311,000 for the Med Center from the University.
"If funds for remodeling projects for Marvin and Lindley halls are also approved," Williams said, "the money could be used to remodel Snow Hall, the only remaining highly used building that is not ac-
ROGER WILLIAMS, a former member of the Architectureally Handicapped Committee, said
although much had been done since 1973, there were more projects that KU needed to undertake.
Williams said the funds could be used to make a main entrance accessible and other improvements on the building.
Dick Royse, a member of the Kansas Department of Vocational Rehabilitation Services Advisory Board, and a KU student, agreed that although the KU campus was one of the most accessible in state, the science department in Snow Hall was still a problem.
"BIOLOGY CLASSES" have a lab and students with mobile disabilities can't take the lab unless special arrangements are made," Roysa said. "The lab areas prevent students from going into the science."
"The entrance and other improvements would open up life science courses to students who are currently being screened out because of accessibility problems."
Tom Bissingham, president of the Students Concerned With Disabilities, who uses a wheelchair, said that he would like to see buildings on campus more accessible but that remodeling costs were often prohibitive.
"The group realizes the financial problems the administration has in obtaining funds for remodeling," he said. "I'd just as soon have a marginally accessible campus and an administration to make a tough move toward improvements than a totally accessible campus and an administration with a negative attitude."
Students who use wheelchairs can enter the outbuilding only through a service entrance in the rear of the building.
BISSING SAID the campus was moderately accessible to all but severely disabled students. He said Strong Hall was a good example of a building that easily palatable, but that took geneingety to get around in.
"The elevator is next to impossible for someone with a wheelchair unless he has strong force of his own."
are not many instances when I use my legs, but the elevator at Strone is one of them.
William Montgomery, acting director of Vocational Rehabilitation Services in Topeka, said KU had a high quality of education and the most courses available to students with disabilities. However, he said, Emporia State University was still ahead of KU in accessibility.
GERAL ISTILAREA, a blind graduate student from Hawaii, said KU gave a lot of individual help to students.
"KU has made a lot of improvements in the last three to five years to make it more accessible," Montgomery said. "However, Emporia has been able to maintain this for a longer period of time, and KU is still No. 2 in that category."
Toni McCalla, Topека sophomore, said that although buildings such as Marvin Hall and others
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"Other schools that have established services often find it hard to change their programs for the needs of certain students," she said. "KU, because programs are complex, we here, can revise things quickly to meet the needs of certain students."
See ACCESS back nage
ku
KANSAN
Wednesday, April 25, 1979
Vol. 89. No.138
The University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas
Commission votes taxi fare increase See story page 10
PETER MILLER
"Daddu" Kina
Eunice Stallworth, Hartselie, Ala., junior gets a big hug from the Rev. Martin Luther
King Sr. King, known as "Daddy" King, spoke to more than 800 people last night in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
However, Malone said he was not upset with the court's verdict on the charge.
Hunter found guilty on 4 counts of rape
Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said "The court was not convinced beyond a reasonable doubt as to why Hunter killed him, so why he was found not guilty on the charge."
A 16-year-old Lawrence youth was found guilty of four counts of rape by Judge James Paddock of the Douglas County District Court yesterday afternoon.
The 13 charges of which Hunter was found guilty occurred enud of the University of Virginia.
Hunter's intent was at issue in the charge of which he was found not guilty. Paddock said the issue was whether Hunter's intent was to find a place to sleep or to commit a rape when he allegedly entered a house in the district block of Rhode Island Street on Dec. 22, 1978.
Paddock also found the youth, Charles Hunter, guilty of two attempted rapes and seven counts of aggravated burglary. Hunter was found not guilty on one of 14 counts he faced: that of aggravated burglary.
Staff Reporter
Paddock said any motions for a new trial would be heard at 1:30 p.m., May 9.
WESLEY NORWOOD. Hunter's court-
appointed attorney, and insist night that he would present a motion for a new trial next
The court will not sentence Hunter until appeals, if any, are heard.
"Some of the matters in the trial and some
the proba in Padlock's decision will be
decided."
The penalty for rape in Kansas is five years to life imprisonment; for aggravated burglary, one to 20 years imprisonment; for assault, rape, one to five years imprisonment.
Malone said he expected a pre-sentence evaluation of Hunter at one of the state's colleges.
Malone said the court would decide at the sentencing whether Hunter's sentences would be served concurrently or consecutively. He said the prosecution would ask the court that sentences involving different victims be served consecutively.
Bv DAVID EDDS
King's message touches audience
There was no plea-bargaining in the case, Malone said.
Staff Renorter
By pleading not guilty to the charges,
he preserved his right to appeal,
Maloney.
By ELLEN IWAMOTO
"his attorney approached us several times, but nothing was resolved as to please him."
Hunter is being held in the Douglas County jail pending the results of Norwood's trial.
"I have a message for you," he said. "Are you listening? Because if you don't listen, I can't get through to you. I've wasted time if you don't listen."
The voice of the Rev: Martin Luther King Sr. rang out over his audience, and as he leaned over the podium and spoke, his feet reached out and touched each person there.
King, 80, retired in August after preaching or 44 years at the Ebenezer Baptist Church Atlanta.
They listened.
"You look mighty good out there to me."
THE AUDIENCE rose and gave "Daddy"
King a standing ovation when he entered the room—a gray-haird, dignified man, who sat across the stage, and waved to the audience.
His message was one about misplaced emphasis. People are too concerned with another person's skin color or his material status and lack of advocate of civil rights and social reform.
More than 800 people crowded into the Kansas Union Ballroom last night to hear King speak about his life experiences. King arrived among tight security. Secret Service agents and KU police were stationed around the ballroom.
King also said a racist society still existed in America.
"My life has been a life filled with dif-
ferences," he said. "But Lord knew I
want to be."
he said. "I'm going to give you a message I think you ought to have. This comes from experience, because a young preacher would be afraid to do this."
"I wish I had a Ph.D. I would wear it with dignity," he said, "but don't you go around boasting about it, because you don't know much."
"I don't look that old. I look younger than I really am because I don't hate anybody. I just love them."
"Emphasis has been placed in the wrong place," he said. "The churches, schools, universities and maybe even America may be responsible for it.
In Mississippi, the Ku Klux Klan is starting up again, he said, but it is not going to get far. People will rise up and start tearing the Klan's clothes off, King said.
"Don't get hung up on it. Thank God for what you have."
"One of the things we get hung up on is color. Just because your skin is white, it may be an accident, or just because your skin is black, it may also be an accident.
King said he was thankful for being able to live.
ANOTHER MISPLACED emphasis occurs in education. Kina said.
He told a story about an educated man who could not fix his car that had broken down in the road. A man with no formal education came along and fixed it. King
King praised the young people of the country. They have nerve, he said and they protest. The older people are acared of jail, but the young ones are not, he said.
"There aren't going to be any slaves anymore," he said. "We've come from a long way back, but we got a long way to go. No man has it made. Go help others, even knowing that they hate you. Don't make yourself little."
"IM EVERY man's brother, no matter what the color of his skin, the texture of his hair, or the amount of money he has in the bank."
It doesn't matter how they treat me, I won't hate them."
King's son, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., was assassinated April 4, 1968, and his youngest son, the Rev. A.D. Williams King, drowned in his swimming pool a year later. King's wife, the late Mrs. Alberta King, was shot and killed July 1974.
"IVE THOUGH myself out of death," King said. "My loved ones aren't dead, they still live. Martin Luther still lives, can't you hear him still preaching, still takin'呢?"
King said he did not fear that someone would kill him.
"This old body is going to die, but the real me inside is going to move on out," he said.
"I've got a job to do, but I'm too old to be doing what I'm doing," he said. "My strong voice, that's not me, that's God, and I thank him for it."
King's speech, part of the University Lecture series, was preceded by a performance of the Gospel Choir of the Ninth Street Missionary Baptist Church, B74 Ohio ST. Several dignitaries were in the audience, including King's grandson, Marcia Masterson, members of the Kansas Legislature and members of the Kansas Board of Regents.
Senate to consider fee increase
The transportation system is funded by $3.50 of the student privilege fee, which pays for student privileges such as the health services. This semester's privilege fee was $100.10.
Keith Mab, Student Senate treasurer, told the Student Senate executive committee last night that the bus system had not been budgeted enough money and that he was not sure from where the money would come to pay its bills.
The Student Senate will discuss raising the student privilege fee by $2.50 to compensate for a $20,000 debt in the case of an insolvency.
Maib said there were several options for the source or the extra money.
"We're counting on backlog, hidden figures and money coming in," he said. "We are considering floating a load on the Endowment Apples."
Co., which provides the buses for the service, would allow an extension of the payments.
He also said that Duane Ogle, owner of the Lawrence Bus
She also said she had discussed the possibility of a graduate student secession from the Senate with Mark Mikkelsen, executive coordinator of the Graduate Student Council.
MARGARET BERLIN, student body president, said after the meeting that the approval of the Senate, the administration and the Kansas Board of Regents would be needed to increase the privilege fee.
Mikkelsen proposed that Berlin set up a committee to study the feasibility of secession during the summer. Berlin said that she was considering this move and that she would rather form a committee than have a direct secession.
The Senate Student Services Committee also met last night to discuss budget recommendations for organizations.
The committee's recommendations and the groups' original requests were respectively.
MECCHA, 809 from $1.55, Douglas County Rape Victim
Support Services, 1,210 from $1.24, Kansas Defender Prison
THE COMMITTEE decided not to recommend funding for the Defender Project because it was not sure that the project would succeed.
The Kansas Defender Project is a group of 24 law students who help inmates at Lansing and Leavenworth State Prison.
Barry Shalikny, off-campus senator, said he would try to amend the Services funding bill to include the Project at
The committee also decided to send to the Senate recommendations that the Senate accept the use of Blue Cross/Blue Shield for student health insurance at KU. It also voted to take $400 from the Senate internal unallocated account for a bicycle air compressor pump and hose at the Satellite Union.
By JOHN LOGAN Staff Reporter
It is spring at the University of Kansas. The red trees are in full bloom. The front steps of Wescow Hall are crowded with students. And the rumors that Chancellor Archie R. Dykes is leaving KU are flying again.
Spring rumors fly about Dykes' exit
Last spring, reports had Dykes leaving Lawrence for either the University of Wisconsin or Washington, D.C. Dykes was supposed to announce his departure after commencement. But August arrived and Dykes was still here.
It's the same song, second verse this year. Only now Dykes is supposed to be considering vacant presidential positions at the University of Illinois, Michigan State University and the University of Michigan.
There is some element of truth to the rumors, however.
Dykes said that he also had been contacted by Michigan State officials about the presidency of that school but that he had turned them down also.
Dykes said last week he had been invited by Illinois officials to interview with them but had no intention of going. Although Dykes had spoken to trustees of the school while on a trip to Chicago last year, the team he was not interested in the job.
Dykes said he had been asked by
But Dykes said that he had never been contacted by the University of Michigan and that he was not interested in leaving KU.
The Lansing State Journal reported Friday that Dykes was one of three candidates for the presidency of Michigan State. The article said an anonymous source had listed Dykes as the frontrunner for that job.
Michigan State University officials to apply for the position but he had told them he was not interested.
"I don't have any interest in the presidency of Michigan State University," Dykes said. "I have no idea how my name got on the list."
Dykes said that a Michigan State official had visited him in Kansas City recently and that he had been called several times about the job. But Dykes he had told them each time that he was not interested in the position.
The rumor that Dykes was being considered for the presidency of the University of Michigan apparently was started by reporters from the University of Washington, who were checking possible candidates for that school's vacant presidency.
"We knew that Dykes had been interviewed at Illinois and Michigan colleges, and we wanted the reporter on the University of Michigan student newspaper." "We consider these school peer institutions and we pretty much know what would be up for the running at one point."
Dykes said that he had never been contacted about the Michigan job and that he had no interest in it. But a spite of telephone calls from curious Michigan men and women carried all through yesterday and Dykes said he was getting tired of the speculation.
Dykes said, "I wish to state publicly that I have no interest in serving any university other than the University of Kansas.
"I am proud to be part of the University of Kansas, now and in the future, and I look forward to continuing as chancellor as long as the Regents want me to serve and as long as I'm able to contribute."
2
Wednesday, April 25,1979
University Daily Kansar
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN-
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Bazaraan assassin thwarted
TEHRAN, Iran—Revolutionary militants stopped an assassination attempt against Prime Minister Mendi Bazargan and other government leaders
The witnesses said the militiamen lifted a man who tried to throw a hand grenade at the leaders. The militiamen kicked the man to the ground as he also fired back.
Bazargan and the other leaders of the provisional government were marching in the funeral procession of murdered Mohammad Mali Gharani
A government aide denied to reporters that an assassination attempt against Bazargan had taken place. But reporters saw the disarming of the unidentified man who, they said, wore an air force uniform. The reporters also saw him and at least one other person taken into custody.
Muzorewa elected in Rhodesia
SALISBURY, Rhodesia—Bishop Abel Muzarea, a Methodist clergyman, was elected the first black minister of Rhodesia yesterday and he will be visiting London in October.
In Washington, sources said President Carter's top African policy advisers thought the election was a fraud and in New York, Andrew Young, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said he thought the results would not stop the guerrilla fighting and could lead to a civil war.
Despite Muzorewa's victory, Rhodesia's major institutions will remain in the hands of the 20-0 million member white minority in Rhodesia, a nation of 6.7 million
Whites will retain a major portion of the parliamentary membership, holding 28 seats for up to 10 years, which will allow them to block constitutional changes. They will also control the police, military, judiciary and civil service for five years.
Unwed fathers' rights affirmed
WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that it is unconstitutional for a federal judge to bind, but not an unwed father, judgment of an illegitimate child by without parental consent.
The justices, voting 54-, said part of a New York law violated the Constitution's equal protection guarantees because it created a distinction based on race.
Justice Lewis Powell said an unjustified distinction was made between the rights of unwed mothers and fathers. He said nothing barred a state from withholding a father's privilege of vetting an adoption procedure if he did not participate in rearing an illiterate child.
The New York suit was brought by two illegitimate children's father who contributed to the children's support and frequently saw them after the birth of their children.
When the children's mother tried to legally adopt the children, the father objected, saying that he and his wife wanted to adopt the children.
Dikes uield to northern flood
GRAND FORKS, N.D.—Clay dikes protecting the sister cities of Grand Forks, N.D., and East Grand Forks, Mn., began to disintegrate under heavy rain.
The north-flowing Red River has spread miles wide into both Minnesota and North Dakota. Flooding many farms and dozens of small towns.
The clay dikes were expected to save Grand Forks and East Grand Forks, but the muddy wall had started giving way in some areas, despite the efforts of planners. There was no evidence that the water had been
In Mississippi, the level of the Pearl River was slowly dropping at Columbia, where half the town's 7,900 residents had fled. The civil defense director for the area said it might be several days before many of the residents, who were forced out when the river crested 10 feet above flood stage, could return home.
Mississippi Gov. Cliff Finnch said damage from the Pearl River Flood was up to $1 million.
Weekend gas cutoff rejected
WASHINGTON - A house committee voted 36-15 yesterday against sending the full House a proposal that would close gasoline stations on weekends. The proposal was one of four major ideas President Carter had proposed for handling the fuel shortage.
The committee approved a second proposal to control non-residential heating and cooling. And they voted to send a plan for controlling advertising lights to the district manager.
The committee votes are an indication of the fate of Carter's measures. The votes also indicate that Carter's fourth proposal, a standby system of gasoline stations, will be approved.
The rationing plan will be considered Tuesday. Rationing is not designed to conserve fuel, but to spread out a severe shortage among drivers until the deadline.
Reactor shutdown set May 2
HARISHBURG, Pa.—The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission yesterday announced a special design to be brought the Three Mile Island nuclear research facility downhill by a helicopter.
Victor Stello, head of the NRC operations at Three Mile Island, said he would declare the plant to be in a long-tenured cooling condition when the water in the plant becomes too cold.
A pump now is circulating water in a process in which a steam generator is being used to draw off heat from the reactor core.
the NRC was expected to decide today whether to temporarily shut down other atomic power plants built by the same firm that constructed the Three
Wichita working to avoid riots
The commission asked Gene Denton, the city manager, to make recommendations to it within three weeks for ways to avoid similar incidents in the city.
WICHTTA—City commissioners voted unanimously yesterday to hear the results of an investigation by the city manager into the ERIat riot at Herman
Three persons testified on violence between police and people attending a rock concert during which 88 people were arrested.
Former radio reporter Jerry Sherwood told commissioners he had questions about how much consideration was given to the safety of the people in the park. (AP)
Airline liquor bill introduced
TOPEKA-The Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee agreed yesterday to introduce legislation that would permit airlines to serve liquor by plane.
The measure provides that the federal government would have exclusive jurisdiction over airways above 500 feet over the state. Under rulings issued by former Kansas Attorney General Vern Miller, airlines were prohibited by state law to take off and land in Kansas without liquor by the drink to passengers, if the flight originated or landed in Kansas.
The bill, which was introduced by State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, has been sent to the Kansas Senate for consideration.
Weather...
Skies will be cloudy today and there is a chance of scattered showers and thunderstorms, according to the National Weather Service. There is a 40 percent chance of rain. Temperatures will be in the 70s but will dip into the 40s overnight. It will be partly cloudy tomorrow and temperatures will be in the 60s.
Today is the last day to sign up for the Intramural Golf Tournament-Medal Play. The Medal Play Tournament will be played on Friday, April 27th at Alvamar Golf Course beginning at 2:00 p.m. The raindate for this tournament is Tuesday, May 1st. There is a green's fee of $7.00 for 18 holes.
Intramural Golf Tournament
REC RELEASE
For additional information call 864-3546, or stop by Rm. 208 Robinson, Recreation Service.
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Tune into the
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Football Team Seniors vs. Basketball Team in a Softball Game
Presented by Alpha Gamma Delta & Sigma Nu
Life . . . Pass It On The Kidney Foundation
Show your secretary some appreciation
An appreciation bouquet.
If your secretary has ever gotten you out of a tight jam, now is the time. And flowers
11
Don't let National Secretaries Week go by without taking firm executive action. Just stop by or call. We do the rest.
National Secretaries Week, April 24-30. Flowers and plants are for secretaries Naturally.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 25, 1979
3
E.B. Allen funds granted
The Ways and Means committees of both houses of the Kansas Legislature yesterday approved a $1.6 million allocation for the renovation and operation of the Wichita branch of the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The approval of the funds was a result of a special supplementary request made yesterday by Gov. John Carlin. The request, in effect an endorsement of the project by the governor, broke a legislative stalemate on the renovation.
Funds for the renovation had been approved by the Senate Ways and Means Committee earlier this year but had been voted down in the House Ways and Means Committee, Chancellor Archie R. Dykes last night.
Dykes said KU administrators had lobbed for the inclusion of the funds at the fund's board meeting.
the legislature. Dykes credited area legislators with helping push the measure
The allocation would give $1.3 million for the renovation of the current quarters of the medical center at E.B. Allen Hospital and would be allocated for operating the facility.
E. B. ALLEN currently is owned by Wicked County, but the county commission offered to give the hospital to RU if state financing could be obtained.
The hospital holds 30 to 35 long-term care patients and costs Sedwick County more than $500,000 a year to operate. Under last year's agreement, the county will move the patients to other care facilities this summer with any of the difficulties with the title to the land.
Dykes said the former owner of the land on which the hospital was built have threatened to sue for additional compensation from the county to provide the site for the hospital.
But Dykes said the county had agreed to pay the costs and any settlement that would be made in a contract.
Dykes said that, after the patients at E.B. Allen were moved to other care facilities, an extensive engineering and architectural building would be made before renovations begin.
David Waxman, executive vice chancellor of the Med Center, said he was pleased with the progress made in his work.
"I'm very happy about that," Waxman said. "I think it's a fine indication of support by the Legislature for the Med Center and our branch in Wichita."
New policy may open hall spaces
The office of residential programs has introduced a new policy to try to make room for persons needing housing in residence centers. The executive, director of the office, said yesterday.
Under the new policy, students who have contracted for space in a residence hall must have their payment upfront and pay the full cost of the cellularation of their contract, McEhlene said.
And under a policy implemented last year, prospective residents also must check
If students do not keep up with their payments and fail to show up on the first day of classes without previously notifying the residential programs office, their contracts
can be automatically canceled, McElhenie said
The policies have been implemented to weed out "no shows," he said, an to open up spaces for those still needing rooms in residence halls.
"It is a positive way of ensuring that those intention on staying in residence halls will be there, and if not, they will be identified," he said.
Opening up spaces for students needing housing in residence halls could be necessary next fall because about 90 percent of students already are under contract for pavework.
Renewal contracts were sent to
residents Jan. 31 and Feb. 1. About one-third
of the residents are still uninsured.
He said he expected about 600 students to cancel their contracts but still did not know whether temporary housing would be necessary next fall.
I came to work at 7 a.m. that morning (Peb.) and there was a line of students waiting for me.
Last fall about 245 students had to live in temporary spaces until rooms became available. Ruth Mikkelson, associate director of the office, said.
She said these students had permanent living quarters by Thanksgiving.
Residence hall muli-purpose rooms, which are usually used for activities such as ironing and sewing, were used a temporary housing space. McEllenne said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editor's staff. Signed columns represent the views of other editors.
Alternative fuel needed
The combination of a long, cold winter, a large university with a large energy demand and an interruptible contract with the company supplying natural gas used to run the university can mean only one thing—problems.
The University was able to fall back on its own reserve of fuel oil, but at most it could not get fuel.
That happened to the University of Kansas this winter when KU's natural gas was cut off by the Kansas Public Service Gas Company for a record 38
THE SITUATION this winter was bad, and the coming winter only promises more of the same if bad weather, inadequate natural gas supplies and high fuel costs hit again, as they may.
Combating the problem will take the combined efforts of many groups concerned with the University—the Kansas Board of Regents, the Kansas Legislature, and additional conservation efforts by the KU administration and students.
The Regents last week took a step in that direction when they approved the financing of a study of a wood-burning boiler for the University that could ease the natural gas shortage woes that plagued KU in recent years.
give its approval. Another study is already being conducted at a cost of about $125,000 into the feasibility of a proposed solid-waste-fueled steam plant for KU.
THE COST of the study is expected to be about $30,000 and would be conducted by an Overland Park consulting firm. But before the study can be conducted, the Legislature must
William Smith, designer of the boiler and a KU professor of electrical engineering, said the initial cost of the plant would be low—about $2 million —compared with the price of the solid-waste plant, which he estimated would cost from $10 to $15 million.
Also, a U.S. Department of Energy study conducted last summer in Hanford, Wash., found that pellets from wood waste could be burned successfully in coal-fired boilers without costly modifications to the boilers.
WHEREVER A wood-burning boiler or a solid-waste plant is built at the University depends on the outcome of the two studies. However, the Legislature first must approve funds for the study of the wood-burning plant. And both the Legislature and the Regents must continue to explore alternative energy supplies, especially at a time when there is an urge for both to cut back on capital improvement funds for state universities because of projected enrollment declines.
The Regents have done their part in expanding the possibilities of alternative energy sources. It is now time for the Legislature to follow the Regents' lead by approving the study of the wood-burning plant.
Sunflower Girls aren't 'super-hyped hucksters'
In the first place, we did not “induce” or “lure” recruits to sign with KU. Our job was to introduce the prospective players to the coaches, show them around the campus and answer any questions they had concerning the program or KU itself. Who would do this if there weren’t an organization such as ours?
During official visits, the recruits were assigned to "hosts" from the football team, and the hosts were able to take them to a fraternity if they so desired.
In addition to the hours we spent with the recruits, we had several other jobs that most people don't know about. We acted as hostesses at the Skywriters convention, the run-in between the players in the press box during basketball games serving refreshments to the press and worked at the KU Relays registering coaches, passing out refurbishings, running time sheets and various other odd jobs. We've done all of this on a purely voluntary basis. We enjoyed being what considered an important part of the KU athletic program.
As a member of the 1978-79 Sunflower Girls squad, I was not only pleased but very proud to represent the University of Kansas and its outstanding athletic program, and it considered me demeaning to be called huddled together out hawking the KU athletic program.
Being a Sunflower Girl is a lot of work, but most of all, a lot of fun. None of the girls on the squail or anyone involved with us consult what we did to be 'repellent' in any way.
Has anyone ever said anything good about the KU Sunflower Girls?
Secondly, being girls there were places, such as the locker room, where we couldn't take them personally, but after the games we took them down to the door of the locker room and they were able to go in by themselves. There they met with the coaches assigned to them and had a chance to talk with the players.
I think it's sad that people don't think our job was "beneficial" for KU, and I wish more people knew how much we really did accomplish.
Kerri Church Chanute junior
To the editor:
The Senate early last September approved in a 67 to 32 vote a constitutional amendment that would give the District of Columbia two senators and one or two representatives, depending on the outcome of the 1980 census.
In addition, the amendment would allow the district to propose and ratify constitutional amendments and to participate in federal elections. It provides rights that all other American citizens enjoy.
Already passed by the House, the bill now goes to the state legislatures for final ratification. It is an amendment that is long overdue. The state's governor should be caused without the elightiest delay.
To the editor:
On April 2 I was a member of a panel answering questions concerning nuclear power and the accident at Three Mile Island. In the Kansas's coverage of this meeting on April 3 you did not mention my views and I have subsequently been repeatedly embarrassed by identification with the anti-nuclear their pro-nuclear views. My views generally coincided with the vocal anti-nuclear members of the audience.
letters
First, the amendment merits passage on constitutional grounds and second, the district's recent past in itself more than the district's current merits for better representation.
Several of the points that I made at the meeting that summarize my views are:
Nuke view askew in Kansan coverage
(3) A nuclear accident has the potential for catastrophic effects, magnitudes greater than accidents from power plants or nuclear energy facilities, and analogize the risks of driving your car to the potential effects of nuclear radiation as did radiation biopsies is inconceivable to me.
(1) It is not known what biological effects (cancer, mutation) low levels of radiation can cause. (2) The science had extensive discussion of this problem. To imply that there is no danger from low level radiation should be strongly emphasized, and thinking on the part of pro-nuclear advocates.
(2) Previous estimates of the chances of a nuclear accident were once in a million years or one such astronomically small chance. The likelihood that an island accident these risks are wrong and it is mandatory, in my opinion, that the whole risk be evaluated and phased out as soon as feasible.
KANSAN letters
Understandably to me, many individuals at the meeting were upset and distraught about the nuclear accident at Three Mile Island. The unresponsive and ivory towerish attitudes of the two radiation biophysicians only served to exacerbate these real con-
THE CONSTITUTION guarantees to every citizen the right to be represented in Congress. For most Americans, this right to represent has come to be an accepted of democracy.
Philip W. Hendrick
Director of Genetics Program
University of Kansas
Philip W. Hendrick
But for the more than 700,000 District of Columbia residents, mostly black, the high school civics book chapter on democracy and representative government has in reality become nothing more than a lesson in political theory.
But it has consistently failed to acknowledge the existence of human right's violations in its own backyard. Passage of a constitutional amendment would eliminate one of those violations.
D.C. deserves equal representation
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
District residents have been provided with one representative to Congress, but he is a non-voting member whose impact is minimal. Thus the voices of a group of people continue to go unheard and unanswered.
Unlike many of the other amendments that have come before Congress and the nation, the question this one raises is clear and straightforward. Does every citizen have the right to equal and fair representation, or the right to participate in national decisions?
(USPS 500-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and may be delivered through Thursday or June and week of Easter Saturday and Sunday and holidays. Attendance for $15 per person, $30 per family, $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 a year county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester paid through the activity year.
send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Fint Hall. The
Send of Kannas, Lawrence, KS 60454
would destroy the federal district. The creators of the Constitution thought it was necessary for Congress to maintain exertion of its judicial power in order to benefit from any state's influence.
During the last few years, the United States has been rather vocal and critical of so-called human rights violations in the Soviet Union and elsewhere.
Some have opposed the D.C. amendment on the grounds that there were better ways of granting the district full voting rights. Of course, suggest that the district be made a state.
Others have suggested that the residential portion of the district be returned to Maryland, for purposes of representation. The district shall be sent to the citizens of the district and Maryland.
THE DISTRICT has not been a part of Maryland for more than 200 years. Since then, it has developed its own community and interests, which would be better represented by the district's own congressman. More importantly, the people in the district have to agree to any retrospection, and so far they have indicated no willingness to do so.
On voting, the district's performance in presidential elections has been well below the national average. Yet, political scientists have found a correlation between voter participation in elections and the sense of political efficacy an individual feels.
According to Gerald Pomper, a noted political scientist at Rutgers University, the more an individual thinks that his vote will be the greater the likelihood that he will vote.
WITH THIS FACT in mind, increased representation for the district may result in a greater feeling of political efficacy—than improving the low voter participation totals.
Ron Altman
Bret Miller
Editorial Editor John Whitesides
Editor Barry Massey
Business Manager Karen Wenderott
The region may have originally been designed to be a place for governmental bureaus, but nonetheless it has become an important area of taxation, thus merting better representation.
Managing Editor Direk Steimel
THERE WERE only 14,000 residents—most of whom were connected with the federal government and who returned to their home states for part of the year where they were represented. The large number of present district residents was not foreseen.
The answer, it seems, also is clear and straightforward.
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
Retail Sales Manager
National Advertising Manager
part of the Founding Fathers. When the federal district was established as the nation's capital, there was no need to provide representation.
The denial of full voting rights to district residents was clearly an oversight on the
This is not a suitable suggestion because it
Second, the district's recent history seems to indicate that the district does indeed merit increased representation on several grounds.
They argue, that by giving the district more representation in Congress, the district's residents would be gaining the power to vote on state, i.e. the powers to tax and to bear arms.
The statistics indicate that the region has performed and is capable of performing the
Opponents also argue that the district's poor voting record in previous elections indicates a lack of interest and concern in their positions. If they should be given more representation* they should be given more representation*
General Manager Rick Musser
Vernon Smith
OPONENTS OF THE BILL, realizing that on a constitutional basis the district's residents do indeed deserve more government action, pick the first argument and assault the second.
Only seven states have fewer residents than the district's 700,000 but 11 pay less federal income tax and 10 had fewer men killed in Vietnam. In sum, the record speaks for itself. The district has more than paid its dues and deserves better representation.
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Support of death veto is irrational
To the editor:
The recent editorial and the correspond-ing, replies of approval the Kansan has printed supporting Gov. John Carlin's veto of the proposed legislation of the death penalty are irrational outcries of emotion and unreality.
But when faced with the cruel murders or a loved one through stabbing, shooting or killing, is there an uncrust form of murder? The probability of capital punishment is justifiable.
Life is a very precious commodity in our society as it has been throughout our history. Our prisons are full of hardened criminals who have little modiity and forfeited their right to human life. Should they be granted this right to life simply because it is the most "civilized" thing to do? Have they themselves surpassed the participation forever by their very actions?
It is time that Kansas citizens and their elected representatives, as civilized people, take on the responsibility and reinstate the death penalty so that it is the only responsible route to follow.
As for Carlin, he has missed a large portion of Kansans, his electorate, because he listened to his "conscience" rather than his "culture." He has not heard the people, by the people and for the people" less we forget. He, as an elected representative, should be well aware of that principle.
Every year, Americans pay millions of dollars in prison expenses. In Kansas state prisons, it costs approximately $9,000 each year to support each inmate—room, board, clothing and recreation, not to mention education and wages for guards and other officials.
It is easy to speak of human rights and moral responsibilities when one is detached
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN letters
This money is wasted on violent criminals that have a 10 percent chance at, best, of death or a fatal system. Also, at this time, it is possible to reach the sentence and be able to get out, "rehabilitated," on parole. I don't believe it is fair to criminals who have forged their right to life.
Rehabilitate me a victim and I'll agree to rehabilitate his murderer.
Ronda Richardsot
Lawrence junior
Kansan lacks logic in Carlin editorial
To the editor:
I'm at a total loss in trying to find the logic in the staff's editorial "Veto Shows Leadership." It is hard to believe that anyone, especially the staff of a paper as well-written as the Kansan, could turn a broken campaign promise, an out-and-out lie to be exact, into a sacrifice for moral beliefs.
To say that Carlin is a great governor for, and I quote, "acting on personal beliefs rather than on political considerations," is totally absurd. If he had stood up for his views, it would have been about losing votes, he never would have lied to the voters of Kansas in the first place.
The question in this issue is not whether you believe in the death penalty, but whether it is right for a politician to make the same decision in a public that he has no intention of keeping.
Randy Engle
Leavenworth freshman
Randy Engle
AAUP should shun inquiry of Crawford
To the editor:
I do not believe the KU Chapter of the American Association of University Professors should be involved in an investigation. I am confident Crawford at the university psychology department.
A complete investigation of the very same charges has been completed and is in the possession of Vice Chancellor Horowitz. In addition, the National Institutes of Health
are conducting an investigation of the very same charges.
I feel it is shocking that Professor Crawford is being "tried" over and over again for the same charges. An additional investigation by AAUP would be redundant and an unnecessary strain on University resources.
David. M. Quadagno
David M. Quadagni
Professor of phviology and cell biology
Apathetic absentees in humanities chided To the editor
I come to chastise and apologize. To chastise many of my colleagues in the humanities—particularly the foreign language departments and the natural sciences for not attending the College Assembly April 10.
I would have been interested in the reaction of "hard" scientists to the proposed B.S. in cognitive psychology, whether they should propose a proposal or not, and would certainly have welcomed the support of all my colleagues in the language departments, not just the students.
I apologize to those colleagues and students who did attend and supported me—and to those who were unable to attend (it is true that there are classes at 4 p.m. Tuesdays and other legitimate reasons for missing attendance) and for arranging actively in opposition to the proposed major which does not include a requirement for a foreign language.
In fact, it is to the students in the program that my apology should be extended, for I think it is the responsibility of a faculty member to argue constantly and cogently for the inclusion in all undergraduate programs of those elements that he or she sees as essential to a liberal arts education and to particular majors. Ultimately, when
we fail, it is the students who suffer and we present with my arguments, a majority of those present with my arguments.
It is noteworthy that at the same meeting, the report of the committee on Policy and Education Goals on its survey of departments regarding a council form of government for the assembly indicated both a lack of stable support and small but strong opposition.
Many of those who argue for maintaining the Assembly in order to prevent disenfranchisement were not at the assembly meeting. Many who argued that "people will come when there are substantive issues" were also not there. I submit that many proposals for new majors are substantive issues for a faculty of liberal arts and sciences.
One note of optimism: Seasoned observers pointed out that the vote (59 to 56 by the way; should I have requested a recount?) was split, not faculty versus students, but faculty and students against faculty. The argument led to the strongest arguments made against the proposal at the previous meeting were made by a student.
David A. Dinneen
Professor of linguistics and French and Italian
Letters Policy
The University Daily Kansas 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 affiliated with the university, the letter should include the writer's affiliation and home town or faculty or staff position.
The Kansas reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 25, 1979
B
SenEx to consider speech rules
A packet of rules governing freedom of speech on campus will be considered today by the University Senate executive committee.
Current rules and behavior codes for political speeches, protests, posters and handball distribution are included in the packet.
The rules and codes were made by various organizations, including the Kansas Board
The collection of regulations initially was put together for the University Events Committee, which met last week to review policies about literature distribution.
of Regents, the Student Senate, the
Education Halls and the All-Schoolship Hall Camp.
Ann Ewesole, eventa committee chairman, said the committee found the existing building to be a viable project.
Don Marquis, a SentEx member, associate professor of philosophy, said, "Some of us thought the policy infringed on freedom of expression.
had passed last October that banned literature distribution in campus buildings.
DEL SHANKEL, executive vice chancellor, had suspended the policy in January
"We passed a resolution that said it should be rescinded—and it was rescinded."
AAUP condemns videotaping of protests
The KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors passed a resolution condemning the University's policy of videotaping campus demonstrations at it's yearly spring business meeting last night.
The resolution, which was approved by a margin of one vote, states that the AAPU deplores the use of videotape cameras by the UN, authorises for non-instrumental purposes.
Immediately after the first resolution was accepted, another was passed that expressed AAUP's opposition to "any attempt by individuals or groups to disrupt the free speech of demonstrators as being fundamentally hostile to the purpose of the University."
The organization also approved a recommendation by its equal opportunity committee.
report titled "Recommendations for reducing racial and sexual stereotyping at the University of Kansas." The recommendation urged the AAUP executive committee to seek release of the report by Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, and James O'Neil, assistant professor of counseling. O'Neil is chairman of the committee that compiled the report. About 25 people attended the meeting.
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until the Events Committee could review it.
SenEx also will consider policy guidelines for graduate student employment, which were formed by a special administration task force.
Marquis said the packet of information would give SenEx an overall picture of current policies concerning freedom of expression.
Jobs must be well advertised, according to the guidelines, and should follow a certain format.
When hiring graduate students, a "systematic, yet nondiscriminatory, system for ranking and selection" should be used, the policy says.
The guidelines call for records of student employment to include sex, race and salary. Training and evaluation procedures, employment conditions and grievance procedures also are addressed in the guidelines.
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Presents
THE KU SYMPHONIC BAND in its SPRING CONCERT Robert E. Foster. Conductor
Eugene Rosseau, Saxophone Soloist
3:30 p.m. Sunday, April 29 University Theatre/Murphy Hall
One of the world's greatest saxophonists performing with KU's premiere concert band
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Hold on to the past...
KU
The end of your KU days is less than 3 weeks away and the friendships made here will last forever through the Alumni Association. Be a part of KU's future—attend the Open House and become acquainted.
Alumni Assoc. Open House Senior Party Wed. April 25th
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7pm-11pm Senior Party
Level 6 Terrace, Union
Seniors: attend the Alumni Open House before going to the Senior Party and
receive your '79 beer cup. Prizes and free KU souvenirs for everyone.
6
Wednesday, April 25, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Money conflict checks dating bliss
This is the second in a series of three stories about dating relationships of college students. Today's story deals with how money can affect a relationship.
Tomorrow: Learning to cope with breaking up.
By LESLIE GUILD Staff Reporter
Whoever said money talks was right.
Although students say they try to keep money from becoming a central factor in their dating relationships, it can lead to conflicts.
Money, and what might be owed in return,
plays an important role in dating. Amy
has a job as a financial planner.
And when money becomes an issue,
students say, that signifies a desire for a
savings account.
"I it's a real contradiction in society," she said. "I'ts thought that a man must spend in style and a women must accept. Yet, society also saves a woman must stay pure."
Mortensen said she didn't let sex enter her relationships because of money spent.
"I FEEL BAD when a man pays a lot for our entertainment and that's why I offer to pay too," she said. "But money doesn't matter." The interns relationships at a commitment team.
Kathleen Draskovic, Lawrence senior,
said she had had dates in which sex had
been implied as an expected repayment for
money spent.
Draskowich said that, when she dated, and her date would usually split expenses.
"I knew he fell I爱ed him something" she said. but "I won't the case, Sex, with his wife."
“It’s a practical thing,” she said. “If I’m working and I have money, then I pay. If he has money he pays. That keeps things from getting too heavy.”
Mark Lanik, Lincoln, Neb, sophomore, said he spent money on dates without implying that his date owed something in return.
"It's sometimes thought about in passing, I guess. But sex is not really expected. Personally, if I spend a lot of money and have a wild time, I don't really have a lot of respect for the girl. I guess you could say you get what you pay for."
But Emily Coleman, co-author of "Brief Encounters," an analysis of heterosexual dating patterns, said the answer to the money issue was to discuss it.
"TALK ABOUT IT," she said. "The couple must talk about money. Once they get past the introduction stage and are committed to seeing each other again, they must discuss money and agree about who will pay and when."
Coleman said the decision of who would pay should be different for each couple.
"No set rules can apply to every couple," Coleman said. "Each couple is unique in that they have to come to an agreement of what will work for them."
Al Green, psychiatrist with the Meninger Foundation in Topeka, said the meetings of
a couple after the initial stage were hampered in problems with money. He said money repayments would not be a problem.
"UNFORTUNATELY, money and the problems it brings have been with us for thousands of years," Green said. "But the problem is really difficult because it realizes really livable everyone, is helping."
Green said women as well as men now could pay on a date.
"Men used to want to be Sir Galahad and pay endlessly," he said. "But now women
"Money is seen as a way to impress and be in control. Yet really, once an individual is comfortable with himself or herself, money doesn't have to be that way."
Students see money as an important factor, Wright said, but try to limit its impact.
"Most students' real concern is that they don't let money become a big deal until a stronger commitment than dating exists between themselves and their partners," he said. "That is why on a casual date no set rules are really applied to who pays. It is especially important for adults to develop and more formal dates are held, that a decision about money is made."
ALTHOUGH SOME students agree that the man should pay, others say that the man should pay.
Lanki said he always paid the way on his dates.
"I will accept if she offers," he said. "But if I ask her out I feel I should pay for the room."
The type of date sometimes is a deciding factor in determining who should pay.
The manager of Trader Vics Restaurant in Crown Center said that with most young adults now living in the city,
"About 99.9 percent of the time, the man pays," he said. "The only time a woman pays is usually when it is a business meal. And then she'll tell the waiter ahead of time."
KU student projects win awards at weekend engineering exposition
awards were presented to the top three KU student engineering exhibitions at the 59th annual School of Engineering expo last Friday and Saturday.
Students in the American Society of Mechanical Engineers won first place with their projects. The projects included an automated feeding device and a typing system. A student was given to students in the American Society of Petroleum Engineers and third
place went to students in the American Institute of Chemical Engineers.
David Kraft, dean of the School of Engineering, said yesterday the projects had been judged for student originality, and for the understanding, the completeness, and the presentation of the project. Ten groups had exhibitions at the expo.
The awards were presented to the groups at a banquet Saturday night.
Deborah Jordan, Raytown, Mo., senior and chemical engineering major, received a $100 prize as the outstanding student for the work she did on the chemical engineering projects. The money was given by alumni of the School of Engineering.
Also, students voted Harry Talley, professor of electrical engineering, as the outstanding faculty member. He received a Ph.D. in Engineering alumni, according to Kraft.
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RISA SHAW, ticket seller at the SUA box office in the Kansas City area, said women who wear blue shirts are targeted.
However, on a casual date, women often will pay.
the check comes, so that no embarassment will occur."
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men paying for dates expected something in return.
"Most women in my classes feel that if a man expects sexual favors in return for the money spent, it his problem." Wright said. "If a woman does not expect larger amounts of money spent. But for the most part, students feel this is only expected if a strong commitment by both partners in the relationship exists."
"Women will pay here a lot more often than at a regular theater," she said. "I've worked at commercial theaters too, and I love showing movies. Women pay for the tickets more often."
Although she said she thought the college atmosphere had a lot to do with it, she said she didn't.
"Some women just wait for the guy to
shaw. 'Show' said. "But quite a lot of the tau
pole."
Coleman said the only answer to the relationship between money and sex was to
Wright also said a problem could arise if
"Some women would like to have men as just friends, and vice versa," she said. "So the role of sex has to be understood, and that is best accomplished through discussion and agreeing in just exactly what the relationship will be."
92 KARAUMA presents Strings of Spring introducing Prairie Fire in front of the Kansas Union at 11:00 a.m. today bluegrass today April 25
Seniors present $981 check for gift of Union fireplace
Reeves Wiedman, senior class president, presented a $811 check for a fireplace for the Satellite Union, this week. Reeves was the director of the Kansas Union, yesterday. Also accepting the check were Chancellor Rieke A. Dykes and William M. Bafoul president of the board of the University of Kansas Memorial Corporation.
University officials, faculty and members of the senior class committees were among 30 people who attended the presentation in the Watkins Room of the
Burge said the senior class could not have given a more practical gift for the Satellite Union.
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University Daily Kansan
1
Wednesday, April 25, 1979
7
Man continues his right-wing fight
By DAVID EDDS Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
NORBORNE, Mo. — The storefront across from the Bank of Norborne hardly looks like the headquarters of a political ideology, but it is.
Norborne, Mo., is about 60 miles east of Kansas City.
It is filled with stuffed birds, coyotes and squirrels that display the skills of a Norborne taxidermist. Farther in the store, books with titles such as "Destruction by Demolition," "Incendiaries and Sabotage" and "Counter-Guerilla Operations," can be seen on the bookshelves along the walls of the office.
The storefront in Norborne, 60 miles east of Kansas City, is the home of Salon Publishing Co., a mail-order distributor of conservative literature. Salon is one of several business operated by Robert E. DePugh, chemist, businessman and former leader of the Minutenen, an underground, para-military, conservative political group.
INSIDE THE building at 111 S. Pine St., DePugh's wife sits at a desk reading the "Firey Cross," a newsletter of the United Klans of America. One of DePugh's daughters stuffs envelopes with right-wing supporters sent to supporters throughout the country.
DePugh, 56, a heavy-set man, is more soft-spoken than might be expected of one who is convinced the United States no longer has a representative government.
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"I think everybody expects me to be a little bit more radical than an am, I hew."
The Minutemen were most active in the mid-1960s. After DePugh's 1969 conviction for possession of machine guns, hand grenades and firearms, the Minutemen bond, the Minutemen went underground.
DEPUGH SAID that he was no longer an active leader in the Minuteur, but that he liked to think of himself as the philosophical leader of the Minuteur organization.
"The Minutenet," he said, "operate as a completely clandestine organization today. The Minutenet no longer hold open training maneuvers or emphasize guerrilla warfare
"Minutesmen now receive training in psychological warfare, infiltration and attack."
DePugh said that he did not know how many members the organization had today, but that membership was distributed evenly throughout the United States.
"If there is an area where we are weak, would be the South. That's because the Klan
DePugh's activities have changed considerably since he was an active leader of the Minutemen, training members for guerrilla warfare.
HE NOW works with several conservative organizations, one of which, the Committee of Ten Million, works to unify the conservative movement.
DePugh said, "One reason the conservative movement has been a failure is that there are so many conservative organizations that they are always fighting among themselves for members and donations."
DePugh said he had been convicted on a false charge. He did not own the gun he was convicted of possessing, he said, and he had murdered the军官 of Alcohol, Tobacco and F'reamurs arent
"Jim, you know those guns didn't belong to me." DePugh said he had told the agent.
DePugh said the agent had replied, "Yeah, I know. But you’ve owned a lot of machine guns. What difference does it make?"
DePugh said the agent was right.
HE SAID, "I've owned a lot of machine guns. I've manufactured them and I've transported them. The姆 that I was transported of possessing weren't mine, tough."
DePugh said people in Norbeer do not scorn him or his family because of his political views. His six children, ages 15 to 34, agree with his views, he said.
BORNESTHROUGH
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There will be a meeting
Host or Hostesses for the Kansas University Athletic Department on Monday, April 30, 1979 at 6:00 p.m. in Room No. 135 of Parrott Athletic Center.
Membership requirements state that you must be a regularly enrolled K.U. student in good standing during the 1979-80 academic year.
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DePugh said that although he was no longer involved in preparing to fight a guerrilla war in case of foreign invasion, he remained an ally of the United States by the Soviet Union was likely.
"Every battle is won or lost before the first shot is fired. I am afraid that our conquest by the Soviet Union has already been predetermined," he said.
Good morning Lawrence, come join us for breakfast, we're serving your choice of bacon or sausage with two bottles of cream cheese. And your choice of a golden waffle or hamburger toast and teapot. To top it all, we serve you a glass of orange juice and a hot cup of coffee, all for only $2.25. Offer good time 4/28/29 Breakfast served 6 am to midnight.
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Uniforms—sizing and purchasing available, Life Uniform Co. will be on campus for you to get your uniform & supplies.
NURSING STUDENTS accepted to K.U. Med . . .
April 26,1979 (Thursday) 7-9 p.m.
ABC Parlours (K.U. Union)
It's important that you come—everyone invited, partially funded by Student Senate
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8
Wednesday, April 25,1979
University Daily Kansan
Ford folds in series
By RICK GOSSELIN UPI Sports Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo.--Kings' guard Phil Ford was continually praised by NBA coaches on the regular season.
That's when the North Carolina rookie was devastating the opposition with his slicing penetration and meticulous passing. That was when Ford was guiding the Kings to their first divisional title in 27 years.
But it's playtime time now and Ford has not played up to the high standard he set for himself during the regular season. He has bordered on dismal, in fact, as the Suns 2-1 win over the Suns 2-1 in the best-of-seven Western Conference semifinal series.
FORD HAS HIT only 6-of-35 shots in the series thus far because of a touch of defensive genius by Phoenix coach John MacLead.
The two teams square off in Game 4 here tonight.
The Sans are leaving Ford wide open in the 15-20 foot range, all but begging him to shoot.
MacLeod has obviously taken note of
Ford's 46 percent season conversion rate from the field. Also, Ford chalked up 21 assists against the Suns in a February game and MacLoue wanted that type of penetration of his lane stopped.
SUPPLIES When Ford looks into the Phoenix lane now, it looks like the San Bernadino Freeway at rush hour.
Tonight at 6:30 pm in Room 100 Smith Hall
"It kind of shocks you when you down court and you're that wide open," Ford said. "I've never been played that way in my life. And when the shots don't go down, you start to think about it more."
"It ites very difficult to dig yourself out of a hole. Phil hasnt had a good game yet. And were not the same team when Phil is off his game."
Student Senate Meeting
Agenda Will Include:
Kings coach Cotton Fitzsimons added, "When you start out 3-d17 like Phil did in the first game, it's like a golfer who begins bogey, bogey.
II. Petition concerning KU campus transportation privilege fee and handicap busing.
I. Late budget request for fiscal year 1980.
III. Resolution concerning Student Health Insurance.
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has run 52 consecutive marathons. In addition to the grueling physical stress Helgerson is undergoing (he said he needed to rest four days after a race), he also is spending all his personal savings to travel by plane, train and car.
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Saturday he ran in the Kansas Relays marathon, finishing 47th with a 2:56:33 clocking. Last Monday he ran in the Boston Marathon. This Saturday he'll be running in Fayetteville, Ark., in the Hop Eye Marathon. Soon he'll be running in a marathon in Denver.
By JOHN P. THARP
Associate Sports Editor
Jay Helgeson is the marathon man.
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Meet directors often waive his entry fee, he said, and other runners try to arrange for a place for him to stay while he travels around the country.
"My goal is to try to break three hours each week," he said, and I want to do $2 consecutive marathons—one a week tor a year."
H骆塞尔's goal is to run in $2 consecutive marathons, a year's supply. If the 24-year-old Wichita native plans go as exertion, he will finish his marathon first (marathon finish number 23 in Houston).
Marathon man running for 52
PHYSICS & PHYSICAL SCIENCE
KU
HIS GOAL isn't accomplished this year because he didn't start until Jan. 28 in
He's trying to get a sponsor, and hopes for a job with an athletic shoe company after he financed his own.
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826
KU
But until then it will be Jay Helgerson's feet and pocketbook running around the country. He may run out of money, but he can't quit running until he gets his goal, he said.
San Francisco, his home when he's not on the road. He said that new his home was built in 1985.
Since he started, he has run in 13 marathons, including one 50-mile run and another 50-kilometer run besides the marathon. He also won a marathon run. That leaves him to 19 to go.
"It's like 52 dominoes," he said, "Thirteen down and 39 more to fall doesn't look as good."
he dropped out of school. He said his business and history studies would have to be reworked.
The first marathon in which the 5-6, 135-pound runner competed was almost four years ago, in June 1975 while he was still in the Marine Corps. After that one, he said, he swore that he'd never run in one again—and he didn't until January 1977.
"THERE'S NOTHING special to me about the marathon," he said. "It's tough to me. But since I don't think it ever been possible, I can make the rules up and set a precedent."
Then last fall, when he was a student cramming for finals at the University of San Francisco, he decided he wanted to run in 52 marathons. He wanted so much to do that
"I don't expect anything lucrative," he said. "I don't think of it as a monetary payoff. It might be a T-shirt payoff. I will have 22 shirts for my kids and grandkids."
"If I had waited to start this," he said, "someone else would have done it. I feel like I'm an athlete 'Joe Backyard Jock' who was never any good in anything. When I finish I'll have a little scrapbook and go back to college.
"Everybody wants to be a little unique and everybody has to carve on his niche in
He explained that there may be times such as Saturday when he had only four days off between marathons. Other times he would have eight days off.
UNIQUE HE'LL BE, because no one else
The Drake Relays is an invitational meet that will feature some of the best amateur athletes.
Building momentum for the Big Eight meet next weekend and qualifying more individuals for nationals will be the two main objectives for the women's track team when it competes this Friday and Saturday in the Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa.
KU women's track coach Teri Anderson
Momentum, qualifiers goals at Drake Relays
said the meet easily would be the team's
season's season because of the high caliber of
catchers.
"A lot of older athletes will be competing in the meet," Anderson said. "We're not going to be psyched out, because we can handle competing against good athletes. We have a very good team and we'll be in every race."
THE MEET'S EMPHASIS will be on
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图示中展示了女性穿着内衣的轮廓,并标注了相关文字信息。
middle and long distance events. The only scheduled sprout event is the sprint mangle event.
"This is the best possible meet to tune-up for the Big Eight," she said. "Also, I think we have a good chance to qualify people for the nationals in the 1,500, 5,000, mile and medley relays and the high and long jumps."
Shawn Corwin has high jumped 5-10 this season indoors, but has not been able to clear the 5-8 outdoor national qualifying fence. Corwin jumped him she also will be entered in the long jump.
KAREN FITZ and Maureen Fulholm are the Jayhaws' representatives in the 5,000 Last Sunday, Fitz won the Avon 10,000 meter run in Kansas City, Mo., and Finnbol finished fourth. By winning the race, Fitz qualified for the Women's National 30-kilometer run which will be in Cincinnati on May 6.
Competing in the two-mile relay will be Finnhold, Bid Hertzgert, Diena Horne and Vici Simpson. Last week at the Kansas Relays, the relay team qualified for competition with a time of 9:10.44, which is three seconds under the national qualifying time.
Hoping to qualify in the mile relay for KU will be Homa, Simpson, Hertzorg and Loriowey. Lowyeary also will be entered in the national event she already has qualified in for nationalists.
Jay
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday. Anril 25.1979
SUNDAY
Staff Photo by BILL FRAKES
Softball pitcher Shelly Sinclair winds up in her five-hitter as KU beat Wichita State twice yesterday, 2-1 and 6-1. Sinclair has a 16-6 record and KU is 25-10.
KU overpowers hapless Ichabods
Bv TONY FITTS
Snorts Writer
Every KU starter scored at least one run as Kamas swaggered a double header yesterday after a scoreless second.
Jayhawk hitters overpowered Icambot pitches, slashing 7 hits in the two games. Brian Gray hit two doubles, a triple and a home run. The third, three singles and another homer to the total.
Kansas started slowly in both games, allowing Washburn to take early leads. But
Washburn led 2-1 after the top of the third inning of the first game, but John Spoettwood, Steve Jeltz, Wright and Gray scored in the bottom of the fourth to take the lead. KU added three runs in the game to garnish the victory.
**1HAT WAS a preview of the fireworks.** In the second game, Washburn scored two runs in the first inning, but KU batted around the pitch to score three 13 runs and seal on the victory a little earlier.
Danny Graham led off the KU third. He had broken a seven-game hitting drought in
the sixth inning of the first game, and he kept up the good work in the third inning of the second game, with another two singles and two runs acced.
"I've been hitting the ball fairly well," Graham said after the game, "but it just wasn't been finding the holes. Those guys had to get hit." Bight, but it still feels good to get hits.
KU coach Floyd Temple agreed with the calf of the competition and was pleased to have his name included.
"IF YOU can't get a base hit off that pitching, you got problems." Temple said, "but any time you get a base hit, it perks up your confidence. As long as Danny does the job behind the plate, he'll be all right."
Graham's three for five performance raised his average 30 points, to 169.
Graham wasn't the only Jayhawk to get more than one hit during that inning. Spottedwolf and Jeltz also had two singles, which were not good for the addicted another single. Gray got two RBI
with his triple, and Bob Halastik knocked in a run with a double. Four Ichabod pitchers added to KU's offensive output in that inning by giving up a total of five walks and throwing three wild pitches. There was also three charged to Ichabod catcher Chris Meike.
AFTER THE third, tilt put in his second-line players where he could but KU still scored four more runs before the rout. They were the merciful application of the ten-run rule.
Temple even put in an untried Jayhawk pitcher. Sophomore walk-on Kurt Kaiten finished the game, retiring three in the fifth inning. He was able to kick些 kicks got the victory, raising his record to 2-0.
Washburn used five pitchers, including Mike Worthington, who had started the game at second base. The starter, Mike Ireland, got the loss.
"I don't really like to beat a team like that," Temple said. "They're not that bad of a ball club—it just happened that the bats got hot.
"But it is nice to be able to relax a little bit. Something like this is good for us—we can get a little momentum going into a tough series."
KU opens a four-game series with Iowa State on Friday. ISU is tied with Kansas for third place in the eastern division of the Big Eight with a 6-4 conference record.
The Friday double-header begins at 1:30 at Quigley Field. The 'Hawks and the Cyclones will play another Saturday at 1.
"It looks like we're going to have to win four this weekend to be able to finish in the top two of the division and make it into the tournament." "Temple said.
Washburn 002 008 0 2 1
Kansas 104 012 0 8 12
Gonzalez, Sequoia and Mikkel, Marki 104 012 0 8 12
Graham, II-B-Gray 2, Spottedwool, Marlin, KMH
(WRight) 2, Watt-W-4 (Walt) 2, Edwards-3 (Ta)
Washburn ... 200 10 3 2 4
Kansas ... 8011 14 17 3 4
Ireland, Maker 3, Mowder 3, Keley 3, Worthington 4,
Mickey, Hicks 5, Kailen and 5, Deckman 4, 1B-Mickey,
HIl-Gray, KHi-Gray, KHI-Berwer, Washburn, Gray
2B-Mickey, B2-Bermer, 2B-Mickey, W-Hickz
(20) L-Ireland (13)
Beanballs scary, but rally produces sweep
By GENE MYERS Sports Writer
Wichita State's basks gained on balls proved more costly than KU's beanballs and the result was a double-header victory by the women's softball team yesterday.
After Shelly Sinclair threw a five-hitter at the Shockers for a 2-1 victory in the opener, KU sprang to a two-run rally in the bottom of the seven inning to win the night cap-6-5.
KU needed the rally because three errors, two on beanball thrown by third baseman Jill Larson, led to four Wichita State runs in the second.
With the bases loaded and one, an Jus,
Krobe hit a smash down the third base line.
Larson dove to her right, gloved it, and
scrambled to her feet to go for the runner,
Melody Haise, at the plate. But her throw hit
back on the head of the head and two runs
were scored.
WITH KROHE on second and Laura Roberts on third, Janet Welling grounded to pitcher Margaret Math. Instead of running at Robered, who was caught between third and home. Mah quickly tossed the ball to Larson. Robered headed home and Larson in the back in the back of the head and two runs were handed, handling Wichita State a 4-1 advantage.
"That ball just had a magnet in it," Larson said afterwards. "That has to be the one."
"The second time I tried to throw it softer to get it over the runner's head, but I didn't do it. Nothing like this has ever happened before."
Larson, however, redeemed herself in the bottom of the seventh.
KU TEDT THE score 44 on Williams' run-score single in the bottom of the sixth, but the Shockers went ahead again in the seventh with three singles.
Kelly Phipps, who reached bases all four times and scored three runs, and Laura Frost, who scored twice, drew walks to off the home half of the seventh. After a change of pitchers and a wild pitch to move up the runners, Larson dropped a bloop double in front of the leftfielder to score Phipps for the tying run.
The next batter, Julie Woodman, stroked a simple out of the second baseman's hand.
"I like them down the middle," Woodman said. "That's what I was looking for and was trying to find."
"When you see pitching like that, and there's not much on it, you should be able to jump on it. Sometimes though, it can affect your timing more than heat."
LARSON WAS RELIEVED to see her
divine nofly drop in.
Sinclair raised her record to 16-6 with the
victory in the opener, and Mah raised hers to 34. Bath mittens wend the distance.
"They're not that strong a team to have two close games with," Stancliff said "But their defense is so good."
"I really didn't think mine was going to be better," Larson said. "When you do this it makes sense."
Even though the victories raised KU's record to 25-10, head coach Bob Stancill was unimpressed by his team's performance against Wichita.
10-34. Both pitchers went the distance.
Wichita State's record is now 14-18
Sandell and Campbell, Sucker and Brazzone. BK
Boller, Klaren, KU-W. Sucker (16-4). L-Sandell.
Wyoming State 001 000 01 3 5
Kansas 001 000 12 4 2
Wichita State
943 1000 9 1 2 1
867 1000 9 1 2 1
Sandrae Saldén (B) and Camphail Mahl and Borquinoa.
Sandrae Saldén (B) and Camphail Mahl and Borquinoa.
Women golfers finish 6th
Oklahoma State University grabbed both individual and team honors yesterday on its way to a decisive victory in the women's Big Eight Championship golf tournament in Stillwater, Okla. KU finished sixth in the seven-team field.
OSU shot a 949 total for 54 holes over the Stillwater Country Club course and defeated second-place OU by 18 shots. KU'S 1,044 hole total was better than only Kansas State's 1,158. Colorado did not send a team to the tourney.
Despite KU's poor showing, senior Nancy Hoins was tied for individual honors going into the final nine holes before losing the title by three shots. Hoins shot a 253 total and finished third behind OSU's top players, Oprin at 17 and Brenda Landcock at 234.
Caty Eyre was the second highest finisher for the Jawhawks, but finished back at 268. Cindy Johnson had a 277 and Lisa Sara and Sally White matched 270 scores.
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Wilson leads KC to 5-0 victory
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Frank White homered on Lerrain LaGran's first pitch and Wille Wilson stole three bases, scored twice and made a spectacular defensive play in the fourth inning to lead the Kansas City wildcard victory over the Chicago White No. last night.
Dennis Leonard evened his record to 2-2 with a seven-hitter, earning his 12th career win. He led the league in games played.
off the third inning, stole second and then scored following consecutive groundouts by White and Hal McRae. Wilson led off the fifth with a scramble score, both stone second and third and gave the Royals a 3-4 lead when he scored on a passed ball by catcher Tyler Austin of Kansas City finishman Ivory hits, including seven for extra bases and six stolen bases.
The Royals play the White Sox again at 7:35 tonight.
25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA
“NEW MILE STORE”
KIEF'S
DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
Top Jazz
mfg. list
7.08
KIEF'S
$4.59
Available on Chrysalis - records and tapes
THE
DOWNTOWN RECORD
STORE
BETTER
DAYS
724 Mass.
MIRACLE
Mike Cochran
Top Rock
Available on Chryselis
JAN FRONTER
"Cooler Down, Flower Child, Still A Child, Again"
www.janfronter.com
Avidigable on Chrysalis - records and tapes
$4.59
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THE
DOWNTOWN RECORD
STORE
BETTER
DAYS
724 Mass.
PARRITI (MRS)
Blondie
d tops
10
Wednesday, April 25, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Celebrate Spring at the 1st Annual AURH Spring Formal April 28,1979 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Celebrate Spring at the
1st Annual AURH Spring Formal
April 28, 1979
9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom & Balcony
Featuring: The Original Artists
Refreshments will be provided. Admission is free
for all hall residents and their guests. Tickets are
available today through 4/28 at your hall desk.
Semi-formal or formal dress is appropriate.
L
A LEVIS
April
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 21 24 25 26 27 28
29 30
Nina: "our parents are proud of you"
The house is bright and sunny.
Bradley's room looks like a study.
Hannah's room looks like a library.
The shiny glass doors look like the shape
Couldn't just say the name?
The fireplace looks like an old brick.
The fire pit looks like a small wood stove.
Try On A Coordinating Top.
LEVI'S WOMENSWEAR
LEVI'S HOMEMADE
QUALITY NEVER GOES OUT OF STYLE
LITWINS
831 Mass.
SUPER STRAIGHTS
where clothes are for fun
Open late Thurs & Fri
'til 9 pm
Open Sunday 1-5
$2.50/$1.50 OFF
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 5/2 ___.
One coupon per customer per visit.
Good on regular or super style pizza
Pizza Hut
6103 Poughkeepsie Rd.
Chestnut Hill, NY 10012
(844) 555-7900
P
LUDK 4/25
1606 W. 23rd St. 843-351b
Iowa Street 842-1667
932 Massachusetts 843-7044
Party rooms available
City approves taxi fare raise
The commission voted 3-2 to deregulate Lawrence's tax companies for a six-month probation period. Commissioners Marci and Donald Binsa opposed the motion.
By TAMMI HARBERT
the membership of an ad hoc committee to advise a consultant recently hired by the city to devise a strategy to improve older and lower-income neighborhoods.
Taxi fares in Lawrence will rise at least 10 cents a trip as a result of action taken by the Police.
Staff Reporter
Central cab fares are an initial 70 cents and 10 cents for each one-seventh of a mile. There is also a charge for taxation.
increase to 80 cents initially and 10 cents for one eightieth of a mile thereafter, Ward Thompson, owner of Union Cab Cob, and Yellow Cab Cob of Lawrence Inc., said.
The commission's decision will allow Thompson to raise cab fares in about 30 days, M. Dean Burkhead, an attorney who represented Thompson at the meeting, said.
RATES HAVE not been increased since
february 1978, although the price of
clothing has risen.
Bus 62 is a free bus service that is paid for by the state Council on Aging, which is designed to meet the transportation needs of the elderly and handicapped.
The deregulation was approved with the understanding that Thompson would
Burkhead said that the company was in direct competition with the cab companies, and that Bus 62 had taken 30 percent of the companies' market.
The committee will have 14 members, including representatives from city government, the neighborhood associations, the local banks and the University of Kansas.
withdraw his objection to adding buses to the city's Bus 62 program.
are now being taken for:
APPLICATIONS
A LETTER to the commission,
BINSON said the fare should be determined by a
federal agency.
The UNIVERSITY GOVERNANCE BOARD
The commission also heard a recommendation by Robert Weems and John Gage, KU law students from the Douglas County Legal Aid Society, who proposed a change in the city's parking ordinance so that violators of parking rules would be given evidence before their cars were towed. Weems and several clients whose vehicles had been towed. The proposed change was referred to the city staff for further study.
The following positions are available:
Union Memorial Corp.Board Union Events Union Judiciary Recreation Advisory Board Transportation Board
Applications are available in the Student Senate offices and are due by:
FRIDAY, APRIL 27
"If the operator sets his rates too high, then either i) other cab companies would enter the Lawrence market, or 2) patrons mean's means of transportation," the letter said.
paid for by Student Senate
In other business, the commission set up
MASS STREET DELI
41 MASSACHUSETTS
presents
THE MOVABLE FEAST
The party tray featuring thin Sliced Roast Beef,
Ham, Corned Beef, Pastaini, Big Eye Swine,
Jalapena, and Chedder. Orange, Dark Rye and
Sesame Seed Hard Rolls, Potato salad or Cole Slaw.
Combination Relish and Condiment Tray, and
disposable plate, fork, and napkin. 3.50 person
the catering season is upon us and look at the savings when you order you own movable feast!
FROM THE DELI . . .
**RODEO:** Interview wanted with persons (ex)
involved in involvement with nodes (ex)
Call Matty at 811 542-3678
The 3 years of hard work ended in 3 weeks. Mann
Alumni Audie. Open House. April 25.
4-27
KANSAN WANT ADS
Belonging for special people. Konjun's Hotel,
Chandler, New York City, is located on the
Guggenheim, May 1-Learth Day. Members of the
Hotel are invited to stay at the hotel. No reservation
required.
Office 842-7337
Gay Leishman referrals referral new honeys
KU RV Info. 664-358-080 or Headquarter 844-
2355
Sliced Smoked Beef and Ham served in a mild BBQ sauce. Sesame Seed Buns, Potato Salad or Cole Swall, Baked Buns, Relish Tray and disposable plate, fork and napkin.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
From the Smokehouse . . .
Minimum order ten/No delivery available/24 hr. reservation required
Anti-Draft Rally, Tuesday, May 1st, 11:30 a.m.
11:35 p.m. Light Hall Lawn.
5-1
ENTERTAINMENT
Hold on to the past. See how at the Alumni Association Open House April 25th. 4-25
J. HOOD, BOOKSELLER will be happy to announce the opening of a premier bookstore in the city where books will be added temporarily as space allows. Come down and browse for a real bargain! 1401 Massachusetts 814-6444.
LOST
Guy Scoyer of Kansas will host a spring plenary session of the 2015 GAO. Call gs.akr.of the front of the 1920 at 6:30am CST. Call gs.kr.of the front of the 1920 at 6:30am CST.
Ladies Alice Silko write审阅, Fri. Apr. 13,
2016 at 4:30 p.m. at the Lamar Center parking lot and Martin Hall Reward. M4-60-4825.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC. Abortion up to 16 weeks, pregnancy tests, Birth Control Consultation. For appointment call: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (8:32-14:21, 400-190) Overland Park, KS.
Man's Times watch with brown band. Mispelized
phone. Please call 8421 after 21:30. Sunrise:
Please call 8421 after 21:30. Sunrise:
Please call 8421 after 21:30. Sunrise:
HARBOUR SPECIALS * 6-10 Mon, Tues, and Wed, 2-4 p.m.
HARBOUR SPECIALS * 5-7 Sat, Sun, and Mo, 11 a.m.
MADIS MURDER NIGHT * 12 p.m. $10 picture.
STATE OF COLOR * 12 p.m. $10 picture.
Lust 4.3 (S) Ladies' gold ring with small purple
ring, unisex. REWARD! Please call:
833-6971
THEISIS BINDING COPYING--The House of
'78ers' Quick Copy Center is headquarters for
themsi binding and copying in Lawrece. Let us
know at 834 MHz or phones 842-3610. Thank you.
MISCELLANEOUS
PERSONAL
RICKS BRSE SHOP is now open 209, Raleigh.
BREXHURST BRSE SHOP is now open 306, Port
port, quick repurchases 1033 Vermont, 841-966-7500
You can buy your clothes that is La Laceure Centre. It has a huge selection of fabrics and can bring you cash for spring dresses and tun fun you can shop. April showers are here to keep the skins moist.
Patriot enthusiasts needed to win TV at May 5th competition. Register in Gisbon's Camera Store for details.
To the improviser after fanlights on Wed. our conversation ended too soon. Let's try again.
---
Happy 19th
Birthday
Margaret Anne
Cunningham
Gulf Winds, Corpus Christi,
Huntington Farms, and
Babe
Love, D.T.
The best things in life are expensive! A second
call to the hospital for a heart attack, Bell Call 612-
MWF 9-12 am. TR 2-5 pm. 4:27
Katz·N. Beaware of suspicious looking characters may play practical jokes on you. 4-25
GODD BROW BIG RED BED $24 is watches
and accessories. GOOD BROW MAGIC BED
for you Thursday night. Maggie & 4.37
$24.
Let's get drunk and dance? At the AUCH
Spring Formal on the 28th 9:00-10:00, Union 42.
SJ-Hang in there, Summer means no more spring fever. We'll make it. LJ- 4:25
SERVICES OFFERED
TONIGHT.
Senior Rooftop Party and
Alumni Assoc. Open House,
7 pm-11 pm-Kansas Union.
Come and join in the celebration.
Academic tutoring. The Lawrence Quinn School
Math, and Memorial Reading Call now: 841-656-3200.
Mail: Math and Memorial Reading Call now: 841-656-3200.
MATH TUTOR MUA, mat. patience, three years professional tutoring experience. 843-5411.
SHY with the opposite sex? We can Help For
and address that. Call *Cultural Learning Center*
or visit www.culturalearningcenter.org.
For Sale. 5 tickets to Doobie Bros. Call Dave at 841-5175 after 9 p.m.
4-27
The Chute--35c draws, 60s can & bottles
Wednesday & Thursday night 4-26
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can help you with your math or CS problems. Call us at (800) 265-1437.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with
Alicia at the House of Unique/Quick Cup. Center.
Alice is available to 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
9 a.m. to 1 a.m. on Saturday and
Masq.
REWRITING/EDITING-Your manuscript, thesis or term paper edited into an effective, grammatically correct book. Thinking with precision and smoothness. Outstanding articles and artworks also available. Availability: 842-1351
EXPERT TUTORS: MATH 000-700: PHYSICS
EXPERT TUTORS: MATH 000-700: PHYSICS
ISTRY 100-700: STATISTICS: CALL 943-803
QUALIFICATIONS: B.S. in Physics, M.A. in
7 years experience in computer program
mung.
Lawrence Open School. Excelling Summer program, Study in Library and biking. Fine arts, organic gardening, international classes in Language Arts, Math, and Reasoning. Apply by September 18th for final scale tuition. Call no. (800) 849-1820 or (800) 849-1839.
RUESCHHOFF
LOCKSMITHS
Tired of feeding yourself? Naimhall Hall is offering for the first time ever a boarding plan. You can book your place this week can be yours if you choose this plan. Stop and see or give in on a room. NAIMHALL Hall #43-142-3559
Complete Lock & Key Services
1015 W.9th 843-2182
PROFESSIONAL Tune-ups, body work paint
job at an unprofessional firm. Call Mike:
800-555-4232.
BIOHYTHM CHAIRTS BY ACUDATE. Computerized guidance, physical—emotional and intellectual support. Resumes with name, address, birthdate for only $40.00 with phone number. Leavings Branch, Shawnee Mission KS, 68088.
TYPING
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tf
Typei/Editor, IBM Pica/Eite. Quality work
with typei. Desert distortion welcome.
ICW 842-5197 M42-5197
*ROPESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4980 fc*
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 481-5980 ff
Now accepting term papers for quality typing,
Lymn, 841-266 f. 5:30, tf
Expert typing all kinds, over-48 hour life-use,
editing. editing available. Call 841-7522 evening-1.
Experienced typist-theses, dissertations, term papers, articles on elective select. Electrically 131; evening, 86-210.
Quality typing guaranteed - IBM Select. Term papers, thesis, dissertation, misc. Carole 641-728.
Experienced Toptier-term papers, thesis, msc.
Experienced Toptier-term papers, thesis,
spoken if F. 843-7654, Mr. Wright.
Missed papers: F. 920-7491.
Accurate, experienced typist—term papers, thesis,
cover letters, reports. Send resume to speedy
service. Tel. per page. 842-7644. Ddmail: acu-
rate.com
Typing on Elite Electric Typewriter by exporter
A prompt service Proofreading 5-8
843-717-4238
Reports, dissertation resumes, legal forms,
graphics, editing, magazine selectric. Call 718-249-5300.
MATERIALS
Typing, editing, experienced Electric typewriter, magazine or jersey ribbon. I love them. Ammo, .28-.35-.40-.45-.50-.60-.70-.80-.90-.100-.110-.120-.130-.140-.150-.160-.170-.180-.190-.200-.210-.220-.230-.240-.250-.260-.270-.280-.290-.300-.310-.320-.330-.340-.350-.360-.370-.380-.390-.400-.410-.420-.430-.440-.450-.460-.470-.480-.490-.500-.510-.520-.530-.540-.550-.560-.570-.580-.590-.600-.610-.620-.630-.640-.650-.660-.670-.680-.690-.700-.710-.720-.730-.740-.750-.760-.770-.780-.790-.800-.810-.820-.830-.840-.850-.860-.870-.880-.890-.900-.910-.920-.930-.940-.950-.960-.970-.980-.990-
I do darned quick typing. 20 pp. & under.
night service Call, Bust 843-643-688, 5 p.m. 1-5 p.
I do damned quick typing. Under 20 pages,
and on a laptop. I read Ruth, 84-6438 after 5 p.m. and weekend.
I read Jane, 9-12 p.m.
Experienced Typist-accurate, quick, reasonable
Caller at 843-7217, spelling illiterate. Call
Carol at 843-7217
MASTERMINDS Professional typing, Fait. Adequate,
Guaranteed. Call 814-3287.
PROFESSIONAL QUALITY TYFING - 842-4800
professional quality tyfing
correcting Selecticite Call 842-4800 Evening
time
For the cheapest, all original, resumes and cover
letters, professional Typing Services
414-8498. Age: Age 35+.
WANTED
Help! I need a good home for a lovable cat
Huit 428-542 before 10 p.m.
4-25
Female non-smoking roommate for fall Bus route: 8th, duplex 10 + 1/2. Need bed frame, mattress, pillow, comforter, etc.
Wanted: Coordinator of development for Kauai community, family and Family Life and Dept. of Special Education, Health Care and Family Life departments. undergraduate education related qualifications; undergraduate education related skills; previous grant application experience, including application of application, sample of writing, Visa and transcript of graduate course and 3 letters of recommendation, at 120 Hawthorne Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS. Req. degree in education or draftline in May '1979. The University of Hawaii offers a two year (spring) academic program. Need a nice 2 or 3 bedroom Apt. or house for summer and next year (Grad. students) a UH-Kauai.
I need a good used 35 mm camera. Call N41-803-604
4-25
Room in exchange for child care, Summer and
nights. Call 516-7827. Call 516-7827.
nights. Call 516-7827.
P female roommate to share two bedrooms, for
summer. Aerosis from stadium b-8444-6644, aft-
front.
Wanted for permanent position in providing advisory services to the following organizations: Lawrence Catholic Center Polkia $200 allowance, Lawrence Catholic Center Polka $150 allowance.
Female rooms要求 for spacious 20m²
room, to be used to campus $90 mcf.
4:27, 841-366-301
4:27, 841-366-301
Need someone to sublease a T bedroom apt-fur-
three bedrooms in or near your city or year-
round. Gift paid. $431-660 per room.
Round. Uptown. 212-782-5466.
Wanted roommate for 2-3dm. AC house, $125
plus utilities. Call 641-8633 after five p.m.
Female roommate for summer to share furnished.
2. bedroom apartment with one other person
3. one-bedroom apartment
One or two nonnominal female remmatives for
autumn $67 to $100 a month plus part call. Cust
charge is $32 per month.
1 roommate to share beautiful 2 bedroom Dupont
house. Bathroom includes a large vanity,
NESSEY $450 per month, *3* old cell
phone, and $750 per month.
Resident Hall Parties to come with a date or
time of your choice, format on Monday
8:00-10:00 at Kansas University
4-26
Roommate need for summer, low rent, close to campus. 842-3770 after 5
One or two female roommates to share Mail App.
for summer. Call after 5. 841-8750
Person to fix my 1975 Toyota Corolla Deluxe
I have sent Call-841-6431 after 5 days.
keep trying!
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- roommate (560 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (561 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (562 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (563 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (564 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (565 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (566 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (567 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (568 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (569 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (570 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (571 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (572 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (573 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (574 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (575 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (576 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (577 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (578 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (579 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (580 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (581 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (582 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (583 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (584 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (585 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (586 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (587 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (588 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (589 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (590 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (591 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (592 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (593 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (594 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (595 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (596 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (597 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (598 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (599 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (600 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (601 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (602 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (603 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (604 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (605 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (606 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (607 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (608 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (609 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (610 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (611 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (612 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (613 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (614 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (615 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (616 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (617 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (618 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (619 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (620 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (621 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (622 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (623 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (624 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (625 w. spouse, apacheus, 3 bedrooms)
- roommate (
Summer roommate for Large two Bdrm. aut-
scription. Room size: $150. call Paid call.
841-4355
Need roommate for summer suburb. Prefer
roommate's name, air conditioning,
laundry. Linda 841-8793
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 25, 1979
11
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansas, are offered to students of a university not affiliated. LEARN BRAND ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
one two three four five
time times times times times
15 words or fewer
$0.20 $2.25 $2.50 $7.35 $0.00
intraditional
word .01 .01 .01 .04 .05
TABLES
to run
Monday
Thursday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
thursday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
friday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
friday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online at 644-8589 the UDX business office @ 644-8589
864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
FOR RENT
$9 still looking for a place to call home? Nalsmith,
the captain of the year, stops by and looks on over
saunter of the year. Stop by and look over his
list. Don't miss the gift from you to give you
all the details and send you an email.
HALL MISSION HALL, 1800 Nathanael
hall, 843-4555
FRONTIER HIDGE APARTMENTS NOW RENT-
UNTURNED from $170. Two laundry rooms, large
unfurnished, with $76. Two laundry rooms, large
unfurnished. On the roof is a room
NEOBORN HOATED POOL 508-3444 or use at 524 Frontier Road. Next door
85-3444.
Female roommate for summer 2 bdrm.
Appletcraft AC, PC pool. Call 814-2270. 520
Christian Husband. Now and Summer. Clow to
amputes. $0.50 per person. #42-8025 between 2
and 3 p.m. at 123 Main Street, New York, NY
MARK & II. A& I apartments room renting for num-
bers 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,
huxury apartments, 7 min walk to campus & 14.
balconies off-street parking, divingDisney spa,
hotels, shopping mall, 1015 Mile Apt. A2, #824-803, 841-212, 842-803
Appt. 2 BR and efficiency. Clow to campus. Utilities
Clean, quiet, and comfortable. 862-397-3451.
**Wanted:** Female roommate to share 2 bedroom
**Job:** 1st floor, St. Pauls Apt.
Hiawaii has only $400; willes for more info.
Email: kristen.davis@jobs.com
To sublease a 1 BR unfurnished Cedarwood
house located at 305 West 49th Street in August,
mid-August. Mid-MAY for less than 1 month in August.
Call (877) 262-5233.
SUBLEASE—a beautiful two bedroom apartment for summer $235.00 Call Dave 841-4065-425
ROOMS FOR RENT. Convenient location- several houses from student Union. Call now 843-259-3601.
Summer sublease 2 bedroom apt furnished or
bathroom with pool $260 a month at
8143/1312 or 8143/1717
or 8143/1312 or 8143/1717
Summer multihouse. Live-in style. ON CAMPUS
and on campus. 90% occupancy. Booktor:
$1,000 per month. Call Saul at 855-247-3630.
2 roommates to share 3 bedrooms Trail Ridge
Apartment or sublease 141-6755 4-28
Summer summer-need someone in large home, neighborhood, small community. $80, $95, $125, $149, $179, $219, $259, $309, $349, $389, $429, $469, $509, $549, $589, $629, $669, $709, $749, $789, $829, $869, $909, $949, $989, $1029, $1069, $1109, $1149, $1189, $1229, $1269, $1309, $1349, $1389, $1429, $1469, $1509, $1549, $1589, $1629, $1669, $1709, $1749, $1789, $1829, $1869, $1909, $1949, $1989, $2029, $2069,
Sublease for summer 2 bedroom apartment Purchased after the watering system installation Call us 483-745-1600
month lease, August 16-May 31. One BR unfurnished-$180, 2 BR unfurnished-$250, thus utilities, AC, gas heat, pool. furniture available. 2 BR unfurnished. 240 Murphy Drive Just 20ff & 18th. 4-26
Bulkship with gluten free refine. Layover 2 days.
Fresh ingredients. Free delivery. Availablity: Ship from USA and more. Available in: Ship from US, Ship from Canada, Ship from Europe.
Jahnauwerk 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
Spend your summer at our pool & save. Summer:
June 1-August 15, 1-Med. bedroom furniture; $140.
Bathroom & tub furniture; $289.
Furniture available: Call 413-855- or 434-841-64.
Bedroom furnishings: Artists. 240 Murray Jr.
202d & 12rd W. 4:26
Sublease: 4 bedrooms duplex for summer $75
month person. 4 utilities. Call 841-358-0584.
Summer sublease. Beautiful three bedrooms, furnished every room. Negotiable. AC, PC, heater.
Studio Apt. Furnished Excellent location $150.00
Kitchen Bathroom Apt. Furnished Excellent location $42.96
Available May 1st, 842-728-3466
**Sublease:** 2 bdm. apt. AC D, W. bunday facility,
7 min. walk to campup **C90** Call kits
***C15***
Submerse subacute to select - 2 bed,
room close to campus, AC 811-6480, unfurnished
For rent this summer. One room apt, new &
clean, close to campus 843-6476 4-26
4-26
3 bdm, double duplex for summer with option
4 bdm, double duplex for summer with option
5 blocks from campus. 842-303-9248. 4-26
6 blocks from campus. 842-303-9248. 4-26
2 bedroom Meadowbrook Apt. to share with you for the summer. Freight negotiable 6946 4-26
Sublease Apt for summer-2 bedroom room
dog allowed, good potential, summer-
184-187 184-187 4-27
Summer romance to share new three bedroom houses furnished. AC fully carpeted, on sale now.
Sublease 1 BR ap. Available May 15, AC, post.
bailance. Call 800-276-3431 after 6 p.m., weekdays 4-5.
Friday only.
Sublease 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment 1
of 5 bedroom suite
May 22, 820 per month Call 841-721-4277
SUBLEASE. Furnished studio in Meadowbrook
Swimming and tennis. 843-6099
4-27
Number student needed. Graded student pre-
2015. BRM atl. $90 . 1) utilities . 4-27
842-7627
DAILY ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE
LAWRENCE'S 'BIG-CITY' NIGHT CLUB
Memberships Available
The Eldridge House
7107 W. 46th St.
Milwaukee, WI 53211
PRIVATE CLUBS &
FINE DINING
Staying Alive
Staying Alive
Memberships Avail.
701 Mass.
CAMPUS ACTIVITIES
Hillel presents another
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Bagel and Lox brunch
Sunday, April 28th
11:30 Lawrence J. C. C.
(917) Highland dr.
$1 members $2 non-members
For more info, and rides call 864-3948
MUSIC
TONIGHT!
LAMONT CRANSTON BAND
Kicks Off
KEGGER NITE!
That Means
FREE BEER!!
Ladies $2.00 Guys $3.00
Doors Open 8:00 Showtime 9:00
BEER / AMUSEMENTS
BIG K's
MON-THURS 7:9:00
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7:9:00
.50'Schoolers & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1:7:00
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
COLE TUCKEY
Non-Members $2.50
Members $2.00
The Lawrence Opera Tour
Phone No. 7107
Summer, sublease: 2. BR AC acpt for $19750
Winter, sublease: 4. BR AC acpt to continue writing
Call $41-8400 (612) 324-2948
Summer minibus. Singlebus 1 BR Southbridge
subway station, bldg #279. Road number:
w. 277
bldg #210. Bldg #119. Call 843-5218.
Looking for a Summer Residence? Rent a 5-7
house, furnished 2 shacks from
4-27
929-9388
Only At KU
I'M A TAN MAN
Back Side
Tan Man Promotions Vary Ltd
Announces its Latest Addition
THE TAN MAN KHAKI
$6.95
DOGS AND CATS Check out this creek 1 bed, master suite with incurtions like bathroom and kitchen, luxuries like balcony, pool, air conditioning, laundry room, and more. Masterz are called. Call 842-6325. 4-27
sleep in the bed of a future Supreme Court
A C. Nearby, Call Gordon on Bedridden.
A C. Nearby, Call Gordon on Bedridden.
THE COOPERATIVE LIVING—In an established
tech hub in New York, Private Resorts
rent rooms from $35-$450. Includes
bathroom amenities and a pool.
CUT-RAFT! Luxury Trailage Townhouse, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, summer sublease $750 per month.
Stuccas three bedroom apartment; furnished:
15. Extremely large,
music classroom;
622-845-451
4-25
MUSIC CABIN
622-845-451
2 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 2-story spacious Measured Swimming Pool Excellent rate. Excelent rental rate. Rentals on Wide Riverfront lot.
Summer roommate needs non-smoker Gradu-
ate in Nursing or Nursing Home Care.
Call Jack or Greg @ 843-7437
4-27
Need to subtile three 3 bedroom apt. Newly
built. ac $290/month utility. u825-9614-5
1
Sturmbrille such-leh, furnished $2 bedroom apt. 10th Floor.
Kitchen, Nestlé Cafe A -C-Dition,
washable. Nestlé Cafe E-
1 bedroom Apt. for sublet. June 1 to Aug. 1.
8:30am Call us 835-446-3400. 5-25
Summer Carriage, new 2 story display, 4 DBR. 21
floor. $990.00 June-July, call 658-362-7566, use
$990.00 June-July, call 658-362-7566
Studies forub in June and July. Furnished
studios for subdue in June and July. Occupied
Quit questioning Call 841-320-6256
Must submit for summer. Make offer. Please help
address in a jacket, Malmo English. 842-728-9500.
www.malmschool.org
2 BR furnished house, AC, large kitchen, 2B
room, room for game room £250. 825-
742. 7667
Wanted! Roommate for the summer. Nice ppt.
Wanted! Roommate to CAN WORK WITH
824-789-1660. Keep Trying! 5-8
Subsite Southridge Apt. May- July 31 2 BRI
fmc. AC $212 $129 $422 $842 $688
FOR SALE
Sunspecs - Sim glasses are our speciality. Non-prescription lenses are selected, reasonable prices available. 1023 841-5750 1023 841-5750
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialists
in electrical components. MOTIVE ELECTRIC,
843-9069, 2000 W, 4th; HVAC,
843-9069, 2000 W, 4th;
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization! Make sure to sign in for exam preparation 31. For exam preparation "New Analysis of American History" make sure at Towson, Mallio Books, Oread Library.
WATHRDY 'MAYTHRESS' $89.98 3 year guarantee,
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, 8138-386, tfr
Watch for truck on Sundays selling produce.
Jawkfood Foods, 8th & Illinois. Also woods.
Skyline Southern, great boy! 1981 Model Rolls RX-
4500 2.0Ghz, 350W, Turbocharger, Must maintain
5% fuel, Air filter. For all cars.
Call 617-286-6222
Produce: Mustang Bass Guitar with strings, cords,
corduroys, padded earpads and covers. Very good condition.
Carry bag included.
1976 Sunset Alpine, Price - convertible top, rear window, $195; 1999 Calipse, $213 at 7 p.m.
74 VW convertible car, 35,000 miles, 4 speed, 4 speed, 4 speed
Must immediately sell. Call 811-7451, after 4 p.m.
1960 Ocel Kadett, 65,000 miles, $600 or best offer.
841-3124
4-26
**71 DODGE CHARACTER-AC. AT. radials. Excellent condition** $185 or best offer 843-642-493.
Bob Jackson bicycle. Excellent condition 22
frame, 540 or best offer. Cast 614-760 3-425
Mom would like a Drop & Jot pad to stick on
the back of her Corner Corrugated Board.
Mas. 145-800
627
1 Dodge Charger, AC, AT, New brakes, Hau-
per w/4x4, 8x8, 15x8, resonator, reconna-
tion $1,250 or $1,600, 843-483-243
For Mother's Day—Free 12 oz. Body Shampoo with $6 40 purchase from Gaultant Collection at Baskin-Robbins.
White Elephant Sale, Saturday, April 28, 8:00-6:00 PM, Parking lot at Chicago Gloria House.
frame $460 or best offer. Call 841-6073 4-25
Yamaha acoustic guitar plus case, like new. $156
Lightweight backpacker. $299
Electric guitar. $499-813-7121
1928 New Hobby Hobbit TA-50. Only 2 miles on speedometer. Call 843-7821.
4-27
74 Mustang II. 4 cylinder, 4 speed, AC, AM/FM
8 truck. Excellent. 842-6000
4-27
1969 Ford Mustang, AT, AC, PS, radio; $1600 or less
Call Tom at 842-7224.
1974 Honda CB 750 Windjammer & Trunk
Condition. Condition. Interest. Contact.
H88-0019-1
71 Camaro, like new. $4,800 mil. AC PS, FS.
74 Camaro, like new. $4,800 mil. AC PS, FS.
76 Camaro, like new. $4,800 mil. AC PS, FS.
78 Camaro, like new. $4,800 mil. AC PS, FS.
82-9646 for sale.
Banco de América 1977, 7068. Windpower屋里 III. Bank &
Rhone 1974, 7068. Windpower屋里 IV. Bank &
Rhone 1974 in the house $3,000 or more offer. Call 212-
522-8184.
1974 Norton 800 Commands! Your own choice!
Get the most likely molluscology $1,600 or
make offer! 842-6232
2 months old bed—one mattress and
frame for $45.00, 83-9950
4-25
Comfortable Twin Bed. Like new. Best offer.
4:27
Bath-842-0554
1571. Kawasaki 420 Custom. Rod with mag, with
tubes. 36-inch wheels. 200 miles. Looks and runs great. 841-241-427.
1572. Honda 300. Rod with magnet, with
tubes. 200 miles. Looks and runs great. 841-241-427.
70 Pontiac Catalina, make an offer, come by 1212 Vermont (right apt.) after 5:30. 4-27
Use Sealy Mattress and Good condition
$25 off Call 864-1388 Ext. 3 for $1.25
Sale ends January 31
Fiat '71 - 71 124 Sport Convert Call after 5 'Best
Flat Offer' 841-1608 4-27
ecoproplibia Britannica - Great Books of the
World, 54 volumes, Callen: Tom
864-2923
1970 school. Halve Raleigh was 55 600 months
1970 student. Carl Fildes took Calli 864-239-8
4-27
first fall, 4940 calls
OTTING MARRIED? Wedding dress for sale.
White Size 8. Worn once $130 to 422.22 over
$250.
Micro receiver Kenwood KR-290d, cost $280.
Micro receiver Kenwood KR-290d, excellent
performance. Call 842-735-1643.
Call 842-735-1643.
1078 Kunstan PA system. 120 waft input. P310
P311. P312. P314. P315. Never been on the road. C615-0049
C615-0049
1978 Yamaha $1500, 6500, kickstart, dual-
cylinder 440 miles Call Chrissi A82-6600-0000
440 miles
Ihspared lightweight bicycle regina report, Comp-
ditioned bicycle, simple price $100, 1902,
2012
1952 Oldsmobile Rocket 86 two-door hardtop,
good condition, last actual mug Call 854-306-7920
Sailfoot Handling S2. Near new, excellent
carrier model; designed by beginners to beat
them at their best. M413RH
M413RB
Honda Express Mogel, Near new, low mileage
motorcycle Gearbox, Cool and heated handlebars
469. 812-3822
469. 812-3823
1967 Toyota Celica GT, 5-speed AM-FM Sterile
43,000 miles by owner. Call 812-6800-472
www.yachtsmotor.com
1 Obtain Triple Beam Scale, Weights 610 Grams;
$45.00
4-30
€6 Entrance! Please visit us and shop our selection of Oak T树木 and Coleman Caves and accoutries. We are as well as well these like Downtown, Lawrence, 401-853-9724, 401-853-9725, 5-10 Downtown, Lawrence.
1927 Avery Hardware 6x4 cylinder, 4 speed, Mint
Condition, New in box. **3000#** or **1000#** at HOT
CONDITION, NOW ON SALE.
SALE NOTICE! Hiking boots sale begins with our ad in next Thursday's UDK. See Sunflower Surprise for the finest in Hiking, backpacking, camping and equipment. 843 Manhattan sets. +40
1974 12 by 59, 3 B. I. skirted, AC, partial curly
hair, wool skirt, waterproof, bottom-warming,
to $250.00; B. I. $250.00
White elephant sale, April 28, 8 a.m.
3 p.m. Parking lot, 149 West Campus. 4-27
Buy from owner and save. V192 use 1972 Matez
A, C, P, S, P., B50, V$, $150, Call 4
3706
90-250 Solargon long lens T4 mount with Mi-
lite and skylight lenses 125mm Hardy Handles
and skylight lenses $125 mm Hardy Handles
$125 mm
Railway Malibu 10-speed Bike, good condition,
complete. Honda 20-speed 20 gallon, quarrier-
complete. Hyundai 845-744-6938
End of season broadcast. Olmirk Mk II N S series
17-18 32-77 17 battings, Call Mike Hapka
evenings, 843-655
FOUND
A sum of money. Please call 842-4142. 4-25
Found near Wesco, pairs of glasses with pinkish
call. Call 841-8310 to claim.
4-26
A pair of glasses in a green vinyl case. They are in Room 114 Marvin 4-26
Cat. Male-must-han a white flea collar. Cat.
683, 409-99 and ask for Juliette. 4:27
Walter= Belongs to John Benge. Call 842-3059 to identify.
4-27
Found Long-baited, off-white, blue-eyed cat. By the Union. 841-1899. 4-20
Camera-near Pottery Lake Call 842-0516 ack. for Sharon
TEKA Instruments Calculate near First Southern
Bishop Church - 1918 & 1921 & Nationality: 684 352 767
HELP WANTED
VERSASEN JOBS- Summer-year round, Europe.
S. America, Australia, Asia. ETC All Fields, $600-$1200
$180 expands. Expansion paid. Sightseeing free.
LOC LAC, BOX-5A, CA-KA. 4-26
CA 8235
NUMBER JOBS, NOW! WORLD CHURCHS!
PLEAUREATE BOSS? No experience! Good pay!
FOR PLCATION or direct referrals to SEWARDO,
Box 60129, Sacramento, CA 95860. 5-8
JOBIS *LAKE TAOISE, CALIF.* *Fiant tailgate* $179.50-$49.50 summer! Thousands still needed: Casinos, Sports Centers, Hanches, Cruises. Send *Sports Center* for LARWOK 60129, Sacramento, CA 95860
Now taking applications for Fountain & Grill
Restaurant, Apply in person at VFW Restaurant 129,
Apply in person at VFW Restaurant 129.
Adult with new transportation to care for 8 bus
passengers, new bus drivers, new light housekeepers $260
Call 313-751-4920
STUDENTS, summer employment Pinkerton's Inc. is now taking applications from students in the Greater Kansas City Area to Guardians in the Greater Kansas City Area. To apply, visit www.gksc.edu or telephone in residence portation available, and telephone in residence Grand Bryant Building, Room 705, Kansas City, KS. For more information call the bank garage, 1124 Gram, An Equal Opportunity.
MAKE $1,000 THIS SUMMER. If you are hard
to pay, please call 842-7230 for referral to
call 842-7230 for interview with us.
Looking for a job to help get you through college? Meet the summer Vista Restaurant, 1522 West 34th Street.
Did you ever Easter bread, bake with your Sims?
Easter bread is a popular food for the Sims. It's made from wheat flour and sugar, then baked at 200°F (105°C). It can be used to make various dishes, including sandwiches, muffins, and cakes.
One of the mid-west's oldest moving and storage drivers, and helpers. Will train qualified drivers and helpers. Will train qualified D-D IQ requirements. Hard workers only need basic skills, Kansas. Mountain or cell call or 911-513-1400. An equal opportunity employer.
One of the mid-west's oldest moving and storage goods will-pack. Will train qualified, utilitarian personnel at 1308 West 63rd Street, Shawnee, Kansan or call 913-651-4681. An equal opportunity employer.
BUSINESS ADMN, GRAAD, marketing & management positions $12,000 up. Never a fee to applicant. Call Bob Countryside 013-850-1500 or Mike Knight 013-850-1674. Std. Suite 3, Shawnee Mission K, K65202
Students majoring in business, pre-med, pre-law,
pre-communications, or social sciences may
major MAY 697 and MAY 801, per month. For interview
reqs visit http://www.usda.gov/about/usda/faculty.html.
ENGINEERING GRADS. Positions $18,900 up
never a fee to apply. Call Bob C席.
912-362-7500 - word reservation to Courtney Pers.
C席, St. Sutter, St. Suite 108. Showw-
harm. Ms. Kissoe 65203
Looking for summer & fall help to work in the hospital, community and night service. Contact Wilthed Fidelity at (802) 537-6641 or wilthedfidelity@yahoo.com
immediate Need for Student, Clark Tytish训品,
student employment through the summer and next acad-
ment of numerous forms, hand-recording data, and en-
gagement with faculty. Reqs. Bachelors or equiv in
number of
Mature-minded college student or grad, wanted
willing to travel 5-7 days per week,
passing old duties at afternoon hours per day.
Willing to accept a variety of positions,
Apply in person, at AA 32d International Territory he
has been working for. Resumes must be typed,
Employer Qualified and women and men are
accepted.
BARTENOFTI, Training now for Fall positions
175 lb. Call Larry between 11, and 6, 892-9321
175 lb. Call Larry between 11, and 6, 892-9321
Psychiatric Nurses wanted for all shifts on child's, adolescent, and adult wards. Appt at the office of Director of Nursing Ohio State University in Knoxville, KY 73806-4576 or Phone 913-296-4576
Equal Opportunity Employer.
Part-time jobs open immediately for for summer
careers. Pay $30 per hour starting wage. Call 842-5280
for more information.
Earn $20 to $100 weekly in your Homework
Cent. Job (Free/Paid) in New York, NY,
inbound Outdoor-Indoor, Electric BIRQ Cookery,
anywhere, operates on less than he get paid,
anywhere, operates on less than he get paid,
vacationed at our Inventory Write today 10:45.
Box #7028692839547
Mental health technicians, increased mental health technicians, psychiatric aids, health service workers, therapists, medical professionals, ncpa-Nehsaa State Hospital, 2700 W. 6th, Topeka, KS 816-325-4367, nursecomp.com to apply for jobs.
REPRESENTATIVES WANTED for promotion of international bus lines to Europe and Asia. Req. Bach deg or equivalent in education or tours. Educational tours. Almost any travel arrangement organized. Maint Bus. Danbury, 747-201-8560.
We have plenty of summer jobs available in the Kansas City metro area for security officers. You can apply to us on our website and a phone in your home. Apply in the fall or spring at WELLS FARM 325 Holiday Drive, 816-651-9411.
£50 $100 paid in person debiting Z.28 microphone
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The University of Kansas (Lawrence Campus), Office of Information Systems is seeking an information data base assistant. Requirement experience includes working with written communications and knowledge of written communication skills, and knowl- der of data base system requirements not required in COHOL programming experien- tive. This position will be in moving into the data base administration area, providing assistance with data base experience (preferably ML). This career requires a Master's degree in Information Systems or be experienced in training the individual will be trained in the areas in which he or she is not proficient. Position will be held on weekdays from 8:30 am to 5:30 pm per weeks during the school year. Submittal of resumes to Office of Information Systems, Office of Information Systems, Com- munity Lawrence, KS, 66042. Application Deadline May 18th. Services: Office of Information Systems, Community Lawrence, KS, 66042. Application Deadline May 18th.
SYSTEMS, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS IS AN EMPLOYER IN ASSOCIATION WITH EMPLOYEER APLICATIONS ARE SOGUIT TO THE ORIGIN OF RACE, RELIGION COLOR, SEX DISABILITY, VETERANS STATUS, NATIONAL ORIGIN.
Wooded, Hottest-Current, Fine area restaurant.
Evening time, spring and summer. Price $12.
Early morning time, spring and summer. Price $12.
Bartenders and waitresses, call between noon
and 9 p.m. Call Hotel Hall or come in between.
Do not leave the door open.
The Office of Information Systems (Lawrence Campus) is seeking a student typist. Must be knowledgeable in English, French, and Spanish (4 hour time limit) scheduled during the fall semester (10 days). Prior experience in preparing charts and presentations, filing and photocopying, Position Staff: Administrative Secretary: Office of Instruction: Administration Secretary: Office of Instruction: Application deadline is Tuesday, May 8th at 8:42 a.m. 868-4326. Application deadline is Tuesday, May 8th at 8:42 a.m. 868-4326. An Affirmative Action Equal Opportunity Employer is an Affirmative Action Equal Opportunity Employer people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national age, gender.
BRESEARCH ASSISTANT Help conduct studies and assess the quality of research. Prepare a morning noonly 9-11. Please arrive to continue next fall. SECRETARY-Typeing. Xeroxing. Mail resume to BRESEARCH ASSISTANT, 844-560-1464. Excellent Opportunity Employer. 4-209
Addressees wanted Immediate! Work at home, or
job offered in NYC. Resume to Jobsite,
Service 5500, Park Avenue, Lane 12, Dulce
Road, Brooklyn, NY 11201.
ARE YOU A PHOTOGRAPHER? If you've ever considered the field of professional photography, you are not alone. The Corporate Corporation photographs more college and women than anyone else in America. The company is strong desire to excel and thoroughly enjoy the field of portrait photography. All you need is a good book to learn from. For more information write: American Corporate Corp. Box 1023. Kansas City, KS 66510.
Attention Skiers! Part-time student, sales/representation. Job involves promoting high quality skiing skills and training in a fast flowing. To qualify, individual must be highly qualified to respond to Summit Travel Inc.'s Package Mountain Resorts in Summit Travel Inc.'s Portland Parka Group.
CURRICULUM & INSTRUCTION (Medium)-launch graduate assistance in the Educational Services Department, August 15, 1978. Qualifications: knowledge of mathematics or related occurrences; graduate student status or related experience; graduate student status or related occurrences; community effectively. RESPONSIBILITIES: students faculty & staff maintain work flow, provide professional services, application deadline is May 10, 1979. Send application letter to Dr. Philip B. Brady, Education Director, University of Michigan.
UNDERGROUND HAUTE TEACHING ASSISTANTS
laboratory supervision and grading in
chemistry, biology, and physical science will be a stipend of approximately $600 for *A*-
years, plus an additional $100 per week. Qualifications should include health
work. Qualifications must include health
care or a faculty recommendation. Interested
students may apply to the Department before May 15, 1979. The Department of Chem-
iology and encourages applicants from
undergraduate education.
NOTICE
DEATH? WHY BOTHER? ECKANAR
The Key to secret wards 832-1422, 841-2763
f WANTED: officials to help with intramural wrestling matches. If intercalled call 842-646 ask for assistance.
f When calling, say 'SAVE ME.'
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- Mail in this form with check or money order to 113 Flint Hall or just come by.
- $3.50 per limerick to cover
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DUBLISHED ON
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---
12
Wednesday. April 25.1979
Access...
From page one
were not as accessible as they should be, KU had been flexible in making allowances
"Everything has been worked out very well for me," McCalla said. "Instructors, because of my reading impairment, make an exam as far as extra time is concerned."
WEICHER SAID the biggest problem in trying to recruit students with disabilities is the need for more specialized training.
"Any campus on a flat plane has more advantages than KU," he said. "For most students, it costs less."
student with a wheelchair to get from Haworth Hall to Watson Library without a car. The topography isn't going to change and it would be very expensive to change
Weichert said there had been discussion about constructing a skyway between Malott and Wescoe halls so students in wheelchairs could get up the hill.
KU began a bus service for students with disabilities this semester and it has been
But he said he didn't foresee state financing for such a project when "it's much cheaper to get a vehicle and take the students around."
Boy's Laetrile treatments stopped
BOSTON - The parents of 3-year-old leukemia victim Chad Green were ordered yesterday to stop treating him with Levitra and submit his medical records, and submit him to fists for poisoning provision.
Volterra said Chad was suffering from low-grade chronic cyanide poisoning stemming from his treatment with Laetrile
Judge Guy Volterra said none of the essential components of the metabolic therapy favored by his parents has aided in a cure for the child's leukemia.
In investigating other legal precedents for the use of Laetrie, Volterra said he found that most cases of the use of the drug were in a third-party judgment judge and Chad did not fit that description.
Royse, of the Department of Vocational and Rehabilitation Services, said this service helped make the KU campus one of the most accessible in the state.
A University of Hawaii Production
THE FORTY-SEUEN SAMURAI
"The door-to-door service of the bus for the disabled helps overcome 90 percent of the physical barriers students with disabilities have at KU." Ross said.
(CHUSHINGURA)
International Theatre and East Asian Studies Centers of the University of Kansas present
KABUKI
English Language Premiere
Japan's classic drama
of revenge
Performed in authentic
Kabuki style
KABUKI performance in English
taking students with permanent or temporary disabilities to and from classes.
8.00 p.m. Tuesday, May 1
(demonstration for young audience at 4.15 p.m.
in the University Theatre, Murphy Hall
Admission $2.50 (50 cents for Demonstration)
Tickets available at the Box Office in Murphy Hall
For reservation call (913) 864-3982
Participate in the Intramural Wrestling Tournament
Deadline for entry is 8:30 a.m. on Saturday, April 28.
Saturday and Sunday, April 28-29 in Robinson Soulym Gym.
All wrestlers must attend a safety clinic in the South Gym, Saturday, April 28, at 9 a.m. and 9 a.m. on Sunday, April 29. Matches start at 10 a.m.
SHOES
Be Ready to Wrestle at Anytime.
Tournament rules, weight classes, and entry forms are available in Recreational Services, 208 Robinson.
---
SUNDAY BRUNCH
Julián C. Holtzman, associate professor of electrical engineering, will replace Arthur M. Briepohl, who will fulfill full-time teaching and research.
ALL YOU CAN EAT!
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Weichert, however, said there were barriers that KU might not be able to overcome in the future because of the broad range of disabilities.
THERE'S A REASON NURSES GET MORE RESPONSIBILITY IN THE NAVY THEY'RE NAVY OFFICERS
Holzman, who has taught at KU since 1969 and is associate director of the Remote Sensor Laboratory, will begin his duties as acting chairman July 1.
"A student might come to KU because he heard it was a progressive university and might be disappointed when he finds the building his classrooms are in is inaccessible because of his disability," Weichert said.
Engineering dept. chooses Holtzman acting chairman
Navy nurses are responsible not only for the care of their patients, but for the training and supervision of hospital corpsmen and other clinical and administrative personnel. Their choice of services is from 13 different fields, and they are stationed in 26 different cities. They earn an excellent salary, receive top benefits, and enjoy the pride and respect of being a Navy Officer.
The department of electrical engineering has selected an acting chairman for the 1978-80 academic year.
For more information contact Ed Gunderson, collect, in Lawrence at (913) 841-4376/4377, or write:
Navy programs
610 Florida Street
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
"The building may not have barriers to others with disabilities, but it's hard to predict what students, with what handicaps, will enroll in the future."
Holtzman holds a bachelor's degree from the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, a master's from the University of California at Los Angeles and a doctorate from Cornell University, all in electrical engineering.
**'THE DEER HUNTER'**
Shawn Sweeney at 1:00 AM
Sun Sat 1:00 PM
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Bat Sun
Mai 115
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JACK LEMMON JANE FONDA
MICHAEL DOUGLAS
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ENOCH THURSDAY!
6/ve 7:30 & 9:46
Set-Sun Mat 2:30
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Eve 7:30 8:40
Mali 5:41 Sun 2:30
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Sat-Sun Mat 2:30
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AN INSIDE LOOK
AT
PUBLIC ACCOUNTING A PRESENTATION BY: COOPERS & LYBRAND
SPONSORED BY THE ACCOUNTING CLUB
DATE: Wednesday, APRIL 25, 1979 PLACE: COUNCIL ROOM-KANSAS UNION TIME: 6:30 p.m.
Meet with Douglas County prosecuting attorney, Law School Faculty member and Lawrence Mayor, and an area Judge.
Pre-Law Students
Chancery Club Elections for 1979-1980
All Interested
April 26,1979
Room 203 New Green Hall
8:00 p.m.
Sponsored by the Chancery Club
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
Funded by the Student Senate
TONIGHT: The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 in Parbors B and C of the Kansas Union. The KU GUNG FU CLUB's weekly meeting is at 7:30 in 1730 Robinson A.
**TODAY:** The French act troupe COMEDIE FRANCAISE will present a lecture-demonstration of scenes from Moirel plays at 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. at the University Center, the WEDNESDAY FORUM will meet at 11:45 a.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, with Joseph A. Pichler, dean of the School of Business, delivering an evening of dramatic series, *WOMEN IN BUSINESS SERIES*, sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource and Career Center, will feature Jan Epperson, vice president of United Way and Guild for Women, to speak on careers in investment banking at 3:30 p.m. in room 121 C Summerfield Hall.
The Forums
Assistant Jefa,
Associate Director
Student Organization
Marian Armworm,
Associate Professor
Marshall Jackson
Assistant Director
Officer or Adminsim
Assistant Jefa
"Open Forum on Black Student Issues and Concern"
Thurs, April 26, 3:5 p.m.
The Jawhay Room, Union Sponsored by KU Black Faculty & Staff Council
Attention KU Theatre-goers Planning to Attend the Opening Performance of Equus:
Special parking will be available for persons holding tickets to the Friday, April 27, performance of EQUUS.
Theatre parking will be available in:
C. 7ONF—north of Murphy Hall;
N ZONE—west of Murphy Hall (north bays)
E ZONE—east of Murphy Hall & adjacent to the Military Science Building
V. ZONE—east of Murphy Hall & north of Summerfield Hall
Please be prepared to show your theatre tickets in order to park in these lots
Try to some early to avoid traffic congestion
STUDENT RECITAL Kevin C.
Bishop in the 8 in the Swartzwelk
Hospital Hall in Murrayville.
TOMORROW: THE BLACK FACULTY AND STAFF FORUM will meet at 3 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. The UNIVERSITY COURTS will meet at 3 p.m. in Haile Hall. There will be an information meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the INTERNATIONAL Room of the Union concerning GRANTS FOR GRADUATE STUDY AND LITERATURE, DRAMATIC LANGUAGES AWARDS BANQUET beginning at 6:30 p.m. in the Watkins Room of the Union.
sua films
Wednesday, April 25
Film Noir:
DOUBLE INDEMNITY
(1944)
Thursday, April 26
(1963)
Fellini:
8 1/2
Dir. Billy Wilder; with Fred MacMurray. Barbana Stanwyck, Edward G. Ward. Screenplay written by Wilder Raimail Raisman, based on James M. Cain's novel.
Dir. Federico Fellini, with Marcello Mastroilani, Anouk Aimee, Claudia Cardinale, Italy/substitutes PLUS: "The History Book, v. 9."
Tuesday, May 1
ON THE TOWN
Kurosawa/Samurai:
(1949)
(1962)
SANJURO
Wednesday, May 2
Dir. Gene Kelly, Stanley Donn; with Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, Ann Miller, Vera Elena. One of the most fast-paced energetic movie musicals ever made.
Dir. Akira Kurosawa; with Toshiro Mifune. Sequel to "Yojimbo" Japan/subtilities.
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.
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Hours: Mon-Fri 10:30-8:30
Sun
Lawrence weather changed continually yesterday, which began with warm temperatures
Changing weather
and sunshine. By the end of the day, rain and cold temperatures brought out jackets and umbrellas.
By CAROL BEIER
Staff Reporter
Senate requests increase in bus fee; action disputed
The Student Senate survived two calls for a quorum at last night's meeting and passed a controversial petition to raise the student privilege fee by $2.50 a semester. The increase will be used for the KU on Wheels bus program.
The petition also recommended a $2 increase in the amount charged for a car insurance claim.
Sarn Zweifel, ex officio senator,
repeatedly questioned the responsibility of
the Senate's actions in considering the
petition.
"We are voting on a petition that would recommend that the Board of Regents tax each student at the University of Kansas an additional $2.50 a semester," Zweil said. We don't need just a majority of the Senate to approve the majority of the Student Senators elected."
"I object to paying a large amount of money for something I'm not going to use."
The $2.50 increase would raise the total transportation fee to $6, according to Steve McMurry, director of the KU on Wheels program.
Mc Murry said the money was needed because of increased costs and improvements that have been made in the service.
The hourly cost was $15 this year for each bus used by the program. Next year the cost will be $16. McMurry attributed the dollar increase to inflation.
The petition also includes funds for a new bus route to serve Lewis and Tennant hills in northern Pennsylvania. The Board of Regents, the bus service also will be extended to include more night hours and extended hours of service.
During the meeting, Keith Mahl, Senate treasurer, clarified statements he had reportedly made about funding for KU on Wheels during the past year.
Maib said his earlier statements regarding the deficit were meant to impress him.
However, because of an error in subtraction, Maib did not realize until after 15 minutes of debate last night on a supplemental allocation bill for Friends of Headquarters that the Senate's unallocated funds save the funds necessary to meet the request.
At the beginning of last night's meeting,
$5,165 remained in the Senate's unallocated
account. After allocations to three student
organizations, the amount left in that account was $1,043. Friends of Headquarters requested $1,765.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
When Maib realized the mistake, the Senate voted that the Headquarters allocation did not require release of reserve money in the account.
Vol. 89, No.139
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Mai said the five organizations that come before the Senate next week for funds to address climate change.
Thursday, April 26, 1979
"It's really not fair to them," he said.
Faculty, student raises approved
From Staff and Wire Reports
The Kansas Legislature approved a budget of $455 million yesterday for the seven Regents institutions for the 1979-80 school year. The University of Kansas received $341 million in funding.
The Legislature, in the second day of its three-day wrap-up session, approved a 6.5 percent wage increase for faculty, . 6 percent increase in operating expenses and a 9.2 percent wage increase for student fees. The increase would be to the federal minimum rate of $2.90 an hour.
State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said he thought the faculty pay increase was not great.
The budget also included $113.9 million for the University of Kansas Medical Center. Of this money, $14.6 million will be spent on the MED Center, the Hospital, the Med Center's Wushua branch.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence,
also said he thought faculty were not paid
"I think the truth of the matter is the Legislature doesn't understand faculty salaries," he said. "It doesn't understand my work they do or the sacrifices they make."
However, Solbach said, the 6.5 percent increase was large considering the attitude
"We don't reward college professors as well as we do people in other walks of life," he said. "I think, considering the cost of college, that we have declined more than almost any others."
"I think that's good coming out of this Legislature," he said, "I think at first there was a move to raise the salaries by only 4 percent; then we decided the faculty did really well in that respect."
Sobach said that other than the faculty salaries, he was satisfied with the budget.
"I think KU did all right. I think that's $16 to $16 million more than they got last year. Most of that is due to the efforts of the KU team and their good relations with the Legislature."
Glee Smith Jr., a member of the Kansas Board of Regents, said of the final budget, "They they restore some of the money. They were paid good for the houses. I am particularly pleased they approved the general operating funds, the faculty wages and the student wage, just as we did."
In budget appropriations earlier this year, the House approved a 6 per cent salary increase for faculty, while the Senate approved a 7 per cent increase. A joint conference committee recommended the 6.5 per cent increase in yesterday's budget.
In other business, House committees wrote a new tax relief program, even though a similar program had been approved earlier this year.
This program, along with the bill removing utility sales tax passed earlier in the year, would reduce taxes in Kansas by 50%. Mr. Lilly, a spokesman Wendel J. Welch, H-Overland Park, park.
The new House tax program would increase the individual state income tax to $58.7 billion by 2014 and homeestead property taxes for low-income disabled or elderly persons or persons with minor children and remove the property tax that helps pay for university and hospital costs.
Lady said he thought the Senate, which has not voted on the first tax relief program, said it was a mistake.
program. The first program included a £20 tax rebate in place of the increased interest rate.
Glover said he was certain the House and Senate would approve the tax relief package.
The House approved by a single vote yesterday a bill that would remove state controls on wholesale liquor prices. The bill previously had been passed by the Senate.
Under the bill, a franchise system would be established under which each wholesaler would sell only one brand of liquor. Competition among the different brands would set the prices on the liquor. The minimum price per bottle of wines on wholesale liquor would be eliminated.
Glover said the system would eliminate duplication of services and possibly lower costs.
State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, has
said the system could lower liquor prices by as much as 5 percent.
The Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee recommended that an interim committee study two bills that could help control litter.
One bill would place a deposit on all beverage containers to encourage people to return them to the retailers for recycling. The money raised by retailers and manufacturers. The money raised, estimated at $1 million each year, would be used to buy trash cans for public use.
The House defeated a motion to appropriate $1.1 million to pay for a presidential primary in Kansas, scheduled for 1800. The House earlier had voted to repeal the law establishing the primary, but the state has refused to go along with that move.
Kansan editors,managers selected for summer,fall
The selection of editor and business manager for the fall and summer University.
Mary Hoenek was chosen as editor and
synthia Ray was chosen as business
man.
Heenk, Iowa City, Iowa, senior, now is the campus editor of the Kansan, Ray. Overland Park junior, is a Kansan sales representative.
For the summer 1979 Kansan, Caroline
Trowbridge was chosen as editor and
Duncan Butts was chosen as business manager.
The selections were made by the Kansan Board, which is an advisory board to the management.
Trowbridge, Russell senior, now is a Kansan wire editor. Butts, Clovis, N.M., senior, is the assistant classified manager of the Kansan.
Applications for news-edited and business staff positions on the summer and fall courses.
SINCE 1970
French follies
Members of the Comédie Française, a French acting troupe, presented scenes from a play yesterday in the Spencer Art Museum. The group was sponsored by the department of drama at the University of Texas at Austin.
Burden of rape includes fright, guilt, anger
By CAROL BEIER
Staff Reporter
Editor's note: Names of the victims in this story are fictitious.
Am had been a graduate student at The University of Kansas for six weeks when a man wearing nothing but a white T-shirt ran up behind her as she was home from the library one night in early October.
"By that time he could have done anything he wanted." she said. "When he realized he couldn't
"We wrested for a long time," Ann said. "It seemed like forever."
Because no penetration occurred, the Lawrence police classified Ann's complaint as attempted rage.
He choked Ann until she quit fighting.
In Kansas, rape is defined as penetration of a female sex organ by a male sex organ, which is committed by a man with a woman who is not his without consent.
The maximum penalty for rape is life imprisonment, for attempted rape, five years.
"ITS ALCHEMIC to me," Ann said. "The sex
part is the worst. The scary thing is the violent
part."
Ann shrugged her shoulders and said she figured she had gotten off" pretty light."
act of violence which, if not actually followed by beattings or murder, always carries with the threat of a death.
Although rape is defined in sexual terms, it is an
"Rape is to women as lynching was to blacks: the ultimate physical threat by which all men keep all women in a state of psychological intimidation," says Susan Browmeriller in her 1972 book "Against Our God."
Ani reported her assault to the police but said she never expected anything to come of the effort.
Only half of the rapes reported lead to arrests, and at least 40 percent of the men arrested are never prosecuted. Of those cases that come to trial, 60 percent end in acquittals or dismissals.
"I woke up in a cold sweat," she said. "I didn't like the way I was reacting to the situations in there."
ANN THOUGHT she was doing well.
That was before her nightmares started.
She didn't dream about her assault. Instead she dreams placed her in the classic role of tempress, one inviting rape. Am's dreams replayed the tired myth that says rape is impossible unless a woman
That was before her nightmares started.
Jo Bryant, counselor for the Rape Victim Support Services, said Ann's reaction was not uncommon. Bryant characterized such residual effects as subliminal guilt.
"Women in our society have been taught that control of sexual contact is their responsibility," she said. "Boys will be boys; girls should control the situation."
this is the point of "Rape: The Price of Coercive Sexuality," written by Lorenne Clark and Debra Lewis and published in 1977. The book states, "What is called 'rape', then, is thought to be only an unsophisticated seduction; at most, it is a minor breach of our social standards."
In other words, rape crosses the boundaries of what is otherwise acceptable pressure for sex.
SOCIOLOGICAL THEORIES notwithstanding, the psychological effect of a sexual assault on a victim is
Am, who said that before her attack she had "loved the nighttime," doesn't leave her house alone after all.
"It terrifies me," she said. "I don't know how long it takes to go away. I wished I did."
"Did you ever notice that cats sound like women screaming?"
Susan couldn't scream.
She had fallen asleep in her living room watching television. She woke up struggling with a man who entered her home and turned off the lights and left. She waited his hand over her mouth and raped her at his nifternoon.
Her rage is subsiding, Susan said, as the months pass since she was raped.
"It was rage. It was really rage," she said. "I was afraid of being killed. I had no defence whatsoever." She stopped, looking at me.
Once, after arguing with a friend on the telephone,
Susan smashed her phone and receiver to bits.
THE INMIDATE rape had a persistent side effect. Susan had a violent temper for several months.
"I would go out of control," Siam said. "I couldn't
oop myself. It's getting a lot better now. I scared me
away."
Susan also suffered from insomnia after the rape.
Researchers and counselors say that it is not unusual for a woman's humiliation and helplessness to be present.
"When you're attacked in your sleep, it makes it hard to go to sleep," she said. "Until he was caught, I would have been murdered."
"Sexually, I was really scared." Susan said. "In his sleep, he would touch me and I stand it off — I can't see him."
She also talked of residual guilt.
IT WAS FOUR months after the rape before Susan was able to have sex.
She has installed a strong lock on her door and now lives with a man she has been involved with for
This is the stopped message you see.
If not, just "You just about accepted it."
"I've kicked myself that I didn't fight back more," she said.
Has she stopped kicking herself yet?
But the fear that haunts Susan has been benign. It is a fear that Susan doesn't think will ever go away.
"I hate being afraid," she said. "That's the biggest thing. I've always been really confident and felt secure about myself. Now I'm really scared just walking down the street."
That fear doesn't even dissolve with the arrest of the attacker.
Mary was raped and beaten after she had asked her date to take her home. He later pleaded guilty and was convicted of rape and assault. Yet Mary said he had served no time in jail.
Instead he was put on probation on the conditions that he would be under psychiatric supervision, that he would pay Mary's medical expenses and that he would have no contact with her.
MARY HAD hesitated to call the police in the first place.
"I was just afraid," she said. "I guess afraid to go through the whole thing. It wasn't going to do any good. It was already over with."
Now she is more cautious
"It made me afraid of men, that's for sure," she
says. "So RORRACKWORK."
See RAPE back pag
2
Thursday, April 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wine Servies
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Decision expected on 8 plants
WASHINGTON - The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is to decide today whether eight nuclear power plants designed by Babcock and Willey will be built.
Babcock & Wilcox built the stricken Three Mile Island plant near Harrisburg, Pa.
The five-member commission questioned staff members and industry spokesman yesterday but postponed its final decision because some members
rionon Denton, NRC director of nuclear reactor regulation, said the staff found that the design and equipment of the Baboche & Wilcox plants made them extremely safe.
Four Babcock & Wilcox plants already have been shut down by their operators for refueling, maintenance and safety reviews.
Such an order would force the closing of four plants. The Rancho Seeco plant in California would be shut down but the NRC staff said electric reliability would not be seriously harmed. Three Oceane units in South Carolina also would be closed, reducing generating reserves in the Southeast.
Treaty ratified; camps shelled
TEL-AIV, Israel—Israel and Egypt formalized their peace treaty yesterday in the Sinai Desert even though Israeli jets, missile boats and border artillery had been deployed.
In Um Kashiba, outside an American surveillance station, bands played and flags were hosted after the exchange of documents ratifying the peace treaty.
in um Kashifah, obliged to attend a meeting of flags were hosted after the exchequer issued documents ratifying the peace treaty. Defense Minister Ezer Weizman said the Palestine Liberation Organization should "stop shooting and start talking." The PLO rejected such talks.
At the United Nations, Lebanon charged with obstructing the return of Lebanese authority to the south and asked for a Security Council meeting on the
Iran vows to have new police
TEHRAN, Iran—The government promised yesterday to establish a new police force that would be loyal to religious principles and would absorb the thousands of people who have been enforcing justice since the February revolution.
The new force, if strongly backed by Ayatollah Ruhullah Khomeini and other revolutionary leaders, could be a significant step toward restoring law and order.
Prime Minister Medi B扎萨克 renewed concerned in a broadcast last night about the armed, ad hoc revolutionary committees that have detained Mr. Trump.
Some prisoners have been tried secretly and 138 people are said to have been executed for various political and sexual offenses.
Carter tells town energy ideas
PORSMOUTH, N.H.- President Carter told a New Hampshire town meeting that anyone who thought there was a simple cure for inflation “is either a liar or
Carter apparently was seeking to allay the concerns of New Hampshire residents faced with steadily rising fuel prices. New Hampshire, which already has low energy supplies, is a key presidential primary state. It totally depends on imported oil.
While oil prices will continue to rise, Carter said, "the gap between what you pay for fuel . . . and what other Americans pay will narrow."
Carter also said he had ordered the Energy Department to make sure that, by October, inventories of home heating oil reach approximately 240 million
Carter, who has refused to say whether he will run for re-election, was in New York earlier yesterday to discuss strategic armies-talks with the Soviet Union.
House panel rejects rationing
WASHINGTON—The House Commerce Committee voted 23-19 yesterday to reject President Carter's standby plan for rationing gasoline by issuing ration
The plan will be heard again before the full House, and a vote is scheduled today in the Senate Energy Committee.
As the House panel debated rationing, Energy Secretary James Schlesinger appeared before a joint House-Senate subcommittee to defend Carter's decision.
Schelsinger said the administration had the votes to defeat any move in the Senate to block Carter's decision to permit a gradual removal of the controls.
But librarians have said that removing the controls would play into the hands of the oil companies, cost consumers too much and worsen inflation.
Sooners' nuclear costs rise
1U1SA, Okla — The price of the Black Fox nuclear power plant in northeast Missouri jumped $40 million yesterday and a delay of 15 months was forecast.
The Public Service Company of Oklahoma, which is building the plant near the town of Inda, made public the new cost estimate and timetable. The company has been working on the project.
Public Service estimated the plant would cost approximately $2.39 billion.
The previous building cost was set at $1.75 billion.
A second generating unit would go into operation three years after the first one starts in 1985.
Meanwhile, in testimony before the Senate Rules Committee, David H. Rosen, a faculty member at the University of California at San Francisco, said a core meltdown of the Black Fox plant could kill 45,000 people and cause $17 billion in property damage.
The committee is considering a resolution calling for a halt to construction of the plant.
Record rains deluge Florida
**AMIAM - A record deluge in Florida yesterday flushed out poisonous snakes and flooded roads and highways, ending a three-month drought.**
It was the heaviest rainfall in Miami's history, with the National Weather Service reporting a 24-hour total of 81.25 inches. Fort Lauderdale reported 14.32 inches.
Police in Plantation, west of Fort Lauderdale, warned parents to keep children indoors and out of the way of snakes driven from their hideways. Two snakebites were reported but it was not known whether the snakes were poisonous.
In the Red River Valley, shared by northern Minnesota and North Dakota, flood waters at record depths have spread as far as 15 miles wide and 25 miles
The Pearl River at Columbia, Miss., although still about nine feet above flood stage, continued to drop and some of the town's 4,000 residents were able to evacuate.
U.S. could detect Soviet arms
NEW YORK—President Carter said yesterday that the United States woumbe able to detect and quickly respond to any Soviet cheating on a nuclear weapon.
"The treaty must and will be verifiable from the day it is signed," Carter said in a speech to the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
He said he was concerned with the loss of two installations in Iran that had given U.S. monitors a ringside view of Soviet missile launches.
But with photographic satellites and other surveillance systems, he said, "we are confident that no significant violation of the treaty could take place without them."
Carter gave no indication of what was holding up the treaty, but assured the publishers that the document would make the United States even more secure.
Weather
Today will be cool with temperatures reaching 60 degrees. Skies will remain partly cloudy, according to the National Weather Service.
April 28,1979
1st Annual AURH Spring Formal
Celebrate Spring at the
9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
---
Kansas Union Ballroom & Balcony Featuring: The Original Artists
Refreshments will be provided. Admission is free for all hall residents and their guests. Tickets are available today through 4/28 at your hall desk Semi-formal or formal dress is appropriate.
SUNDAY BRUNCH ALL YOU CAN EAT!
$4.75 per Person
10% OFF on parties of at least 15.
15% OFF on parties of 30 or more.
3 Days advance notice to receive discount.
We Reserve The Right To Add Gratuity To Parties Of Eight Or More.
The Eldridge House
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video films
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• Sensitive glimbal-suspension tonearm has a mere 7 mg tota
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• Induction power (8.3 kW), 13 and 45 rpm.
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MAKE SURE YOUR VACATION DOESN'T TAKE OFF WITHOUT YOU.
There's nothing lonelier than being left behind at vacation time.
That's why we've got Continental Reps right on campus. Our travel specialists fill you in on schedules, discount airfares, tours and routes. And save you from calling all over town to get the right flight at the right price.
Whether you're heading home or off to that special vacation, talk to your Campus Rep. Ask about our "Let Yourself Go" charge card too. We'll show you the best way for your vacation to take off. With you there to enjoy it.
Your Campus Rep is Melanie Zollars (913) 843-7874
CARNIVAL AIRLINES
The Proud Bird with the Golden Tail.
CONTINENTAL AIRLINES
North America/Hawaii/Micronesia/Orient/Australia/New Zealand/Fiji/Samoa
Thursday, April 26.1979
3
Family deaths hard on students
By RHONDA HOLMAN Staff Reporter
"Daddy's had a heart attack."
When Ann Denton, Lawrence junior, heard her sister say those words in January after her father's death, the shock hit immediately.
Three months later, the emptiness of losing a parent often makes it hard to confront fear and loss.
"I threw the phone down. I didn't know what I was doing. It was like I was watching myself. I just kept saying 'no, no' and screaming." Denton said.
"It comes in sports," said "You get drained and think you're going to accept it and then it all comes back again. I always thought if the person seemed OR then they
But Gary E. Price, associate professor of counseling, said the most difficult time for a grieving student was quite awhile after the death had occurred. He said a young person who had lost a loved one often denied that he had survived and convinced himself that he was over it.
"THE GREATEST need is six to eight weeks after the loss," he said. "It makes it double difficult for college students because they are away. They don't have the supportive system around them here that they would have at home."
Price said the University counseling center worked with many students who had lost a parent or close relative—some long before they ever came to college.
The death of a loved one is inevitable during a lifetime. Price said, but grief often is a new experience that might be difficult for a young person to understand.
"Older persons have experience to help them grieve, but young people have to learn how," he said. "They don't have other losses to tie into to help them deal with it."
Denton's father, a veterinarian, had lived through a heart attack years before. He had felt fine the morning of the attack that killed him.
And Denton, who finally was found at a friend's house 70 miles away from her apartment, died peacefully on Tuesday.
mixed state of shock about the sudden loss and panic about the future.
"MY FRIEND DROVE me home," Denton said, "All the way, I kept telling myself that I had to be strong for my mom. When I got home I was ready in time and told her how much she meant to me."
Other students who have lost a parent agreed that their immediate concern was the loss of memory.
"You grow closer to the parent that's left. You know they are both there before, but you don't realize what they are until one of them dies. It's hard to tell someone when they're mad at their parent to imagine it would be like without them," she said.
"The hardest thing was seeing my dad alone," said Shaunah Maura, Overland Park junior, whose mother died of a slow cancer five years ago.
Price said that grieving students were saddled with the dual responsibility of readjusting to their campus lives and taking on the remaining parent at the same time.
"They're concerned with how they can help back home and there are often feelings of guilt about not being around enough," he said.
CHRIST ACKERMAN, Lockport, Ill., sophomore, few home last June when her father died of a sudden attack. She **suffered** from an attempt to quit school and stay with her mother
"For my mom's sake, I would have liked to have been there, but I just called her a lot," she said. "I know that she wouldn't have wanted me to stay. The third that gets him is that he must attend anation that she's in. She is in that big house and all three kids are going to be gone soon."
The students said that during the days following the death, they were encompassed by a pain and confusion that made it difficult to function normally.
Denton said, "People came and just started talking about everyday things. I would never have heard of them."
"There was nothing I could do because I
Pre-enrollment vote to face SenEx query
Staff Reporter
A motion was passed yesterday by the University Senate executive committee to ask the administration why a recruitment supporting pre-employment had been rejected.
Evelyn Swartz, SenEx chairman, told SenEx members that administrators said the pre-enrollment recommendation was appropriate and of widespread support and a lack of money.
By TONI WOOD
The recommendation, made in February by the University Council, called on the university to develop a plemening a pre-enrolment system at the University of Kansas. It also asked the administration to consider charging a registration fee to cover the cost of inpatient care.
SeenEx members voted to write to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, to ask him for justification of the administration's about lack of support for pre-enrolment.
DON MARQUES, SenEx member and associate professor of philosophy, said, "I am concerned when the University Council, which represents students and faculty, makes a recommendation regarding pre-enrollment—and the administration deals with pre-enrollment by saying there is no widespread support for it."
Swartz said she was concerned that the council's recommendation was asked for, given and decided on without responding to it. She had to ask for the administration's decision.
Hutton Barron, SenEx member and professor of business, indicated that he thought there was "widespread support" for pre-enrollment.
"The concept of pre-enrollment is not one that can be dropped," he said. "There has been enormous—and that's more extreme than 'widespread'—enormous dissatisfaction with the present enrollment procedures."
Mark Bernstein, graduate student representative, said he supported pre-employment, but not a computerized system. The training could be done within each department.
MARQUIS SAID he would be able to understand the administration's financial reasons for rejecting the pre-enrollment plan and money for the system were not available.
"But it looks like it won't cost a lot of money," he said. "The recommendation is to get the program started."
Mariquis said the easy way to handle the issue would be to ask students whether they know the definition of the term.
"The administration hasn't asked them, as far as I can tell," he said.
In other business, the SenEx reviewed guidelines for graduate student employment, which were drawn up two years ago by an administration task force.
The guidelines addressed policies for selecting, training, and evaluating graduate students.
Barbara Baume, secretary for the committee, told SenEx members that the document seemed unclear and vague on many points.
GERHARD ZUTHER, SenEx member and professor of English, said, "I can look through every item here and instantly link it up. We're already doing in our department."
Some SenEx members agreed, saying the guidelines seemed too generalized and not tailored to their needs.
A memorial service for William Doremus Paden, a k professor of English, will be held at 4:30 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. Paden, 75, died Monday in the KU Medical Center after a long illness.
Memorial services for professor today
SenEx members voted to table until next week, consideration of a packet of freedom of speech policies, which were initially approved for the University Events Committee.
"I WAS really scared. I didn't know if I was going to be able to listen in or not," she said. "The death was what I was thinking about constantly and I wondered if people knew. I didn't want people to pity me—I just wanted to talk about it."
While at KU, Paden was active in the Association of American University Press. He was also a professor of English. He said that Paden had been known on campus as "Mr. Hunter."
Paden taught at the University for 37 years. He was named professor emeritus of English upon his retirement in 1973. He taught a variety of English courses, including Shakespeare and beginning writing courses.
Paden also was a primary force in the
Denton said she was apprehensive about returning to classes a week after the death.
increased participation by faculty members in university affairs, especially in the late 20th century.
couldn't read or concentrate or anything. I could talk to the people for a while, but then I just wanted to scream. I didn't want to be alone in my room. I couldn't that yet."
Survivors include his wife and a daughter, Dagmar, both of the home, 838 Broadway; a son, William Jr. Evanston, III.; a sister, Michael; a cousin, Parkersburg, W.Va., and a grandchild.
William Albrecht, professor auretus of
William, and Paden's son, William $J_r$, will
pass away.
Price said the emotional stages that grieving students experience often were
"People experience a lot of stages of grief," he said. "They go back and forth between anger and depression. There is often denial—when the person acts like everything is all right. And then there is an acceptance."
Before coming to the University, Paden
in math and a PhLB in English from France.
Paden was born July 13, 1903, in Parkersburg, W. Va. He married Digman Patricia.
Students said that no matter how well adjusted they thought they were, there were always things that reminded them of the loss.
when I go home. At the end of the summer I went home for two weeks and the first week was fine. He had traveled a lot and I was used to him being gone. But the second week I suddenly realized that he wasn't coming back."
Denton said she still had not been able to take the bookmark out of a book that she and her father 'had been reading before his death. She also said she had dreams that he was alive and found herself easily upset when strangers asked about her parents.
The family prefers that contributions be made to the department of special collections.
"He was tremendously impressive as a personality," Zutter said. "He was a well-known campus figure who was probably here longer than any of us."
Price said that in counseling, he encouraged grieving students to let loose the pain by crying and talking about the loss. But he said getting over a death was a slow process that could not be finished in a matter of weeks or months.
Mahoney said, "I feel sorry for myself sometimes when everyone is talking about their mums. And the hardest times are Weekend in the house and Mother's Day."
"A person can go on after losing a loved one only by accepting the loss, incorporating it into themselves and becoming able to operate and be functional without devoting so much mental time to it," he said.
ACKERMAN SAID, "It hits me more
"She died five years ago but sometimes it feels like it just happened yesterday," Mahoney said. "The pain hits hard and it hits fast and it takes a good two to three years to really get over it. Even now, you feel that so depressed and nobody knows why."
Ackerman said, "I don't feel any reagent that he died. He was my dad and I loved him."
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Presents
"MASH'IS THE AMERICAN WAR COMEDY SINCE SOUND CAME IN!" Pascale Rauf
IN!" Pauline Kael New Yorker
MASH An Ingo Preminger Production
DONALD SUTHERLAND ELLOTT GOULD TOM SKERRITT
Produced by
INV PRODUCERS (BENTHAM TIME) (JUNG LAROON)
Directed by
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
APRIL 26,1979
Follow Bookstore lead
The constant quest for profits by business and a high inflation rate result in prices for consumer goods that too often deplete the pocketbook.
It is rare to find a business selling goods below the suggested retail price.
But that is exactly what is happening at the Kansas Union Bookstore.
Although any decrease in bookstore prices might seem small or insignificant, the pennies and dimes do add up, and the saving of dollars can result.
Currently, the bookstore is selling school, art, engineering, office and other supplies below the suggested minimum. Brok, bookstore manager, said.
IT IS ESTIMATED that KU students pay about 10 percent less for school and office supplies and from 10 to 15 percent less for art and engineering supplies under this new price policy.
In past years, bookstore supply buyers purchased goods in small quantities about every three weeks, Brock said. Thus, there were more expenses from more freight, more often. In addition, purchases were made through "jobbers" or middlemen. So from the manufacturer on
down the line, all price increases were usually passed on to the student.
But a change in buying practices has allowed the bookstore to offer supplies below retail prices. It is a welcome change.
PURCHASES are now made in bulk, normally at a discount and without charges for freight, Brock said. Any discounts are passed on to the student.
These efforts translate into a decrease in the price of filler paper from $1.50 a year ago to $1.10 this past fall. An imputed sheet of arches paper costs $1.15, about 85 cents less than retail price.
By purchasing goods in bulk at discount rates at a recent buying and education convention in New York for college bookstores, the bookstore saved about $4,000. Brock said. Also, by purchasing now, the bookstore avoids paying a higher price in the fall because of inflation.
Any efforts to provide students a cushion from the impact of higher prices is appreciated.
More attempts at reducing costs are encouraged, and the effort by the bookstore management is a good example that can be followed.
Although KU students' reports will not be arriving for several weeks, America's colleges already have received less than excellent outcome was deficient less than excellent.
American universities flunking ethics
In fact, America's colleges are funking ethics, at least according to a recent report by the prestigious Carnegie Council on Higher Education. The higher education based in Berkeley, Calif.
The council found plenty of blame to spread around—to students for cheating on tests and reneging on loan payments, to instructors for increasingly inflating grades in the past decade, and to college administrators for painting less than accurate pictures of college in catalogs and for inadequate entrance requirements for foreign students.
THE OVERALL diagnosis of the nation's institutes of higher learning was that they showed "sizes of deterioration of important parts of academic life."
The council found, among other things,
that:
- Nearly 9 percent of students claim some form of cheating is "necessary" to get wanted grades. At some schools, 40 percent feel that necessity.
- About 13 percent of loans made under the Guaranteed Student Loan Program are in default. Students are defaulting on other loans, too, also, many of them by declarating bankruptcy.
- Mutilation of library property is increasing. The theft of books and journals rated was "serious" at 80 percent of the schools studied.
- Since 1969, faculty members have awarded increasingly higher grades, making it easier for students to succeed even with micropor work.
- A "FRANTIC search" to keep up enrolments has caused colleges to admit unqualified foreign students, make them study in English and give undeserved academic credits.
The situation does, indeed, seem grave.
Nuclear incidents erode public trust
Throughout the 1960s, thousands of Americans lived in Utah,
Nevada and Arizona watched with fascination, boiling water,
and even seeing animals.
They witnessed actual testing of the federal government's new, powerful and terrible weapon—the A-bomb, a bomb capable of wiping up large cities and maiming hundreds of people who were in the path of its radioactive fallout.
Fortunately, at least it seemed so at the time, the government and the Atomic Energy Commission assured residents that they were in no danger, even though some lived only 60 miles from test sites.
Today, many of those witnesses are dead--cancer victims and survivors in the test region have sued the federal government, alleging that the government knowingly exposed people to dangerous levels of radiation to speed nuclear testing.
IF RESEARCH and investigation can prove a link exists between the radiation and the higher-than-normal incidence of cancer in the test region, more than 500 cancer victims and their long-term compensation in the form of hundreds of millions of dollars.
A joint congressional committee is holding hearings to examine the issue and to decide whether the government is responsible to the cancer victims. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., said that "it is clear that the out of the heart of the刑事诉讼 that the government had, indeed, died."
APPARENTLY, cancer caused by that fallout now is killing people.
"Today's hearing is in a real sense what show that more than 20 years ago the government placed the people of Ulaanbaat in," she said.
"Residents in southern Utah heard 'there is no danger' every day there was a test," Utah's Gov. Scott Matheson told the committee last week. "Intentional disregard for health crept in a little bit at a time."
The government lied once to speed development of nuclear power and it apparently caused death. Concertavally it could lie in the name of national security.
The Three Mile Island accident near Harrisburg, Pa., and the
Additionally, it was disclosed last week that President Eisenhower told the Atomic Energy Commission to keep the public "confused" with explanations of nuclear power while it continued the tests. And in a 1953 document, a commissioner, W.S. Libby, said, "People have got to learn to live with the facts of life and part of the parts of life are fallout."
erode public trust Jake Thompson
A-bomb testing disclosures have eroded the government's credibility in nuclear safety matters.
How many Americans today believe that they know the full truth about the Three Mile Island accident? That they know the truth about radiation levels in the Harrisburg area? That they can accept the health assurances of their government?
THE SITUATION is grim for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the Atomic Energy Commission's replacement, which must assume a new, currently undefined, burden of proof of nuclear safety.
Granted, 87 open-air A-bomb testings and one accident in a nuclear power generation station give vastly different levels of radiation. As many as 5,000 millirsds of radiation were carried in the winds during the bomb tests. No one knows the exact amount of radiation released at Three Mile Island, but officials have said it was far less.
Yet, one of the many unanswered questions is what effect the additional amount of radiation will have on area residents who were exposed to it at birth.
No accurate estimation is available. Time may reveal the truth, but links between the accident and a rise in the incidence rate are still unknown.
SO, FOR ANY additional development of nuclear power, the government and the NRC must be more open about safety issues than at present. There is a need for nuclear power plants. The government's burden of proof that nuclear power plants are safe in far greater as a result of their safety, is greater than that of other types of power plants.
If not, we could feel like Kern Bullock, a Cedar City, Utah, sheep farmer, who lost 1,000 animals in a rain of atomic dust from a 1853 bomb test. In the hearings last week he was asked if he trusted the government.
One hopes the nation will learn from its mistakes and use the incidents to protect its future.
Conversely, the public must become more wary and mistrustful of government and its institutions. The safety of the nation is
"I sure won't," he said. "I think we were all just took."
Mary
Ernst
Unless the abuses are corrected, the council has warned, some colleges will be "even more reluctant to insist on ethical standards in their training," engage in improper conduct themselves."
Solutions such as the strict honor codes used at military academies and other colleges would perhaps put a lid on the abuse of some individual freedoms. Reduce
THE HALTING of grade inflation also must be done on the individual level, despite the pressures instructors may incur from demanding students.
But how to stop the abuses, which have been becoming more and more flagrant each year, is a question that seems unanswerable.
tions in cheating and in defaulting on loans
will have to come primarily from individual
charges.
However, college administrators could immediately halt some of their practices and make noticeable improvements. Foreign student requirements could be more strict, but the more honest and requirements for acceptance of academic credits could be redefined.
A competitive society that defines success in terms of how one individual does in relation to another instead of in relation to one's self is at the root of many of the
Neither the individual nor the institutional efforts are likely to be made, though, at least not in the near future. That is because a new institution will exist and do not appear to be fading away.
honesty problems of students. The desire to succeed overrides the desire to be honest.
AND A declining birthrate, which will likely mean declining enrollments in the future, has put pressure on administrators to fill the void left by the parting hordes of students from the post-war baby-boom era who flocked to America's colleges in the early 1970s. Often, that void is filled by foreign students, many of them unqualified.
The council stressed that reform is the responsibility of the colleges, including the students, faculty and administrators. The role of state and federal government, the council added, is to encourage higher education to police itself better.
Whether America's college community can do that, and whether the University of Kansas in particular can, is a big question. Hopeably, the answer will be found before the Carnegie Council's next report card comes out.
EXXON
Ford LINCOLN
FLY
Cadillac
USED
THE ENERGY
CRISIS IS
IRAN'S
FAULT...
Loss of reason plaguing U.S. society
By ALAN WOLFE N.Y. Times Feature
BERKELEY, Calif.—Historians of the future may have to explain to skeptical audiences the passions that overcame the challenges of sustaining proposals for tax relief, quack remedies for economic stagnation, obsessive fears of the military strength of a declining enemy—almost every aspect of the society, they were, and had been dominated by a fricken madness.
While otherwise sensible men—including governors and presidents—lose all control and endure wolf and hysterical schemes, and invent conventional ideas that suddenly seem radical.
—Taxes in the United States are not too high.
Statistically, the United States has one of the lowest tax burdens of the world's advanced capitalist economies. But few care about the fiscal aspects of the matter. As the global economy has grown, economics promise will relieve them of their burden, people may want to bear in
SOMEONE PAYS for health care, parks, highways and theaters. As Americans opt to have these services delivered by the marketplace, they will pay more for them. But some people are more likely to the profits that will be attached to them. Taxes will go down and take-home pay will rise, but somehow -mysteriously-people will have less money left over after they obtain the services they need. At that point they become fashionable to blame sinister forces.
mind that the level of taxation must be related to the level of services.
—Inflation is not a mysterious force
Nobody denounces inflation more than businessmen, unless it be politicians. Yet both business and government prefer inflation to any other available alternative. Inflation is like a magic potion. It enables conflicts to be resolved. It encourages legislators not to make fundamental changes. It allows business to expand. It belies borrowers.
Professor's critics unfair, unethical
Although I was not in Belize myself, I have personally spoken to all the people
IRONICALLY, as the United States heeds the call, it begins to instructhe enemy that threatens it. Defense spending will drain America's resources, bankrupt its treasury and soften the dynamism of its economy. The United States and the Soviet Union like armored knights, will just themselves into impotence in the name of glory.
appeared to threaten the security of the republic. The Soviet Union is in its worst shape in years. Facing a paralyzing economic crisis, dependent on the United States to provide bread to its own population, suddenly surrounded by antagonistic superpowers on all sides, the Soviets are acting like any weak power: They are spending more on arms to give the U.S. the ability to resist the assists of American intelligence, mistaking this spending for belligerence, call for the United States to meet the threat.
To the editor:
This country can continue for a time to pass constitutional amendments as a substitute for restructuring its economy. It can make inflation the scapegoat for all its while the source of the trouble is inequality and injustice. It can blame the Russians and their social life to dismantle in the process. It can, presumably, anything it wants.
This letter is in response to the April 17 article concerning an ethics investigation of Michael Crawford, professor of anatomy at the University of Texas at Austin and Crawford for the past five years. During that time, he has displayed only the highest moral and ethical values, both privately and publicly.
One of the accusers had not even taken part in the Belizean study. Her only knowledge of events stems from her relationship with the other accuser. She did not come to KU to study under Crawford but he agreed to support her when her original adviser left the University. Although she had not been able to attend on many occasions that she would like to leave KU but was "stuck" here for financial reasons.
Lawrence graduate student
The two individuals whose complaints have now been made public, years after those complaints were investigated and dismissed as groundless by the University, have in my opinion only their own personal motives for continuing to attack Crawford.
More than ten people went to Belize with Crawford. Among these were a Lawrence physician, a number of prominent anatomy students, and one graduate student, with no previous field experience of this type, is making these charges. Other members of the field team enthusiastically support Crawford or have not publicly involved
Robert M. Baume
It was more than six months after the return to Lawrence that the charges against Crawford arose. The student's motive, he said, was to attack me, is that they became disenchanted with their work and wanted to leave. They told me they believed that Crawford would not give them a favorable recommendation. I think that in order to cover themselves, they had been helping and supporting them in their graduate careers. They accuse Crawford of being unethical, but what could be more unethical than to continue to make accusations against an individual that have been shown to have no basis in fact?
KANSAN letters
involved about their feelings on this matter. The complaining individual was fully aware of the problem and included the financial arrangements. She told me before she left that she were quite pleased with the forthcoming trip, and she agreed on the necessity of a fund to provide her with money.
Moreover, she did not express any ethical concerns upon her return. She told me that she enjoyed her time in Belize and felt better over at the end to take a vacation in Mexico.
Middle East letters reflect propaganda
To the editor:
But if it continues to do what it has been doing over the past year, there is little doubt that it will go stark raving mad while the other party tries what could possibly have come over it.
In the past several weeks, two letters to the editor concerning the Middle East conflict have been published. Both reflect some common pre-Arab claims. Unfortunately those claims are based on misleading Indian Arab propaganda.
There would not have been a single Palestinian Arab refugee if the Arabs had accepted the 1947 United Nations partition resolution and if they had not gone to war in 1948, a war that actually created two refugee problems—Arab and Jewish. There was an unplanned exchange of minorities, and there were conflicts situation elsewhere in the world between Greece and Turkey in 1922, and between India and Pakistan in 1947.
A very common belief was stated by Coleen P. McKeighan [4/9/79], "The Palestinian homeland is without a doubt the core of the Middle East problem."
The Palestinian Arab problem is a result of a conflict—not the source. The cause was the refusal of the Arab states to recognize Israel's right to exist.
Let me introduce some historic facts about the conflict.
There has never been any exile of Arab refugees from Israel, as Tom Ramstack argued in his letter (4/13/79). About 590,000 Arabs left Israel during 1947-48 and went on to fight in the war. Arabs moved to neighboring countries to avoid the war situation. From March 1948
Arabs moved because they were panicking, often at the urging of Arab leaders. The 180,000 Arabs who stole from thelamame number (600,000) of Jewish refugees fled the Arab states. Little is heard about them because they did not remain refugees for long and were never able to return.
McKeighen wrote about the basic human rights of the Palestinians that have been denied. Yes, she is right, they have been denied by most Arab governments.
They insisted that they remain refugees, living in camps, as an exhibit of Arab defiance of the United Nations. They left the burden of caring for the Arab refugees in the United Nations, and in fact most of the financial burden was carried by the United States.
For 19 years, from 1948 to 1967, Arab states controlled the West Bank and Gaza Strip without establishing a Palestinian Arab state, nor were they asked to by the Palestinian Arabs or by pro-Palestinians who now claim such a state would end the Middle East conflict. Even when the West Bank was part of Jordan, the Palestine State had no right to set its goal as the destruction of Israel, rather than establishing its own state.
As a homeless people for 2,000 years we sympathize with the plight of the Palestinian Arabs. Rather than seeking to destroy Israel, it would be constructive for them to look for relief from among their fellow Arabs.
Oded Dromi Graduate Student Tel-Aviv, Israel
TO BE SURE, many powerful people would prefer a society that had no inflation. But if the price of such a utopia were to be a dollar, it would not have an economic, slower rates of economic growth, or (perish the heretical thought) government control over prices, then inflation is a second-best choice. Before sinister exponents like Trump and Obama, let it be known that it is the work of man.
—The Soviet Union is not a military threat to the United States.
Alan Wolfe is a visiting scholar at the Institution for the Study of Social Change at the University of Pennsylvania.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
(UPSB 690-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, and Sunday and holiday Monday through Saturday. Students pay $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $2 semester. Outside the county.
new 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 Whiteside
Managing Editor Dr. Steimel
Campus Editor Mary Hoenk Associate Campus Editor Pam Manion Assistant Campus Editors Carol Huntley Bashir Editor Diane Bobon Special Section Editor Nancy Forte Group Editor Mary Thorburg, Sama Furth Sports Editor Nancy Dressler Associate Sports Editor John Chiff Wire Chair Linda Finestone, Paula Southerland, Leon Untrub Wire Editors Cynid Hughes, Barb Kornell, Caroline Trowbridge
Pinta Pilates Center, Punta Surflandia, Leon Nerdu
Business Manager, Kardina Carbine Twistbasket
Business Manager
Retail Sales Manager National Advertising Manager
Ron Altman
Bret Miller
General Manager Rick Musser
Advertising Adviser Chuck Chowins
Thursday, April 26, 1979
1
Renowned French thespians perform at KU
The Comedie Francise, a world renowned French acting group, made a rare appearance at the University of Kansas yesterday.
The performance was sponsored by the department of French and Italian and the department of Chinese.
hour-long performances in the morning and afternoon in the Spencer Museum of Art.
Bryant Freeman, chairman of the department of French and Italian, said he
The seven members of the troupe acted out between eight and 10 plays written by the 17th century French playwright, Jean-Bantise Moliere.
"All the seats were taken a half-hour before the plays began," he said.
The actors flowed into each new character without a pause and held up cards to invite the audience.
JRP residents commit 'Rites of Spring'
Mike Smith's face turned the green color of his after-dinner snack Tuesday night when he downed 12 jalapeño peppers in 40 seconds. Kevin Nelson, organizer of the event, said:
The "Riten of Spring" is a week of events that began Monday at joplin on H. Pearson and ended Tuesday at W. McGraw-Hill.
chance to relax before finals and to celebrate the end of the semester, Nelson
Last night, thirst quenching was the main
After the peeper-eating contest, for which Smith, a Wichita sophomore, won two rolls of Certs, Bill Dahlman, Kansas City, Kan. won the match game snapping contest.
The KU debate team of Steve Griffin, Lawrence senior, and Kevin Fowler, Leavenworth senior, took third place at the 33rd National Debate Tournament last week at the University of Kentucky in Lexington.
Debaters score in Nationals
Griffin and Fowler recorded eight wins and three losses in competition with the top righthand side of the league.
won first place, followed by Northwestern University.
Griffin and Fowler's third place finish completed a year of high honors for the team. They won first place at Georgetown Forest University and Baylor University.
event, and the fourth floor of JRP won the beer-chucking relay. Nelson said six representatives from each floor pair participated in the victory by accumulating the most points.
KU won the National Tournament in 1970 and 1976.
After the beer chug, residents with or without belles full of beer watched a Three Dogs
At the end of the week's activities, the residents who live on the floor with the highest total of points will win two kegs of beer. Nelson said.
Tonight's activities will feature a jellosnarfing contest, imitating Beilush's downing the wiggly stuff in the movie "Animal House."
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
There will be a meeting
held for men and women students who are interested in being
Host or Hostesses for the Kansas University Athletic Department
on Monday, April 30, 1979 at 6:00 p.m.
in Room No. 135 of Parrott Athletic Center.
Membership requirements state that you must be a regularly enrolled K.U. student in good standing during the 1979-80 academic year.
Vespa Mo-peds
COME TRY ME
Vespa Mo-peds
Vespa Scooters
Chrysler
Sailboats
13 to 30 ft.
THE CAPTAIN SHOP
Complete power boat selection!
843-2585 1441 West 23rd
STUDENT TRANSCRIPT
KANSAS JUNIOR COLLEGE
COURSE CREDITS GRADE
Fall 1976
English 101 3 A
Math 126 3 B
History 135 4 B
Speech 180 3 C
Phys. Ed. 111 2 B
Spring 1977
Biology 206 4 C
English 102 3
Poli. Sci. 156 3
Spanish 115 4
Fall 1977
Sociology 123
Business Admin. 275
Spanish 116
Psychology 211
Accounting 152
STUDENT TRANSCRIPT
KANSAS JUNIOR COLLEGE
COURSE CREDITS GRADE
Fall 1976
English 101 3 A
Math 126 3 B
History 135 4 B
Speech 180 3 C
Phys. Ed. 111 2 B
Spring 1977
Biology 206 4 C
English 102 3
Poli. Sci. 156 3
Spanish 115 4
Fall 1977
Sociology 123
Business Admin. 275
Spanish 116
Psychology 211
Accounting 152
CREDITS REJECTED?
Did the university give you credit for all your junior college courses?
Or did some of your courses transfer but not count toward your degree?
Even courses in such basic subjects as English, business, psychology, and math?
If you had these or similar problems, we'd like to hear about them.
The Kansas Legislature wants to find out what kinds of problems students have in transferring junior college courses to state universities. We're looking for ways to improve the system, and you can help.
Please share your exper anytime between 8 a.m. and May 7. We will need to verify the
LEGISLATIVE DIVISION OF POST AUDIT STATE OF KANSAS, TOPEKA
Each character were only essential costumes, and the only changes in costume were quick, usually consisting of changing wigs.
CALL COLLECT (913) 296-2196
Freeman compared Molier to Shakespeare, who was founded the French Republic about 1630.
"It has existed, for all practical purposes, continuously since it was founded. It is the most prestigious repertory theater in the world."
The troop has 68 members who tour the world. They come to the United States every couple of years, he said, and they usually go big cities like New York and Chicago.
So, when the group made a stop in Lawrence, Freeman was surprised.
"They hardly make it to the United States, much less the Midwest."
He said he had never expected them to answer the department's request that they
---
"We wrote them a long time ago. We just locked out."
NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TODAY: BLACK FACULTY AND STAFF FORUM at 3 p.m. in the Jayhawk room at tne Kansas Union. GRANTS FOR GRADUATE STUDY ABOARD 1980-81, an informational meeting, at 3:30 in the International Room of the Union. UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will meet at 3:30 in 105 Blake Hall.
TONIGHT: DRAMATIC LANGUAGE AWARDS BANQUET will be at 6:30 in the Watkins Room of the Union. POLITICAL SCIENCE-PISGIA ALPHA BANQUET will be at the Pine Roof Room of the Union. SUA BRIDGE will be at 17 in the Pine Roof Union. A PUBLIC LIBRARY will be at 7 in the Lawrence Public Library. GEN. ALEXANDER HAIG will speak on "NATO and Our Future Security Needs" at 8 in Woodruff Auditorium in the Union. KU SKYDIVING CLUB will be at STUDENT RECITAL. Jane Wilson at the piano, will be at 8 in the Swarthout Banquet.
TOMORROW: TENNEY FRANK SYMPOSIUM ON THE TEACHING OF LATIN will begin at 9:30 a.m. BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION SEMINAR, with William L. Beetles speaking on "The Diversification Benefits of Conglomeration," to be at 10 a.m. in 405 Summerfield. LATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union. ENGLISH HONORS AND AWARDS DINNER will be at 6:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union. KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 173 Robinson. KANSAS ANthropOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION will meet at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. KU CHORUS CONCERT will be at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. FORUMS WILDERFORMED at 8 p.m. at the University Theatre in Murhaub Hall, Admission free with KU ID
JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
JAZZ only at
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
976 Mass. Illustrations
Tonite: Jam Session: No Cover!
the Gaslite Gang Jazz Band Featuring
Only!
Johnny Moore the Midwest's Premier Jazz Drummer
Admission *6.00 includes FREE Beer, Peanuts, Popcorn and Selt Drink
Admission 6.00 includes FREE Beer, Peanuts, Popcorn and Soft Drink
Bring this Ad in for $2.00 OFF!
Call 843-2644 for Reservations
Bring this Ad in hot 200 VFY
Call 614-2044 for reservation
first
serve
BORG STRUNG WITH US String With Us The Way The Professionals Do...
Hours
10:5 30 Mon Sat
10:8 00 Thurs
And we give you 24-Hour service even if we have to work al night.
So stringing for Borg was a detalled and demanding assignment. We treat the stringing of your rocket with the same
When Bjorn Borg came to Kansas to ploy for the American Cancer Benefit we were selected to string his rocket.
See Our New Store in Crown Center
first serve
Borg likes his racket strung with gut — almost to the breaking point of 88 pounds — compared to 55-62 pounds for most players.
TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE
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and save $90.00 on our Early Bird Special
View:
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Closets:
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Walls:
solid, each brick.
Two Sinks:
no waiting for
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Bath
Bedroom
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Big Picture
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Cable TV Hookup:
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Private Entrance:
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Carpet:
Wall to wall,
several colors.
The TOWERS, make it part of your plans.
Early Bird Special ends April 30-Come in today
jayhawker towers apartments
4603 w. Fifteenth
6
Thursday, April 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
TEACHERS WANTED
Positions are available this spring and fall for college students and graduate students with degrees in Math, Physics, Chemistry, and Engineering (U.S. citizenship, under the age of 28) to teach college and graduate level courses at the Navy's Nuclear Power School in Orlando, Florida. An excellent benefits package is included and no teaching experience is required.
Contact Ed Gunderson, in Lawrence, at (913) 841-4376 (collect) or write:
Navy Programs
610 Florida Street
Lawrence, KS 66044
NIKON REBATE HEADQUARTERS
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COME IN FOR ALL THE DETAILS NOW
OFFER GOOD ONLY UNTIL MAY 31, 1979!
Downtown
1107 Mass.
ZERCHER
Hillcrest Center
919 Iowa
PHOTO
PHOTO
Good morning Lawrence, come join us for breakfast, we're serving your choice of beverage at the door or only way you like them. And your choice of a golden waffle or hash browns toast and tazie. To top it all, you're served with a glass of orange juice and a hot cup of coffee, all for only $2. Offer good milk 4/28/29 breakfast served 6 am to midnight.
problem-free keg equipment for your next keg party
try our
schneider retail liquor store
1610 w. 23rd
843-3212
SIZZLER
SOMETHING HOTELS
Spotlight
Performance April 27 28 7 p.m.
Hashinger Hall
Donations accepted at door
1516 W.23rd St.
SCHUMM FOODS COMPANY
presents
lemon tree
11 W. 9th
FREE
One
Natural Dry or
Fruit Topping
with purchase of any size dish
of Natural Dessert Yogurt
k
NEW YORKER
PREMO ITALIAN'S
PIZZA
FREE
DOUBLE SAUSAGE TOPPING
with purchase of Any Size Pizza
RIBS . . RIBS . . RIBS
THE CONVERSATION SMOKEHOUSE
719 Mass.
1/2 Slab Small End ...$4.75
1/2 Slab Big End...$3.75
Fresh
Home
made
Strawberry
Short Cake 50¢
Made with first pick
fresh strawberry
图
MISS STREET DELI
50¢
Offer Good Wed. thru Sun. April 25-29 No coupons accepted with these specials The Downtown Eating Establishments
Heard shines for Suns
KANAS CITY, Mo.—Garrett Heard took a little advice from Phil Ford of the Kansas City Kings before the Phoenix Suns 108-94 NBA playoff victory last night.
By JOHN P. THARP
Associate Sports Editor
The victory gave the Suns a commanding 3-1 lead in their best-of-seven NBA playoff series against Atlanta City. Scott Wedman and his team lost to 19 and 1 Sam Harden 18:40 to the Kings.
Heard, who was one of five Phoenix players in double figures, improved his playoff scoring average four-fold with the 19th-ranked Westphal scored 30 to lead the Sunset attack.
The advice from Ford, Heard said after the game, came in a local television interview with the rookie in which he discussed his playoff slump.
"PHIL FORD said he was concentrating a little more on his shooting." Heard said. "When I heard him on the news, that's the story," he told me. "Gave me a mep talk on the TV 'a little bit.'"
Apparently Ford's inadvertent pep talk, along with a change in Heard's pre-game routine, helped spark Heard to his highest goal of the season. He shot no warm up baskets.
"I didn't go out and shoot," Heard said. "I normally go out and shoot, but I was thinking of my concentration on the game more. I thought it would help me and it probably did, although I did shot a couple of free throws.
"I REALLY DON'T think I've been good in the series. Toniight I just came out and
took shots in the open and the first couple fell and I was off to the races."
NURSING STUDENTS accepted to K.U. Med . . .
Uniforms—sizing and purchasing available, Life Uniform Co. will be on campus for you to get your uniform & supplies.
April 26,1979 (Thursday) 7-9 p.m.
ABC Parlours (K.U. Union)
It's important that you come—everyone invited. partially funded by Student Senate
Heard's change of pre-game strategy helped him enough to hit nine of 12 shots from the field as the Suns' second-leading scorer in the fourth playoff game.
We're Cleaning Out THE ATTIC
"Gar is a big-game player." Phoenix coach Ceciliaood said. "He been that way for his life." He has his day to remember.
Come in and take advantage of our "Backroom Bargains"
Spring Dresses 25% Off
Tops 25% Off T-Shirts
T-Shirts
Reg. $6
Now $4.90
Shorts
Reg. $6
Now $2
Spring
Tops & Skirts
20% Off
One Rack Jeans or Pants 25% Off
Terry Cloth Tops & Pants 25% Off
MacLeod, who didn't know about Ford's
pep talk, did know about Ford's slump and
its effect on the Kings. Ford finished with 12
points, his high game of the series.
“PHIL, FORD is definitely their quarterback.” MacLead said. “You get their quarterback out of there and it definitely hurts them. He’s had a sensational year, but he’s a small guard and he’s at a little disadvantage. We’ve got some big guards.
THE ATTIC
927 Massachusetts
BANNAH CITY VILLA
Westborough 8:24 7:15 6:30 4:19 4:10 12:18 8:18
Wilmington 1:59 1:24 6:20 3:14, Hilmaeck 3:40, McKenzie 3:29
Raleigh 2:49 6:41 6:20 3:14, Hilmaeck 3:40, McKenzie 3:29
Photocell 18 27 27 36 30 -10
Phone call 18 27 27 36 30 -10
Founded out-Leroy Total Inaug. Phoenix Nakamatsu City
Founded out-Leroy Total Inaug. Phoenix Nakamatsu City
PHOENIX (106)
sua films
Dave B 8-64-17 IHW 8-29-18 Adams 57-19 IHW 8-29-18
Dave B 8-64-17 IHW 8-29-18 Adams 57-19 IHW 8-29-18
Rebelton 3-28-18 Robinson 3-28-18 Scott 57-19 Brazzil 2-28-18
Thursday, April 26
Fellini:
8 $ _{1/2} $ (1963)
D. Federico Fellini, with Marcelo Mastroiani, Anouk Alimee, Claudia Cardinale, Italysubtitles, PLUS: "The History Book, v. 9."
Friday & Saturday, April 27 & 28
Truffaut
THE MAN WHO LOVED WOMEN
(1977)
Dir. Francois Truffaut; with Charles
Marsden; with Gilles Menguel;
Caron, Photograph by Nedel
mendros ("Days of Heaven");
Francesco Lusacchi; with
Gilles Menguel; 9:30 AM,
9:30 SAT, 7:00
MoAoS OH (1870)
Midnight Movie
Dr. Robert Allman; with Donald Sutherland, Elliott Gould, Gaily Kellerman, Robert Duvall The original outfit for the movie "Hamilton," Jer. Jr., F-17: 7:00am, 3:30 & 8:30am
ERASERHEAD
Innight Movie
A New Shocker:
ERASEHEAD
Dir. David Lynch; with John Nance, Charlotte Stewart. "Eraserhead" is not for the squeamish.
Tuesday, May 1
ON THE TOWN
(1919)
(1949)
Di, Gate Kelly, Stanley Donez, with Dr. Gene Kelly, Stanley Donez, with Ann Miller, Vera-Ellen. One of the most fast-moving men in the music field.
Wednesday, May 2
Kurosaw/Samurai:
SAMURO
SANJURO (1982)
Dir. Akira Kurosawa; with Toshiro Mifune. Sequel to "Yojimbo". Japan/subtitles.
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.
Thursday Special
For only $5.45
you can receive a 16" pizza with one topping Pyramid Pizza of your choice and 3 free cokes.
amid
Pizza
Fast, Free Delivery 842-3232 507 W 14th (at the Wheel)
Thursday, April 26, 1979
---
University Daily Kansan
7
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sports Roundup
By TONY FITTS Sports Writer
4-game series a must for KU
Kansas has to sweep four games from Iowa State University this weekend have a realistic chance of finishing high enough in its division to go to the Big Ten.
The Jayhawks and the Cyclones meet tomorrow afternoon at 1:30 at Quigley Field in the first of two weekend doubleheaders. They will finish the series at 4:25.
"We created the pressure ourselves by not beating Colorado and Kansas State when we should have," KU coach Floyd Temple said earlier this week. "And we lost one game, but they were tied and won three those, we would be tied for second instead of last."
The first two teams in the division go to the post-season tournament in Oklahoma City. KU and ISU are tied for third at 6-4. Nebraska leads at 11-1 and Missouri is second with a 9-3 conference record. ISU coach Clair Criers said he also
ISU coach Clair Rierson said he also bowed to finish in the top two.
"Hopfully for us, NU will sweep the rest of its games." Rierson said. "Both KU and we are hoping to knock off Missouri and move into second place."
ISU would have to sweep Kansas for that to happen. The Cyclones lost four at Nebraska last weekend.
"We thought we were pretty good until last weekend," Rierson said. "Right now, if we have a problem, it's with our four and five hitters. Greg Lempke has hit some home runs, but lately he's had driving trouble in them. And Jeff Trunberger has been his best biter over the past few weeks. What's hurting us the most is his inability to drive in runs when we need them."
KU HAD its own problems at the plate when it faced Missouri last weekend. Things may improve, however, because a home run hitter, probably will be back in the lineup. He has seen limited action in the past two weeks because of a sprained wrist.
"We're going to play him no matter what," Temple said yesterday. "He should be pretty close to full speed."
The Jayhawks will need all the hitting possible to make it into the Big Eight tournament. Their final conference games are next weekend with Nebraska. The last regular-season games will be played on a conference-coference-break leader with K-State.
"The baseball season is winding down," Temple said yesterday. "I just hope it doesn't end on the eighth."
Rovals win 7-6 on Cowens' shot
From the Kansan's Wire Services
From the Kansai'sWire Services
KANSAS CITY, Mo—Al Cowsing
enlisted as a security guard in
the bottom of the ninth inning to give
the Kansas City Royals a 7-4 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
With two out in the ninth, White doubled off loser Mike Proly, and after that he tied the game with Cowens lined Proly's first pitch into left field. The winner was Al Harabock, who relieved Siever Mingoril in the ninth and won a rushing Washington with a runner on run.
DARREL PORTER, who drove in four runs, gave the Royals a 6-5 lead with a solo hero in the eighth. But Bill
Naharodny drew the White Sox even in the ninth with his second home run of the game.
Nahorodyo also baited a solo shot in the seventh to give Chicago a 1-1 lead. But two-doubles by Porter and Clint Hurdle tied the score for Kansas City in the seventh, and Porter homered in the eighth to give the Royals a 6-4 edge.
Junior Moore's two-run double off Royals starter Larry Gura and an RBI single by Eric Soderholm gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead in the fourth. Alan Bannister's triple and a sacrifice fly by Washington made it 4-1 before Nahordny hit his first home run in the top of the seventh.
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April 26 & 27
Friday—3:30 & 9:30 pm
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Woodruff Auditorium ADM $1.50
Tracksters eye final relay stop
By GENE MYERS
Another KU freshman, Sanya Owolabi, hopes to help his name to the list of qualifiers this weekend. Owolabi, however, will be in Philadelphia for the Penn Relays, competing there with KU's decathon entry Steve Rainbolt.
Two down and one to. That's how the Midwest Reliance circuit joins this weekend.
three of their four previous meetings, including the one with President and open discussions of the Kansas Reliefs.
Sports Writer
With the Texas and Kansas relays completed, the final one, the 70th edition of the Drake Relays, is tomorrow and Saturday in Des Moines, KU. Will make the trip after a year's absence because of assorted injuries and ailments last spring.
Kevin Newell, an instrumental figure in the 440 and 880 victories and runner-up for the outstanding performer honors, will run in their metric counterparts, the 400- and 800-meter relays. Lester Mickens, Tim Dugan and the 400-squad. The lineup is the same in the 800 except Deon Hogan is scheduled to run in Jones' spot.
"We're looking forward to returning to Drake," head track coach Bob Timmons said. "We feel that the sprint relay should be representative but the field should be touch."
Last year Owolabi, a New York native who was named prep athlete of the-year by Track and Field News, had one of his best seasons. He was the best in the triple jump in the outdoor season is 51-24% and the NCAA standard is 60-37%. In the indoor season, however, he teased 9-24%.
Timmons has good reason to be looking forward to Drake. Last week in the Kansas Relays, KU snapped a three-year dry spell in batron races on the Midwest circuit. KU snared the 440-yard, 880-yard and mile relay crowns.
Newell, who whipped former Big Eight great John Garrison, William Snoody and Clifford Wilson in the open 100-meter dash at Stanford with an impressive variational 100-meter dash. His rivals will include Texas & A&M standout Curtie Dickey or State University's Mike Robertson.
"I'm more worried about Robertson," Newell said, even though Dickey has lost the tie. "And I think that is the reason."
Newell's 10-43 clocking in the last week last qualified the three-time All-American for the NCAA championship.
years. "He does nothing all year but in this meet."
KU's other qualifiers are Anthony Coleman, who is sidelinesed with a sore hamstring, in 110-meter hurdles; Mickens and Hogan in the 400; and Jeff Buckingham in the pole vault and the 1,600-meter and mile relay teams.
Mickens, Newell, Tommy McCall and Stan Whitaker run on the 1,600 team, and Hogan, Mickens, McCall and Whitaker run on the mile relay squad.
At Drake, freshman pole vaulter
Buckingham is favored against several 17-foot vaulters. Leading this team is Abillean Christian's NAIA champ Billy Olson, who has a 17-4% career best. Buckingham's best is 17.8, but he has defeated Olson in
After he finishes the decathlon, Rainbolt will fly to Des Moines for the high jump
The Kansas softball team has a whammy on it and that whammy has head coach Bob
Softball team wants to beat tournament's jinx
"The last two years that I've been here."
Stanciflck said yesterday, "the host team for
the region Six tournament has never won state. This makes me pretty leary."
Injuries hamper tennis chances
An alling KU women's tennis team will participate in the Missouri Valley tennis tournament today through Saturday in Columbia, Mo.
Kansas, defending state champion, will host the Association of Intercollegiate
"We'd have a great shot at winning it if we didn't have problems with injuries," he added. "I don't think I'd be able to do that."
The Missouri Valley tournament consists of two singles divisions and one doubles division. Each team's top four players are entered in the championship division. The fifth and sixth players are grouped in a separate bracket.
The Jayhawks won the tournament in 1976 and placed second in 1977, but Kivisto said he did not expect his squad to finish at the Cup. He said it would be Carrie Fotopolus and Lissa Leonard.
FOTOPOULOS, KU'S N. 1 player, aggravated a shoulder injury during the Big Eight conference tournament two weeks ago and probably will play only doubles.
Leonard jammed a finger in practice this past week, an injury that Kivisto said had impaired her ability to volley. He said he could do the game better on champion, probably would play only singles.
The injury to Fotopoulos forced KU to move everyone up one position in singles, Kivisto said. The player most hurt by this would be Kathy Merrion, who was taken out of the tournament's lower division and placed in the No. 4 slot.
"I think Kathy could have won the smaller division," Kivisto said.
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KU
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826
KU
Athletics for Women regional tournament May 10-12.
Tomorrow and Saturday, KU will try to defend its title in the state AIAW journey in Oklahoma.
However, no matter how the Jayhawks are in Toptea, they automatically qualify for the Region Six tournament because they are the host team. KU, therefore, actually is playing for a better seeding in the regional tournament, which is why Stancliff is
"WEVE GOT TO be the favorites," Stancillock said, "but knowing you don't have to win takes away the edge. We're just playing for seeding purposes.
The first test in the double elimination tournament is 12:30 tomorrow afternoon
against the winner of the morning's Pittsburgh State University-Friends University contest. Depending on the outcome of a play either at 5 or at 8 tomorrow evening.
The three other teams in KU's half of the bracket are Wichita State, which KU swept in a double-header Tuesday, Fort Hays State and Benedictine.
In the second section, Emporia State is favored over Washburn, Bethany, Marymount, Baker, St. Mary's of the Plains and Kansas State.
If KU does snare the state championship, the next highest finish also qualifies for the Region Six tournament. If the 'Hawks are first, the state champion also qualifies.
EQUUS
A Play by Peter Shaffer
Presented by
The University of Kansas Theatre
April 29, 28 & May 3, 4 & 5
at 8:00 pm
University Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale
in the Murphy Hall Box Office
For reservation
call 913/664-3982
KU Students
admitted free with ID
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8
Thursday, April 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
ALL CAMPUS T.G.I.F.
friday April 2/th
2:30-5:00
Broken Arrow Park (29th & Louisiana)
1 draw 50° or 5 draws $2.00
Football Team Seniors vs. Basketball Team in a Softball Game
n a Softball Game
The Kidney Foundation
Life . . . Pass It On
Presented by Alpha Gamma Delta & Sigma Nu
$7800 AS A SENIOR AND POST GRADUATE EDUCATION IN NUCLEAR POWER JUNIOR—SENIORS
Juniors and Seniors with at least one year of physics and calculus may be eligible for a year of post-graduate training in nuclear engineering and over $650 per month for up to 12 months prior to graduating through the Navy's Nuclear Power Officer Candidate Program. Information contact Ed Gunderson, in lawrence, at (913) 841-4376, collect, or write:
Navy Officer Programs
610 Florida Street
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
MISS. STREET DELI 041 MASSACHUSETTS
presents
THE MOVABLE FEAST the catering season is upon us and look at the savings when you order your own movable feast!
FROM THE DELI . . .
The party tray featuring thin Slised Roast Beef, Ham, Corn Beef, Postram, Big Eye Swiss, Jalapeño, and Cheddar, Onion, Dark Rye and Sesame Seed Hard Rolls, Potato Salad or Cole Slaw. Combination Reish and Condiment Tray, and disposable plate, fork, and napkin. 3.50 person
From the Smokehouse ..
Sliced Smoked Beet and Ham served in a mild BBQ sauce. Sesame Seed Buns. Potato Salad or Cole Slow. Baked Beans. Reish Tray and disposable plate, fork and napkin.
3.50
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★ ★ ★
The University of Kansas J.A. Vickers, Sr., Memorial Lecture Series
Alexander HAIG
Jr. General Supreme Allied Commander
April 26, 1979
8 p.m.
Kansas Union
Woodruff Auditorium
The board of directors of the Associated Students of Kansas lobbying organization voted Sunday not to reappoint Hannes Zacharias as its executive director.
ASK rejects director's job bid
By CAITLIN GOODWIN
SLANI KEDORTER
Steve Young, KU member of the board of directors of ASK, said yesterday that the board chose Robert Bingham, a graduate from Emporia State University, for the position.
Young would not say why the board did not reappoint Zacharias, 23, but he said some members of the board said they were disappointed with Zacharias' management of the office.
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Attention KU Theatre-goers Planning to Attend the Opening Performance of Equus:
Special parking will be available for persons holding tickets to the Friday, April 27, performance of EQUUS.
E ZONE—east of Murphy Hall & adjacent to the Military Science Building
Theatre parking will be available in:
C ZONE—north of Murphy Hall;
N ZONE—west of Murphy Hall (north bays)
V ZONE—east of Murphy Hall & north of Summerfield Hall
Please be prepared to show your theatre tickets in order to park in these lots
Try to some early to avoid traffic congestion
executive director; dealing with the Legislature, dealing with the individual campuses and office management," Young said. "Most of the negative comments dealt with the latter. There were also comments about their attitude and overall performance."
The board of directors comprises one representative from each of the ASK University, the University of Kansas, the University of Kansas, Kansas State University, Emporia State University, Wichita State University, Pittsburgh State University, St. Mary's State University and Washburn University.
YOUNG SAID THAT Zacharias was one of three finalists for the position, but that the other two were not
Young said he and the Washburn University member of the board of directors were the only members who voted to keep him in the race.
The KU Student Senate voted April 10 to join ASK on a full-time membership. KU had been a provisional member of ASK for a one-year trial period at a reduced rate,
Zacharias was the second ASK executive director to reapply for the position. The first was Vic Miller, who, in 1974, also was not reappointed.
Membership in ASK costs a member school 25 cents for each full-time student. KU's
It's hard to say what the board was thinking when they made their decision, he said. "I was not sure."
ZACHARIAS SAID he was more disappointed than angry by the board's decision
pointed than anger by the board's decision.
Zacharias said he did not know why the board decided against him. He said he had been care of any problems when he was director.
"I felt that I was in a position that I could lend some more expertise to the association," he said, "I felt that I had achieved level level level level level level level Regents and to know the Legislature well."
He said he would like the director's term to be more than one year, but he said that the salary would not keep a director around that long.
"I was getting $675 a month and not health
He said when he had reapplied he had asked the board for $850 a month and health insurance. Bingman will get $725 and no health insurance, he said.
Bucky's
Spring Fling
Young said that although he was not satisfied with the board's decision to罢 Zacharias, he was satisfied with the board's choice in Bingaman. He said that many people at KU had expected Zacharias to be reappointed.
"THE PEOPLE WHO have learned of the decision were shocked." he said.
"He was pretty刷命 in his politics," Harper said "he leaned toward the Democrat."
insurance," he said. "That is not enough to warrant staying on for more than a year."
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Zacharias said he wanted to continue working with state government in some ways.
Mike Harper, former student body president, said he was not surprised by the election.
Roping
"I'm looking for employment right now," he said. "I'll just have to try to speak my nerves."
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FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC. Abortion up to 17 weeks. pregnancy tests, birth Control, Court procedures. For appointment; call 866-520-9211, 412-343-1000, 401 1938 1918. Overland Park, Ks.
Guy Leibman counseling referrals now handed
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2354 IMM
HARBOUR SPECIALS AT 10:00 Mon, Fuse, and
2:30 Tue, Wed, & Thurs. $50 each.
MADIS BLOOD NIGHT! Wed; $40 picture
session.
GOOD SHOW BIG KED Room 254 is watching
through the screen. Maggie & Fletcher
will be Thursday 11th; Maggie & 4-27
4x6
Applications are available for the fall 1979 staff of KJHK, KU's radio station owned and operated by students. Applications can be submitted to the provided address or should be returned to 217 Fint by 5 p.m., Monday.
SKY with the opposite sex? We can little for SKY and address to her: Social Class Learning Center, 1520 Main Street, Boulder, CO 80307.
Overland Photo
For Sale 2 to Doobie Bros. Call Dave at
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4-27
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Absorption, un to-
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This is your last chance? The St. Lawrence Center is sponsoring the last poka of the semester. A 3d admission includes all the bier, pop, puppets, and props. *7th at 11 a.m.; *7th at 14 a.m.; at the Kulau Restaurant, 802-695-6200.
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To this, improver after fanlights on West. our
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 26, 1979
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accompaniments, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students without charge. Please BEWARE BURG ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one, two three four five
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Each instruction
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ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday 4 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or e-mail, offering the UD business office at 1-800-345-9676.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Aunt-Drift, Rally, Tuesday, May 1st 11:30 a.m. 5-11 p.m. Strong Hall Lawn
Employment Opportunities
Operating for all of your tech needs assistance here at the office. Contact TPC BASE 210-345-8888 or visit tpcbase.com. An account can be opened in 210-345-8888 to receive all of our technical support.
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ENTERTAINMENT
Gap Services of Kansas will host a writing plenary on the impact of the union on cut graft or the front of the union on cut graft.
FOR RENT
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimhist
will be available at 804-531-2978, the number of
his location. Stop by and look on our
or give us a call at 804-531-2978, and send you an
application at Naimhist HALL, 1800 Naimhist
Hall.
FRENTER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW HENNTING. Studios, 1 and 2 bedrooms, furnished and equipped with large kitchen space, parking On KU has room for a bedroom, two bathrooms, 484-483 at room 2A Front Door. Room 2B 484-484 at room 2B Front Door.
Christian High School, Now and Summer. Close to campus. KGs 10.90 per person. $82-692 between 2 flights per week.
Female roommate for summer 2.00 bdm.
Appleeropt AC, AC pool. Cali 841-2202
300x300
**Wanted:** Female residents to share 2 bedrooms in a multi-family home. Resumes should include RU Lifespan $200,000 for more information. Call 312-578-4950.
Apt. 2 BHI and efficiency Cleo to campain. Utilities paid. Clean, quiet, and comfortable. MA
Apt.
ities
9579.
MARK, K. I, H AITAPARTMENTS now renting for summer
learning programs. 7 min to campus. 10 min to
luxury aquarium. 7 min to campus. 12 min to
basketball off-court playing. dbspc/duplonet.
dbspc/duplonet. off-court playing. dbspc/
duplonet. 1915 Misc. Apst. 23; 842-0033; 841-2155;
842-1163.
ROOMS FOR RENT. Convenient location—several houses from student Union. Call now 212-346-5755.
2 roomsmate to share 3 bedrooms Trailidge
Apartment or sublease N41-6752 4-38
Summer Ministers—need someone to share large
images (25+ MB) or images smaller than 32-
80s, or couple $80. B43-6121
Jayhawker TOUVERS 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 179
91 month lease, August 16-May 31. One BR unfurnished-$180, two BR unfurnished-$250 plus lease. Parkway Drive Apt. 8431-155 or 8424-156, Parkway Apt. 8430 Murphy Drive. Just off 2nd and Iowa. 4-26
Balkinsky with gaitter by Franke, Favorite 2 (Lady), 16/18; Pfeiffer with gaitter by Franke, Favorite 2 (Lady), 16/18; Farinelli with gaitter by Franke, Favorite 2 (Lady), 16/18; Farinelli with gaitter by Franke, Favorite 2 (Lady), 16/18. Available in Macy's.
Spend your summer at our pool & save. Summer June 1-14, 15 - 18 Weekend prices: $140 per room. Includes pool furniture available. Call 843-1155 or 843-3416. Parkway Terrace Apts. 214, Murray City 426-2695 4-26
Subluser 4 bedroom duplex for summer $75
mouvement person '1' utilise B41-8049-254
$450
Summer sublease. Beautiful three bedrooms, furnished apartment with 280-square-foot apartment. $169,000.
4-26
Studio Apt. Furnished Excellent location $160 per person or full availability May 1st, 824-292-3721
Sublime 2: bbm. altc AC D.W. laundry facility
7 min. walk to campus 532 Call:
Cabot 606
Summer sublease with option to re-c rent. 2 bedrooms close to campus. AC 811-6600, unfurnished.
For rent this summer. One bedroom apt, near &
clean close to campus. 843-657-8288
3 hdm. double subshell for summer with optimum to creep in, cool on sunny days, private parking, or vacant campus. Curiosity is welcome. Contact: cams45.www.cams45.edu
TRY COOPERATIVE LIVING—In an established
cooperative living center in New York,
Patients receive $350 worth of uncomplicated
care from $495.
DAILY ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE
TONIGHT
Pork Tenderbain stuffed with ample dressing.
$5.25
A Quarantine 2 Deeper
Entertainment Thru No, Sat
Jerry Felii - Pig Rock Musician
THE BURRidge House
No. 317, San Francisco, CA
94108
FINE DINING
MINGLES DISCO
YOU GET MORE AT MINGLES
Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th 842-7030
DAILY ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE
FINE DINING
MINGLES DISCO
YOU GET MORE AT MINGLES
Ramada Inn 2222 W. 6th 842-7030
Tonight
Pork Tenderloin stuffed with ample dressing
$5.25
A General Night
Entertainment Thurs. Fri. Sat.
Jerry Fahn - Pop Rock Musician
The Lentridge House
(212) 589-3894
CAMPUS ACTIVITIES
Hillel presents
nothing
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Bagel and Lox brunch
Sunday, April 29th
11:30 Lawrence J. C.,
(RT) Highland de.)
$1 members $2 non-members
For more info, and rides call 864-3948
MUSIC
PAUL GRAY'S
Jazz Place
TONIGHT!
JAM SESSION
NO Cover
926 Mass.
BEER AMUSEMENTS
DIGK's
MON-THURS 7:9:00
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7:9:00
.50° Schoolers & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1:7:00
-DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
BEER GARDEN
Every Friday is
LADIES NITE
14 oz. Driven City 20' 700 R
$1 0 Purchase on week
14th & Tenuee
LOUISE'S
EVERY FRIEND AT ENTERTAINMENT 3-5
$1 PITCHERS
100% Mass
SHELLEE, Farnished in Bedroom,
Swimming and tennis. 833-0409
4-27
a netroom Mondbrook Apk. to share with
male for the summer. Free, negotiable
4-58
Summer rooms to share have three bedroom
roommates. AFC fully furnished
164-182 164-182
4-27
Summer auctions: 1 BR Southridge
2 BR West Village
May 21st, 21st, 170. $701, Built 841-3288,
427
Summer address 2 BR AC acct for $975.00
Summer address 2 BR AC acct to continue refinancing
B41-847-7030
Looking for a Summer Residence? Rent a 5-
bedroom house, furnished 2 blocks from
the beach.
DOGS AND CATS Check out this copy 1 bedroom pad (with optional furniture) (Padded bed) or 2 bedroom pad. Please contact us big field to run in the room. air conditioning has a lift door. Call 842-323-1278 4-27
Summer school needed. Needed $90
BR App. $90 ... attailies. 4-27
-2187 - 2187
Sublease 2 bedrooms; unfurnished apartment 6
minute away to city centre. Call 8431051-427
or call 8431051-427
Shire in the bed of a future Supreme Court
court. The calf of Dr. William D.
A C. Cheyney, the bed of Gordon Boulder
843-2060 - 4-277
Sulfinane Apt for numbers -2 bedroom close to house dog, allowed. pet number - 427-1877
CUT-RATE: LUXURY Traitledge Township, 3
houses; 2 both; summer suburb $275/month
841-922-6222
Need to inquire about 3 bedroom apt. newly
redone AC $280/month utilities $12,904 - $14,
500
Summer inmate modelled, non-inmate Grad-
classed, prisoner with a call to the Call
机 and Bqr 843-7437
4-27
Summer sub-bagage, furnished 2-bedroom apt. 10th Floor
Furnished Cottage, AE-4, District 7,
Nice Nesting; Cute Room
1 bedroom appt for smuket June 1 to Aug. 1,
5pm Call after 5 p.m. 833-4400 5-2
Summer package, new 2-Year duplex, 4 BHP,
1200 sqm, £899/month, hire from 3/2022, rentable
from 4/2022.
BEER GARDEN
Early Friday at
LADIES NITE
14 oz. Drinks Only 30' 7:39-9:00
$1.50 Pitchers on week
14th & Tenth
Studium for address in June and July. Purified
water is required to occupy. Quiet 8-
minute. Call 811-456-7030.
Must student for summer. Make offer. Please help
keep trying. Jamie, Malia Old English, 482-758.
Keep trying.
Watched! Roommate for the summer! Nice guy!
Waited! Cannot CAN WORK WITH you!
Keep Trying! 0.8
Keep Trying! 0.8
LOUSE'S
EVERY FRIDAY AFTERNOON 2-5
80 SCHOONERS
$1 PITCHERS
1000 WEEK
2 BH furnished house, AC, large kitchen, 2B
mansion room, kitchen for garden $200
kitchen with island and 2 bedrooms $250
Sublease Southridge Apt. May-31 July 2 1B-HR
furn. AC, Pile 512) Tile 824, B42-8888
SUMMER SLIM-LAKE at Moosebrook. Apt.
Two-bedroom, two-bathroom. 1070-6285.
422 #82-7038
Summer sublease 2 bedroom Apple Craft Apd.
Reduced price. Next to campus. August 4, 5.
Comfortable 2 bedroom apartment on the second floor of a modern townhouse. Entirely remodeled last summer. Dark wood floors, hardwood flooring, interior furniture included. Available summer months $180 per month. All amenities included. 4-27
PLEASE HELP out two fellow college kids by sub-leasing a luxurious mall apt for the summer holiday. Provide the large kitchen, large kitchen and beautiful furniture. Excellent price! call Caiti Scott or Sandy at 212-458-3070.
summer solitaire-Sunset two bedroom Apartment
in campus-2179, C718; 641-1231-524
S-4
Summer sublease 1. hdbm $150.00. Call 841-4998
after sale 2. hdbm $150.00. Call 841-4998
5-1
From June 1 on, 3 older students seek one or two teachers for every day of school. -24h fireplaces, plant organ, garden, -24h greenhouse, food store, ground furniture, food comforts of a real home, who can help keep you safe. -TWO $250 per student Drops 2
NUMBER SURLEASE One bedroom gut. like-
Room with a bedroom, A, terrific bed.
DON'T DIEVY - 301-1948 5-2
SUITET for summer For 1 or 2 people New York City / Union, Barrie, rentable (581-407) 842-297
Small one-bedroom house to rent for summer rental $125/mi. Call Roberta, 841-390-3628
Ant. for sublease, 2 BR 1 bath, $170 month,
and May 15 to Aug. 15, Born 641-5549, 5-2
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Note. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization Makes sense to you in a new way. Prepare for exam preparation. *New Analysis* (3) For exam preparation. *New Analysis* (3) For exam preparation. *New Analysis* (3) For exam preparation. Crate, Mall Bookseller, & Oread Bookseller. *If*
Watch for truck on Sundays selling produce.
Jackson Foods, 9th & Illinois. Also wood.
Sauce, Bread, Pastries.
WATERED MATTRESSS $59.98 3 year guarantee
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. 136-138, tlf
Froster - Mustang Bass Guitar with strap, wood, corks, picks, and covers. Very good condition.
Locks, courts, and covers. Very good condition.
1960 Open Kudett, 65,000 miles, $600 or best offer.
841-3124
4-26
For Mother's Day—Free 12 oz. Body Shampoo
from Chance; from Chance Collection.
4-77
Corner Dresser, 36th Street
4-77
SunSpace - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-persistent.
1021 Mass. 841-5797
1021 Mass. 841-5797
White Elephant Sale, Saturday, April 28, 9:30 AM-
pm. Parking lot at Chicago Garden House
4-27
Mom would like a Drop & Jet贴 to stick on her phone from Corner Round Corner Drifters # 277
Yamaha acoustic guitar plus case, like new $150
Lightweight backpack case for easy transport
841-371-731
841-371-731
1699 Fort Mastung, AT, AC, PS, radio $1600 or best offer. Call Tom at 842-7234
74 VW convertible车, 25,000 km/h, 4 speed. 345 mph, 19 ft., wheelbase 33 inches, steering wheel 16 inches, rear axle 849-763) after 4 hrs.
74 Mustang II, 2 cylinder, 4 speed, AM. AC
8 track. Excellent. 842-603-4
4-27
1975 New Hobbit Hobbit TA-50. Only 2 miles on
newestest. Call 843-782-5. 4-27
72 Caravans, like new, 14,400 mL AC, PC PR,
Small enough to be on roadway. You can look
small enough
Comfortable Twin Bed. Like new. Best offer.
Call 842-5054
4-27
1974 Norton 850 Commands! Your chance to own a new imported motorcycle is now available. 4-27
Used Body Mattresses and Support Good condition
Call 681-5282 1287 Fax 681-5282 6256
4-27
1971. Kawasaki 850 Custom Silver, with multi-
band turn signals and a rear diffuser. Lotks and runs total: 841-813 - 477
$
Eclectic Encyclopedia. Great Books of the
World. 31 Volumes. 969 Call. 7052-8023
70 Pontiac Catalina make an offer, come by 122 Vermont (right apt.) after 5:30 4-27
Fax "TI" 124 Secret Convt. call after 5 Best
Bittern 811-4398
4-27
Sirion, recipient: Kennedy KI-2200; cost $260.
Sirion, recipient: Kennedy KI-2200; cost $260.
Sirion, recipient: Kennedy KI-2200; cost $260.
Call 815-272-3000. Keep calling.
GETTING MARRIED * Wedding dress for 10, 42-96
Size. Wear & Worn. size to 102.
4-26
1978 Kutchan 7A system. 13wt head, P110
speaker cable. Excellent conductivity (95V
per meter). Coaxial cable (600VAC)
Batteries 301
SAVE! on
3, 4, & 5 year
maintenance
free batteries!
As low as
$24.30
All with
IMMEDIATE FREE INSTALLATION!
THE BATTERY SHOP
842 2922
Fhway 40 N. Lawrence Across from Icabod's
1978 Yamaha. $500. Gucci. kikutart. dualcub
one-400 units. Call (312) 834-6600.
Dualcub. Includes a bag.
1000p lightweight hybrida rectangular Com-
portable with simple, durable design. 1800 x
1492
1952 Oldsmobile Rocket 800 two-door hardback,
condition low, actual air condition. Call 800-745-8132.
Sulfinat Sackett 25 | New Airline executive
company, Salt Lake City, UT
Soundtrack $400 | 811-318-101
Honda Express Mopar. New near, low intolerance. 829. 841-3027. Out and out, behind hills! 829. 841-3027.
1976 Toyota Celica GT, 5 speed, AM-FM stereo
824-840-0000 4-277
1917 Arrow Healthcare, in 1st floor, A med. Mng. 600 sq. ft. of office space. Fully furnished. Credit card must be $500 or more and be on credit.
1. Ounces Triple Bean Scale Weight 600 Grams $45.00
4-30
Cause Enthusiast. Please visit us and our collection of Old Town and Coleman Cause and accents. We rent as well as sell them for $250-$300 at Surprise, Missouri, Manhattan, Downtown, Lawrence.
NAME NOTICE: Hiking/bicycling beyond the boundary of
NASSA NOTICE. Do not climb trees, ski or bicycle in
water and continue hiking or biking to the Nassau
Reserve area and continue hiking or biking to the Nassau
Reserve area.
1974 12 by Ss. 2 II HR skirt-AC, partial four-
point sleeve, black cord, 60W, 84-825
2011 12 by Ss. 3 II HR skirt-AC, partial four-
point sleeve, black cord, 60W, 84-825
11am. chirpman saturday: April 28. 8 am.
3.5 km. Parking lot: 143 Dwest Campus. 4-27
86 230 Solner mount jumbo T-mount with M1-M2 adapter
light weight silver $125 from Hardy 7497-8444
Railroad Medidat 10-pound, good condition;
$50 Also 20 gallon and 20 gallon suspensions;
350 Also 20 gallon and 20 gallon suspensions.
End of season biography, Olivia Mink III S. Series:
Call Me Mike! 277 findings; Call Me Mike! 365 findings
785 AMP, mounted 600 cups, 72 liters per gallon,
820 amp or best offer. Lazio M41-2127-34
5-4
Window van, 68, Bodge, 6 cycle, $790. Call 841-543
4892 after 5 pm
Pai Saly, Risa Biasedo Call: 914-6267
$65.00 3-1
72 Firefighters Export. Low miles, power plus many
814. x4128 Jeanne. 5-2
1966 GMF Case-victim-Customized interior, runs great.
Cabinet w/ lift arm, fits iPhone 13, $3,500-$4,250
at 75th Street.
FOUND
Found near Wren, pair of gloves with pinkish
pink lining. #411-826 to claim. 4-26
A pair of glasses in a green vinyl case. They are in A partir 11 Marrano. 4-26
Faced long-lined, off-white, blue-eyed cut.
By Du, Division. 841-1099. 4-26
Walter - belongs to John Bengel. Call 842-2693 to
identify
Set of keys in First Hall Impair at Kawasaki
Business Office 864-8238
4-27
Camera-incar-port Lakes. Call 842-0516 ask for Sharon.
Iron Instruments Calendar near First Southern Baptist Church—1809 & A. Natashaw; 643-287-387
Barn silver watch found near the tennis courts.
Call 864-4090 Farad
4-30
HELP WANTED
Found an umbrella on a campus bus morning of April 24. Identify to claim. 864-1008 4-30
OVERSEAS JOBE RUMANNE Rumane zur Kupfer-Produktion in
Brasil. Responsible for preparing and packaging
jobs. Work with SCAA Corona Del Mar
Warehouse. Job ID 3524. Candidate Del Mar
Office.
SUMMER JOBS, NOW! WORLD CRUISERS!
PLEASURE BARGAIN! No experience! Good pay day!
DEVELOPMENT & PROFESSIONAL FACILITICATION and direct referral to SEAWORLD
Box 60139, Saratoga, Cal. 95260. 5-8
1899. LAKE TAHOE, CALIF. / Fantastic tide!
$719.00 summer! Sunmums! still needed.
Casino, New York City, Manhattan, Craiksworth,
APPLICATION INFO: 602-9860, Box 6029, Santa, CA 93580, 5-8
Adult with new transportation to care for 8 min.
Reserved for child under 6 yrs old. $2,000
for care at 12-31pm for long-term care. $2,600
STUDENTS, summer employment Pinkerton's Inc. is now taking new students into employment as Security Guards in the GREAT BRITAIN. For 15 or older have交培 permission application by calling 914-203-7588 on Monday-Mar. Fri. 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. 1102 Grand Battery Boulevard Grand Battery Boulevard at the Mercer Bankgage, 1112 Grand. An Equity Opportunity.
ENGINEERING GRADES. Positions $1860 up,
Never a fee to applicant. Call Bob Countrey,
912-583-1750 or send resume to Courtney Pets-
Service, 824 North St. Suite 181, St. Louis,
Missouri 63002.
K. 65022
Did your Easter break leave you with the summer job blues? We still have a few full time summer work positions available. Find out if they are suitable to P.O. Box 205, Lawrence, KS 4630-4300 or to P.O. Box 205, Lawrence, KS 4630-4300.
Skippers taught in hibernation, pre-wood, pre-behind
the ice. They were paid $50 per month. Make 907 per month. For interview
questions, call: (212) 807-6364.
Psychiatric Nurses wanted for all shifts on child's, adolescent, and adult wards. Apply at the office of Director of Nursing, Tampa State Hospital. Mail resume to: Director of Nursing, Tampa State Hospital, 312-456-3080. Equal Opportunity Employer
MAKE $L006 THIS SUMMER. If you are hard
working and愿意和rewriting to relocate
CNL 8242 3957.
Looking for a job to help get you through college or into the workforce. Send resume to Summer W. Johnson 1252 W. 4th St.
BUSINESS ADMN, GRADS & marketing & management positions $12,000 up. Never to applicant Call 618 Courtney m9244m 6900 Wrd St. Suite 105, Shawnee Mission, KS 66200
Plurklarion Index open immediately or just mouse
over it. Call 310-456-7890 for $250 up to starting price. Call 310-456-7890 for
more information.
monoradiologist. Need for Student Clark-Kegel (minum)
graduation) to work as a monoradiologist employment through the summer and over next fall in a number of monoradiology hands-recording data, and application
include Curing test. Make written application con-
ditionary for Monaural Histopathology Global Survey. Moore Hall, 1300 Avenue A (Nashville). Resume to Dr. David DeWitt, Dkam Hall Equal Opportunity.
Mental health technicians, licensed health work-
tachers, psychiatric assistants, health service work-
ers and other mental health professionals are
State Hospital, 2700 W. 6th, Topeka, KS.
Phone 913-269-4576. Mergages can be arranged by
phone.
Earn $50 to $100 weekly in Your Homebank
in New York, NY. Learn Electricity 101: Cookers,
Industrial-Outdoor, Electricity 102: Cookers,
on-site operator on less than $9 per hour.
Enrollment is open to all who wish to
be a "workable" inventory writer. Write today D&C Bank
at (866) 324-7444.
$50-$100 paid in person or delivery. Z-20 monitor
with 3-way zoom. Battery operated. Free wifi
power. $60 day warranty. Deskpad, scanner, tape
machine, LCD monitor, DVD player, phone
phone.
We have plenty of summer jobs available in the Kansas City metro area for security officers. You will work on the job site, perform poststation and a phone in your house. Apply on Mon-Fri, 9 am -5 pm. WELLS FOR CITY: 710-285-4366
REPRESENTATIVES WANTED for promotion of international bays lines in Europe and Asia. Exc. Travels, Expeditions, Educational tours. Abroad any travel arrangement organized. Music Bus. Theatre 4-26
The University of Kansas (Lawrence Campus), Office of Information Systems, requires students of student data base assistance. Required experience includes working with written communications skills and knowledge of written communication skills not required by CODBO programming expert requirements. Also required are basic data base expertise (preferably IBM). This course will cover moving into the data base administration area and the procedures for moving into the data base administration area. The individual will be trained in the areas in which he or she is not proficient. Degree will be earned within 18 months of graduation. Bourses per week during the school year. Subject to availability. Services: Office of Information Systems, Lawrence Campus, KC 66443. Application Deadline: May 30th. EMPLOYER APPLICATIONS ARE SOUGHT FROM ALL QUALIFIED PROFILES. DEMISSION VETERANS STATUS: NATIONAL ORIGIN
Wanted. Hotelcatering. Free area rearrangement.
Bachelor's degree or equivalent, two year
revenue, terrine and innings. Phone 911-
277-4567. Email info@hotelcatering.com.
The Office of Information Technology (Lawrence Company) is seeking a system typist. Must be proficient in using Windows 10 and 8.44 time block requirements during the week, with 6 hours of practice experience in preparing charts and reports, receiving files and photocopying Position Requisition Information. Resume with reception, filing and photocopying Position Requisition Information. Apply to Stiffler Administrative Secretary, Office of Information Technology, 904-435-3278. Application deadline is Tuesday, May 1, 1999 a.m. The Office of Information Technology (Lawrence Company) Applications are sought from all qualified applicants who have a demonstrated ability to diagnose disability, veteran status, national origin, age or background.
Bartenders and waitresses call between room
and room 11, 625-793-4200 or in between
at room 11, 625-793-4200.
RESEARCH ASSISTANT Help conduct studies weWorked children in Tampa. Must be bachelor's degree in education, five years next full SECRETARY-Tying, Keyboarding, 644-560-3800. Opportunity Employer 4-308-644-5600.
Addresses wanted Immediate! Work at firm in
Baltimore, MD. 8250 Park Lane. 127 Dell St.
6236 Park Lane.
ARE YOU A PHOTOGRAPHER? If you've ever considered the field of professional Photography, Compete Corporation photographs more college-aged students than its former rival. If you like to travel are independent, have a strong desire to excel and thoroughly enjoy the art of portrait photography. All you need is a copy of your current portfolio and a keenness to learn. For more information write: American Compete Corp. 1007 Kestrel Avenue, Kansas City, KS 64102.
Attention Scales! Faculty坐席 sales representatives have been invited to the annual job interview promoting high quality staff. For this position, individual must be highly qualified in the subject area. Attendance on the Summit Travel Pack, the Portland Plaza, or the Capitol Mall will be required.
MISCELLANEOUS
Chock your blood pressure.
FREE
MESS HUNDING COPYING - The House of
Lords recently passed a motion beating
tenning and covering in Lawyers. Let us
consider the case of a former messenger.
...
CURRICULUM & INSTRUCTION (Media) - half-time graduate assistant in the Educational Research and Development program August 15, 1978 Qualifications: knowledge of mathematics or related experience; graduate student status starting at or communicate effectively RE-SERVICE: associate faculty & staff maintain work flow; develop instructional materials assist the Director of Instruction; apply letter to Dr. Phyllip Brody Education Department.
UNDERGRADE HIGH TEACHING ASSISTANTS
classify students and grade in mathematics, science and english, and grade in social studies with a standard of approximately 600 for 14-weeks. Qualifications should include breadth and depth in math, science, language, or a faculty recommendation. Interested students must be enrolled before May 15, 1979. The Department of Chemistry and Geology offers undergraduate and graduate applications from eligible applicants.
Strona Hall Lobhv
Wescoo 4th Floor West
8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
TAN MAN
DAY!
—MAY 2nd—
"Undress" like Tan Man
Shorts & T-Shirt
Watch Personals
for details. — Dad
NOTICE
DEATH WHY HOTHER? ECKANKAR
The Key to secret worlds. 843,212-843,212e
750,613-750,613e
WANTED officials to help with intraumal wrestling match. If interested call 343-5346 or email us at wrestling@cbs.com
OFFICIAL TAN MAN
VITTA, we are just posting here because MAYER
has a new job. He is a business analyst in the
we have. We want an eastern, cool, mathy Breeding
to work with us. Maybe in NYC? We will talk.
We will email you.
LIMERICK CONTEST FORM
DEADLINE: MONDAY, APRIL 30, 5 PM
- Mail in this form with check or money order to 111 Flint Hall or just come by.
- $3.50 per limerick to cover
publication costs.
Write
Contest Judge
Limerick here—
ALL LIMERICKS
PUBLISHED ON
is Chancellor Archie Dykesi
FROM
TAN MAN DAY,
PUBLISHED ON
NAME
WED. MAY 2nd.
PHONE
ADDRESS:
ELECTRONICS
2319 Louisiana
MOST ORIGINAL
LIMERICK WINS
TEAM ELECTRONICS
ENTER HERE
$400 JVC PORTABLE
RADIO CASSETTE
RADIO CASSETTE RECORDER
WHAT'S A LIMERICK?
- 2 VU Meters
- ALC & Manual
Recording level control
WIN!
A limerick is 5 lines with a rhyme scheme aabba
Full Auto-Stop
- 5 Watt - 4 Speak
- 5 Watt—4 Speaker system with 6.1/2"
system with 61/2"
woofers & 2" Tweetery
JVC RC-828
10
Thursday, April 26, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Rape...
From page one
said. "It frightens me when I meet some body like that that I don't know."
"I felt like it was partly my fault, but you can't cut yourself off from everybody just to make yourself feel better."
Although estimates differ on the percentage of rapes that are reported to the police, most researchers and law enforcement authorities agree that women attackers in a social context before the assault are often reluctant to re to the police.
Sut. jeanne Longaker, KU police officer,
estimated that only 5 percent of the rapes
that occur in the Lawrence area were
reported.
"THEY DON'T report them, either for fear of retaliation or just plain embarrassment," she said. "They're just not willing to become that much involved."
The KU police handle all raped reports on campus. The Lawrence Police Department has jurisdiction over rape cases that take place within the city limits, and the sheriff's office handles cases that take place in the county.
Longaker said that two raps and four attempted raps had been reported on by police.
She said she based her low estimate of reported rapes on the number of anonymous phone calls she received and rumors she heard. She also is involved in education programs on self defense and crime prevention.
"I never plays," Longaker said. "There is
a girl there who says she was raped
almost every time I play."
The women least likely to report their assaults, Longauer said, are those who were killed in the attack.
"They're afraid of things getting out that make it look as if they brought it on themselves," she said. "It's totally unfair that you cannot go out to a social place and make an acquaintance and do things with that person." "You're going to come home the same way you left."
"SOME DEVELOP a real fear of dating." Another barrier to reporting raped and attempted rapes, Longaker said, is a victim's desire to protect her family.
"Some of them say, 'Mom would never get over it.'" she said.
Ron Lim, criminologist for the Lawrence police, agreed that of those women who do report assaults, the majority who had been arrested did not want to pursue the case in court.
Olin said that 23 raps were reported to the Lawrence police during 1970. He said that they had been on patrol.
That percentage does not reflect the Dec. 22 arrest of Charles Hunter, a 16-year-old Lawrence youth who recently was convicted of six sexual assaults during that month.
Longaker said that most of the women who had been through a rape asked her how she had reacted.
SHE SAID, "They want to know how they can continue to have a social life and not be afraid of what the consequences will be at the end of the evening.
"I guess you just take your chances."
According to one writer, a woman is raped in the United States every 14 minutes. Susan said the solution to the problem must come through education for men.
"They're the ones that have got to stop it," she said. "I 'happens all the time'—just happens."
Susan said some of her friends regarded her experience as another reason to hate men. One of those friends had bought a gun and learned to aboot. Susan has considered
"I don't hate men," she said. "I never have, I consider him (the attacker) a wild animal. That's what he was during the rape. I don't consider him another human being."
Hate may not be the word but perhaps awareness is.
"Any man can do that," Susan said.
"Every man has the ability to do that."
SHE RECTED from a poem starkly titled "Rape Poem," by Marce Piercv:
"There is no difference between being raped and being pushed down a flight of cement steps except that the wounds also bleed inside.
"There is no difference between being raped and going head first through a windshield except that afterward you are afraid not of cars—but of half the human race."
Susan's attitudes toward her experience, and her determination to let people know what happened to her and to others, are "Fighting Back." a 1798 book by Janet Hole.
In the book, a rape victim concludes her story by saying, "A body that has been raped is usually a gradual process. It has been five years since the assault. The details have blurred. No longer do they invade my daily thoughts. Yet, in quiet times, I know the most bitter truth."
"It can happen again."
CORRECTION
ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL
will appear at the Lawrence Opera House Saturday, May 12th instead of May 5th as advertised in yesterday's Kansan
SKY DIVING Come Fly With Us
AERONUTS
Greene County Sport Parachute Center Wellsville, Kansas Student Training Classes 10 a.m. Tues.-Sun. Dawn-Dusk
First Lady June Carter $30,000. All bundles of items include: price includes book, airline and dummy ride card and dummy ride card. Proof of proof of identity with good proof of identity on an Carl Curtison farm. Check at www.curtisfarm.com.
1 25 KC
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Associates of Lawrence Invites the public to our weekly
OPEN HOUSE April 27 - 8:00 pm 500 Lindley Hall
If not clear, there will be an Open House the following Friday and every Friday thereafter throughout most of the summer.
Partially funded by Student Senate.
Rent it.Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
Theories on breaking up differ
This is the last in a series of three stories about dating relationships of college students. Today's story deals with learning to cope with breaking up.
By LESLIE GUILI Staff Renorter
By LESLIE GUILD
Whether it's "Breaking Up Is Hard To Do" or just "Now We've Got to Say Goodbye For The Summer" that you're hearing, the answer is a permanent end of a relationship is difficult.
Breaking up a relationship that has been important to an individual is one of the most influential decisions a couple can make. Coleman and Betty Edwards say in their book, "Brief Encounters," which is an analysis of heterosexual relationships. It is a time of decision-making that must be made with caution.
COLLEGE OF STATISTICS
Some relationships end without a discussion of what went wrong or why. Other couples talk about the end of their relationships and how they will cope with the future. Experts have varying opinions on which is best.
"THE ONLY WAY to be able to accept the end of an important relationship is to discuss what has happened," Coleman said. "He gave me a part of your experience and it is very difficult."
"Students aren't usually that formal about breaking up," Wright said. "One person makes the decision and informs the other, leaving that person behind."
But Erik Wright, professor of psychology at KU, said students sometimes couldn't
Al Green, a psychiatrist with the Menninger Foundation in Topeka, said discussion at the breaking up point of the relationship was unrealistic.
"At that point a lot of anger is occurring."
he said. "So a discussion really wouldn't be very representative of the true nature of the world."
HE SAID, RATHER that the only representative discussions were those that Mr. Gates had made.
"It is best to modify the relationship at points along the way," he said. "This should be done by talking about problems when they occur."
Haig to lecture on NATO tonight
"Discussions about goals and problems that confront each partner must take place at each practice along the way." she said. "If you fail, the time of breaking up. It would be important,
Kathleen Draskovich, Lawrence senior,
sad talking out problems was the best way
Gen. Alexander M. Haig Jr., former
Gen. Alexander M. Haig Jr., former Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, will speak at 8 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union as part of the J.A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture Series.
speak on "NATO and our Future Security Needs."
Haig, who was chief of White House staff under former President Richard Nixon, will
As deputy assistant to Nixon for national security affairs, Haig made 14 trips to Southeast Asia to speed the return of U.S. prisoners of war and to help establish a successful ceasefire agreement between North and South Vietnam.
The lecture is free and open to the public.
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so that no hard feelings linger. That's why a discussion must come."
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"Neither individual can really see the other's point of view, because they feel so much pain over the end of the relationship," she said. "So such discussions usually don't happen." However, they can have some relevance, in getting both partners to talk to each other."
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WRIGHT SAID the process of breaking up for most students was very painful.
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"A lot of we' is broken down," he said. "This begins a withdrawal process."
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"Some students ask why they ever got involved," he said. "Others just deny that the break up is occurring. They experience depression and they are just plain loneless."
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"Students have a good sense of recoverability," he said. "It sometimes takes a while, but inevitably most will recover."
Green said maturity was important in breaking up.
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"ABOUT 99 PERCENT of broken relationships are painful," he said. "The key is a quick, mature approach to getting your life going again."
"For people who have lived together, property has to be divided up," she said. "The physical moving out makes the situation a lot more traumatic."
But she said the couple still had to deal with the emotional side of breaking up.
WRIGHT SAID, however, that students have to go for them in a broken relationship.
"Change isn't something that is easy to adapt to," she said. "So to comfort myself when change is taking place in my life, I don't really engage in some other or new activity. I just rely on my other friends and I draw from their stability."
"The simple fact that they are students and in an environment with so many people makes it difficult to learn."
Mortensen said she thought it was important not to live in the past.
But Coleman said that being a student on the rebound could be good and bad.
Drakskovic said she thought breaking up was difficult because so many decisions had to be made.
"You must train yourself not to think about things you did with your past mate or songs that were "your songs," she said. "Once you get over such things you can go on and have good memories and feelings about the break up."
Mark Lanki, Lincoln, Neb. sophomore, said he thought it was important to end the season.
"If both partners can be open and
"You are in an environment where a lot of people your own age with similar interests are," she said. "But there's no way to tell who is available. And if the school is large, that can also be a negative aspect. It can be loneliest in a crowd."
straightforward about what happened, I think you can remain friends," he said. "You have to sit back and think things out."
But, he said he thought it was important not to dwell on things too long.
"YOU HAVE TO funnel your energies somewhere else," he said. "For me that something else is sports. I get involved and play basketball, the pieces and begin looking for sorrowese pieces."
Coleman said the real problem in breaking up was rejection.
"At this time a person is feeling unacceptable," she said. "It's important to build up your self-esteem. So what ever helps to do that, be it another relationship, close friends or just laying low for a while, is what will help."
LAST CHANCE!! POLKA
music by Joe Schiefelbein and his Flying Dutchmen
Friday April 27 8:11-45 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
$3.50 admission includes beer, pop and popcorn (tickets at the door)
Pre-Law Students
All Interested
Meet with Douglas County prosecuting attorney, Law School Faculty member and Lawrence Mayor, and an area Judge.
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Physician shortage hits rural areas hard
By PATRICIA MANSON
Staff Reporter
When Buckin's long-time family doctor moved, it took the Kansas town almost a year to replace him.
"We looked everywhere," Dale Birney, cashier at Buckin's Farmers State Bank, said recently. "There's got to be a million and one placement centers. We looked there, we contacted friends and neighbors, we went to health days at the Med Center, we did a lot of
PRIMARY CARE is family practice, general practice, internal medicine, pediatrics and emergency medicine. Primary care
Bucklin, a town in southwest Kansas with a population of 800, was facing a problem shared by hundreds of rural towns in the state—how to find a primary care physician when specialization in the medical profession is limited; how many numbers of doctors are needed for urban and suburban areas.
Although the optimum ratio of primary care physicians is 80 for every 1,000 persons, according to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, Kansas had only 50.7 for every 1,000 persons in 1977. Ninety-two of the 105 Kansas counties suffer from a shortage
The counties that do not have a shortage are Leavenworth, Wyatton and Johnson in northeast Kansas and ten others in southwest Kansas.
Rural towns have trouble attracting doctors, the Department of Health and Environment says, because most rural towns are not large enough to support specialists. Even primary care physicians are reluctant to practice in rural areas, the department says, because they do not have as much time as urban physicians or as many opportunities to consult with specialists.
A. J. YARMAT, associate director of Outreach, the placement and recruiting service at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
"Small communities have difficulty attracting young physicians," he said. "Young physicians aren't heading for the small communities with 1,000 or 2,000 people. The smaller the town, the harder it is to recruit doctors."
Because of the trouble rural towns experience recruiting and retaining doctors, the Kansas Legislature and the Med Center have issued a rule to limit the number of doctors.
Perhaps the most controversial program is the Kansas Medical Scholarship Program, established by the Legislature last year. Under the program, students receive a year's tuition for each year they agree to practice in Kansas. Students who receive an additional $500 a month while they are in school must agree to practice in medically underserved areas of the state.
THIS YEAR, 153 students enrolled in the program are obligated
Although the program was established just last year, its future is uncertain. The program has been attacked by both medical
to practice in Kansas, and 273 more are obligated to practice in rural areas of the state.
More than 230 medical students filed a lawsuit against the Kansas Board of Revents last May, saving a tuition ransom by the
the legislature that established the program. In March, the Kansas Senate passed a bill that would have allowed the Legislature to limit the money available for the program each year. The governor, did not vote on the bill before the legislative session ended.
State Sen. Mike Johnson, D-Parsons, who wanted to eliminate the program completely, said recently, "I think the program is too
Doctors praise small-town life
The requirements for the job don't sound attractive.
Long hours. Few vacations. Isolation from fellow professionals. Lower than average pay. Certainly not enough to an extensively educated man or woman.
Yet a minority of doctors in Kansas are resisting the trends toward medical specialization and urban living and starting practices in rural towns.
"I like rural living," Michael J. McGinnis, a surgeon who has practiced in Dodge City for the past five months, said recently. "I like the people here. This is the United States where people are close to the earth. They're really good people."
many ways, a bad environment to grow up in.
Rodney Dill, a family practitioner in Atwood, in northwest Kansas, said, "I'll take it, I will."
"Also, you get a chance to know your patients here. You know their families, their environment. You can deal with the patient better."
"BY BEING A jack-of-all-traits,
"I would not beged doine doing the same things over and over," he said, "I like the at-
titude of a rural area. I grew up in a rural town."
"What I was looking for was a smaller town under 2,000 population," Berttonter
said. "What I wanted was to start my own business."
The chance to work for himself makes up for the lower salary doctors in rural areas usually receive. Betterton said.
According to the American Medical Association, in 1975 doctors in metropolitan areas carried an average of $23,400 a year, while those in metropolitan areas carried an average of $8,900 a year.
Other doctors and medical students said the smaller salaries for rural doctors did not discourage them.
regeens was an attempt to force them to participate in the scholarship program.
Frank Flamer, a third-year student at the Med Center, said he planned to practice in a rural area despite the salary difference.
"MONEY IS NOT a deciding factor," Flamer said. "I think I can make a sufficient living either place. If there was a See DOCTORS back page
When the Legislature established the program, the Regents raised 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 Regents also increased the program program had not influenced their decision to raise the tuition.
SO FAR, the courts have made no decision concerning the
expensive. We're going to spend $3 million on it this year. We could take that money and put it to better uses, like expanded residence permits.
The scholarship program also has been attacked by members of
IN ANOTHER attempt to alleviate the doctor shortage in rural areas, Kansas has expanded its family residency programs in urban and suburban areas. In the past three years practice residence program at the Med Center and at three hospitals in Wichita. Twenty-eight of these residents are scheduled for residency.
Also, the Med Center requires all medical students to spend two
months on a rural preceptorship. Under this program, students assis s a doctor in private rique practice.
The Med Center also sponsors Rural Health Weekends, a voluntary program in which students spend three days in a rural setting.
Both these programs encourage students to consider rural practice, Yarmat said.
"The PURPOSE is to allow students to become acquainted with rural physicians and to become familiar with rural health praecipes."
Floyd Hockermichael, a third-year Med Center student, spent a weekend in Helot, in north-central Kansas, observing the local
"I learned a lot," Hockermann said. "I followed a general surgeon around. It gave me an opportunity to review some things that I didn't know."
"We don't actively recruit doctors," he said, "but what we do is provide the names and bodies to those who want doctors. The towns
The Office of Physician Placement and Recruitment at the Med Center helps doctors who have already graduated find positions in the medical field.
Since the placement program began nine months ago, Yarmat said, the Med Center has helped place 268 doctors in 21 toys.
ONE OF THE DOCTORS placed was Dale Bettterton, a family practitioner from Minnesota. Bettterton began working in Bucklin's
Betterton said he was impressed with the Med Center's placement program.
"Their information is very current and they try to match doctors to their desires," he said. "Private search groups are not very good. They usually don't take into consideration a doctor's likes or philosophy of medicine."
the ultimate success of programs designed to ease the shortage of doctors, especially primary care doctors, is uncertain.
The percentage of primary care physicians in Kansas has risen slightly in the past few years and the percentage of all doctors rose by 13 percent between 1963 and 1973. However, during that same time, rural areas lost 29 percent of their doctors, most of them were ill-educated.
Increasing the number of Kansas medical school graduates or doctors probably would not by itself lessen the doctor shortage in rural towns, according to the Department of Health and Environment. The state needs doctors who like small-town living, the
Michael J. McGinnis, a surgeon in Dodge City, agrees.
"The problem is not the number of doctors," he said. "It's finding people who like this kind of lifestyle."
House approves tax relief package
e Staff and Wire Reports
TOPEKA-A $48 million tax relief package, viewed by some as the Kansas Legislature's last shot at major tax relief this session, solidly passed the Kansas House yesterday and was sent to meet an uncertain fate in the Kansas Senate.
Of the three-bill package, the House unanimously passed a measure that would raise the personal state income for all but 10 percent of passers-by passed unannounced was a bill allowing more low-income elderly and disabled Kansana to qualify for property tax.
The third bill, eliminating a statewide 1.5 mill property tax used to finance state building construction, passed 115-8.
House Democrats had been expected to try to amend the package by doubling the amount of tax relief money provided by the homestead bill.
"IM AT A loss for words at the moment and still in a state of shock," said State Rep James Braden, R-Iowa. He also said party plebished its acceptance of the plan.
House Republicans, who compiled the package, were surprised to receive full Democratic support on the bills boosting the income tax exemption and expanding the homestead property tax relief program.
One Democrat who was satisfied with the Republican proposal was State Rep. Mike Glover of Lawrence.
"I'm happy with the way it came out," he said. "I have to consider that I'm representing two segments—my old district and my new district."
"It gives you an idea of the hot spot I'm in."
Glover was referring to the fact that the House reapportionment plan carried out this year would put him in a new district for next year's election.
He said the Democratic tax relief proposal would have helped the young couples with children and the working class in a large part of his constituency now.
HIS PRESENT district, the 44th, includes much of east and central Lawrence.
The Democratic plan would have allowed anyone who made less than $16,000 a year to get homestead property tax relief.
The Republican plan would raise the present income level from $2,900 to $13,000, and limit tax relief to low-income elderly disabled and heads of households.
"In my new district you can forget it," Glover said. "There are a lot of families there making more than $50,000 a year."
The 44th District will be made up of strongly Republican precincts in west Lawrence after next year's election.
The three measures were sent to the Senate yesterday, where a caucus of Republican senators gave the bills lukewarm support.
THE $38 million House package is aimed at breaking a tax deadlock before the Legislature adjourns its 1979 session this week. Except for a law removing the 3 percent sales tax on tobacco, the law will have received the surplus of both houses.
House Speaker Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, said he was uncertain how senators would accent the neckwear.
Senate Republicans, who control the 40-member upper chamber by a bare 21 vote, have unanimously approved a package. However, by a showing of hands, they indicated they probably would not vote.
A bare majority of a caucus indicated they could support the $1,000 income tax exemption, rather than a $20-aperson tax credit proposed earlier this session. Most of the caucus also indicated they could support the homestead proposal.
The removal of the statewide property tax received more opposition, particularly merely would help large property taxpayers, such as utility companies. Many senators indicated they could support tax not repealing, the tax for about five years.
Alen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning, said yesterday, "For the long run, we we've estimated the cost over the next four years."
E.B. Allen renovation to cost state $4 million
It will cost about $4 million to renovate and expand E.B. Ellen Hospital, the Wichita branch of the University medical center. KU officials said yesterday.
David Waxman, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said he was pleased with the appropriation for E.B. Allen.
The Kansas Legislature Wednesday appropriated $1.3 million, of the Med Center's $114.7 million budget for next year, to begin the renovation.
hiring an architectural firm to study E.B. Allen, Richard Walsh, dean of the Wichita branch, said. The firm will come on Friday for renovating the hospital, he said.
"I think the Legislature is going at it the right way," he said, "I think the money is adequate for their needs for next year."
Walish said the Med Center would begin taking bids for the architectural study job this summer. Construction work on the building will be begun at least in February 1980, he said.
"We'll develop a plan on what needs to be done and what should be done first," Walsh said.
Part of the $1.3 million will be spent
The Kansas Board of Regents voted in February to keep the Wichita branch of the Med Center in E.B. Allen, where the state had been renting space since 1923. Sedgwick County, which owns the state need to sell for $1 B.E. Allen to the need to sell for $1 B.E.
Walsh said that the exact cost of the renovation would not be known until the study was completed, but that it would not be more than $4 million.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Vol.89.No.140
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Fridav. Anril 27.1979
Good Question
Wayne Rogers, former star of the television series "M*A*S*H", spoke to a large class in Flint Hall yesterday morning. Rogers told the students about his educational
Staff Photo by BILL FRAKES
background, his new movie and acting. He has been in the Lawrence area this week promoting his new movie, "Ones in Paris." See related story and photograph page 10.
Haig urges reassertion of U.S. power role
By JUDY WOODBURN
Staff Reporter
The United States must reassert its role as a world leader if Western nations are to counter the "ominous and relentless buildup" of Soviet military capabilities, Gen. Alexander M. Haig Jr., said last night.
"The days are gone when we are able to move in and out of local or regional crises which find the United States in direct or potential confrontation with the Soviet Union with great urgency. The United States, of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces in Europe.
Speaking to more than 550 people in Woodruff Auditorium as part of the J.A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture Series, Haig said U.S. military power had declined in comparison to Soviet military power in the past decade.
Hlaa said that until the early 1970s, the United States had been able to depend on its strategic nuclear superiority as a defense against Soviet aggression. But, he said, the United States had also exploited deficiencies in this area of Soviet military strategy.
"This relentless growth in Soviet power is not the result of a sudden change in Moscow's orientation," Haig said. "It is
the material consequence of 15 years of 4 to 5 percent increase in Soviet defense spending."
BUT MAIG said there was reason for "cautious optimism" that NATO forces in Europe would be able to meet the threat.
He said he was optimistic because NATO member nations recently had pledged to increase military spending in Afghanistan.
Hag will retire from NATO in June and return to the United States.
Haig said the West also must be aware of the implications of what he called "blatant and illegal Soviet intervention"
'How can America hope to establish firm, viable
r these ventures, Haig said, will threaten the sources of raw materials, especially energy sources, to Western nations. They also are undermining the significance of detente efforts, he said.
THE PAST year, he said, has seen the emergence of Soviet client states in Afghanistan, Ethiopia and South Yemen, the development of a network of ports around the borders of Russia and as a deepening Soviet in eastern southern Africa.
relations with the Soviet Union, such as credit transfers and cultural exchanges, while we ignore blunt Soviet intervention.
Some members of the audience challenged Haig's criticism of Soviet intervention by saying these Soviet actions could be compared to American involvement in Vietnam.
But Hagi answered only that the "perversion of existing liberation movements by the Soviets in the Third World could not be paralleled in any way with American action in Vietnam."
As deputy attorney to former President Richard Xionk for national security affairs from 1970 to 1973, Haug made several trips to Southeast Asia to help establish the United Nations mission in South Vietnam and the return of U.S. resistance to war.
Higa also said that he had several reflections on a possible reintroduction of the draft in the United States and Japan.
HE SAID he thought American youth should mature with a sense of oblivion and service to the people of their nation. He was determined to help them.
See HAIG back page
2
Friday, April 27, 1979
University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services
Risina river forces evacuation
URAND FORKS, N.D.—The Red River continued to well yesterday, flooding parts of Minnesota, North Dakota and Canada, and prompting the evacuation of some communities.
The sandbaked duges in and around Grand Forks appear to be holding but officials read 200 more people in East Grand Forks, Minn., to evacuate.
Civil Defense Director Orley Gunderson said he was scouring for volunteers to send to the Point, an area of about 1,000 homes where the Red and Red
Some dikes in the low-lying areas around the Point, though reinforced by sandbars and clay, were becoming waterlogged.
Mantahou Premier Sterling Lyon ordered people to leave areas in the path of the flooding river.
"The situation is serious and worsening," Lyon said in a broadcast announcement Wednesday.
Upriver, as the Pearl was dropping, some of the 3,500 people who had been evacuated in Marion County, Mississippi, returned to their homes.
induction weathersaily
service said, blue skies appeared and the National Weather Service said the Pearl River in Louisiana would crest at the Gulf of Mexico
Board supports gasoline plan
WASHINGTON - The Senate Energy Committee voted yesterday to recommend approval of President Carter's stability gas plan to the Senate, including the following provisions:
Carter agreed to set aside 10 percent of the nation's gasoline reserves for use by motorists who drive farther to reach their jobs.
"We need a standby rationing plan," said Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., chairman of the energy panel.
Jackson said another element of Carter's proposals—authority for weekend station clinches—would be voted on and probably rejected on Monday.
Once we revised Carter rationing plan, which would be put in use only during a national energy emergency, gasoline coupons would be disbursed on public roads.
Mideast violent despite truce
JERUSALEM—Syrian and Israeli farmer jets flew over Beirut yesterday while Christian militants lobbed shells into the southern Lebanese villages
Despite the action, a spokesman for the Palestine Liberation Organization said there had been no significant violations of an early morning U.S. trust that the military was following orders.
A U.N. spokesman also said the truce, arranged by U.N. liaisons in Israel and Lebanon, was holding.
Observers said the second day of Syrian flights over Lebanon indicated a closer cooperation between Syria and the PLO, both staunch opponents of the ISIS.
In New York, the U.N. Security Council agreed to meet "without delay to consider the situation" if any more serious incidents occurred and expressed concern that they were happening.
No casualties were reported from the Israeli naval shelling of camps near Sidon, which is about 30 miles south of Beirut.
Prices climb again in March
WASHINGTON—Consumer prices jumped another 1 percent in March, the government said yesterday.
Prices increased sharply in March in all sectors of the economy. Food and housing prices went up 1 percent; clothing prices were up 1.5 percent; and
Alfred E. Kahn, President Carter's anti-inflation chief, told the congressional joint economic committee that the March price report was bad, saying "we still believe in inflation."
Kahn also said it was "highly unlikely" the administration could meet its 7.4 percent inflation target for the year.
seen. George McGovern, D-B-D, said the March increase was an "economic and political disaster." He introduced legislation to give the president standby powers in his office.
Unless the administration wants such authority, officials say Congress probably will not approve it.
Ecuador to end dictatorship
QUITO, Ecuador—Ecuadorians will end a military dictatorship Sunday when they elect a president and congress, and become the third country in South America.
The new president and 69 members of the national legislature who are elected Sunday will be inaugurated and a new constitution will be adopted on Aug. 1.
In recent weeks, the military rulers in Ecuador repeatedly have said the elections would be held.
President Carter's administration has voiced support of the transfer of power in Ecuador.
The other two South American democracies are Venezuela and Colombia.
Nazi's lawyer may sue Carter
AUSTIN, Texas - The attorney for Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hitler's deputy has spent the past 36 years in Berlin's Spandau prison, said he planned to heed the plea of a lawyer who had been convicted.
The attorney, Merrell Frazer, Jr., said Hess should be released for humanitarian reasons. Hess suffers from cancer and mental illness, Frazer扎疑。
In a letter to President Carter, Fraser threatened to file a writ of mandamus against the president if Carter did not work for Hess's release.
Frazer said the United States, France and Great Britain have indicated a willingness to release Hess, but fear of reprisals from the Soviet Union have
The Soviet Union has vetoed Hess's release, saying he represents the last vestiges of fascism.
Chinese tour Kansas farms
GARDEN CITY—A delegation from the Peoples Republic of China yesterday completed a tour of the American heartland by looking at farming in southwest
Silkwood illness called fraud
The Kansas stop was part of a nationwide tour and was hosted by Farmland Industries of Kansas City and Far-Mar-Co., a Farmland grain marketing company.
The group visited wheat farm, grain elevators, feedlots, irrigation projects and a beet processing plant in areas around Garden City, Dodge City and Chicago.
The delegation, led by Yang Wei, a member of China's ministry of finance, made the visit to gather information on American production and trade.
"We are very impressed," Yang said.
ORLAHOMA CITY™ the president of Kerr-McGee Nuclear Corporation testified yesterday that Karen Silkwood was responsible for contaminating her testified water.
Kerr-McGeeAGSilkwood became contaminated while spiking urine samples she submitted to the company for radioactive testing. The corporation contends she added the plutonium to the samples to embarrass the company during union bargaining sessions.
Morgan Moore, Kerr-McGee president and manager of the company's plant when Silkwood became contaminated, made the statements "This is an unfortunate event."
Setting the record straight
The name of the chairman of the department of French and Italian was incorrectly reported on page 5 of yesterday's Kanan. The chairman of that department was
Weather
It will be clear to party cloudy today with a high temperature of 80, according to the National Weather Service. The low to mid-60s are expected, the upper 30s. The high tomorrow will go up 70.
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Friday, April 27, 1979
3
KU not alone in S. Africa issue
By LAURIE WOLKEY
Staff Reporter
The pros and cons of university investments in South Africa became a topic of discussion and dispute at the University of Kansas this semester.
But KU is only one of many universities that recently have questioned the effects of their investments on the apartheid system in South Africa.
There has been little disagreement between university administrators and students that apartheid, a system of racial segregation, does exist in South Africa.
The major issue has been whether American companies with South African subsidiaries could benefit from investment on the apartheid system. More specifically, some universities with investments in those companies have questions about the influence in South Africa in the racial system.
ALTHOUGH THE Kansas University Endowment Association recently decided to continue investing in South Africa based campuses at KU for some time. Several student organizations have protested the Endowment Association's decision and some have indicated they would continue to push for the divestiture of KU stocks in the country.
Among the other universities that have looked at the issue are Amherst College,
But their responses to the issue varied.
Miami University of Ohio, Smith College,
the University of Illinois and the University
In an article about university response to the South African problem, it was reported that the board of trustees at the Miami University of Ohio had voted to sell university stocks in two corporations with operations in South Africa.
But, Kay Irwin, administrative assistant at the Miami University of Ohio, said yesterday that the stocks in those two corporations, Union Carbide Corp. and Warren-Lambert Co., were not sold because of the companies' South African operations.
"It was just time to start over and we invested in other companies instead. Iwin
"They have decided not to divest. They are inclined to go along with the Sullivan命题."
The Sullivan Principles, established in 1977 by the Rev. Leon Sullivan, provide an example of how a moral law can be
According to Irwin, the university board of trustees had discussed divesting from South African based companies but had decided not to do so.
Instead of withdrawal from South Africa, the principles call for American companies to follow anti-apartheid guidelines that emphasize positive impact on South African workers.
MEMBERS of the University of Illinois board of trustees said the board was keeping a watchful eye on all the companies and banks in which the university had invested.
According to Earl Porter, secretary of the board of trustees at IU, board members think the university can influence corporations.
"The board will support divestiture only when a corporation fails to implement the Sullivan Principles or when the corp is insolvent in South Africa is strengthenme." Porter said.
"We have written a stockholder proposal to the companies. We voted for the proposal."
THE PROPOSAL includes a list of the improvements to which the university expects the South African based companies to adhere. The spokesman said the board of trustees responded differently to each corruption.
A spokesman for the board of trustees at Amherst College said board members there had voted to remove the chairman.
Porter said that although divisive would be considered "only as a last resort," the board had informed all companies and made sure they were confident their support of the Sylvan Principles.
At least two universities have made
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decisions to divest all stocks in corporations with South African subsidiaries.
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Alen Torrey, university treasurer at Hampshire College, said that after numerous student protests, the university agreed to stock in South Africa based companies.
Torrey said the university administration established a campus-based committee on investment responsibility to examine the issue. The committee was split on a solution, Torrey said, "but two months ago we sold the stocks in the three companies."
Howard White, director of public relations at the University of Massachusetts, said the university had divested all holdings in corporations in South Africa.
"The divestiture involved about $620,000 of stock in 20 companies. We simply bought shares of other companies without bases in South Africa," White said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN editorials
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of
APRIL 27,1979
Solve default problem
One of the more unfortunate legacies of the student population in this country has been the extremely high default rate on student loans from the government.
But recent figures indicate that the government is succeeding to some degree in whittling down those high rates. In one year, according to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, the default rate on Guaranteed Student Loans has been lowered from 14 percent to 10 percent.
For that achievement, HEW should be congratulated. And it looks as if there could be more improvement in the future. A standard billing system has been established to replace the scattered index cards that once contained tax records for inmates are now offered to officials who can convince defendants to settle.
BUT THERE are still problems with the sister loan program, the National Direct Student Loan Program, which has default rates as high as 50 percent in some schools. The responsibility for
collecting those loans now rests with the colleges themselves, and the government has not seemed inclined to take the initiative to do something about the default rate.
And that is unfortunate, for the higher the default rate, the less money is available for badly needed student loans. And continued high default rates will threaten a program that is sorely needed for many who could not receive an education without a loan.
ONE POSSIBLE solution, however, has been suggested by Joseph Califano, secretary of HEW. Califano recommended that the two large loan programs be merged with several smaller ones, allowing the government to assume all collection responsibilities.
With that step, and a renewed emphasis on collection by HEW, the government might restore some much-needed integrity to the student loan program and in turn maintain a program that is vital to many college students.
The goal of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence was to guarantee to all citizens the right to life, liberty and property.
Studies conclude racism still rampant
But two reports released recently by the U.S. Civil Rights Commission and the Southern Regional Council indicate that the Founding Father's ideas haven't quite worked out, particularly as far as blacks are concerned. The reason is racism.
"If there were a commitment to the objectives set forth in the Fair Housing Act, the picture now confronting us as a nation is that we are in the midst of a very substantial and a very material way."
FLEMMING CALLED housing discrimination a reflection of racism and added, "Let's not fool ourselves. We still care, with this basic problem in our nation."
"The government does not come into the court of public opinion with clean hands," Chairman Arthur S. Flemming said as the commission issued its 335 page report.
Eleven years after the passage of the Fair Housing Act, discrimination still is widespread in the selling and renting of houses in this country, the Commission said recently. And even Uncle Sam is a part of this sickening act.
The Veterans Administration and the Farmers' Home Administration were among the federal agencies singled out in the report for discriminatory practices.
The FHA was criticized as not being thorough in its handling of complaints. "Often it investigates only part of the complaint," the study said.
Further, agency officials consider compliance reviews a waste of time, and, the study said, of '3,028 reviews conducted in fiscal year 1975, no instances of noncompliance were reported. It reported similar results in succeeding years.
Crawford given unfair trial by press
To the editor:
I am writing in response to the "article" appearing in the April 17 Kausan concerning an investigation of charges made by two graduate students about the ethical conduct of Michael Crawford, professor of anthropology.
Instead of investigating and reporting the events that have actually occurred, the reporter, Bill Riggins, chose merely to repeat the allegations made by Elizabeth Murray and Crawford's denial. This gives the impression that the issue is "just a case of (Murray)'s word against Dr. Crawford," but it also shows how by other members of the field crew working in Belizn in 1976 and the outcome of previous hearings on this matter.
As a member of the Belize field team, I am obligated to make several points that the article fails to mention concerning our policies for obtaining consent from volunteers. We are instructed to use a single cell test results. All of the researchers who came into contact with the study participants made every effort to explain the purpose and procedure of the study. Individuals were not coerced or misled in any way. I might add that Murray's job involved getting students to visit the actual data collection site, so that she never actually observed the actions of Crawford or any members of the field team toward the study participants. The other graduate student mentioned in your article, Mackenzie Pompeki, was never in Belize at anytime.
Any of the seven members of the Belize field team can and have substantiated these facts. In addition, the Advisory Committee reviewed our procedure for obtaining informed consent in the field and found it adequate. During this review, Murray was a voting member of the committee, although he hardly be called an unbiased reviewer.
The allegations made by Murray and Sempolis have been reviewed by an anthropology department grievance committee, with Dean Horowitz representing the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, by (former) Dean Snyder, and by (former) Vice Chancellor Argersinger. In each case, the results of the review were wrongdoing. The results of this review process are publicly available; yet your reporter made no attempt to consult them.
Until this time, I have not made any public statement about the charges against the University grievance teams were sufficient to set the record straight. Apparently unwilling to admit that they were wrong, the University grievance teams discredit Crawford's professional conduct.
Finally, the headline in the Kansas AAPP plans ethics inquiry) tittle to accept responsibility.
KANSAN letters
agreed to investigate the charges made by the two students, and has not independently launched an investigation of Crawford's case. The Crawford should be found not guilty by University grievance heartbags, but is then subjected to an unfair trial by press in the case.
It is my sincere hope that Kansan reporters will in the future check their sources before publishing such distorted and potentially damaging hearsay.
Pamela J. Byard
Lawrence graduate student
Nuclear newcomer exaggerates report
To the editor:
In its April 13 issue the Kansan quoted Fred Halstead as saying that the people of Harrisburg, Pa., "received an amount of money from the state for their entire bodies 24 hours a day for the duration of the crisis." Such a gross exaggeration as that only serves to demonstrate how unfriendly the people are.
Evidently he got his information from the newspapers, which often printed numerical estimates of the exposure around the plant and compared it to common X-rays. Such comparisons can be misleading to those who do not understand the units involved, but, in a little about the subject myself, at least I can look up the terms to see what they mean.
The reports gave the radiation in units of exposure. Exposure is a measure of the total charge of the ions produced in an element of dry air by the passage of radiation photons. The common unit is the Roentgen. One Roentgen = $3.8\times 10^{-12}$ coulombs per kilogram of dry air.
Now notice that nowhere in the definition is there a reference to time. Exposure is a measure of the total exposure, not the rate of exposure. Thus when the radiation was measured, it was meant what that the total exposure was amenable, not that the intensity was the same.
What that amounts to is that the people were exposed, during the duration of the crisis, to radiation equivalent to about three short X-ray examinations. In fact, I recall that the total exposure was given to be about 30 million radians per year from natural sources such as the sun.
I have no objection to people being concerned about excessive radiation exposure.
MARVELLY
GEEZ! WITH GASOLINE
ATA BUCK A GALLON WE
HAVE TO CUT BACK A LOT
THIS YEAR...
ON FOOD.
Robert Johnson Goddard junior
McCarthyism lives in anti-nuke protests
In retrospect, it seems a shame that the nuclear activists will hurt obseriences at a time when they are more likely to obviously understands the subject, and listen so attentively to someone like Halstead who doesn't know anything more than what John Doe could read in the local newspaper.
To the editor:
Who said witch hunts are a thing of the past? McCarthyism isn't dead; it has just found a new evil to save America from nuclear power.
but I hate to see irrational fears develop from such absurd exaggerations.
Have you noticed as I have that most propensities of atomic energy speak calmly, quietly, and they constantly refer to facts and figures, while on the other side of the coin, most opponents of atomic energy rang their fists and how about how thousands upon thousands will die?
Now every person from Los Angeles to New York will be pointing at the Three Mile Island accident and calling for the permanent abandonment of all nuclear power plants in the United States, probably the United States. Few if any will look at the facts.
Fact 1: No one was killed; in fact, no one was injured.
Fact 2: Only two people (workers at the plant) received exposure to amounts of radiation above the maximum allowed for a worker. If they will suffer any harmful side effects.
Fact 3: There was no serious possibility of a "China Syndrome" type mellown.
The facts are there for anyone to see. The verdict is in. the Age of oil is passing, whether the American people will admit it to themselves or not. America needs viable energy alternatives for the future. Nuclear power is a clean, efficient and safe energy source.
Nuclear energy has a better safety record than coal, oil, natural gas and most other energy sources. Thousands upon thousands have died, and will die, in automobile accidents, but no one has suggested that we ban cars from the face of the earth.
The future is risky. Anyway we go will be costly. Coal will take the lives of many miners and its pollution will take the breath from many other people. Solar energy may be used to power these plants underdeveloped right now, and if we put all our hope in it, we could be left out in the cold with a lot of hopeful plans still on the drawing boards. Nuclear power is no panacea can always be improved upon. An we should learn from the Three Mile Island incident.
Beware of your decision people. No one source of energy is the answer, and if we toss one aside too quickly, your children may pay dearly for that decision.
Letters Policy
David Eland Hoxie freshmar
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is after publication, the letter should include the writer's home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication.
Vernon Smith
"There is evidence from a variety of sources that most projects financed by Farmers Home Administration—homes owned by local government, aggregated by race," the commission report said.
THE SOUTHERN Regionn Council, a civil rights research group, found in a study of boards and commissions that hold decision making powers in 10 southern states that 60 percent had no blacks and 50 percent had no women.
The study, "The Segregated Governments of the South," examined the boards and commissions whose members are appointed to hold real, not advisory, regulatory powers.
The report said that in the nearly 15 years since the passage of the Voting Rights Act, 2,000 blacks had been elected to public office in the South. But it said that they made up 30 percent of all publicly elected officials in a region where 20 percent of the population was black.
"As in the past, it remains a southern fact of life that the color of skin and gender tell more about who is exercising the decision-making powers in southern government than factors," Steve Suitts, the council's executive director and author of the report, said.
THE REPORT examined boards and commissions as of Jan. 1 in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and at universities. It did not mention the regulatory power or the governing boards of colleges and universities, which Suits said were more likely to be segregated because
Alabama got the gold star for the state with the worst record on black appointments. In Alabama blacks are members on two of 15 boards. In Mississippi, where blacks are nearly 40 percent of the state's population, only six board members were black. Sixty percent of the boards surveyed had no black members.
the schools had a history of segregation.
The findings of both reports confirm what a lot of blacks generally have known all along. And it is good to see that the findings are now a part of the public record.
MARTIN TO
THE EARLY FANFAN
HE SAYS HE LIKES HIS
PITCHES LOW, SLOW, AND UNDERHANDED
But until the agencies charged with enforcing fair housing standards are forced to get their acts together, and until more blacks are allowed to participate in policymaking boards and committees, the long-term effects of the law are alive and well in America will inevitably remain true. Founding Fathers note withstanding.
Bv JAN T. GROSS
N. V. Times Service
Defense of human rights a necessity
Wouldn't it be less naive, and more in keeping with the tradition of popular sovereignty, to think of our interests abroad in our open university foundations of our political system?
NEW HAVEN, Conn.—The issue of human rights, when applied to U.S. foreign policy, cuts across two motifs deriving from the nation's Protestant heritage: the notion that moral duty should guide men in their actions, and the notion that men should be practical in their actions.
In foreign policy, we also must search for an effective blend between idealism and pragmatism. For while pure idealism offers no convenient guideline for the conduct of international relations, pure pragmatism is no solution either, as it tends to erode the
Few Americans seem to doubt that the cause of human rights is worthy of whole-hearted support, but many doubt whether it is practical to become its champion.
WE TABLE IT as a sign of navare or cunning when we invoke ideals while discussing foreign affairs and as a sign of wisdom and shredness when we argue for realpolitik.
But how are we to pass judgment on the purported realism of a realpolitik if our national interests are not derived from principles of the Constitution?
Political commentators seem to have identified a contradiction between two deadly cherished principles of the American ethos, and the commentators, together with the public, are disturbed and uneasy. Would one not jeopardize interests if one sought to question them? In other words, no easier step, what are the practical consequences of taking a moral stand in a real world?
BUT ONE may try to consider the question from a different angle—that the Carter administration's open commitment to the defense of human rights allows, for the first time in American history, the development of a firm foundation for our foreign policy.
What are they derived from instead—some theory of history espoused by a secretary of state, a foreign policy adviser or a chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee?
What this difference in vocabulary reveals is of fundamental importance, because it demonstrates that U.S. national interests, as they are put forth and pursued by foreign policy makers, are not logically derived from the principles of democracy.
Observe the strangely split mentality we always exhibited when dealing with internal affairs on one hand and foreign policy matters on the other. We were unrelied on. When our politicians spoke about internal politics, we heard references to principles of democracy or the Constitution; when they spoke about foreign policy, we heard mostly about American interests.
IT MAY BE that internal and foreign policies are related and that the actions of a democratic state in one domain have a bearing on how it fares in the other.
[
Just as we must think about difficulties or practical implementation of ideals, so we must also ensure that the documentation not derived from a firm and well-defined commitment to our ideas will have no merit because its consequences for the preservation of liberty cannot be ascer-
WE HAVE committed so many spectacular blunders in the conduct of foreign affairs that it is foolish to think that we know what we are talking about when we use such concepts as "balance of power" or "tactical vs. 'strategic' concerns." These cannot suggest that we have a grasp of practically, but what if face is what is practical?
unavoidable values that underlie democratic institutions.
As we became fascinated by our growth, we became infatuated with power. Consequently, we were able to see only institutional power holders abroad—that is, governments and the military—as partners to deal with in foreign relations.
We completely forget about societies, we were deaf and blind to processes of social change, we relegated social forces to dusty shelves of the academy and social movements to the subject of "political intelligence."
IN DEALING with non-democratic regimes, which is when human rights bear most on foreign policy, we must shift the focus of foreign policy from governments to societies, for it is within the societies, rather than their governments, that there are forces of emancipation and democratization that we must identify and assist.
Among other things, we could get in touch with groups such as Charter 77 in Czechoslovakia and the Worker and Citizen movement in India to then gain visibility and strengthen in their own countries. We could press for cultural and sci-技 education in India, independent thinkers in, say Latin America.
We can do this while remaining true to the values of political freedom written into our Constitution. And it will be in our best interest to do so, for unless these social forces prevail peacefully, for unless future is uncertain.
We have no more urgent interests abroad than defending the principles by which we live at home. The defense of human rights is our only sensible realpolitik.
Jan T. Gross is assistant professor of sociology at Yale.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN On Campus
TONIGHT: THE ENGLISH HONOR AND AWARDS BANQUET will be at 6 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union. The JOURNALISM HONORS and AWARDS BANQUET be at 6:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union. The KAISER ANTHROPOLOGICAL CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Union. THE ASSOCIATION will meet at 8 p.m. in the Foom Room of the Union.
TOMORROW; CLASSICS DEPARTMENT SYMPOSIUM on the teaching of Latin will meet all day in the Council Room of the Union. KU GUN FUG CLUB meets at 8 a.m. in 173 Robinson, PILAMBA THETA will meet at 9 a.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. THE KANSAS ORNITHOLICHICAL SOCIETY will meet at room in the Union. The KENNETH SPENCER RESEARCH LIBRARY will host an open house at 4 p.m. at the Library. PERSHING RIFLES will meet at 6 a.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union. FRIES’S MUSEUM will meet at 6 a.m. in Calumnian Room of the Union. FRIES’S NERIES will host Emily White, pianist, at 8 a.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. COLLEEN KNEHNS, organist, will perform at 8 p.m. at Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont. The AURH SPRING FORMAL will begin at 9 p.m. in the Union Ballroom.
Unemployment problems and solutions, employment for the disadvantaged, politics in labor relations and the organization of labor are all part of a specialized field of education. The Department of Labor received a $220,000 departmental grant last fall. It received a $200,000 departmental grant last fall.
By GENE BROWNING
Staff Reporter
Part of the money will be used to organize training seminars for administrators in human resources agencies in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Iowa, Anthony Reddin, director of the human resources program, said recently.
Human resources is a broad area ranging from job-
lunting for the disadvantaged to labor relations in private
workplaces.
broad h we ights is
master's degrees in the School of Social Welfare, the department of political science and the School of Business. The curriculum was designed for students who were interested in entering the human resources field. He said the human resources program would not be offered as a graduate degree because he needed students prepare for work in the human resources area.
REDWOOD SAID that seven students were in the program and that he expected the number to increase.
Political science, social welfare and business can all be connected to human resources, Redwood said.
THE FACULTY members are very experienced in the human resources area. The Department of Labor was established to be the main source of employment.
"It is logical for these disciplines to cooperate because they are concerned with the political and organizational needs of today's people."
Redwood said human resources classes had been reorganized into a curriculum for students working on
Grant aids human resources field
you're starting from scratch, he said. "We had everything here.
Redwood said KU was chosen from 16 schools that applied for the grant.
Judi Servo, associate director of the program who worked mainly with the regional training side of the grant, said that besides training students, the grant paid for seminars that would help human resources administrators.
Servo said, "The seminars give administrators a chance to look at issues and identify the problems.
"Essentially the Department of Labor had the view that you don't get much work for a program some time when
"It is hard for them to justify taking time to look at human resources problems, but the private sector has learned to do it."
Attention KU Theatre-goers Planning to Attend the Opening Performance of Equus:
Special parking will be available for persons holding tickets to the Friday. April 27, performance of EDUUS.
Please be prepared to show your theatre tickets in order to park in these lots
E ZONE—east of Murphy Hall & adjacent to the Military Science Building
Theatre parking will be available in:
C ZONE—north of Murphy Hall;
N ZONE—west of Murphy Hall (north bays)
V ZONE—east of Murphy Hall & north of Summerfield Hall
Try to some early to avoid traffic congestion
(1977)
April 27 & 28
Truffaut:
THE MAN WHO LOVED WOMEN
films sua
Friday & Saturday, April 27 & 28
Dr. Francisco Truftauf; with Charles Denner. Brigitte Fossey, Leslie Mendros, Phyphy Fossey, mendros ("Days of Heaven") Frenchiates; Francesca Bassini 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m.
M $ \bullet $ A $ \bullet $ S $ \bullet $ H (1070)
Dir. Robert Allemant, with Donald Sutherland, Elliott Gould, Sally Kellerman, Robert Duvall. The original outfit. Mimi's hat. Jer. Jr. 7-4.700.000 3:30.800
She said instructors at the seminars will be mostly from KU. The seminars will be later this year at Departments of Psychology and Medicine.
Midnight Movie
Midnight Movie A New Shocker:
ERASERHEAD
(1949)
Dir. David Lynch; with John Nance,
Charlotte Stewart. "Erasehead" is
not for the saemisham.
Tuesday, May 1
ON THE TOWN
Dir. Gene Kelly, Stanley Donen; with Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, Ann Miller, Vera Elena. One of the most fast-paced energetic movie musicals ever made.
Wednesday, May 2
Kurosawa/Samurai:
SANJIRO
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud,
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission.
(1972)
Dir. Lewis Gilbert; with Roger Moore as 007, Barbara Bach. Music by Marvin Hamilisch.
Dir. Wooley Allen; with Woody Allen,
Gene Wilder, Burt Reynolds, Louise
Lasser, Lynn Radgrave, John Carradine.
Weekend shows also in Woodruff at
3:30, 7:00, 9:30 or 12 midnight unless
otherwise paid. $1.50 admission.
(1902)
Dir. Akira Kurosa; with Toshiro Mifune. Sequel to "Yojimbo". Japan's subtilities.
Friday & Saturday, May 4 & 5
THE SPY WHO LOVED ME
Midnight Movie
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You have $3.47 left in your account. Hey! That's $1.47 more than you expected.
Hey! That's $1.47 more than you expected.
Now comes Miller time.
c. 1978 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee, Wis.
er time.
6
Friday, April 27, 1979
University Daily Kansan
TONIGHT and SATURDAY the LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE
PRESENTS
cole tuckey
Don't Miss their last appearance this school year!
GET TICKETS NOW FOR THESE COMING ATTRACTIONS!!
Wednesday May 2nd
Friday, May 4th
Saturday,
May 5th
The EARL SCRUGGS Revue Infinity Recording Artists SPYRO·GYRA DAVID GRISMAN
MIDNIGHTS
$5.50 advance
$3.00 advance
$4.50 advance
FIVE STARS
$5.50 advance
$6.50 day of show
JOHN SMITH
$3.00 advance
$4.00 day of show
$4.50 advance
$5.50 day of show
Saturday, May 12th . . .
Don't Miss
ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL
and
DAVID ALLEN COE
Tickets available
at Better Days
& the 7th Spirit
Doors open at 8:00
Show at 9:00
The
Lawrence
Opera House
7th Spirit Club
642 Massachusetts
842-6930
Tickets available
at Better Days
& the 7th Spirit
Doors open at 8:00
Show at 9:00
The
Lawrence
Opera House
7th Spirit Club
642 Massachusetts
842-6930
London student brings Steinway to Kansas
By RHONDA HOLMAN Staff Reporter
The desire to study with Sequira Costa, professor of music performance, brought 20-year-old Francis Hornak, London special student, and his German Steinway grand piano to the University of Kansas.
Staff Reporter
"I met him in England when I was studying at the Royal College of Music and I was impressed with his master classes. I asked him if he would allow me to study with him and he said yes," Hornak wrote. "I have one of the greatest concert pianists anywhere is here in Lawrence."
Hornak, who has been at KU since September 1978, will present his first recital in America at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Swartbout where he will be accompanied by
In Sunday's recital, Hornak will be playing Schubert's *Imprompta in C minor*, Op. 90, No. 1; Beethoven's Sonata in D major, Op. 10, No. 3, and Chopin's Ballade No. 2 in F Major, Op. 58: *Nocere a b flat minor*, Op. 9, No. 1; and Scherzer in C sharp minor, Op. 39.
FEW BISHIV SHOB students would be financially able to follow their teacher to America, Hornak said, but an inheritance left by his father made it possible for him to ship his piano to Lawrence and to buy a house.
"I'm luckier than some. I can afford to study in America," he said. "I brought my piano over and nobody but a fanatic would do that ... it is a German Steinway and there is virtually no pianist in States like it except those that two or three others have brought over."
"It's worth it to have an instrument that can produce the sound I want. Of course, these pianos are terribly expensive and most students couldn't afford one. It makes me sad to think that most piano students never play on an instrument with a good sound. The
majority of pianos at KU can never give any sort of beautiful sound."
HORNAK SAID he had considered moving his Steinway to wait before Hecture did his program, but had decided it was imminent to play there.
Hornak said he practiced between four and six hours a day and one lesson a week with Costa but often was disappointed with his performance.
"I expected to do six hours a day, but it's so much a personal thing," he said. "I was a temperamental practitioner. I find discipline rare."
Hornak said he started piano when he was 8 and never felt pushed into becoming serious about it by his family.
Hornak said he thought Costa was a practicing musician with much more musical imagination than some teachers.
"We don't have a musical family at all. We were living in Paris and we had a piano in the flat and my mother decided to put one of the children to it," he said. "I showed some natural talent and everyone said 'Oh, you must become a concert pianist, it's such a wonderful life' not even thinking about all the hours of practice it involved."
"I GET VERY bored with people playing the piano as if it is a typewriter," he said. "When I play music, I search for what I think is an emotional meaning. You can make music academically by looking at this chord and saying 'This should be beautiful' or you can make music by developing a sensitivity within you and opening up your emotions.
"Piano playing" brings up this connotation of professionism and fast fingers. Too many pianists are concerned with producing an acceptable performance instead of a musical performance: it is hard to be able to communicate emotionally with an audience."
There will be a meeting
Held for men and women students who are interested in being Host or Hostesses for the Kansas University Athletic Department on Monday, April 30, 1979 at 6:00 p.m. in Room No. 135 of Parrott Athletic Center.
Membership requirements state that you must be a regularly enrolled K.U. student in good standing during the 1979-80 academic year.
IT'S DOOBIE DAY!
STILL AVAILABLE
JOHN HARTMAN
PATRICK SIMMONS
MICHAEL McDONALD
KEITH KNUDSEN
JEEF BAXTER
THAN PORTER
THE DOOBIE BROTHERS
with special guest
JAY FERGUSON
TONIGHT in Allen Fieldhouse
THE 'MINUTE BY MINUTE' COUNTDOWN HAS BEGUN
THE 'MINUTE BY MINUTE' COUNTDOWN HAS BEQUN
10:00 - 3:00 PM SUA & KJHK...T-SHIRTS, POSTERS, ALBUMS AND COKE GIVEAWAYS IN FRONT OF THE UNION
11:38 AM THE DOOBIES ARRIVE IN LAWRENCE
1:18 PM DOOBIES BACKSTAGE PASS WINNER ANNOUNCED ON KJHK
12:00 - 3:00 PM WATCH FOR THE DOOBIES VAN ON THE BLVD. WITH GIVEAWAYS
6:00 PM TICKETS ON SALE AT THE FIELDHOUSE
7:00 PM DOORS OPEN AT ALLEN FIELDHOUSE
8:00 PM THE MUSICAL EVENT OF THE YEAR BEGINS
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 27, 197!
7
Budweiser presents...
the
"MIDNIGHT SNACK"
zzzzzzzzz
OK, WAKE UP...
MIDNIGHT SNACK
TIME!
OH, LEMME SLEEP...
WAKE UP...
BALONEY SANDWICH!
LEMME ALONE...
I WAS JUST ABOUT
TO MEET THIS
DYNAMITE CHOCOLATE
MOUSSE...
... AND A BUDWEISER.
HEY, YOU GUYS,
SOMEBODY WAKE UP
THE FAT GUY!
WAKE UP,
FAT GUY!!!
OK...LET'S GET THIS SNACK MOVIN'..
LET'S GO...
WHAT'RE WE
WAITING FOR...
POUR
IT
ON!!!
WHY DO YOU THINK THEY CALL 'EM TASTEBUDS, ANYWAY?
WATCH THE TASTEBUDS (IN ACTUAL COMMERCIALS) ON "SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE!"
8
Friday, April 27, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Western Store
25% off ALL SHIRTS
Ladies & Mens Long & Short Sleeve
Large selection to choose from
"Your Authentic Western Store In Lawrence"
RAASCH SADDLE &
BRIDLE SHOP
ENGLISH WEAR WESTERN WEAR HORSE AIDS
Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa • Lawrence, Kansas 842-8413
H
Heavenly offer
from high in the sky
This Weekend:
Free soft drink with any order
Gabriel's
Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842-5824
Gabriel's
Holiday Plaza
2449 Iowa
842-5824
HOLIDAY
PLAZA
25th & Iowa IS TA
Saturd
Up in the air with
down to earth prices
Group of Summer Handbags—20% off
Summer Gloves—50% off
Straw Hats—30% off
Gold or Silver Evening Bags—60% off
Saturday Only
April 28
10-5:30
Holiday Plaza—25th & Iowa
BAG SHOP
In the Holiday Plaza
2449 K. IOWA
LAWRENCE, KS
841-8100
Hours:
Mon-Fri 9-5
HOLIDAY
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This Weekend
GRAMOPHONE
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WHY SHOP AT KIEF'S?
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instrumental tape deck with high-resolution
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KENWOOD
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ESSEX
GROUP
Secretary of
TECHNOLOGY
Technics
MODULAR
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Reg.
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SA 80 Receiver
$1,250 Tornadoes
$1,735 (1000 Speakers)
1735 Calligraphy
$5610 System Back
1/2 OFF
SPEAKER SALE
ESSEX
GROUP
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SPEAKER SALE
ESSEX GROUP
SUNDAY 11
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Essex 900 ... Reg $100 *495*
Essex 300 ... Reg $150 *75
NO EASE
TOSHIBA
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Toothpaste SRA 770
Belt Drive 5 Shape Tone Arm
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A BEST VALUE
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GRAMOPHONE SHOP
$99
Cartridge not included
1/2 OFF
SPEAKER SALE
ESSEX
GROUP
---
JBL
L-19
SPEAKER
SALE
Save
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KIDS'S
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PRICE
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maxe
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BLANK CASSETTE TAPE
$2'99
ea.
LN
Q YAMAHA
TC-320 CASSETTE
OMT. 1
$225
Product Bundle with
Omnt. 1 (OEM Grade)
Audio cable and accessories
product bundle that includes
audio cable, headphones,
card reader, USB hub and other accessories
that work with Omnt. 1 (OEM Grade)
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
a
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 27, 1979
rd A
9
A
rd
KIN' OFF
ay, April 28
HOLIDAY PLAZA
"NEW
MILE STORE"
25th
Iowa
Holiday Plaza
23rd
Enter the House of Cathay
Cathay is one of Lawrence's most distinctive restaurants, serving the finest in Chinese food and cuisine. At Cathay you will delight in the delicacy of Beijing famous dishes. The hot and bold dishes from Cai
tel China, or enjoy yourself in the rich cultural flavor of foods from Southern China, Visit, Cathay and experience new worlds of dining pleasure.
The Cathay Restaurant
25th & Iowa - Holiday Plaza
Weekdays Lunch 11:30 Dinner 4:00 10
Sat & Sun Dinner 11:10
Closed Tuesdays
the
the
en
om
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robin's nest Bath & Kitchen Shoppe
NOW OPEN!
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wicker
shower curtains
cushioned toilet seats
cannisters
glassware & pottery
Put a special touch in your Kitchen and Bath
Holiday Plaza Hours: Mon-Fri 10:30-8:30 Sat 10:30-5:30 Sun 1:5-30
25th & Iowa
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Is takin' off
During May Reductions up to 50% (Ideal for gifts)
Wagner Teas
20% off
Greenbriar's
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(Prices good thru 4-29-79)
with these great weekend specials
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Cooked Corned Beef $3.49 lb. (reg. 3.99)
Norwegian Jarlsberg $3.79 lb. (reg. 4.49)
Accessories Lamps
Filkscreens Prints
Paintings V Textiles
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This Weekend: 1/4 lb. lox 1/4 lb. cream cheese
Party special: 15% off any size party tray ordered before May 1
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Closed Monday
VALLEY WEST
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Brown
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COLOR, COLOR or COLOR. $21.
10
Friday, April 27, 1979
University Daily Kansan
M. BARRISON
Wayne Rogers
Staff photo by BARB KINNEY
New role different for 'Trapper John'
Almost anything beyond a whisper seems out of place in the post Eldridge House Restaurant and Club, particularly in the late afternoon quiet.
BY BLAKE GUMPRECHT
Staff Reporter
That's why Monday afternoon seemed so strange.
"I got his autograph," came the cry from one of the distant rooms in the Massachusetts Street restaurant.
Television and movie star Wayne Rogers, meanwhile, was sitting a few rooms away, sipping a glass of Burgundy in answering questions from a reactor.
Rogers, best known for his role as Trapper John in the first three seasons of TV's M*A*S*H, was in town to promote his latest film, "Once in Paris."
Indeed, it was an unusual occasion—a major Hollywood star visiting a store's size of Lawrence solely to promote a new picture.
"I've been told by people," the 44-year-old Rogers said, "that stars fly into Kansas City, give it a fast salute, and are off again.
"PEOPLE TELL ME that not many stars do what I'm doing. A lot of them make a picture and assume their part of the job is done."
Not Rogers. At least it doesn't appear that way.
His visit to Lawrence was part of a three-week tour of the country promoting "Once in Paris," which opens today at the Hillecrest Theatre at Hillecrest after four months of exclusive showings in New York City and Los Angeles.
A gimmick? Maybe, but don't try arguing that point with Rogers.
"I'm trying to sell tickets," he said bluntly. "I have the philosophy that if you believe in a picture you should show it. I believe in this picture."
"I've made other pictures that I wouldn't walk out my back door to talk about," he insisted. "I don't have to do this, but I love the picture."
"I'd stand on a corner in a town of 500 people if I could sell some tickets."
ONE THING for sure, Rogers role in "Once in Paris" is far different from any he's had.
Rogers plays a happily married American screenwriter on his first trip to rewrite a script. He ends up falling in love with an English woman.
"It's different from any part I've ever had before," he said. "This guy is inhibited, kim not inverted, and interviewed, kim not. I never played a part like that before."
"It's a very delicate part. To play a guy who really doesn't do anything, a guy who's passive, and to try and make it hard for you, but don't stretch, but I loved the challenge."
Rogers admitted that the character he played in TV's M*A*S*H was closer to his own personality.
"I think of myself as an extrovert... a . . . fun loving guy," he says, "I don't take things all that seriously. I'm out to have a good time.
"I THINK OF myself as an animal: I eat when I'm hungry and I sleep when I'm睡. But good actors can play any part. The best ones do."
Evidently the finished product of "Once in Paris" didn't turn out too bad.
"When the reviews came out in Los Angeles, Frank Gilroy called me and said some actors waited a lifetime for them. They recalled Gilroy directed the picture."
"I don't think it will be big, but it'll be good. When the critics came out with their top tels, we were in most of them.
"Award winning? No. We've already passed the Academy Awards and we didn't win anything. But we weren't produced by a large studio, so we didn't have the machine to produce the publicity."
So, Rogers is his own publicity man, hoping that "Once in Paris" will be seen more than once in Lawrence.
-UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nightlife
Spare Time
Lawrence Opera House, 644. Massachus
seats St.
- Cole Tuckey, April 27 and 28.
- David Grisman Quintet, May 5.
- Spyro Gyra, May 4.
David Grisman Quintet, May 1.
- Cole Tuckey, April 27 and 28.
* East Scruce Revue, May 2.
Concerts
- Doobie Brothers, 8 p.m., April 27, Allen Field House.
- Visiting Artist Series Emily White, piano, with David Wetter, pianist伴奏, 8
- KU Chorale, 8 p.m., April 27, Swarthout Recital Hall
- KU Symphonic Band, 3:30 p.m. , April 29,
University Theatre.
Billy Joel 8, p.m., April 28, K-State's Ahearn Field House.
Theatre
- Equus by Peter Shaffer, 8 p.m., April 27 and May 3, University Theatre.
- Knock Knock by Julie Feifer, B p.m.
April 25, 2014, Lawrence Arts Center.
- Kabuki : theatre. The Forty-Severen Samurai, 8.p.m., May 1, University Theatre.
Recitals
Colleen Krenhan, organ, 8 p.m. April 28.
Poultry Congregation Church, 951 S. Broadway.
Francis Hornak, piano; 3:30 p.m., April 29,
Swarthout.
John Sarson, organ, 8 p.m., April 29,
Swarthot.
Brian Shearp, percussion, 8 p.m., April 30,
Swarthaw.
Student compositions recital, 8 p.m., May 3, Swarthowt.
Alfred N. Green, instrumental conducting,
8 p.m, May 1, Saworth.
Doobie tickets still being sold
Students will be able to dance to their classes in time to the music of the Doobie Brothers formerly, as taped music is broadcast on Jayhawk four times in between.
The taped music is part of an SUA concert in Palm Springs that toured concert at 8pm tonight in Alpen Field House.
Ken Desieghardt, SAU promotion manager, said Wednesday's count indicated 11,420 concert tickets had been sold, 4,279 tickets short of the sellout goal.
Designeeshad said tickets would be sold for $7 and $8 at the SUA ticket office at the Kansas University until 1 p.m. Any remaining money will be at the box office at Allen starting at 6 p.m.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Arts & Leisure
Kabuki to perform here
"Kabaki Hawaii," a theatre troupe from the University of Hawaii, will present "The Forty-Seven Samurai (Chashugura)" at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the University Theatre in
James Brandon's adaptation of the classic Japanese drama will be performed in the authentic Kabuki style, complete with costumes, wigs, music and singing.
The theme is the secret vendetta of 47 loyal men in avenging the forced suicide of their lord. The play is set in the era when a conspiracy to kill them presents a view into Japanese feudal society.
The American tour marks the U.S.
premier of the play and is the largest and
most successful of its kind.
outside of Japan, according to Andrew Tsuchida, professor of speech and drama and a professor at New York University.
There will also be an hour-long Kabuki
workshop for children at 4:15 p.m. tuesday
through friday.
The troupe's tour culminates a year of intense Kabuki training led by Nakamura Matsaguro, director of the troupe and chief conductor of the National Theatre of Japan, Tosukai said.
The workshop and performance is sponsored by the International Theatre Studies Center at KU. Tickets can be purchased at the Murphy Hall Box Office for $2.50 for the performance and 50 cents for the workshop.
Psychological trauma portrayed in 'Equus'
The intense story of the internal struggles of a 17-year-old boy who blinds six horses and the psychiatrist who treats him will close the 1978-79 theater season at KU.
Peter Shaffer's "Equus," which will be presented at 8 tonight, tomorrow and May 3-5 in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall, is based on an actual incident in Northern England in which a boy blinded 28 horses.
In Shaffer's adaptation of the story, Alan Strang, a 17-year-old stable boy, mysteriously blinds six horses with a steel spine. He is committed to a hospital where he defies the questions of Martin Dysart, the psychiatrist.
Through Strang's treatment, the meaning of the horses in the context of his confused upbringing and Dysart's private torment over his own lack of passion become clear.
Ronald Willis, professor of theatre and director of "Equus," said that even though the play had "a sense of removal" in its audience, the performance had audiences been able to identify with.
"I THINK it explores some of the concerns that all of us feel." Willis said. "There is a lack of direction and passion in our lives. The violence sense that you can't figure out in "Equus" is part of the public mind or the public sensibility today."
Wills said although the boy's twisted ideas about religion and sexuality might seem to be the focal point of the play, Dysart's own struggle was most important.
"It's not so much Alan's dilemma as it is Dvart's. 'Willis said.' He's the anguish."
The 14-member cast includes William Kuhlke, professor of theater, as Dyart and Earl Wewing, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, as Dent Bent, and Kevin Keating, Great Bend graduate student, portray Strang's religious mother and atheist father. Judith K. Deines, Lawrence senior, plays Jill Mason, whose predecessor encounters with Alan precedes the violence.
EWING, A newcomer to KU's main stage,
a said friend had told him about "Equus"
and that he had read it "a million times
since." Ewing said that although Alan's torment was personal, he could relate to much of the role.
"I think every kid at 17 or sometime during his youth feels like him," Ewing said. "I think of Alan as an extreme of everybody, who is comfortable between two almost opposite parents. I've had the same locked-up feeling myself at a time when we'd be share with so he makes a god for himself."
Ewing said the most tense scene in the play for him was the blinding of the horses at the end.
"A after a night of rehearsal I have to spend an hour winding down," he said. "I don't want to go out."
EWING SAID he felt no anxiety about the nude scene which precedes the violent blinding scene and said his parents also were understanding.
"They took it really well. It's a beautiful moment. It just fits in perfectly," he said.
"Personally I'm very uninhibited. It doesn't bother me."
For the KU production of "Equus," Delbert Unruth, associate professor of theatre, designed a sprightly wooden instrument with an original score of synthesized music written by Stanley Shumway, professor of music theory, which is based on a realist approach. Manta, Ga., junior, designed the costumes.
"Equus" is an intense drama which includes some cruelty, violence and profane language. They play also refers to sexual assaults in the workplace. Patron discretion is advised, Willis said.
Tickets for the KU production of "Equas" are on sale for $3.25, $2.50 and $1.75 at the Murphy Hall box office. KU students will be admitted free with an ID card.
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You set the temp.
we pay the bills.
Location
On campus,
on bus route
Price:
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:
Wall to wall,
several colors.
The TOWERS, make it part of your plans.
Early Bird Special ends April 30-Come in today joyhawker towers apartments 1603 w. Fifteenth
SCHUMM FOODS COMPANY
presents
lemon tree
11 W. 9th
FREE
One
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with purchase of any size dish
of Natural Dessert Yogurt
THE
NEW YORKER
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FREE
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OLD WESTERN HOME
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1/2 Slab Big End...$3.75
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MISS STREET DELI
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Friday, April 27, 1979
11
City refuses raise for firefighters
Lawrence city officials, trying to comply with federal anti-inflation guidelines, have refused a request from local firefighters for a 17 percent cost of living wage increase, Kevin Burt, city employee relations director, said last night.
The guidelines ask that wage increases be kept to 7 percent.
"We talked about the guidelines," Burt said. "We feel very strongly about living safely."
Firefighters and city officials met Wednesday to discuss contract proposals in the City of Atlanta.
Contract clauses concerning insurance coverage for firefighters' families, skill
Consumer Affairs board selected
The Board of Directors of the Consumer Affairs Association last night selected four KU students and one KU staff member to join them on the board of directors.
The students selected were Debra Hafleigh, Lawrence first year law student; Preston Longino, Lawrence graduate student; Pat O'Brien, Lawrence graduate student; and Michelle Senecal, Lawrence freshman. The campus staff member named to the board was Judy Browder, director of University Information.
Consumer Affairs, 819 Vermont St., is a public service office that investigates fraud.
Susan Hanna, campus representative for on-campus affairs, said the selection was "thoughtful and well thought."
The board of directors, Hanna said, is responsible for selecting the programs the association will promote and for making policy decisions for the association. She also said student members of the board acted as a "link to the University."
The board members selected yesterday will serve with five community representatives who are members of the board, and will be representatives of the Consumer Affairs Office.
incentive pay, longevity pay and a physical conditioning program for firefighters also.
City officials rejected a proposal for increased longevity pay for firefighters because the current longevity pay plan is only a year old, Burt said.
The city currently pays for a portion of the plan.
Firefighters and city officials disagreed on the family insurance proposal made by the firefighters. Firefighters requested that the City of Bristol accept Blue Cross and Blue Shield family plan.
THE CITY rejected the plan because of possible budget problems and increases in the costs of the plan. James Woydzki, vice president of the International Association of Fighter Pilots, wrote:
Firefighters now are willing to discuss a specific dollar amount increase in the city's share of insurance payments, Woydzink said.
Woydziak said an agreement was neared on a proposal for skill incentive pay for the staff.
Burt said that the city and firefighters agreed maintenance of a physical fitness center was essential.
Skill incentive pay is a system that encourages firefighters to develop extra skills, such as arson investigation and safety training, by giving pay raises for each skill learned.
University Daily Kansan
the city rejected the firefighters' proposal for the plan because it was too specific.
The major disagreement on the skill incentive proposal was whether the fire department chief should have sole responsibility awarding the raises, as the proposal states.
Woolly negotiations are going slowly, Woodyziak said, some progress has been made.
"The city seems to be willing to work things out," he said.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Police Beat
- Compiled by David Edds
Lawrence police arrested three men Wednesday on charges that alleged they were involved in an armed robbery at the Western Stilin Stank House, 3204 Iowa St., Frie
Jail officials identified the men as Eugene Coleman, 28, and Jerry Hammleton, 22, both addressings at a local motel, and Patrick D. William, 22, no address listed.
Coleman originally was held in lieu of $25,000, and the other two were held in lieu of $2,500 bond each.
LA. Lyle Sutton, head of the police detective division, said last night that the bond for the three was raised yesterday, because of suspected connections with robbers in western Kansas and in Nevada. He said the three were not suspected of being involved in any other burglars in Lawrence.
Sutton said Coleman was accused of being the man who allegedly entered the restaurant near closing time Friday and took an undisclosed amount of cash after threaling a clerk
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Palaeia 2:1 and Acts 4:25
No cash had been recovered yesterday, Sutton said. However, a car and a weapon possibly used in the Lawrence holdup were recovered, he said.
Webster says "a heathen is one who does not believe in the God of the Bible. This fits in with what God says in the Sermons and Indications, in denominationnations such as Lutheran, Episcopal, Methodist, Presbyterian, etc., were founded and developed by men who were Old and New Testaments are the Initable Word of God, the Supreme Authority for Faith and Practice, Or, in other words,
The Law and The Testimony were the great Foundation Stones of The Reformation of the 16th century begun by Luther, and established by the same great Foundation Stones, and the Law and The Testimony were also the basis of the 17th century Revival and Reformation, sometimes called the Great Foundation Stones, because words frequently on the lips of John Wesley, and were the great Foundation Stones of the 18th century Revival led by John Calvin, were similar to those of France at the time of her Revolution.
Not only did the Westesian Revival greatly bless England, but its fire leaped across The Atlantic Ocean and kindled itself in North America by the hands of such men as Whitfield, Asbury, Coke. Johnathan Edwards, and others, and spread rapidly over our country, producing such men in civil life and civil life as George Washington,帕特里夏·华福, etc.
like a trumpet? "Give me liberty, or give me death?" As an individual have often thought of and thanked God for what Patrick's zeal and efforts, along with kindred spirit, has given him. He was always thought that he "stopped short," and should have gone further and said "Give me righteousness, or give me death." We have been told to use by faith we do to death in time, and in eternity.
Liberty without righteousness usually uses "license," which in turn produces and provokes the "wrath of God" upon men and nations! Through the blessings of God which have come from our rich and godly heritage we have grown into a nation of believers.
Patrick Henry "cried aloud, spared not, lifted up his voice
By the way, wwy don't you get familiar with your Bible it you have taken the vows to join a Protestant Christian Church — or if you have not joined — Get familiar with all of it?
The great and inspired men of God mentioned above were all in one accord in one respect: "They believed in The God of the Bible." No only that "it contained The Word of God," but it "was The Word of God."
Ask the Author and Finisher of Faith to give you a believing heart. "Fear comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God." If "you read it and decide you don't want to or can't trust The god therein revealed then resign and get out of The god," say, "and put your hand in the baggage, and "paddle your own canoe" on into eternity, in the boat formed by your own wisdom and skillful hands!
9 STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
[5TH STREET]
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Weaver's Inc.
Serving Lawrence ... Since 1857
THE T-SHIRT DRESS FOR SPRING
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Neat new fashion look on campus about town T-shirt look in dress length. U-neck or V-neck piping trims these one piece, belted dresses with slit sides. Machine wash and dry 100% polyester. Navy or red. Sizes 5 to 13.
15,
Jr. Shop—2nd Floor
First Time Ever At K.U.
Student Appreciation Days
April 30th-May 4th
WEEK-LONG SPECTACULAR SAVINGS!
For Students Only
MONDAY
10% OFF
all clothing
at regular price.
★★★
10% OFF
all greeting cards
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10% OFF
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★★★
Don't forget to
register for the
FREE MOPED
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May 4th.
WEDNESDAY
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THURSDAY
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★★★
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Student I.D. (current, of course)
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A man dreams of winning.
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Dreamer
TIM MATHESON SUSAN BLAKELY JACK WARDEN
A MICHAEL LOBELL PRODUCTION
DREAMER
Produced by MICHAEL LOBELL • Directed by NOEL NOSSECK
Written by JAMES PROCTOR & LARRY BISCHOT • Music by BILL CONTI
COLOR BY DELUXE ©
PG PARENTAL GUMMS SUBSCRIPTION AND ADVERTISING
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Starts today at a theatre near you. Check local newspaper for specific theatre listing.
12
Friday, April 27, 1979
University Dally Kansan
Have you got what it takes to manage my place?
It takes a special person to manage a Godfather's pizza establishment. You will need a work-40 to 55 hours per week—but he will paid well for it.
Godfather's is looking for people to join the nation's fastest growing restaurant chain and build a rewarding career in restaurant management. We are seeking someone with two years of college or personal accomplishments and two years of college or personal accomplishments as a person with high personal standards that can in turn give Godfather's an advantage over other firms within the leadership ability to make a crew into a production unit.
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A "ground floor" opportunity in the fastest food industry
A full management training program
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If you think you've got what it takes to manage a Godfather's Pizza restaurant, contact Godfather's. There's an offer too good to refuse.
711 West 23rd Street
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER MIF
Trouble won't recede in water bill dispute
Godfather's Pizza
711 West 23d Street
INTERNATIONAL CREDIT UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEE ME
BY ROBIN SMITH Staff Reporter
Last month a KUstudent received an abnormally high water bill of $118
This month, the student's water bill was $27.
However, Ralf Amati, Kaechai, Pakistan, graduate student, can explain neither why he is on the first place in the first place.
"It has been a month since this situation started and I don't know any more than I knew in the beginning," she said.
Two weeks ago, Ansari said he thought his high water bill could be the fault of a leaky toilet in his apartment at Stouffer Place, a married student house complex owned by the University, on the corner of 19th and Iowa streets. The problem also could be a faulty water meter; he said.
"NOW I REALLY don't know what the problem is."
Ansari said. "There is something unexplained going on, because neither Stouffer nor the water department can find out where this water went or how."
Employees at Souffre Place said they had found no leak in the apartment, and employees of the water department said they checked the meter twice and found it was in proper working order.
"When they took out the meter the first time, the water department employees that they had installed a new meter," Ansari said. "Now they tell me how much it costs with a temporary meter, then put my old meter back."
However, Ansari判命 that his meter has been changed since it was checked the first time.
"Even on this month's bill, there is a note that states 'meter:' changed. So if my meter was changed, what good would it have done to recheck the meter with me present? It would have been new and correct anyway."
Ansari said, however, that the water department is "trying to hide something."
"THE FIRST TIME that the meter was checked, I didn't witness the test." Ansari said. The water department has a policy that requires the owner of a possibly faulty meter to be present during the testing.
"The meter was checked a second time about two weeks ago and I witnessed that testing." Ansari said.
"But it was funny because a water department employee just appeared at my apartment door and told me. You have to go now to check your water meter—if you don't, the plumber will come in and call me to inform me that someone was coming over."
but the mail checked out.
Gene Wgo, director of utilities, said that because the
"But the meter checked out OK."
"We have delivered our product to this consumer and the meter proved this," Vogt said. "Because the met
metered checked out, the water department was no longer involved in the situation.
"Now, the student is to pay his bill or the water will be turned off."
Vogt did not say when Ansari's water might be turned off.
ASANRI SAID he would pay this month's bill but
would not pay the bill for $118 until the situation was
done.
Darryl stone, director of public relations for consumer affairs, said he had recommended laic aid for Assani
"I have been advised by the consumer affairs people not to pay the water bill until I find out where the water went and how." Ansari said. "Because I haven't discovered anything new in the situation, consumer affairs has recommended that I seek legal help. I guess that is the next step."
I think that Anarzi would have a difficult time if he tried to handle this alone. "Stone said." If he works with the students, it should be possible.
Stone said he had discussed the case with Vogt and Stone recommended that Stone talk to the city manager's office.
Stone met with Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, and two water department employees last Wednesday to
"At the meeting, we discussed two important positions of the water department," Stone said. "One was that the water meter reading was correct, and the other was that there was no leak."
Denil Maray, supervisor for Stouffer maintenance, said that since the meter was checked a second time, it did not need replacement.
"I WAS SATISFIED with the answers that I got, but that still doesn't resolve the issue. I still don't know any answers."
"We have checked the meter for the past six days and it hasn't been erratic," Milray said. "It seems to be in perfect working order. And there isn't a leak near the water, unless it can not know where the water went, unless it was the toilet."
However, Joe Mater, maintenance man for Stouff, said he had never found a leak in Ansari's apartment.
Ansari said that he no longer called the water department because they would not listen to him and that it was time to change.
"The water department used to be sympathetic toward me," Ansari said, "but now they behave coldly.
"I'm very frustrated about this entire matter. And I am slowly becoming an innocent victim."
THE FILM FOR THE
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Shows each evening at 7:30 & 9:30
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Granada
"When the women's program was started 8 or 10 years ago, the other award programs that were being held all over campus were honoring only men."
award and recognize women at KU for their achievements.
The program is free and open to the public. A reception will follow.
A scholarship fund, the University of Kansas Women's S Scholarship Fund, was not being used at the time, Mims said so the program uses money from this fund to
"We try to get a group as representative as possible." Mims said.
Shown each ew. at 8:00
Sat Sun 1:45 *145*
Adm $3.00
Hillcrest
Wayne Rogers & Gayle Hummick
"ONCE IN PARIS"
Sat Sun
Matur. 1:55
illlorest
If this one
doesn't scare you...
You're Already Dead!
PHANTASM
R
"THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY"
Ew A17.20 & 8.20
Mak 2.50 & 6.20
Hillcrest PG
Good morning Lawrence, come join us for breakfast, we're serving your two eggs of bacon or sausage with two egg yolks and a jar of sour cream. And your choice of a golden waffler or hash brows toast and jelly. To top it all, bring some orange juice and a glass of orange juice and a hot cup of coffee, all for only $2.25. Offer good tmr 4/28/79 Breakfast served 6 am to
The women were selected from more than 1,500 nominees of academic departments, the administration, women's groups and individuals, Mims said.
services and student services. An outstanding number and two outstanding staff members will be needed.
Program to recognize KU women
New members of Mortar Board, a senior honor society, and Lambda Sigma, a sophomore honor society, also will be announced.
Joanne Collins, councilman in Kansas City, Mt., will speak on the program
NIKON FE
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The selection committee comprised a variety of women.
According to Nancy Mims, president of the commission, women will be awarded scholarships for their achievements in areas such as politics, athletics, community
NIKON FM
COMPACT
KU women students, faculty and staff members will be honored at the Women's Day in the Big Eight Room at the Renaissance Five women also will be inducted into the KU Women's Hall of Fame at the program, on the Status of Women by the Commission on the Status of Women.
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Downtown
1107 Mass.
ZERCHER
PHOTO
Hillcrest Center
919 Iowa
1516 W.23rd St.
ZERCHER
I will output the text content of the image as it is.
3. 50 person
MISS. STREET DELL INC.
041 MASSACHUSETTS
presents
Minimum order ten/No delivery available/24 hr. reservation required
presents
THE MOVABLE FEAST
the catering season is upon us and look at the
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3.50 person
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FROM THE DELI . . .
The party tray featuring thin Sliced Roast Beef,
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Sliced Smoked Beef and Ham served in a mild BBQ sauce. Samese Beds Nut, Potato Salad or Cole Slaw. Baked Beans, Relish Tray and disposable plate, fork and napkin.
From the Smokehouse .
sua films
Midnight Movie
ERASERHEAD
A FILM BY DAVID LYNCH
FRI. & SAT. AT MIDNIGHT
A Libra Films RELEASE
SIZZLER
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New 35mm Prints
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Woodruff Auditorium
ADM $1.50
---
Women's Rally Against Rape
Friday, May 4
11:30-1:30 pm
In between the Union and Dyche
—Live Music
—Speakers
—Information
Sponsored by Women's Coalition Partially funded by Student Senate.
Everyone encouraged to participate.
films sua
Presents
"MASH'IS THE BEST AMERICAN WAR COMEDY SINCE SOUND CAME
IN!" -Pauline Kael.
New Yorker
MASH An Ingo Preminger Production
DONALD SUTHERLAND ELLIOTT GULD TOM SKERRITT
PRODUCED BY DOLL RUTH SUMMER
PRODUCED BY BRIAN MUNGER
DRIVEN BY ROBERT ALETT RING LAMBER II
PRODUCED BY DELIUX MANSIONS
ORIGINAL RANKBACK RECORD ON COLUMBIA RECORD
K
April 27 & 28
Friday—7:00 pm
Saturday—3:30 & 9:30 pm
Woodruff Auditorium
ADM $1.50
Friday, April 27, 1979
13
University Daily Kansan
Crew to regional
It will be the biggest meet of the season for KU's crew teams tomorrow when they compete in the Midwest Regional Championships at Madison, Wis.
The University of Wisconsin will be the heavy favorite going into the meet because its teams have never lost a men's varsity eight race in the regionalists.
KU will enter three races: the men's
eight, the women's freshman eight and
women's open.
"We have had a week layoff," Don Rose, crew coach, said, "and we are紧迫 to see how we stack up against the rest of the season. It's the highlight of our rowing season."
The crew team will close its season one week from tomorrow when it rows against Kansas State University at Shawnee Park Lake, just outside of Kansas City, Kan.
KANSAN Baseball Standings
EAST
W 1 L Pct. GB
Boston 11 4 173
New York 10 586
Milwaukee 10 586 2%
Baltimore 9 8 328 2%
Detroit 6 7 462 3%
Toronto 6 173 462 4%
Chicago 6 173 313 6%
AMERICAN LEAGUE
WEST
California 10 10 667 -
Texas 12 10 667 %
Kansas 10 6 425 -
Kansas City 7 10 429 %
Missouri 7 10 323 %
Oklahoma 6 10 128 -
Oakland 6 12 138 -
Yesterday's Gamer
Milwaukee 5-Detroit 1-4
Kansas City 6-5, Cleveland 4-
Boston 7-6, Detroit 8-6,
Boston at Seattle, n
New York at Oakland, pda, rain
at Philadelphia, pda
Today's Games
**Today's Ticket**
Milwaukee Traverse 14-24, Minnesota Knockout 14-24, Detroit Raiders 1-15, Buffalo Sabres 3-6, Cleveland Gardens 14-15 at Kansas City Shipfish 2-0, Boston Beatles 14-15 at Calgary Knockouts 1-14, Boston Kayne 14-15 at California Knockouts 1-14.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST L. L. Pct. GB
Philadelphia 11 10 527
Atlanta 15 6 367
Chicago 7 6 358
St. Louis 7 6 323
New York 6 6 319
Phoenix 6 12 394
WEEKS 12 13 14
Houston 12 9 5 706
Cincinnati 12 9 160 706
San Diego State 12 9 414 3%
San Diego 8 11 421 3%
Los Angeles 8 11 421 3%
Miami 8 12 294 7
Yesterday's Games
Yesterdays' G Games
Houston at Chicago
San Francisco at New York, ppd, rain
only games scheduled
Sports Digest
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
76ers cut Spurs' edge to 3-2
From the Kansan's Wire Service
SAN ANTONIO, Texas--Julius Erving hit 32 points, 24 of them in the second half, and four other Philadelphia players were in double figures last night as the 76ers thrashed lethargic San Antonio 120-9 to cut the Spurs' lead to 3-2 in their best-of-seven National Basketball Association playoff series.
Erving, making an unusual start at guard to enable Philadelphia to use a larger lineup, got 16 points in the third quarter and built up leads of as many as 23 points.
minutes of the game and managed only 17 points in the first quarter.
The Spurs, who led the NBA in offense this season, did not score in the first $ 3^{1 / 2} $
PHILADELPHIA held a 30-8 lead at halftime and increased that margin to 85-4 at the end of three quarters. The 76ers won as many as 27 points during the final period.
San Antonio's high-scoring George Gervin, the NBA's scoring champion at nearly 30 points a game, collected just 13 points.
In Atlanta, Steve Hawes and Eddie Johnson scored 12 points apiece in the second half to give the Atlanta Hawks a 104-8 victory over the Washington Bullets and deadlock their NBA quarterfinal series at three games apiece.
Montreal wins playoff opener
MONTREAL — Pierre Laroque fired a 35-foot past shot Boston goalkeeper Gerry Chevere at 12:17 of the third period to break a 2-2 tie and help the Montreal Lakers secure a victory. Brusso last night in the first game of their National Hockey League playoff series.
The second game of the best-of-five semifinals will be played here tomorrow night before the series shifts to Boston for Games 3 and 4.
Guy Lafaye and Doug Jarvis also scored in the third period as the Cats beat the Spurs, wipe out a 2-1 Boston lead, Jacques Lernaire had given the Canadiens a 1-0 lead in the first period, but Jean Ratelite and Dion Marcotte gave Boston in
LAFLEUR'S third goal of the playoffs
The winning goal came after Lafleur got the puck at the Montreal blue line and passed it to Doug Hisebrough. He then headed back for the Lifelong Larocue, an infrequently used player pressed into service by injuries to Rejean Hovee, Steve Shatt and Mark Norliff. It was a rare occasion.
tied the score at 2-2 for 3-44 of the third period. His attempted pass from Cheevers' left glanced off Brunus Mike Milbury and got past Cheevers.
The Bruins had an apparent goal disallowed by referee Dewell at 13:38 of the final period. Newell ruled out a shot, but the glove put the puck into the net with his glove.
Chiefs trade Elrod to Cards
Jarvis then scored into an open net with 37 seconds left in the game.
ST. LOUIS - Linebacker Jumbo Eirro, who had asked the Kansas City Chiefs to be traded, was obtained yesterday by the St. Louis Cardinals in exchange for an eight-round National Football League draft choice.
The 6-2, 223-pound Eldrod, a fifth-round Chiefs draft choice in 1976, was an All-America defensive end for Oklahoma's national championship team in 1975. A Chiefs spokesman said Eldrod requested that he would play the game so that he could play more elsewhere.
St. Louis' defensive coordinator, Tom Bettis, described the 24-year old Efrod as "in the mold of what we're looking for in our defense.
Elrod, who began his NFL career as a middle linebacker, started two games as a rookie but was sided by a shoulder injury during the season and underwent surgery.
"HES A FINE, aggressive and hard-hitting linebacker, with better than average quickness. Our team can take him by his head coach." He'll provide depth for us at the middle
linebacker spot and give us added competitiveness for that position."
CARDS OPERATIONS Director Joe Sullivan said Eidr was acquired after the team's scouts had looked over college talent available for next week's NF1.
He later backed up veteran Willie Lanier and shifted to outside linebacker last fall. He played in each of the Chiefs' four games, mostly, as a special team member.
The eighth-round draft choice that St. Louis traded was the one Cards received last year from the Los Angeles Rams in exchange for running back Jerry Latin.
Wild pitch dooms Indians
Bv JOHN P. THARP
Associate Sports Editor
KANAS CITY, Mo.—With the score tied at four and one out in the bottom of the ninth, Kansas City Royals third baseman Trey Thompson had never hit against in the major leagues
The Cleveland Indians, in a last-ditch defense, had moved right field Horace Speed to second base, and Brett faced an injury that would keep him out of the lineup don't win, as left-handed Sid Mongo threw a wild pitch and Willie Wilson came home with the winning run to give the Royals a 5-4 victory over the Indians here after missing the team's fourth straight victory at home.
"I didn't know what to do." Brett said about the different defensive set up. He didn't know where he was going.
Although Brett said he hadn't seen a similar alignment in his big league career, he said he did see the wild pitch that gave the Royals the victory.
"I DIDN'T REALIZE the bull was going that far away from the catcher, he said."
"I don't hit that many fly balls, mostly grounders. That lineup was a good play."
think he kicked it when he was looking for it,
I would have打hit the ball to lefall (which
would have been his foot)
"I've used that rig myself," Herrog said of the switched lineup. "It ain't a bad play. Their back was against the wall and they got through the balls hit to the outfield score anyway."
Royals catcher Darrell Porter showed Herzog's theory was correct in the fourth. Porter hit a home run over the right field wall, his second in two nights.
PORTER ALSO caught two Indians attempt to steal a base, extending his reach on the fence.
Cleveland took an early lead in the second when Andre Thornton grounded a single to left and scored after catcher Gary Alexander singled, making it 14.
Porter's homer made it 2-1, but in the sixth Bobby Bonds hit a home run of his own that gave the Indians another two-run advantage.
In the Royals' half of the innings, Frank White looped a barely-legal single just inside the right field line and then scored after Bret hammered a triple to right center. Amos Ots, celebrating his 32nd birthday, singled to left, scoring Brett.
Kansas City was looking good until the top of the ninth when Alexander, who was lucky to be among the first people to vehemently with the home plate, impried over a controversial walk awarded to Patek
ALEXANDER STAYED in the game and that was a break for the Indians. He hit a home run that tied the game at four. Toby Harrahd doubled and starter Rich Gale, who hasn't had a victory since Sept. 4, 1978, was nanked.
Hrabosky, 2-0, got the victory. Dan Spillner, who pitched three innings in relief, took the loss and is 0-1 for the season. The two teams play again tonight at 7:35.
Al Hrabrosky came on in relief and got Duane Kuper to fly out. Dade also fled out, to Patek, who started a double play that ended the inning.
Coach adds administrative role
By DAVID PRESTON
Sports Writer
As a student at KU, Tom Kivisto was an All-Big Eight performer in basketball and an academic All-American. As an alumnus the past five years, he has been a tennis professional and the men's and women's tennis coach.
Now, while maintaining his coaching position, he is trying his hand at yet another
In February, men's athletic director Bob Marcum named Kivisto to be the assistant director of the Williams Educational Fund, which raises money for athletic scholarships. He replaces Don Fambrough, who is KU head football coach.
So Kivisto, always the athlete, has become an administrator.
"I LIKE THE administrative end," Kivisto, a native of Illinois, said, "but it requires me to put in extra time. As the coach of a non-revenue sport, I have to do all our own iternaries for travel, recruiting and public relations—and then I have to coach
Kivisto, a tall, mustachioed, athletic-type, looks as comfortable in his suit and tie as he does in his tennis or basketball warmups. He is a good addition to the new role in suite of the additional workload.
"So I was busy in the first place, and now I spent a lot of time in the evenings here
That time spent in the office, however, is vital in achieving the goals he has for the company.
"I have two major objectives here," Kivisto said. "First, I've been given the
"SO OFFEN A student will graduate and move somewhere else for his first job. Then he'll get married, and all of a sudden it is time to realize it's he lost touch with the University.
responsibility of getting the younger alumni involved back with the University. I'm trying to stimulate interest among them because they are one of our greatest resources.
"We're trying to get them involved with the athletic program."
Another resource, Kivisto said, is the graduated teacher who too often has been a professor.
PETER BROOKS
Tom Kivisto
"A guy comes in here and gives his best for four years and although he gets a lot out of the University, he still feels rejected. He doesn't feel one does anything for him any more."
"I want to bring K-Men (letterman) back to the campus and keep them involved with the athletic program. We have to establish a mentor so that we have a common goal."
THOAT GOAL, Kivito said, is to build a strong scholarship program for student athletes. The Williams Fund offers incentives for scholarship donations and relies on alumni contributions for money to distribute to athletes.
"You can be successful in both athletics and scholarship. It takes a special interest in the concept of operation on the concept of importance of winning, but not to the point where it will affect academic performance. There is no 1. And No.2. Both are parts of a complete program."
KIVISTO'S RECORD indicates that he was able to handle both situations. His academic All-American status and his tennis and basketball browns were his most important success for the Williams Fund position, Marcia said at the time of Kivisto's appointment.
But Kivisto said another factor had a big part in his landing the job.
"I have been a part of a revenue sport as a player and part of a non-revenue sport as a coach, so I can be sympathetic to the needs of both."
Season Football Tickets at Reduced Rates for Recent Grads
1977-1978-1979 Graduates are eligible to receive up to 2 tickets for the reduced price of $42.00 per ticket
Come by or mail your check to:
1. Remittance must accompany your order. Make your check payable to: KUAC.
2. Do not expect to receive tickets before September 1.
3. in the event you have a change of address before Sept. 1, please notify the ticket office.
4. Late season ticket orders received 14 days prior to the first game, cannot be mailed and must be picked up under name in which ordered at WILL CALL
ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE Allen Field House Lawrence, Kansas
66045
6. People who had season tickets last year and want to reorder the same seats this year must do so before May 15th.
7. New season ticket holders will be assigned the best seats that become available.
window in Memorial Stadium the day of the game.
5. Please list telephone number on order.
For further info.—Call 864-3141
--knit shirts . . in hundreds of values to 27.50 styles & colors . Now 20% OFF
shorts . . in ten styles . . Now $10.00-25% OFF
spring jackets in five styles . . Now 30% OFF
spring slacks in madras plaids values to 29.50 and solids . . Now 20% OFF
many other items drastically reduced
Name:
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Telephone:
No. Price Amount
42.00
Postage Handling 1.00
TOTAL
--knit shirts . . in hundreds of values to 27.50 styles & colors . Now 20% OFF
shorts . . in ten styles . . Now $10.00-25% OFF
spring jackets in five styles . . Now 30% OFF
spring slacks in madras plaids values to 29.50 and solids . . Now 20% OFF
many other items drastically reduced
KU
Celebrate K.U. Appreciation Week at Mister Guy of Lawrence with a Pre-Season Sportswear Sale!!
10
N-T-W Fri. Sat.
10-6
Thurs.
10-9
Sun.
1-5
New Hours:
MISTER
GUY
920 Mass.
14
Friday, April 27, 1979
University Daily Kansan
AFTERTHEGAME?
AFTER THE GAME?
MAKE IT WITH
JUAREZ TEQUILA
GOLD OR SILVER
IMPORTED & BOTTLED BY TÉQUILA JALCOO'S A
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CLUB
As the end of the semester closes in, many near-graduates are rushing to send out resumes and letters of application to employers. But according to Kleyan Hayden, assistant instructor of finance, it might be better to write the writing the applications before mailing them.
Center corrects writing problems
The center was financed by the National Endowment for the Humanities, through a private grant.
The service, which opened last fall, is the school of Business and the department of Finance.
The Communications Resource Center in Summerfield Hall offers free advice and instruction to help overcome writing problems.
Haydon said the center originally was intended to improve the writing skills of business students. However, the student response to the service was lower than expected. The student activity was expanded to help students from any school or department in the University.
Pentax Vivitar
Fantastic Vivitar Sale!
Vivitar 220SL
35mm SLR Camera fl.8 Lens
Reg. $239.95
NOW ONLY $159.95
(while 3 last)
Vivitar Model 365
With P.C. cord, R.S.-3 remote sensor unit,
LVP-1 power pack with strap, battery holder,
power cord, 21mm wide angle panel
Reg. $249.95
NOW ONLY $115.00
(while 3 last)
Vivitar Model 283
With 28mm wide angle panel, P.C. cord,
A.P.-1 battery holder, removable sensor
Reg. $129.95
NOW ONLY $89.95
(while 10 last)
Vivitar Model 273
With head converter, P.C. cord, and wide
angle panel
Reg. $87.95
NOW ONLY $59.95
(while 5 last)
SALE ON
WHILE SUPPLY
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Technics has taken the sophistication of quartz control and combined it with the precision of direct-drive. The result . . . the SL-1200 MKII. A fully-automatic turntable that performs at a professional level.
By incorporating quartz as a reference, rotational speed never varies more than ± 0.002%. Pitch control is accomplished by programmable counter circuitry. Therefore, any pitch you select must be in the range of 0 to 65°. You can perform internal rotor motory: you get this kind of performance.
human engineering, the result is bound to be impressive. We think Technics SL-1200 MKII is.
- Sensitive gimbal suspension tonearm has very low bearing friction of 7 mg.
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Most freshmen and sophomores are enrolled in English courses, he said, and their instructors could advise them on writing problems.
813 Massachusetts
Juniors, seniors and graduate students can use the service. Hayden said.
"This is not meant to be for basic instruction in English," he said.
There are eight Communications Resource Center instructors and each works at the office about five hours a week. All of them have graduate institution instructors of English at the University.
The instructors at the center help students with reports, case studies, resumes, title cards, and other materials.
“What we do is take an essay that is already done and review mistakes with the structurer. We can also do the first draft of a report and discuss what could be done to improve it.”
However, Hayden said the instructors
Greater University Fund elects national chairman
The University of Kansas Greater University Fund has elected Frank Becker as its national chairman, Mary Margaret KU Enforcement Association, said recently.
Becker is the president of the Becker
petroleum carrier company in
Kansas.
Edward Riss, a member of the fund's board for three years, was elected as its vice
The fund raises money for the University. The donor may restrict his gift by specifying which department he wants to receive his funds. This was amused into that department. Simpson said.
chairman and Eileen Olander, also a three-year member, will serve as second vice president.
The Endowment Association sponsors the beck, Becker, who was elected April 21, will preside over board meetings and work with a team in the 1978400 fund. Simpson said.
The three new officers will assume their new positions July 1.
"We are getting more and more students all the time," he said.
Amy Devitt, another center instructor, said that although some students had asked for help with writing resumes, most of the students recently had been with reports for classes.
"We don't have time to edit these. Our purpose is not to do the assignment for the project."
Hayden, one of the center's instructors,
said the student response to the service had
been positive.
Hayden said more students took advantage of the service toward the end of
The center's office is in 306 B Summerfield and students may stop in or call for an appointment. The office is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. during the week.
were not in the business of editing or writing theses and other papers.
"We would like to encourage people to come in earlier in the writing process, instead of waiting until the last minute," he said.
The cause of a fire that gutted a con-
stance stand is the presence of an
alarm. A 7:30 a.m. Wednesday
walnut will underlie it.
Cause of blaze unknown
Insurance appraisers are scheduled to estimate the cost of damages today.
The fire, which started in the kitchen area of the small, green stand, was put out in time to save the building from major structural damage. Officials said all of the cooking appliances in the stand had been turned off.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Although the stand was not severely damaged by the fire, several small appliances were destroyed and smoke and water damaged the building's interior.
NOTICE
SUA FUN RUN
Firefighters from Clinton Township and
Clinton County Public Works were dispatched to
Sat. May 28
3 mile course, timed,
9:00 AM, meet at
the Space
Technology Building
on West Campus
PERSONAL
RICKS KISE HISE is now open 200, Raleigh A-D, Puch, & Centurion B-port, quick, port. clinic. Vermont V414-6042. www.rickskise.com UREGY CLINIC. Abortion up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy tests. Birth Control, Counseling. Tubal Ligation. For appointment call (913) 424-5100. 4401 1098. If, Evergreen Park, KISE
The flames were out by 9 a.m.
BARRIER SPECIALS $4.50 - 10 Mon, Tues, and Wed.
$6.50 - 20 Mon, Tues, and Wed.
$8.50 - MAYS DAILY NIGHT* Wed. $1.60饼干。
Gay Leahman counseling referrals now handed
through KU In. 864-350-836 or Headquarters 864-
121-795-836
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing, Birth Control, Counseling, Tidal Ligation. For appointment: 604-352-4380, 4393, 109th St, Overland Park, Ks.
*messaging for special people Manifest's hostel*
*for special guests**
Bogan Manifest - L-Jahr. Members not required.
Bogan Manifest - L-Jahr. Members not required.
The 4 years of hard work end in 3 weeks. Make them come to the Home Parties and Alma Amy. See the 2019 Recruitment Page.
This is your last chance. The B. L. Lawrence Center
A 1200-seat opera house, located at 725 Broadway,
New York, NY 10026. For reservations call (415) 895-
3300.
The best things in life are expensive! A second trunkie can help you get the best Call 866-253-4700.
To the improvise after failings on Wed, our TOUF@ the Hawks soon Let's try again TOUF@ the Hawks
GOOD SHOW BIG RED. ROOM 234 is watching
Maggie tee up for Thursday at Maggie's
meet Thursday. Maggie & 4-77
Want to submit b 2 hr 11% bath apartment at Mall apartmnta for summer. Call 847-3900 -5863
LISTEN UP "Wild Bill is at it again! Tune-up is
too long." Call 811-435-6200. Fax 811-435-6200.
Call Sunday, Call 811-435-6200. fax 811-435-6200.
Fridahe enthusiasts needed to win at May 5th
competition. Register in Giselle at www.giselle.com
Won't you smile awhile for me, Sarah? Have a
4-27
1 one! XOOO - King Dew
For 815, two tickets to Doble Bros. Call Dave at 4-27 for 815-717 after 5 p.m.
All CAMPUS T.G.LIFE 2-30.50 Broken
***Campus, 1 park or 5 draws 4-27
***Campus, 1 park or 5 draws 4-27
SHY with the opposite sex? We can help For
address and address to Social Learning Center
and address to Social Learning Center.
"WANTED"-1 date to love, overweight 7
year senior. Contact Brikt King. B349-7-27
429
Sponsor an Alpah Gamma Delta phloe for 24
days, downsizing from front of 11 National Bank
daughters in front of 11 National Bank
daughters.
Date-line, Hawaii A.P.-World renown tun-fun fishermen in the Gulf of Mexico examined the anatomical structure of a Norwegian Trifidopsis were reported leaving the scene. The fishermen were taken to safety and were armed danger. Any information concerning their activity was kept secret.
The Chute-25e pitcher, $2.00 cover Friday
the Chute-afternoon $1.00 cover
& bottom, $2.75
Worn-Happy 18th. Let's go to Nebraska.
And we'll be a picture of your FACE!
It will look like you!
You have until May 3 to send $1.00 to P.O. Box
5-23
NKC MK6, 64116.
PHILEDGS You thought it was neat, that scene in the street, but the Alpha PHI activists can't be beat. Big I is Saturday, so you'd better be sure you have on them underwear.
4-37 4-27
Happy birthday to the F&K O Delta Tau Na-
hver had—loud! Your brothers
4-27
Tan Man--You've created quite a stir at KU
I'll drink to that--Dad 4-27
THE TAN MAN KHARI on sale now! CALL
843-752-8100 or 843-752-8100
multiservice thai hatk for $4.95 of Tan Man
president's hatk for $15.95 of Tan Man pres-
ident's vest. Lirk Ltd.
The way you fill those blue jeans baby, my,
mmy. Happy Birthday! - A friend
4-27
TAN MAN
DAY!
—MAY 2nd—
"Undress" like Tan Man
Shorts & T-Shirt
Watch Personals
for details. —Dad
SERVICES OFFERED
Academic tutoring. The Lawnway Open School Mature Tutoring. The Lawnway Open School Mature Tutoring. Call now. 814-160-6932 and Retinal Reading Call now. 814-160-6932
MATH TUTOR M.A. in math, patience, three
years professional training experience. 822-341-341
your professional learning experience. 822-5341, if
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT is available with support.
Printing is available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to
Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 10 a.m.
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who
knows both math and CS problems. Courses
841-147-897.
REWRITING/EDITING - Your manuscript, thesis or toen paper edit into an online version. Toon paper reflects your thinking with precision and smoothness. Outlining of texts and articles also available. E-book format.
EXPERT TUTORS: MATH 000-700: PHYSICS
100-700: COMPUTER SCIENCE 631-852:
CALL 439-852 or
M453-752. QUALIFICATIONS: B.S in Physica,
M.A. in Math., 7 years experience in
computing
Lawrence Open School. Excelling Summer program and study, biking and hiking, fine art organic gardening, creative classes in Language Arts, Math, and Research. Available 7-30 pm, with scale building call now.
Tired of feeding yourself? Naimim Hall is offering for the first time ever a meal prepared daily by our staff, per week can be yours if you choose this plan. Stop and see us or give us a call at 853-8350. **AMSTERDAM**
**226 WEST 4TH STREET** 853-8350
PROFESSIONAL Tune-ups, body work paint
(dbx at an unprofessional firm) Call Mike K.
Khan at 800-355-2626.
BIOHYTIMT CHARTS BY ACUADATE. Companion CD includes your physical-emotional and intellectual needs with range, address, habitats for only $400. Brand new! Branch Wing Mission Ks. 60508. 5-8
Composite home remodeling - building + roofing +
decorating + renovation - 643-588-9261
Winston Brown Construction - 643-588-9261
Winston Brown Construction - 643-588-9261
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-6980. fc
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. tf
Typet/Editor, IBM Pica/Eite. Quality work
for the production of diapestation, wafers
14.2012-N82T1F.
TYPING
New accepting term papers for quality typing,
Lynn, 841-206 after 5:30. fr
Experienced, typist-these, dissertations, term
exams, position selection, selective. Baccalaureum,
842-1311; evening. 842-1310.
Quality typing guaranted - IBM Selectric, Termo-
paper sheets, dissertations, miss. Carolle McCormick.
Experienced Typist—term papers, tlist, mice, music
writing. Exp must include spelling correction, spelled out
843-855-6344, Mrs. Wright.
Accurate, experienced typist - term papers, thesis,
dissertations, reumes, mileies, printer editing,
copying, proofreading. Job must be a hard work-
done, I do darred quick typing, 20 pp. & under, 1
night service. Call Ruth, 843-643-618 for 5 p.m. 5-
Reports, dissertations, reumes, legal forms
or Joanne, selective electric CAL-5-7
or Joanne, 841-112-71
Any, Md/Noir 2014th St. Carlin '43
563-792-1815
Trouble-free. Proftress proofed by experienced
Proftress. Proftress proofed by experienced
MASTERMINIMS Professional typing. Fast. Accurate. Guaranteed. Call 811-3437. 5-80
PROFESSIONAL QUALITY TYPING EMAIL
properly to Claire @ ediths.english.com
correcting Selectie. Mail 812-456-2151, Rewriting
email to Claire @ ediths.english.com
Typing, editing, experienced ECI typewriter,
carbon or rubbon ribbon. I love thesis. Am-
$85.
Experienced Typsit-accurate, quick, reasonable
scheduling, spelling correcting, G-8
mathematics at 842-371-8328
For the cheapest, all original, resumes and cover
letters. For international Typing Server
414-846-3890. Space Age Airplane
I doward quick typing. Under 20 pages, I will
Expert typist will presume client distortions, disorganization, and/or miscommunication. A secure, active work at reasonable rate. Call Ruth at (866) 553-1212.
WANTED
Female 12-month-old wanted for spacious 2 bathroom to stay in campus; $90 per month; 841-366-3001; 841-366-3001.
Need someone to sublease 1 bedroom ghetto-furn-
need someone to sublease 1 bedroom ghetto-furn-
Ulld. paid $432,660 per 4 p.m. €675,
Ulld. paid $432,660 per 4 p.m. €675,
Wanted roommate for 2-bedroom AC house $125
plus utilities. Call 841-6833 for five p.m.
...
Female roommate for number to share furnished
Female roommate for number to share furnished
Plus utilities. Swimming pool. 410-835-9080
Responsible nonsmoking, females to share 2 bed
room apartments in the building. Call 811-6828-4-30
and 13epc Call 811-6828-4-30
One or two nonnominal female roommates for
$70 to $100 a month plus payable fees 4-30
841-852-6980
1. roommate to share beautiful 3 bedroom (Supreme)
2. 1-bedroom apartment for $699/month
3. NECSCARRY $39/week or monthly
4. 1-3th cell ($39/month)
One or two female rooms to share Mail App.
for summer. Call after 5. 841-8759
Person to fix my 1975 Toyota Corolla Delita
to keep it from calling Call 641-6431 after 5 p.m.
keep keeping?
Summer roommate for Large 2 Bdmr. Fax:
414-8433 $109, utilities paid Call: 765-4143
Needroom needmor for summer students Prefer
dilution of 0.5% or 1.0% BOD5 for
diluting laundry Laundry #414-8798 evening's
Room wanted May 21-31, Aug 1-18 $15 per
week. Call Mike Camke 862-748-9000
Liberal, non-sexist, non-evaporate smoking person who has been admitted to persons I am considereré. Call Kevert avant enceinture.
Need three male roommates for summer to share
room. Must be 18 and over washers, $75 mo.
* 1 utility room B (44) 866-6233
* 1 utility room C (44) 866-6233
In need of three male commuters for next fall
payments, call 841-325-6711 or visit site:
$2 monthly; utilities Call 841-325-6711 for more
Wanted: Laidley female graduate to share bea-
ney in Parkland Park Apt. 1-Aunson and 4-30
885-187
Grad student or upperclassman wanted, for
with garden near tennis courts; 1 bikl on,
of campus. Available May 30. Wood store, CA, own
phone: 8 457-8696. Mail address: 825.37. ppm
Want to buy large abstract painting, acrylic or gouache? Have your artwork with price, size and where that can be found.
Needed 2 chairs to share 3 Berm, duplex for
2 chairs + 4 utilities. Call Canis Bartle
Christie at 845-702-9231.
Shelley Miller is looking for a housemate. June
1979-June 1980. 1802-4780 or 8632-3311.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 27, 1979
15
KANSAN WANT ADS
Adequate facilities, good services and employment
support. Requires Bachelor's degree in Business
Sciences or related field and 5 yrs of exp. MHNG
MENG MNENG MNG MNENG MNE
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
15 words or
lower $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
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.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
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
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online, calling the UDX business office 1-844-525-0369.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Aunt-Draft. Rally, Tuesday, May 1st, 11:30 a.m.
1:15 p.m. - Stright Hall Lawn Haven
Employment Opportunities
Operating room or any other teaching assistant job will require experience in PDP, Computer Aided Diagnosis (CAD) and Computerized Tissue Banking (CTB). Confirmation of background is an important part of the application.
ENTERTAINMENT
Guy Services of Kansas will host a spring plunge on Wednesday, March 25th, from the floor of the U.S. Bank of Kansas at 10:45 a.m., or the floor of the U.S. Bank of Missouri at 10:45 a.m.
FOR RENT
Still looking for a place to call home? Naimith Hall now has a couple of openings on the first floor. To book an appointment or give us a call at 415-8504 and we will be glad to answer. Naimith HALL, 1800 Naimith HALL, 841-8504
FRONTIER RIDGE APARTMENTS NOW REESTABLISHED
A residential unit unfurried from $170. Two laundry rooms, large bathrooms and office spaces in the INDOOR HEATED POOL. For appointment call 864-344 or at www.$44 Frontier Road. Next door
Christian Housing New and Summer. Close to campus. Mail in resumes to m42-842 between 2 p.m. Keep it clean.
Female roommate for summer. Two bdm.
Applicsoft AC. AcP. Cell 141-2378.
*Wanted: Female romantiate to share 2 bedrooms*
*For rent: 1st floor, $450 per month. $850 total*
*southern limits: $900 for more (incl. taxes)*
*in Atlanta, GA.*
Apt. 2 BR and efficiency. Clear to paucus. Ui-li-
ners. Clean, quiet, and comfortable.
MARRE A & II. *A*partitions now renting for non-mastery apartments, 7 miles with to campus. 1 auxiliary balconies of direct stairway, dining room, disabled access to office, parking. Contact info 1015 Mit Apst. #27. bt: 824-6032. 811-5151. bt: 824-6032.
ROOMS FOR RENT. Conventure location - several houses from student Union. Call now 866-359-1240.
Summer student need software to share large
data files. 3-4 users required.
$8 or couple $85, 84-6127
- 2-5
Sublease with option to renew. Luxury 3 bed, 3 bath, Townhouse, Pool, Tennis Court, Car Ports, Bus Route, Karaquehill Club, Dishroom, and more. Available in Michigan 841-3729 or 843-7423.
Summer subarea with option to recurrent 2-bed
close home to campus. A11-864-0000 unfurnished
building.
TREO COMPRACTIVE LIVING...is an established
treatment center that provides a variety of
privacy, private living from residents $250,
including amenities. *Phone* (310) 846-2795.
Subrash Ant *Ant* for summer2-bedroom close to
companys dog allowed, possible summer rain
-rainy days.
Skiplift 2 bedrooms unfurnished apartment 4
bathrooms May 19, 2023 $280 per month Call 843-3037-297
May 23, 2023 $325 per month Call 843-3037-297
Summer roommate to share new three bedroom
room. 644-1625. AC, fully furnished.
bathroom. 644-1625.
SUBLEASE. Furnished in Mendowbrook.
Swimming and tennis. 843-0699
4-27
Summer roommate needed. Graduate student preferred. BR Apr $90 1' utilities. Call Jake 415-278-3016.
Summer sublease: Sunuelus 1 BR Southside
2BR Westside; Roof-top mobile suite, available
bureaux 816; B170; C81; 841-535-9200.
Summer subclass: 2 BR AC acp; for $175.50
Summer subclass: 4 BR AC acp; to continue selling
books: 814 - 847 500
Looking for a Summer Residence? Rent a 5-bedroom house, furnished 2 locks from 4-27
DOGS AND CATS Check out this 1 bedroom room just before bedtime. The rooms like bathroom and kitchens, luxuries like balcony, air conditioning, has a water heater, laundry and Masters are allowed. Call 842-7350. 4-27
Sheep in the bed of a future Supreme Court
ruler? No. Call Georgia 842-906-4277.
William Gallock 842-906-4277.
DAILY ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE
PRIVATE CLUBS
MINGLES DISCO
YOU GET MORE AT MINGLES
Ramada inn 2222 W. 6th 842-7030
G.P. LORD'S
STAYIN' ALIVE
STAYIN' ALIVE
Memberships Avail... 701 Mass.
AMUSEMENTS
BEER
DINING
MONTH THURS 7:900
$1 PITCHERS
TUESDAY 7:900
5.0' Schooners & $1 Pitchers
FRIDAY 1:700
DRINK & DROWN
EVERY FRIDAY
708 Mass.
BEER GARDEN
Every Friday
ADVANCE WEEK
14 oz. Draws Only 9:30-9:00
$1.50 Pitcher all week
14 oz. Bottles
Aztec Inn
LUNCHEDN MENUS
807 Vermont
842-9455
HERE'S WHAT'S
HAPPENING!
Jordansen TOUERS ARMMENTS
MUSIC
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
COLE TUCKEY
Last Appearance this semester
$2.50 Gen. Adm.
$2.00 Club Mem
NEXT WEEK
May 2nd
Earl Scruggs Revue
THE LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE
At Spyryn Club
CAMPUS ACTIVITIES
Hola! presents another
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Bagel and Lox brunch
Sunday, April 29th
11:30 Lawrence J.C.C.
(917) Highland dr.)
$1 members $2 non-members
For more info. and rides call 864-3948
CAMPUS ACTIVITIES
Hugel presents another
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Bagel and Lox brunch
Sunday, April 29th
11:30 Lawrence J. C. C.
(977) England dr.)
$1 members, $2 non-members
For more info. and rides call 864-3948
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
2. bathroom. 2. bathroom. 2. story parquet Memo-
orate. 2. bathroom. 2. bathroom. 2. story parquet Memo-
orate. 2. bathroom. Excellent rental rate. Memo-
orate.
Need to audit weekly 3 bedroom apt. Newly
moded: AC $260/month, utilities $981-54
$298/week
Summer recreational needed: non-smoker Graduates
Call Jack or 815-647-3121
Call Jack or 815-647-3121
4-27
CUT-HATRY Luxury Traitrade Townhouse, 3 bedrooms, 2 halls, summer ambiance $279 per month
Summer mule-leaf, fertilized 2-bedroom gt. 10th &
& Minneapolis. Precision condition. A-ClC-Dip.
Seasonal use only.
Wanted
Bouncers
& Doormen.
Call Jon at 842-6930
The Lawrence
Opera House
75 Spruce Club
Nomineer, sublease, new 2 story duplex, 4 IRE, 2 Baths, $650/month. Floor Rate: $1,375/month. Rent: 460 sqm, monthly June-July. Pending: $850/month.
1 bedroom Apt. for sublet, June 1 to Aug. 1.
610 Call: am29. p323-4860. 5-2
Strabo for outlines in June and July. Purgitied
the book by J. C. Wheeler. Quotation 6
[Call: 814-7250 for details]
Wanted! Roommate for New app. Nice place in the CAN WORK IT OUT 24/7. 720-636-1980. Kean Trump (1)
Must submit for summer. Make offer. Please help.
student in a Joan, Malin Ode English, 842-759-0813.
2 BR furnished house, AC, large kitchen,
2 pachys, room for garden, $20 to $40
SUMMER SUP-LLEASE at Meadwrokbrick Apts.
Two-bedroom, two-bathroom house for $485 per month.
2 bedrooms, 1 bathroom. Walk-in closet.
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom Apple Craft Apt.
reduced price. Next to campus. 843-1260.
www.applecraft.com
Comfortable 2 bedroom apartment on the second floor of large house two shacks much more spacious. Dark wood floors, large windows led to light and air. New carpet and new months $180/mo. All utilities paid. Carry a blanket.
PLEASE HILO put two fellow college kids by sun-baking a luxurious Mall agit for the numerous guests. Make large wood, large kitchen and beautiful furniture. Excellent call number. Call Ouillat or Sandy at 800-257-3612.
Summer sublease—Suspects two bedroom Apartment 11; both bath, overflowing soo, very large, 2 bedrooms.
Summer sublease: 1 bdmr. $150.00 Call 841-4988
after 7.
BUMMER SUBLASELE. One bedroom apt., lift-
unified furnished 19th Avenue, A.C. terrife location,
190-456-2780.
From June 1 on, 3 older students seek one or two rooms in room-basement 203; bathroom, fireplace, plant, room. People who love low-cost food, comforts of a real restaurant, people who love our warm
Small one-bedroom house to rent for summer month $125/mile. Call Roberts, 843-3095, e-mail roberts@me.com
Apt. for sublease, 2 BR, 1 bath, $170 per month.
Apt. till 15 Aug. to 15 Aug. 841-634-52-2
*
Large 4-5 bedroom house available in old West London early summer this through July 1986. For further enquiries please contact us on 0207 3545 700.
Summer sublease. (June 1st July 1st) with option
to receive summer facility, *AC* (83-47)
& *B* (83-47)
One, two-bedroom duplex available. May 6 and
September bedroom/bathroom
Meadowbrook summer sublime. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
Bedroom with pool and beach balcony. Call
829 or 841-7752.
Sputecio 2 bedroom Apartment. 960 ft from Kansas
Union. Subnet for summer. Cell 414-851-50. 5-4
SUBLET for summer. For 1 or 2 people New
Union for Union Rent negotiable (641-
8027 9327)
FOR SALE
Summer subunit 2 bedroom facility Apt. Completely furnished including grand piano, Short kitchen and bath.
A beautiful two bedroom apartment available at campus - "campus 401" Call 814-652-3333
840-352-3333
Summer suburbs large furnished one bedroom
hotels; Westchester, Long Island and
boston. Great location. N-9K from Union
Ave. $275-$400 per night.
Sublease studio apartment for summer: AC furnished, clean, pool, tennis. Call 853-590-2601.
WATERPROOF MATTRESSES $29.99 3 year guarantee.
WHITE LIGHT 704, Mass 843, 126-
Watch for truck on Sundays selling produce.
Jayhawk Foods, 8th & Illinois. Also wood
Sunpackers - Sun glasses are our specialty. Non-prescription only. 800-254-1760, selection, resignation.
Alternator, starter and generator. Specialties:
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-690-2600 w/ W. 6th.
MOTIVE ELECTRIC 843-690-2600 w/ W. 6th.
Peader Muitingang Bass Guitar with straps, corals, pearls, cymbals, picks, strings, picks, braces, cables and covers. Very good condition.
For Mother's Day - Free 12 or 18-air Shampoo
with $60 tip贷 from Chirnitys collection at
chirnitys.com. See our online shop.
White Elephant Sale, Saturday, April 28. $8.95
White Elephant Sale, of Ohio Highway 40.
W. Cornwall. 4-27
Western Civilization Note. Now on Sale! Make sure out of Western Civilization books for class to take on course 4. For course 2. For course 3. For exam preparation. New Anaiyah Critics, Criteria Maker Bookstore, & Orad Bookstore. If you need other materials, visit us.
Mom would like a Trop & Jet贴 to stick on
mask from Bound Corner Drugsher
would like a Trop & Jet贴 to stick on
1900 Ford Mustang, AT, AC, PS, radio, 1600 or best
feel. Call Tom at 842-7274.
Yahya souhaits backtrack his case, like new $150
lightweight guitar plus case.
[The image shows a partial view of the backstock]
84-217D
178th Hornbill Robbit TAK-36 Only 2 miles on
new heifer. Call M84207 4:27
74 Mustang II, 4 cylinder, 4 speed, AM FM
8 track, excellent. 842-603 4-27
71 California, CA now. 14,000 km². AP, PSB, PB.
92 California, CA now. 3,000 km². AP, PSB, PB.
Small enclosed on-site hotel. You can leave
any time or anywhere you wish.
1974 Norton 820 Commands. Here's your chance to own a quality imported importer's $1,000 or more of these products.
Comfortable Twin Bed. Like new Best offer.
Call 842-0564
4-27
1971 Kawaii $60. Century Silver with mag,
front and rear钻架. Blaize nearly length.
$58. Diameter.
70 Porta Catala, make an offer, come by 1321 Vermont (right apt) after 5:30. 4-27
Used. Study Mattena and Springs. Good condition.
$25 set. Call 643-8148 Ext. 3 after 3:27
Encyclopedia Britannica "Great Books of the
World" 54 volumes, 601 call: 484-2035
684-2025
Plat '71 - 124. Sport Convet. Call after 5. Best!
Tail '81 - 841-698
4-27
GETTING MARRIED? Wedding dress for sale.
On White Size 9 Worn once $110-$221 overall
$250.00
Storm receiver: Kewanow KR-2200 and $200
will be charged. $100报价, Excellent料
price.
1973 Yamaha 8150, $155.0; kickstart, dual-cat
only 160 miles. Call Carli 842-6400-8688.
1978 Kunman PA system 130 wall head. P1516
1979 Kunman PA system 130 wall head. P1516
Never been on the road K943-8002-AASY
Never been on the road K943-8002-AASY
16-speed lightweight bike. Regina Sport Con-
trol pull bike, amuletix detailail. $100; $149
and more.
Honda Express Mopar, Near new, low mileage,
1995. Lock, oil and helm oil needed-
$1,995. $499-$1123.
810-3182.
dollars, Canyon, Catalog, perfect neighbors $250 (sends $40 more) 811-312-91
1-5
1976 Toyota Camry GT, 5 speed AM-FM Shower,
43,000 miles by origin call. Call 843-600-4277
1 Obsite Triple Beam Scale, Weight 610 Grams;
$35.00.
4-30
1017 Arsenal Hardcap, 4 cylinder 4 speed, Miring
1295 Arsenal Hardcap, 3 cylinder 4 speed, Miring
819 Arsenal Hardcap, 3 cylinder 4 speed, Best ORT
819 Arsenal Hardcap, 3 cylinder 4 speed, Best ORT
Canon Enthusiast! Please visit us and shop our selection of Old Town and Coleman Canes and accessories. We rent as well as sell them fine condition. Please contact Mr. Maison at 510-734-8200, Downtown, Lawrence.
1974 19 by SS. 2 BB arrived, AC, partial furnace, forced air, tercor door, swimming pool, kitchen sink.
White elephant sale: Saturday, April 28. 8 a.m.
3:30 p.m. Parking lot: 135 West Campus. 4-27
Buy from owner and save. Very nice 1972 Moss
Caric, A C, P S., B50. P V 256. Calib. 83 H.
B28. P V 256. Calib. 83 H.
80-230 Solitaire senior leather. T-1 monitor with MHz.
Keyboard and skidless feet. $195 from Handy $499
from Sears.
Railroad. Metalid, 18-speed boat, good condition,
$55. Also 20-gallon and 30-gallon aquarium.
(Recommended).
78 AMP, moped. 600 miles, 75es per gallon,
350 or best offer. Lyles 844-212-97.
5-4
Window van, 68 Dodge, 6 cycle, $790 Call: 841-5493 after 6 p.m.
For Sale. Ross 10-speed bike. Call 864-6357
$55.00
77 Firebred Engel, Low miles, power plus many
814-8244 Jeone. 5-2
2 tickets to Billy Joel concert, very good seats.
Call 842-1229 4-27
km to 11 p.m. Keep calling 5-3
King-size bed and recliner (both new) 2
doz. large concrete bed. Call 818-2422-afu2
for further information.
Pamasonic stereo tape deck AM-FM radio-
Kenwood speaker only $360-842-517
- 8-5
RM 400 SUZUKI CALL 842-6000 AFTER 5 PM
1977 MGB 10,060—one owner miles, $2,500
Call-3
5-13
802-325-4660
FOUND
Two Double Brother tickets. Main Floor. Call
843-8895 4-27
Waller—Belongs to John Benge. Call 842-2059 to
4-27
Camera—inherent Pocket Lake. Call 842-6516 ack. for 997.
Cat. Male--Gold has a white flea collar. Call
852-900 and ask for Joliette.
4-27
Texas Instrument Calculator near First Southern
Baptist Church-19th and Nainstil. Bk 844-3367.
www.instrumentcalculator.org
Set of keys in First Hall Inquire at Kannan Business Office. 846-4354. 4-27
Barron silver watch found near the tennis courts.
Call 644-8590 Farad.
4-30
Found: Are umbrella on a campus bis nightingale of Avr 247. Ident in claim. B64-169E 4:30
2 Irish Setters. One young, thin male; one older,
heavier female. Call 645-0745. 5-1
HELP WANTED
SUMMER JOBRS, NOW! WORLD CRUSHERS!
PLEASURE HABITAT! No experience! Good pay!
CLIPPING & CLARIFICATION
PLICATION and direct referrals to SEAWORLD,
Box 60129, Sacramento, CA 95886. 5-8
陪同 with own transportation to care for 8 baby
children. Call 212-543-9071 or book eye care lounge calls: 260/971
Call 212-543-9071
Wanted
A few aggressive,
ambitious females
to wait tables.
Call Jon at 842-6930
The Lawrence
opera house
17 Sport Club
JOSES LAKER TAIONE, CALIP! Fantastic tiger! $170.500 annual! Summer! Still needed, Castros, Pinaricca, Rancho Criativa, Critibal, Seed 601.298, PSIMA, PSIMA to LAKOWEKI. Box 60129, Safta, CA, 95800
**STUDENTS:** nummer employment Pickerlons' town how making application for a job security employment on Security Guards in the greater Kansas City area. How portability available, and telephone in convenience Grand Bank Building, Room 201, Kansas City, Grand Bank Building, Room 301, Kansas City, the bank garage, 1112 Grade, AnEqual Opponent
ENGINEERING GRADES. Position $18,000 up.
N. v.e. r to applicant. Call Bob Courtney.
913-528-1720 or send resume to Courtney Port.
652-447-8810 St. Suite 105. Shore 58.
Ks. 652203
Did your Easter break leave you with the summer job blues? We still have a few full time summer work positions available. We find out if they are suitable for you. To P.O Box 2021, Lawrence Ks 66043, 4-822-785-3800.
Students majoring in business, pre-med, pre-law
and/or foreign language. May earn $379 per month. For interview
please visit www.cityofhouston.edu/college/admissions.
MAKE $2,000 THIS SUMMER. If you are hard working, independent, and willing to recharge your needs, you have a great chance.
HUMSITYM AIMM CYTALIS, in partnership & member
of the HUMSITYM Foundation, are providing
promotional materials for the HUMSITYM
Foundation. BWB is responsible for all sales &
promotion activities.
Looking for a job to help get you through college? We have noosa & thompson, 1297 W. 6th st. 1297 W. 6th st. 1297 W. 6th st.
Part-time Job with open介紹並估價 1st summer job from
June 20 to October 31. Requires $50 by start of training. Call 824-5280 for
information.
Earn $250 to $100 weekly in your Homeownership,
Industrial-Outdoor, Electric BIRE Coffee-
ers, Indian Outdoor, Electric BIRE Coffee-
ers anywhere operates on less than or be per hour.
vestituted in inventory Write today BAK Box
institution.
$100-$150 paid for phone debugging. Z-80 microcontroller
6 bit microcontroller. Descriptor management, scene, part
number 6 bit microcontroller. Description
We have plenty of summer jobs available in the Kansas City metro area for security officers. You will work in our office, in a portraitation and a phone in your home. Apply in person: Fri - Mon 4 a.m - 5 p.m. WELLS VARGE Apt. 109-218
8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Check your blood pressure
FREE
Friday, April 27
Strong Hall Lobby
Wescoe 4th Floor West
8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
The University of Kansas (Lawrence Campus), Office of Information Systems is seeking an information technician to assist data base administrators. Require experience includes having a strong knowledge and written communications skills, and knowl of job duties required in COHGL programming experiencel not required in COHGL programming experiencel have experience (preferably IMS). This career mentored position will be offered to students who have experience (preferably IMS) that is an excellent growth opportunity where the data base administration area is this is an excellent growth opportunity which he or she is not proficient. Position will be held on weekends during the school year. Student hours per week
Bartenders and waitresses, call between noon
6 a.m. and 10 p.m., or come in between
8 a.m. and 10 p.m., 845-763-763
Wanted: Horttie-Cushion, face area restaurant
Wanted: Horttie-Cushion, face area restaurant
eight times, spring and summer. Phone # 866-749-5200.
The Office of Information Systems (Lawrence Campus) is seeking a working typist. Must be comfortable using a computer (4 hour time limits required) during the hours (4 hour time limits required) during the day, and profuse experience in preparing charts and reports, photography, filing and photography. Position will involve Administrative Secretary, Office of Information Systems (806-4326), Application deadline is Tuesday, May 1st. Applicants must have an M.S. degree or equivalent (48-4326). Application deadline is Tuesday, May 1st. Applicants must have an M.S. degree or equivalent (48-4326). Application deadline is Tuesday, May 1st. Applicants must have an M.S. degree or equivalent (48-4326). Application deadline is Tuesday, May 1st.
RESEARCH ASSISTANT Help conduct studies and review reports. Work with co-workers on available months 9-11. Prayer勿会 to continue next fall BESTIARY-Tying, Kwening, Worthington. Address inquiries EQUAL Opportunity Employee 4-309 Addresses wanted immediately! Work at home in Los Angeles. Apply for position: EQUAL Opportunity Agent Services. 850 Park Lane, Suite 127, Dallas, TX 75001.
CURRICULUM & INSTRUCTION (Media)-half-time graduate assistantship in the Educational Outreach Division, U.S.A., beginning August 18, 1979. Qualifications: knowledge of educational or related experience; graduate student status starting in September; ability to communicate effectively; HE-credit institution faculty & staff maintain work flow; develop instructional materials using Brody's coursework; faculty & staff maintain work flow; apply letter to Dr. Philip Brooks, Education Department.
Attention Manager, Part-time student sales representative Job involves promoting high quality education Job involves promoting high quality free training to Quality individual must be knowledgeable in Summit Travel Inc. Parkside Kelowna Job involves presenting to Summit Travel Inc. Parkside Kelowna
ARE YOU A PHOTOGRAPHER? If you're ever considered the field of professional Photography, Compete Corporation photographs more college and women than anyone else in America. Compete Corporation is strong desire to excel and thoroughly enjoy the field of portrait photography. All you need is a field of portrait photography and a sense of necessity to learn. For more information write: American Compete Corp. Box 1072. Kuwait City, KS 74913.
UNDERGRADUATE TEACHING • ASSISTANTS
in laboratory supervision and grading in
business administration will be a stipend of approximately 600 for 14-
weeks. Qualifications should include health
certificate, certification in business or a faculty recommendation. Interested students may apply May 15 1979. The Department of Chemistry
enrolls undergraduate and engenuine graduates from
the university.
LOST
LOST. Gold wrist bracelet on 4.24. Sentimental value. If found please call 664-661. Reverse $5.
MISCELLANEOUS
Eyeglasses, brown leather case, on table outside
9 Strong Case 864-0956, Oliver 2941 $54
Last one pair of light-pink framed prescription
pictures. Call 83-787-4267
Took call by Kelley A. 83-787-4267
Maiz Tines watch with brown belt. Milpitas,
Thursday, 12 p.m. in an oil near Sunrise.
Cars are welcome.
THESIS BINDING COPYING - The House of *Naber's* Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their thesis binding and copying in Lawrence. Let me help you at 838 Main or phone 842-360-7101.
DEATH? WHY BOTHER? ECKANKAR
The Key to secret worlds. 842-3432. 841-2763.
NOTICE
The key to securing wireless networks is WANTED: assistance to help with intruder-wired打击 matches. If interested call 604-356-1498 or run on stop by 208 Robinson, Service 44-73.
VIRTS-Are you getting your benefits? #18
Check campers VIRTS 118 if Ubliqua 644-479
We have, we have, cr. notes, Malls Bookshop II,
the Malls Shopping Center, 711 W. 26th, 4-58.
OFFICIAL TAN MAN
OFFICIAL TAN MAN
LIMERICK CONTEST FORM
- Mail in this form with check or money
order to 111 Flint Hall or just come by.
DEADLINE: MONDAY, APRIL 30, 5 PM
- $3.50 per limerick to cover
publication costs.
ALL LIMERICKS PUBLISHED ON
TAN MAN DAY,
WED. MAY 2nd.
Contest Judge
is Chancellor Archie Dykes!
Write
Limorick
here—
NAME:
PHONE:
MOST ORIGINAL
LIMERICK WINS
ADDRESS:
$400 JVC PORTABLE
RADIO CASSETTE
2319 Louisiana
RECORDER
TEAM ELECTRONICS
WHAT'S A LIMERICK?
A limerick is 5 lines with a rhyme scheme ababba
WIN!
- Full Auto-Stop
- ALC & Manual
Recording level control
aabba
- 5 Watt—4 Speaker system with 6 1/2" wofers & 2" Twentier
TURBO
SVC RC-828
4
16
Friday, April 27, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Haig...
From page one
concerned that that an all-volunteer army would not participate in number of reserves for a war. U.S. security
"If the American people are told the facts," he said, "they'd support any ultimate decision—which may be in the early 1800s to go back to the draft system."
At a news conference earlier yesterday,
Hawaii was asked if he had any intentions of
running for the GOP candidacy for president in 1980.
"I have not declared in any form or to anyone intentions of entering the American political scene, but that does not foreclose that possibility at some juncture," said Hagi, who was chief of the White House staff under Nixon.
Immediately after the speech, Haig left to return to Allied headquarters in Belgium.
General Haig
Intramural Wrestling Tournament
Participate in the
Saturday and Sunday, April 28-29 in Robinson Squim. Gym
All wrestlers must attend a safety clinic in the South Gym, Saturday, April 28, at 9 a.m. and 9 a.m. on Sunday, April 29. Matches start at 10 a.m.
Deadline for entry is 8:30 a.m. on Saturday, April 28.
Be Ready to Wrestle at Anytime.
Tournament rules, weight classes, and entry forms are available in Recreational Services, 208 Robinson.
R
wants to answer your questions about
Alpha Omicron Pi reorganization
Panhellenic Association
Open Rush regulations
Bring your questions to the
Informational Meeting
tremendous difference, maybe it would matter to me, but right now it doesn't."
Wednesday, May 2
Michael Grant, a fourth-year student at the Med Center, said, "It probably wouldn't be a significant difference. You would learn more about the city in your price in the city because of overload."
From page one
Forum Room - Kansas Union
The lower salary and longer hours have not dampened the enthusiasm for rural practice shared by small town doctors, including McGinnis.
Doctors . . .
9:15-10:15
Hockermith said he thought there was a better opportunity to earn money in rural areas than in urban areas.
"I love it," he said. "I wonder why I didn't do this 10 years ago."
urban doctor has to build up a practice, whereas if you are a rural doctor and if you're competent, you have an instant practice. In a rural area you can work as many hours as you want and see as many patients as you want."
"In a rural area you can make as much as you want to," Hockersmith said.
EQUUS
A Play by Peter Shaffer
Presented by
The University of Kansas Theatre
April 27, 28 & May 3, 4 & 5
at 8:00 pm
University Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale
in the Murphy Hall Box Office
For reservations
call 914-264-3865
KU Students
admitted free with ID
GIBRALTARS
MOFFET-BEERS BAND
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
9-3
Live Entertainment
Disco
Live Entertainment
Disco
TONIGHT
memberships available
842-5765
If not clear, there will be an Open House the following Friday and every Friday thereafter throughout most of the summer.
located in Hillcrest Center for the discriminating adult
Partially funded by Student Senate.
April 27 - 8:00 pm
500 Lindley Hall
Advertise it in the Kansan 864-4358
The Astronomy Associates of Lawrence Invites the public to our weekly
OPEN HOUSE
W. S.
QUIZ TIME:
IF HAVING YOUR TONSILS OUT IS A TONSILLECTOMY AND HAVING YOUR APPENDIX REMOVED IS AN APPENDECTOMY, WHAT DO YOU CALL REMOVING A GROWTH FROM THE HEAD?
A
MARILYN MONROE
(WE MAKE IT FUN)
HAIRCUT!
headmasters
843-8808
809 VERMONT OPEN EVENINGS
P. S. GOOD LUCK ON FINALSI
1st Annual AURH Spring Formal
Celebrate Spring at the
April 28,1979
9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom & Balcony Featuring: The Original Artists
Refreshments will be provided. Admission is free for all hall residents and their guests. Tickets are available today through 4/28 at your hall desk. Semi-formal or formal dress is appropriate.
$7800 AS A SENIOR AND POST GRADUATE EDUCATION IN NUCLEAR POWER JUNIOR—SENIORS
Juniors and Seniors with at least one year of physics and calculus may be eligible for a year of post-graduate training in nuclear engineering and over $650 per month for up to 12 months prior to graduating through the Navy's Nuclear Power Officer Candidate Program on campus interview contact Ed Gunderson, at (913) 841-4376. (c) US Naval Academy.
Navy Officer Programs
610 Florida Street
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
OFFICE
905 Avalon Road, Apt. 1
OPEN HOUSE
Columbian Properties Corp.
10:00 a.m to 5:00 p.m
AVALON APARTMENTS
$200 - 2 Bedroom
$160 - 1 Bedroom
HARVARD SQUARE APTS
SPECIAL SUMMER RATES
$200 - 2 Bedroom
Carpeting *Panelling*
Fully Equipped Kitchen
Draps *Access to Pool*
Water *Gas or Water* *Security*
Traffic Pickup *Off Street Parking*
Bake oven *Baking Ovens*
Efficient Maintenance
Efficient Maintenance
Carpeting • Draps
Fully Equipped Kitchen
Pool & Water • Gas heat!
Trash Pickup • Off Street Parking
Friendly Management • Security
Efficient Maintenance
Storage lockers
sua films
Presents
"TRUFFAUT'S FUNNIEST IN YEARS."
"The man who loved women' considers some of the aspects and manifestations of love and then shakes its head in a mixture of wonder and delight. A supremely humane, sophisticated comedy full of the double-edged wit of the self-aware."
*American Critic NY Times*
Francois Truffaut's
The man who loved women
April 26 & 27
April 26 & 27
Friday—3:30 & 9:30 pm
Saturday—7:00 pm
odruff Auditorium ADM $1.50
Woodruff Auditorium ADM $1.50
Polygraph tests relied upon. discredited
By TOM ZIND
Staff Renorter
"As an employee of the company, would you agree to take a nylon verbal test?"
Chances are that everyone has encountered a similar question on an employment application.
As more retailers have turned to polygraph examiners as another weapon in an arsenal to combat the growing problem of employee theft, onposition to the tests also has been mounting.
Employers who use them say the tests are a necessary tool in screening employees.
Those who are opposed to their use complain of the inaccuracy and unreliability of the tests and their results.
The theory behind lie detector tests is simple.
Then they yank me out of the chair and he will lay with pleasure, breathe heavier and exhibit an increased pulse.
A POLYGRAPH machine records the electrical impulses generated by these three bodily functions by producing a graphic representation on a roll of paper with electrodes, and with electrodes that pick up these electrical impulses.
When the test is over, the examiner can look at the graph and see on which questions a person's perspiration, heart beat and breathing changed. From this information, the examiners say, they can tell whether a person has lied.
A fundamental question in the debate about the merits and ethics of lie detector tests is whether the examiner is qualified to make sense of the mass of lines that the machine spools out during a test.
An Overland Park examiner who has had 11 years of experience said an experienced and qualified examiner was "a must" in conducting an accurate examination.
THE EXAMINER, Dwight Fidler, a former New Jersey police officer who learned the skill at the law enforcement department and had hands of an experienced polygrapher, is 98 percent accurate. I consider anyone incompetent with his has not been fully trained.
"It takes a lot of experience," he said. "I could have you doing pre-employment tests in three weeks. However, you can't sit down and do 150 of these tests and then do murder cases."
Fidler, who said that polygraph work deserved the same respect afforded to other professions, is concerned about the murders of unqualified examiners who have set up shop. He said he strongly favored more restrictions and guidelines. RESTRICTIONS on who can administer polygraph
RESTRICTIONS on who can administer polygraph tests in Kansas are almost non-existent and those
that are on the books have little effect on excluding amateurs and incompetents.
According to Kansas State Deputy Attorney General Tom Haney, the only broad restriction in Kansas is that the examiner be licensed as a law enforcement officer or private detective. Haney agreed that these restrictions did not assure that an individual was qualified to conduct a fair and accurate test.
A bill that would have licensed examiners and created a board of polygraphers was killed in a court fight.
Fidler said such a bill was needed to protect employees and businesses from quack examiners.
"The public needs to know more about polygraphers," he said. "Most employers don't know there's a difference between a good and a bad polygrapher."
Fidder listed asking relevant questions, being able to interpret the results and having a respect for the rights of the people involved as some qualities of a good examiner.
THE LINE OF questioning is one area of polygraphy that has come under fire. Opponents say it is too open to abuse because polygraphers can ask questions not related to a person's fitness for employment, such as those regarding sex and drug habits.
"IIf I'm looking for orange that were stolen, I'm not going to ask about apples," he said. "Eighty percent of apples are toxic."
Filler, who does work for Gibson Discount Center,
2252 Iowa St., said he asked only relevant questions.
the questions we ask in practice, as well as the
questions we use in our practice.
to take the test a few weeks ago questioned the test a
The employee, Karen Voss, Chicago sophomore, said, "I think it all is right if the people want to take the test, but I feel that a person can be made nervous and that this could affect his score."
However, Fidler said, "What you're looking for is the change from the normal. There a 'normal' for a different one."
"Actually," Fidder said, "the more nervous they are, the easier it is to tell whether they're telling the truth."
HE SAID NERVOUSNESS did not matter because the machine measured responses and the examiner didn't.
Although Gibson's uses polygraphs on an irregular basis, according to store manager Art Cromer, the use of the tests does not appear to be widespread in Lawrence.
Of 25 companies contacted, four said they used the tests. Spokesmen for K Mart, 31st and Iowa streets, and Kansas Color Press, 2201 Haskell Ave, refused to say whether they used them. However, two em-
employee of the companies said they had never been asked to take one there.
Rocky Davis, store manager for Super-X Drugs,
i15 W. 23rd St., the said店 had used polygraph tape.
"We use it as a screening process of all new empioyees," he said. "We use it primarily to verify the accuracy of our training."
JIM TUTSHULTE, assistant store manager, said the store had to be very careful in its hiring process. The managers were often the store was concerned with weeding out employees who were drug addicts or who had stolen money or drugs.
Although pharmacies might have a special problem in screening employees, none of the other
Jerry Toberson, owner of Jerrys Pharmacy, Sixth and Michigan streets, echoed Filler's concerns.
"I wouldn't consider using them until there is some better way of determining that the person is competent," he said. "If the state had licensing I might go along with it."
Another local pharmacist who has not resorted to polygraphs is opposed to them for different reasons.
"I have the feeling that they are a little dehumanizing," Dick Runey, owner of Honey Drug Group.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
PARKS
See POLYGRAPHS nave eight
KANSAN
RAIN
Lawrence, Kansas
Mondav. April 30, 1979
Vol.89,No.141
Spencer Library to get $250,000
See story page two
CORNELL
a crowd of more than 12,000 in Allen Field House Friday evening. See related stories and photographs on pages five and seven.
'Listen to the Music'
Parking lot plan faces opposition
By TONI WOOD Staff Reporter
But students and faculty should not have to pay for improving two of those lots, according to Mark Bernstein and Sam Zweifel, graduate student representatives to the University Senate executive committee. $200,000 be used to fund the KU bus system.
About $200,000 will be spent to improve the parking lots next year under the plans approved by Gov. Scott.
Bernstein and Zweifel are authoring a resolution that would call for the University Council to reconsider its approval of the parking board's 1980 budget.
The lots to be improved are B-1, which is behind Carruth O'Leary Hall; AFH, near Allen Field House; and the Alumni Place parking lot.
THE $200,000 necessary to finance the improvements would come from revenue generated through the sale of property.
Bernstein and Zweifel objected to improving the Allen Field House lot and the Carnarrou-Loake lot because, they said, the benefit could only certain students and faculty.
About 190 stalls would be added to the Allen Field House lot, which is next to Quigley Field. Permits for this lot would be for the entire year or $23 each semester.
About $40,000 would be spent to build an exit driveway from the lot behind Carruth-O'Leary. Twelve parking stalls also would be added.
BERNSTEIN SAID that lot benefited mainly the faculty operations and security staff of the company.
should come out of the administrative budget.
Bernstein said that the athletic department would be the only beneficiary from this lot's improvement and that the money should come from athletic funds.
Patrick Simmons, lead singer and guitarist for the Doobie Brothers, performs in front of
However, Don Kearns, director of parking, said that only about 1 percent of the lot was used by faculty operations and staff. "Most of it is strictly used by staff and students," he said.
"That's where students pay dormitory fees and the staff and faculty go there (to Carruth-O'Leary) to the personnel office or the payroll office," Kearns said.
Faculty and staff will have to pay $40 next year or $24 each semester for a permit for the CarruthO'Leary lot. There also are other permits for the driver for drivers who don't have permits.
Bernstein said the money that would be used to improve the Carruth-O'Leary and Allen Field House lobs should be used for the KU bus system. If the system were improved, more students would ride buses to campus and fewer would drive cars, he said.
THE BUS SYSTEM currently is financed by part of the student privilege fee and is in line with the budget.
"If they would match funds with the Student Senate, they could alleviate some of the problem instead of encouraging it by building new lots." Bernstein said.
"The problem" is the increasing number of drivers who park in zones where they do not have permits, as cited in the Annual Report of the Parking and Traffic Board. Drivers with permits often have no place to park because of the violators.
The University Council approved the total parking and traffic budget for 1980, including the lot improvements, at its April 12 meeting.
During the meeting, Bernatine tried to raise the question about the lot projects, but it was too difficult for her.
KU budget approved Dykes pleased with it
The Kansas Legislature approved the KU 1980 budget of more than $220 million late Saturday afternoon at the tail end of its cleanup session.
The Legislature also approved the budgets for the other Kansas Board of Regents schools. The total, including KU's budget, was $438 million. The bill containing the budgets now moves to Gov. John Carlin for his approval.
Included in the bill for operating allocations for $1.6 million for operating expenses and renovation of E.B. Allen hospital, the new home of the Wichita branch of the KU
Kansan applications for summer and fall available this week
applications for news and business staff positions for the summer and fall semesters. A copy of the form is available. The forms can be picked up in 105 Fint Hall; the Student Senate office, Suite 10B Kansas Union; and the office of student organizations and activities.
Medical Center; $390,000 for the purchase of two fuel storage tanks and $344,500 for a generator.
Med Center officials estimate that it will cost about $4 million to complete the project. Part of this year's allocation will be spent hiring an architect to plan the renovation. Construction is scheduled to begin in February 1980.
The allocation for the renovation of E.B. is the first phase of a four-year plan to renovate
Completed applications must be returned by 5 p.m. Friday to 105 Flint Hall.
Under the bill, $1 million would be used for the renovation of Marvin and $27,500 would be used to renovate Lindley. Funds to complete the work on both buildings should be allocated by the Legislature next year. It would also be allocated to finish Marvin and $16 to finish Lindley.
Other construction projects approved by the Legislature included a $1,277,500 allocation for the renovation of Marvin and Lindley halls.
Also included in the bill was a 6.5 percent increase for faculty salaries, a 6 percent increase in other operating expenses and a 9.5 percent increase in student wages.
"It looks good for us, much better than it "did earlier in the session," he said. "Given the climate for tax reduction, we were pleased with what happened."
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he was relatively pleased "with the outcome of the process."
Refugee depicts Vietnam flight
ByLYNN BYCZYNSK
Staff Reporter
Saigon was a city in chaos four years ago today. The war was over: South Vietnam had surrendered.
The few remaining Americans were being evacuated from the city by U.S. military helicopters that whirled all over the city.
They fled the victorious communist government in Nakayama, fishing vessels, private pleasure boats, barges and trucks.
In the Americans' wake, tens of thousands of Vietnamese streamed out of the country by their only escape
Jim was one of 35,000 Vietnamese who fled their homeland that day.
Today, Jim is a student at the University of Kansas. Because his flight was a crime in the eyes of his government and because his family is still Vietnam and could not ask him to be asked to answer only by his Archigradic first name.
JIM, HIS DARK EYES alert and his smile frequent, sits upright on the tiny bed in his spartan boarding-house room. Slowly, but without pain, he recounts the tale of his journey to the United States. It is his English that is measured and hesitant, as if it were still a stranger to his tongue.
He was 19 years old and a college freshman when he climbed aboard the fishing boat in 1975. And, although he sat shoulder-to-shoulder with other refugees, packed too tightly into his cabin, he never left behind friends, parents and eight brothers and sisters.
Why did he do it?
"My parents pushed me," Jim said. "A lot of people go away and get degrees and that after you go and get a good job. I am the oldest son. And in Vietnam, if the oldest son gets a good job, everyone will keep going."
And so, with little warning or forethought, Jim found himself packed on a fishing boat, heading to sea.
For two days and nights the refugees had no food or water.
people used—not the young ones—and you know what happened to them? They got thrown into the ocean," I said.
THEN, THEY were spotted by a U.S. navy boat that delivered supplies and later returned to pick up the
Jim sailed to the Philippines, then boarded another boat bound for Hawaii, which had about 5,000 refugees on
Within two weeks of the fall of Saigon, Jim was starting his new life in his new home: Kansas.
A Catholic priest in Wichita had sponsored Jim and brought him to that city. A federal grant enabled him to work for the U.S. government.
The U.S. government has been good to him and the American people have not shown any prejudice toward them.
"I think we still have more chance than blacks," Jim said.
"I don't want a job in the U.S. I'd rather be with my family around, even though I'm poorer," Jim said.
Despite the changes that have taken place in his homeland since Jim came to the United States, he still remains a leader.
JIM TRANSFERRED to KU after one year at Wichita State, he expects to graduate next year with degrees in Engineering.
He saves much of the money he earns working part time at the Kansas Union and sends it home to his family. The Vietnamese government takes about 20 percent of what he sends, but any amount helps his family, Jim said.
For Jim, adjusting to life in the United States has not been difficult, because he was raised in the Americanized
The, he would play tennis or see a movie or go dancing on the weekends. In Lawrence, it is the same.
"As a country, we stick together." Jim said.
The only difference, Jum said, is that in Vietnam "We don't drink beer."
He also has adjusted well because he has surrounded himself with other Vietnamese.
Jim said that his contacts with Americans were few. The difference between the American and Vietnamese people, Jim immediately said, was "Americans have bigger teeth."
His circle of friends includes only the 20 Vietnamese people living in Lawrence, he said. When he travels, as he did last year to Washington, D.C., he stays with other Vietnamese.
It is acceptable and common to look for Vietnamese names in the telephone book and ask to stay with them,
DESPITE JM'S IDEA to return to Vietnam, he said he wanted to become a U.S. citizen.
His only reason for wanting U.S. citizenship is to help him return to Vietnam, he said.
"No way I can go back now. If you get off the airplane, they throw you in jail. If you are an American citizen, they throw you in jail."
Jim predicted that he would be able to return to Vietnam in a few years, when U.S. relations with his homeland
"When I came in 1975, I foresaw 1978. Then it was 1979.
Now I don't know. But we'll keep trying."
"We want to die in the Vietnamese land, not in the American land."
2
Monday, April 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansan's Wire Services
Soviet dissidents plan reunion
NEW YORK—Newly freed Soviet dissident Alexander Ginzburg said yesterday that he and his family would live with exiled Soviet novelist Vladimir Nabokov.
The move will reunithe two associates who have been prominent leaders of the Soviet dissident movement. Solsthentiy, a Nobel laureate, has been in
An interpreter translating for Ginzburg said Ginzburg would go to Vermont tomorrow, and that Solzhentynen had invited Ginzburg and his family to "live
Gimming has been staying at the U.N. Plaza Hotel since Friday when he and four other Soviet disasters were flown to New York in exchange for two Soviet airplanes.
Ginzburg, whose latest trial last summer drew international attention, was convicted of "anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda," in connection with his involvement in the failed 1985 protests.
Blast injuries 3 Israeli children
TEL AIV- A bomb blast injured three children waiting for a school bus near here yesterday as the Israeli Cabinet mitted in Jerusalem and voted to reinstate a ceasefire agreement.
The three children were not seriously injured. One was treated for shock and the others for minor channel wounds, authorities said.
Threening in Kar Sava, eight miles northeast of Tel Aviv, was the latest in a wave of terrorist attacks against Israel aimed at disrupting the Israeli-
The Palestine Liberation Organization said in Beirut, Lebanon, that its guerrillas were responsible for the attack and contended that several Israel
Meanwhile, Israeli and Egyptian generalized in the Sinai Desert at Tasa, a United Nations post, for their first detailed discussion of the return of Sinai territory to Egyptian rule. The military leaders said they would use "good will and understanding" to solve future problems.
British mothers favor Tories
LONDON - The British Conservative Party is expected to get a boost in voting from young British mothers over the Labor Party in national elections.
An opinion poll published yesterday indicated that mothers under the age of 45 would vote for the Conservatives, led by Margaret Thatcher, by a 4-percentage-point margin over the Labor Party and Prime Minister James Callahagan.
A Conservative victory would make Thatatcher Britain's first woman prime minister. But the women polled by the Marplan organization ranked her third in a personal popularity contest behind Callaghan and David Steel, leader of the Liberals, which is the third strongest party.
The mothers, who account for 7 million of Britain's 40 million registered voters, favored Labour at a margin of 35 percent to 45 percent in the last general election.
Marpan said most of the 1,017 women questioned listed union pay demands as the primary cause for a doubling of consumer prices during the past five years.
Waldheim uraes Asian peace
PEKING—U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim told Chinese leaders in Peking yesterday that unless stalled peace talks between China and Vietnam were defused quickly, the situation could “deteriorate with consequences far beyond this reason.”
Walheim said, "It is therefore imperative that all efforts be directed towards finding a settlement in conformity with the principles of the charter of the city."
Walheim is on a tour of Asia to help encourage progress in the peace talks. He was politely but firmly rebutted in Vietnam, where Premier Pham Van Dong insisted that his demands be met.
Vietnam, meanwhile, said that China's eight-point peace proposal was a clear indication that the Chinese have not given up their policies of "hostility and"
"respect."
Judges combine herbicide suits
ST. LOUIS—Nearly 300 suits on behalf of Vietnam veterans who were exposed to the toxic herbicide Agent Orange will be consolidated into one case to
Six district judges from around the country assigned the cases Friars to U.S. District Judge George Prat of New York's Eastern District. The suit asks that a $4.2 billion fund be set up by six chemical companies that it claims made and supported by the United States Department of Justice to the chemical and reimbursed federal agencies for benefits paid out.
The companies named in the suit are Dow Chemical Co., Hercules Inc., Northwest Industries Inc., Diamond Shamrock Corp., Monsanto Co, and North
WASHINGTON - A survey by an international population study group indicates that one in four pregnancies worldwide ends in abortion, according to a
The report by the Population Crisis Committee estimated that at least 40 million and perhaps as many as 35 million legal and illegal abortions were performed in the United States.
The Soviet union, Japan and Austria have among the highest abortion rates in the world, the report said. More than half of all pregnancies in those countries end in abortion, compared with about one in four in the United States, India, China, Sweden and Denmark.
The committee said the high abortion rates in the Soviet Union and Japan were because of legalized abortion and a "historical reliance" the two countries had on the women's reproductive health.
TOPEKA - Attorney General Robert Stephan said yesterday that his office would check into a report that liquor was consumed in the Statehouse by the governor.
United Press International reported that cocktails were mixed and consumed Saturday in the office of Senate President Hosey Doyen, R-Concordia, appallingly overloaded.
State law prohibits consumption of liquor on property that is owned by the state.
Stephan said he did not know the full details of the incident and did not know how he would handle the situation. Stephan also is expected to consider the question of the immunity of Kansas legislators from prosecution during a legislative session.
Stephan said, "It would certainly be an obligation of the office to make an inquiry into any allegation concerning violation of any laws of the state."
150 arrested at Colorado plant
About 300 Colorado protesters, led by Daniel Ellsberg, had trained for weeks in a plan to block three entrances to the Rocky Flats, Colo., plant about 16 miles northwest of Denver. The plant is the nation's only producer of plutonium "triggers" for nuclear weapons.
DENVER -At least 150 anti-nuclear activists trained in civil disobedience were arrested when they marched before the gates of a Colorado state jail.
About two dozen armed federal marshals and security guards from Rockwell international were waiting for the protesters at the plant's east and west gates.
The arrested protesters were placed on a bus from the Denver County Sheriff's Department and taken to a makehift booking station nearby, where
The confrontation was a militant follow-up to a mass rally at the weapons plant the day before.
Weather...
Skies will be cloudy today and there is a 30 percent chance of rain tonight, according to the National Weather Service. Temperatures will rise into the 60s this afternoon but will dip into the low 30s overnight. Temperatures will rise tomorrow and there is a chance of scattered showers and thunderstorms.
Spencer contributes $250,000 to library
The Kenneth Spencer Research Library will receive a donation of $250,000 from Helen Foresman Spencer, wife of the late Dylan Forsman, Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said Saturday.
Jim Ranz, dean of libraries, said yesterday that $150,000 of the donation would be used for the acquisition and preservation of books. The remaining $100,000 would be used for refurbishment and maintenance of the library, be said.
The announcement was made at the celebration of the 10th anniversary of the foundation of the university.
Alexandra Mason, Spencer librarian and head of special collections, presented Spencer with a portfolio of letters from his former students and researchers expressing their gratitude.
Dykes said, "Her gifts have truly elevated the spirit and enriched the minds of children."
MASON SAID the first 10 years of the library had been its childhood.
She said all three of the library's departments—the Kansas collection, University archives and special collections—had grown in the past 10 years.
The building of the library was made possible by a donation of $2 million from the Kenneth A. and Helen F. Spencer Foundation. Spencer has since continued her financial support of the library. She donated $150,000 in 1974.
Jim Ranz, dean of libraries, said that Spencer Library was a good example of how a private benefactor could help a university. Because of Spencer's support, the library is able to attract rare book collections and outstanding faculty, he said.
"This has become recognized throughout the country as one of the finest research libraries and collections of rare books in the country." Dykes said.
Speaking next, Stuart Forth, dean of libraries at Pennsylvania State University, told me that he had written libraries, said the University of Kansas had only a vague idea for a new library when it first approached Spencer. But her own university to make definite plans, he said.
"The collections here are the envy of many institutions throughout the country," he said. "Most of us would give almost anything to have similar facilities."
The Astronomy Associates of Lawrence
Invites the public to our weekly
OPEN HOUSE May4-8:00 pm 500 Lindley Hall
If not clear, there will be an Open House the following Friday and every Friday thereafter throughout most of the summer.
Partially funded by Student Senate.
y
Your Kansas Union Bookstores
Your
Present:
FIRST TIME EVER Student Appreciation Days APRIL 30-MAY 4
BIC SPECIAL!
BiC®
BiC®
BANANA
INK
CRAYONS
Reg. 20¢ ea.
NOW ONLY 10¢ each
Fine Line
Markers
Reg. 20¢ ea.
NOW ONLY 10¢ each
Other Student Appreciation Days' Specials
Mon. 10% OFF all clothing at regular price.
10% OFF all greeting cards & posters in the Oread Book Shop.
Bic Medium Point Ball Point Pen Reg. 25'ea. NOW ONLY 10¢ each
Tues. 10% OFF all school supplies.
Only 3 days left to register for the FREE MOPED.
Wed. 10% OFF all art & engineering supplies & calculators, too.
Offers good while supply lasts. No Dealers Please!
BEST QUALITY BEST PRICES BEST SERVICE
YOUR KANSAS UNION
BOOKSTORES
BEST QUALITY • BEST PRICES • BEST SERVICE
YOUR KANSAS UNION
MAYER CHARGE
BOOKSTORES
VISA
Other Student Appreciation Days' Speclais
Thurs. 10% OFF on all gifts.
CRAZY PRICE SALE!
Ridiculously low prices on many one-of-a-kind items not normally found in our bookstore.
Frl. 10% OFF all general reading in the Oread Book Shop.
10% OFF all items (except texts, special orders & service orders)
Plus, A SECRET SAVINGS SUIRPURE!
We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with KU students.
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 30, 1979
3
Fears of Jews eased, prof says
Staff Reporter
By TOM ZIND
The recently ratified Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty is important to Jews in Israel because it will help "diminish the fear of loss and war" that has been prevalent in the Jewish community since the Holocaust, a great Holocaust, Hebrew University in Israel and yesterday.
- Speaking to about 25 members of Hillel in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, Aaron Aurbach, an educational psychologist, said, "The peace treaty is probably the most important event in history since the formation of Israel."
Aurbach's 48-minute talk focused on how the mass slaughter of European Jews in World War II contributed to the Holocaust.
The Holocaust continues to affect Jews, he said, because almost all Jews know of the Holocaust. "I was a survivor," he said.
centration camps or someone who died in one. Because of this, most Jews have a sense of loss and absence and are fearful of another holocaust, he said.
"THEER WILL always be a sense of loss and absence," he said. "This sense is something that pervades Israeli society, particularly the Holocaust and the Israelian experience."
Aurbach said Israel was important to the Jewish people because it gave them a sense of power to defend themselves, a power that Jews did not have before Israel's creation.
"Irael offers security for Jews," he said. The peace treaty, according to Aurbach, will be beneficial because it should help reduce the fears of the Jewish people.
"Every time there's a war there is a revival of fear over the Holocust," he said.
"There is a feeling of a prelude to genocide."
He said that competition in business affairs was fierce because of the Jews' perceived need for security and a sense of power.
"Iraellis are independent, realistic,
achievement-oriented," he said. "They've
been working hard."
Memories of the Holocaust affect even the way business affairs are conducted in Israel.
POWERLESSNESS is a symptom that many Jews experience, Aurbach said. This powerlessness was most acutely felt in Israel before the wars that have been waged between Israel and the Arab countries, he writes. He has relieved, he said, when the firing came.
Jews in Israel also fear abandonment because of the Holocaust, Aurbach said.
In past wars, he said, people who left Israel when the fighting began often became
the object of contempt by native Israelis. He said this type of reaction was an example of fear of abandonment and of being alone. As a result, he became increasingly self-reliant, he said.
Aurbach said that Jews who experienced an ongoing sense of loss because of the Holocaust were given the ability to forgive.
ONE, HE said, was reality. It is crucial for the Jewish people not to repress thoughts
" Unless you go back and experience these
things, they have the possibility of overdose.
They are extremely dangerous."
Aurbach said it was important for Jews to talk about the Holocaust and even to visit the remains of the concentration camps in an attempt to bring their fears into the one
The other course of action lies in the establishment of peace, he said, which he thought would alleviate much of the never-ending fear and the resultant sense of loss.
ASK adds KU fee to 1980 budget
By CAITLIN GOODWIN
Staff Reporter
The Associated Students of Kansas, a student lobbying group, revised its 1980 budget Saturday to include the fee from the University of Kansas. The revised budget was set at $29,643.21 and has a contingency fund of $3,956.29.
"The board felt it would be easier to assume that KU would not be back," he
The KU Student Senate voted April 10 to join ASK with a full membership. The fee for ASK is 25 cents a semester for each full-time student, or $19.57 a year for KU.
Steve Young, KU member of the ASK board of directors, said yesterday that the board had voted on the 1980 budget in January, but that the board had not included
KU was on a one-year provisional membership in ASK at a reduced fee rate
before the Senate voted to join the association at the full rate.
THE SEVEN member schools and their fees are: Emporia State University, $2,000; Fort Hays State University, $2,287; Kansas State University, $1,800; Pittsburgh State University, $2,500; Washburn University, $2,600; State University, $2,700; and KU, $157.50.
Young said Wichita State, Emporia State, and Pittsburgh State had reduced their fees from last year because of a decrease in predicted student enrollment.
Young said most of the contingency fund probably would be spent on a duplicating machine for the ASK office, which now must be available in University's library duplicating machine.
The legislative assembly voted on Items to be researched during the summer for further discussion in the fall. The most body of legislation will come from Emporia State, replacing a similar resolution by Wichita State, calling for ASK to research nuclear energy and its effect on health.
The legislative assembly members, the voting body of ASK, also met Saturday. Eleven of KU's 23 legislative assembly members attended the meeting. However, KU still had 23 votes because each member was an absent voter, voting on behalf of an absent member
NONE OF K-State's members attended the meeting.
Young said most of the KU delegates were against the resolution because it was not a student issue and because of its intense political controversy.
The resolution failed by one vote.
He said the KU delegates voted against the resolution 16-7.
The assembly also approved the support of assessing student union charges to the administration and faculty of each school. The school would charge the faculty for the use and bring the bills to the Legislature to reduce the percentage of union use by faculties.
THE ASSEMBLY also approved support of boll that would encourage bottle rolls.
The assembly approved the research of these issues:
- Reinstatement of the draft
- Prohibition of the use of student fees for construction.
- Establishment of a method to work with family in decision making process
- Investigation of any general state regulations on companies
- Establishment of a cigarette tax or other taxing measures to fund campus programs.
- general state regulations on campuses
Evaluation of the state contract holding
- Evaluation of the state contract bidding system.
- Investigation of universities' investments to determine whether they are effective
- Initiation of an incident fee waiver for graduate assistants.
- Revision of the state's marijuana laws.
New 35mm Prints
4x6
Overland Photo
1975
John Spottswood
Gladstone, Missouri
Senior
Naismith
Hall
1800 Naismith
843-8559
"Good food, good social life and it's right across the street from Quigley Field and Allen Field House."
KBI drug raid nets four men in Lawrence
Four Lawrence men were arrested during the weekend on charges of possession or sale of narcotics. The Lawrence arrests were part of a raid throughout the area by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation that resulted in 15 arrests.
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
Three Lawrence men were arrested Friday and were released on bond by Friday.
James Mendenhall, 1209 Ohio St., was released on $10,000 bond, Edgars Gibbs, $325; Mississippi St., and Herbert Dungas, $250. Mr. Dungas st., were each released on $5,000 bond.
All films M-R shown in Woodruff Aud,
at 7:30 unless otherwise noted. $1.00
admission.
Another Lawrence mwr, Brent Hoffman,
1433 Connecticut st., was arrested Saturday
for allegedly stealing a bottle of wine.
sua films
Dr. Joshua Logan, at Mitsi Gailyan, Rossano Brazzi, Ray Walston. Includes the songs "Some Enchanted Time," "Nothing Like a Dame," "time," and "Nothing Like a Dame."
Tuesday, May 1
ON THE TOWN
(1904)
(1958)
Dir. Gene Kelly, Stanley Donner, with Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, Ann Miller, Vera Eileen, one of the most fast-paced energetic music ever made.
(1962)
Dir. Akira Kurosawa; with Toshiro Mifune. Sequel to "Yojimbo". Japan/subtitles.
Wednesday, May 2
Kurosawa/Samurai:
Friday & Saturday, May 4 & 5 THE SPY WHO LOVED ME
Dir. Lewis Gilbert; with Roger Moore as 007, Barbara Bach. Music by Marvin Hamillich.
Midnight Movie
EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS
WANTED TO KNOW
ABOUT SEX
(1972)
Dir. Woody Allen; with Woody Allen,
Gene Wilder; Rynn Reynolds; Louise
Lasser, Lynn Burdick; John Carradine.
(1977)
Tuesday, May 8 Rogers & Hammerstein:
SOUTH PACIFIC
BAHAI FIRESIDE KU Bahai Club
will meet on Monday, April 30th at 7:30 p.m. in Parlor A of the Kansas Union
ONLY
$399
NIKON REBATE HEADQUARTERS
NIKKOR
NIKON FE AUTOMATIC COMPACT
LESS
$40 REBATE DIRECT FROM NIKON
Nikon
AF 35mm F1.4
NIKON FM COMPACT
LESS
ONLY $275
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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 editors.
APRIL 30,1979
Bus increase justified
It seems some members of the Student Senate are a little slow in catching on to things. Things such as an energy crisis and the strong need for improved public transportation.
If the members really did understand those things, it would take little mental application to realize that improvements and expansion of the KU on Wheels bus program is not only a necessary and important step, but a step well worth a $2.50 increase in the student privilege fee.
That increase would meet inflation needs and increased costs and would allow a new bus route to east Lawrence and increased night hours.
A PETITION in the Student Senate calling for those increases, and a $2 increase in the amount charged for a semester bus pass, was passed last week, but not without opposition. And
if that opposition takes root in the Kansas Board of Regents, which must give final approval to the increases, it could be a telling blow to the bus program.
When those benefits are weighed against the $2.50 increase, it should be clear to both the Senate and the Board of Regents that maintaining the KU on Wheels program is of vital importance.
Anything less would be self-
defeating and irresponsible.
Much of the opposition to the fee increase is based on purely selfish reasoning. "I object to paying a large amount of money for something I'm not going to use," argued one student senator.
NEVERTHELESS, it is obvious that the bus program does benefit a large number of students, and the energy-saving potential of mass transportation is well documented.
Burden of U.S. defense should be shared by all
To the editor:
There have been several editorials and letters this semester opposing the draft. Of particular interest is Richard Camr's letter (April 4) stating that the quality of the manuscript was so excellent since 1872. Either Camr was in a most exceptional case, or he wasn't very observant.
Cram seems to think that all a soldier must do is dig foxholes and fill sandbags. That may have been true before World War II. However, the development of strategies based on tanks and helicopters has increased in recent years, such as TOW missiles and laser range finders.
I served in the Army from 1792 to 1976 (as an enlisted man in a signal unit) and saw the quality of both "grunts" and technicians during that time.
Support units also depend on advanced equipment. I need not mention the caliber of machinery used by the Air Force. This equipment must be maintained and operated by technicians who understand electronics and mathematics, not uneducated graduates of Army training courses. It might also add that the training course 'higher' skillful 'college-educated technicians' too good to do manual labor.
I am also disturbed by Cram's ideas as to whom should serve in the Army. Life in the armed forces is mostly distasteful. Unfortunately, the world is such that it is necessary for our security that somebody serve. This unpleasant chore should be shared equally by all segments of our society. We must be disingesting that those who enjoy the best benefits of the American system must shoulder the greatest burden.
One might misread the last paragraph of Cram's letter to imply that all volunteers are kill-crazy war lovers. In fact, that sort of narrative is clearly thrown out of the Army as mentally unstable.
the vast majority of volunteers (and ROTC students, as well) are there out of financial necessity. They don't savor the cause and killing any more than civilans.
There are other considerations favoring reinstatement of the draft. Although the active duty components may be meeting their recruitment quotas, most reserve units are at strength. Most civilians don't realize that most countries can't afford to maintain a full-strength standing army during peacetime. Reserve units are mobilized in the event of war, and the speed with which mobilized often determines the outcome.
If a conventional war broke out, it would take six months to register and draft the first inductees, and another two years to recruit and train. The Warsaw Pact nations have twice as many men and four times as many tanks in their army. These are not large armies in the western USSR that have large armies in the western USSR that
KANSAN letters
could be at the front within hours and reserves that could be mobilized within days. If a conventional war broke out in Europa, NATO would lose before any additional American troops could be put into action to bring out 'bearers' our reserves back to full strength.
Conscription would help defend our freedom not only from without, but also from within. Undecided volunteers (or, "someone willing to follow or curry out a job") would be much about our democratic form of government. Their loyalities will lie with the Army, not the nation. Draftswes would be more motivated to disobey orders to overthrow the civilian government. Anyone who does so would be any country's military is being most naive.
As one might expect, college students oppose the draft. But it is shameful to see them oppose it. They want to as a facade to hide the real reason for that opposition. Most college kids just don't want to go into the service and seem content to let the sons of less fortunate circumstances
In the past two hundred years, hundreds of thousands of our countrymen have died in defense of our liberty and millions more have worked for poverty wages, thus allowing America to develop into an industrialized nation. Our generation ages more than ever, but more than any other, yet we are the least willing to make any sacrifices ourselves.
America needs citizen soldiers rather than professional soldiers. Tid Techsher
'Rocky Horror' show refreshing with toast
In regard to Bill Winsor's letter warning of the "decendence" of "Rocky Horror," I can't see how the showing of "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" could "saturate" the university with "polluting mind rot." Aside from the campus-wide distribution of Today's student and occasional blitzes of the saturation of university is free from any such "saturation."
To the editor:
I, too, have attended "The Rocky Horror Picture Show," and I found both it and the audience to be refreshingly frivolous and irreverent. I suggest that Mr. Wisner and his brother attend the movie at least once more. This time, however, they should be sure to watch, for example, party hats, taisst, squirt guns, and a sense of humor. They'll have much more fun.
Todd Zwahl
Augusta junior
HEY
WHAT'S HAPPENING.
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But even after Ford lost the race, he was not able to shake the globe of Nixon, which has been held for 50 years.
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Nixon pardon still plaques Ford
When Gerald Ford lost the presidential race to Jimmy Carter in 1978, speculation was that Ford's pardon of Richard M. Nixon in 1974 had hurt him as much as anything.
Ford, however, took steps to rid himself of the ghost last week when he appeared on NBC-TV's "Weekend" show and explained his action. He said he was surprised by the negative reaction to his presentation of Nixon and that he not explaining better why he granted the pardon.
Yet, even if Ford had emphasized that argument in 1976, there still is a question about whether it would have made much difference to the many Americans who supported Mr. Bush's rule and misruffles perpetrated by the Nixon White House. There are, in fact, many
Instead of spending all of his time "working on the domestic and international problems of the president representing 25 percent of the electorate," as was "devoting 25 percent of my time on the legal matters, the tapes, the documents that were in controversy as far as President Nixon was concerned."
Mary Ernst
Americans who still would like to know the truth, truth that only Nixon could have done.
FORD ASTUETELY noted that Nixon's resignation "would have been far, far better accepted if he had been controle, admitted to the American people."
but Nikon never apologized to the American people who he had let down, and because of that many voters never forgave Ford for the pardon.
FORD HAS said that he does not intend to run for the presidency in 1980, a decision obviously related to his defeat in 1976 and to his role as head of the organization that may have helped cause that defeat.
Some even suggested that a pardon deal was made with Nixon before he stepped down.
"Unfortunately, some people still don't believe it, but as long as my conscience is clear I have to accept what others may feel." he said.
“But if circumstances did develop,” he added, “where there was a consensus, she in the spring of 1890, and I felt that I could be country, I would not duck the responsibility.”
Despite a clear conscience about the matter, Fond is seen by some as the villain
in the affair, and to them that affair was one of the truly great crises of the U.S. presidency and had badly deflated the morale of the nation.
However, few Republican leaders are likely to see Ford as being particularly constructive to the party or the country, consensus or no consensus in spring 1880. Ford was an enthusiastic candidate after he failed to beat Carter as an incumbent. That image is hard to shed.
oep hurt that the citizens of this nation had suffered from the Watergate affair. No longer, it seemed, were they willing to trust elected officials, and especially the one official who needed their trust the most—the president.
Ford's decision to pardon Nixon was probably a difficult one to make—the political consequences being what they were.
Ford thought he could restore that trust by devoting all of his time to the "domestic and international problems of the president," and avoiding the Watergate affair and the involvement of Nixon seemed the best way to do that.
However, the most pressing domestic problem in 1974 was the involvement of Nixon and other officials in the Watergate affair. Instead of providing the leadership to guide the American people through the crisis, Ford chose to skirt the issue.
Hindsight is a great thing, but it does not change much of anything. Ford, in looking back at his action, realizes now that he has learned what the anger of the anger toward Nixon and his pardon
A IN SICERE to restore the
confidence of the American people in the
US government.
And the American people, in looking back at Ford's action, realize now that Ford could have helped the nation answer the questions raised by Watergate. And they realize now that that chance will probably never come again.
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Futile wars obscure other problems
Last night I didn't sleep very well.
It wasn't because I was sick. And I don't think it had anything to do with the exam I was scheduled to take in the morning but failed to study for. Yesterday I had a full day of classes and felt exhausted. I should have slept like a baby.
But I didn't and I think I know why. After work I ran into a close friend and we began to talk. The conversation began as most. The weather? School? Graduation? Shortly we were joined by two more acquaintances in conversation continued much in the same vein.
I'm not certain how or when, but gradually the conversation shifted to the topic of
Like most little boys, I grew up playing the games of war, in which toy guns fired imaginary bullets and where death lasted only for a moment.
Our backgrounds are different, politically and socially. Yet somehow we had all in some shape or form been touched by that person who spent minutes we shared some of those memories.
I KNEW my father was a soldier by profession, but the full ramifications of his occupation didn't register with me. Even when he left for Vietnam and we said our goodbyes, I don't think it ever dawned on me. I was a chance that I might not see him again.
She said she was in the fourth grade at the time, but could still remember the "weird and strange" feeling that pervaded the atmosphere about the place. Even her playmates could sense there was something odd happening there, although influenced their own lives, she said.
ONE INDIVIDUAL spoke of living in a small Kansas town in a community composed completely of the families of military personnel.
My father was an Army officer, and at the all-black grade school that I attended 1
He went away and he came back, with stories of battles, close calls and fallen comrades. But none of this really mattered to him. That was his back and that was all that mattered.
Another person talked of the senselessness of the war and how he probably would have evaded the draft were he of age at the time.
My own experiences with Vietnam are faint, but with time have grown sharper.
Vernon Smith
---
A few years later a new set of orders came. My father was to return to Vietnam.
By now I was in junior high and was beginning to be come attuned to what was happening in Southeast Asia. I remember feeling outraged by the new orders. It just didn't seem right for him to have to go over it, but he must be a mistake. I resented and hooded.
IT WASN'T and the waiting, hoping and
maviing vitil just began anew.
Every day my younger brother and I would check the mailbox to see if there was a letter from our father. If there was then it was sent to me. But when we weren't we just tried not to worry about it.
One day a letter came and the pained expression on my mother's face revealed that the news wasn't good. Our father had been wounded.
Wounded? This was a strange, new and forbidding word. I remembered hearing it used by newsmen on TV but I didn't understand what it meant.
"Is he dead?" my brother asked with a bint of fear in his voice.
"No," mom replied reassuringly, wearing a tight and nervous smile. "He's in the hospital and says not to worry. He'll be coming home soon."
SO IT WAS that I became formally introduced to the subject of war. Because of my youth I didn't quite understand Vietnam, or for that matter, war.
I didn't know who my father and millions of other fathers, husbands, brothers, lovers, nephews, uncles, cousins and others were getting shot and killed. I just couldn't tigre
And now almost 10 years later, after having read numerous books on the subject, the same questions that teased my childish mind remain unanswered. I am still in the
I don't know, it just seems so senseless, so pointless and beyond all reason. The technological achievements that have improved our world and the emphasis we place on life and living would suggest no sound basis for our participation in war.
BUT IT JUST isn't the case. Reports of battles and rumors of wars, nations rising up
against other nations continue to get headlines in the news.
Is this the result of rational human beings or of brutes?
The U.S. and Soviet Union for the past 30 years have lived in a state of fear of one another because each has the potential to remove the other from the face of the earth.
In recent weeks there has been talk of a new SALT agreement with Russia and what it would do to stabilize the growth of nuclear weapons. The intent of the accord is to re-arm the nuclear and firepower of weapons for each nation, and thus reduce the threat of nuclear war.
But I am not convinced that a new agreement will make any significant difference. My own advice is to accord your accord leaves much to be desired, But, quite frankly, I can't say I have much faith in it.
IT JUST seems such a waste. A waste of
time, money and effort. Both countries could simplify things by just agreeing to cease production of nuclear arms and to shift to less nuclear warfare unrealistic, but it would afford the world community the time necessary to work on some of the other more pressing world problems.
Problems such as the energy crisis, widespread hunger, spiraling unemployment and inflation deserve the immediate attention of all rational human beings. But when will this day come? When will we have the time?
When will our world be able to talk about the energy crisis, unemployment and inflation in the past and not the present tense? When will we be able to say that no child has to go to bed hungry? When will we stop being beasts and start being men?
I think I'll try to get some rest now.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
(UFSB 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May, Monday through Thursday during June and July; and Sunday through Saturday during May and June. UFSB 600-640) Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $34 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student account.
KANSAN
Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60045
Editor
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Managing Editor Dick Johnson
Editorial Editor John Wuestein
Campus Editor Mary Peanmont
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Copy Chiefs Cyrid Frost, Barb Kornig, Caroline Trowbridge
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Monday, April 30, 1979
5
University Daily Kansan
'New' Doobies uncork old energy
By RICK JONES
Reviewer
When the Doobie Brothers kicked into their set-ending "China Grove" 90 minutes after the lights went down inside Allen Field House Friday night, the audience was
about inflatense?
old has cop be-
But when fireworks and flash pots began exploding in four-four time to the song, nearly 13,000 people unscored a shriek that didn't lose any steam until the Doobies finished their second encore and the house lights came back on.
THE SONG, which featured some stinging lead guitar trade-offs between Simmons and new member John McPeek, brought the band to a high point. There were many times during the course of the evening.
Led by guitarist Patrick Simmons and keyboard player Michael McDonald, the band opened the show with a five-song set of "The Greatest," an indeptied version of "Long Trem Humin."
MCDONALD DISPLAYED the understated urgency of his vocals on "It Keeps You Running" and new jazz music from the band. He played the harmony with McMadeon that made the band.
KANSAN Review
The band proved early in the show that the addition of McFee, Bumpus and drummer Chet McCracken more than made up for the recent loss of guitarist Baxter and Wheeler. The newcomers added a versatility that was perfectly suited to the band's diverse style.
THE BAND established an immediate rapport with the crowd and later had no trouble getting them to sing along on "Black Magic" after they were given the roles they were filled with people dancing.
Simmons and McFee played harmonic riffs that brought back memories of Duane Allman's work with Richard Betts in the old and driving rhythms. McDrona, who writes between Bumpur tenor sax and McFee's guitar, wrote of the songs with a strong jazz foundation.
version of the song sound stale by comparison.
The song's success was heightened by McFee's stunning violin work and by the
The different musical backgrounds of McDonald and Simmons were evident in the way the music continued to change pace over the years. At most of the band's rockers, continually shook the roof with his powerful choring and driving rhythms. McDonald, who writes heavily syncopated chromatic songs, was also known for the same tensions that marked his vocal
THOUGH THE varying styles could have presented the band with a conflict of sensibilities, they instead diversified their repertoire and gave the audience a taste of everything from bluegrass to jazz to honky-tonk.
substitution of "Kansas Moon" instead of the "Mississippi Moon" mentioned in the text.
When the band began playing some of its newer material, the crowd impulsively began singing along—not just the chorus, but entire songs.
Of the three songs they played from their new album, "Minute by Minute," the biggest crowd pleaser was "What a Fool Believes." They also played the title track
The Oread Book Shop, one of the sponsors of the competition, gave $250 in prizes to the winners of the contest. First place winner gets a certificate and second place winner gets $50 certificates.
Book collections to be displayed
Barry Laudoff, Fallon, Mo., senior, won first place in the undergraduate division with his collection, "Early 19th and 20th Century Elementary and High School Textbooks."
Beginning today, Watson Library will display the book collections that captured prizes last weekend in the 23rd annual Snuder Book Collecting Competition.
The competition was divided into undergraduate and graduate divisions and was held at the Kenneth Spencer Research Library.
No second place was awarded in the undergraduate division, but John H. Failen, of Boston, was awarded.
GERALD CARR, Coefyville graduate student in history, won first place in the graduate division. His winning collection was titled "Imperial Germany and the First World War." Carr said he had collected books in the subject area for seven years.
"I must say I felt pretty confident this
belt was the best collection, but a better
collection than the last time I entered.
The former director, Terry Baldridge,
Decatur, Ill., graduate student in music
and composition from Princeton University.
Winning the Snyder competition was a first for Carr, who said he also had entered the game.
mention with his book collection, "Twen-
Century American Poetry. An
Owney Study."
"Nineteenth Century American Tunebooks and Hymnals."
Baldridge had been collecting books on the subject for eight years.
"WHEN I was in high school, my grandmother gave me a trunk full of 20th century hymnals," he said. "Then I just started picking them up in up antique stores."
Those entering the competition were asked to submit an essay detailing not more than 50 of the books in their collections. This was done by a member of the assistant special collections librarian, said.
Watson Library will display the winners' collections for two weeks.
Show offers best of tiny ceramics
An exhibit of 127 miniature ceramic pieces opened yesterday in the Art and Design Gallery of the Visual Arts Building. It is the third National Cone Box Show.
The show, which takes place every two years and is sponsored by the University of Kansas and the Edward Orton Jr. Ceramic Foundation, comprises the winning pieces selected from about 330 entries from around the country.
TOMORROW; Watson Library will hold a USED BOOK SALE from 9:30 a.m. to 4 a.m. in front of the library. A CIVIL ENGINEERING SENIORS LUNCHCHEE at be at hodgepodge The Centennial Room of the University, at 4:30 a.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. Kevin Ryan will speak on "STRUCTURED PROGRAM DESIGN" at the Computer Assisted Instruction Seminar at 4 p.m. in the Computer Services Facility Auditorium. At 4:30 a.m. in the meeting at 4:30 p.m. in the Cafeteria of the Union. Alfred N. "Buzzy" Green, instrumental conducting, will give a DOCTORAL RECITAL at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. Szvetzar Yugoslavia, and the University of Texas at Austin, will give a PHILOSOPHY AND SLAVIC AND EAST EUROPEAN STUDIES LECTURE. "Authoritarian and Democratic Communism," at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the University. MODEL UNITED NATIONS will hold a meeting at 4 p.m. in Parlor A of the Union.
TONIGHT: A WOMEN'S RECONFIGITION PROGRAM will be at 7:30 in the Big Eight and Jayhawk rooms of the Union. Charles Jelavich, Indiana University, will present a SOVIET AND EAST EUROPEAN STUDIES LECTURE, "Serbian Nationalism As Seen Through 19th-Century Textbooks," at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Union. DONALD MEICHENBAUM, professor of psychology at the University of Chicago, will give a *Cognitive Behavior Modification: Assessment Concerns, Critical Issues and Future Directions*; at 7:30 in the International Room of the Union. Brian Shepard, percussion, will give a *STUDENT MURPHY Hall*. Murphy Hall, the KU OPERA WORKSHOP will present scenes from three operas at it in the Wilmington Inghe Theatre in Murphy Hall. Richard Allick, Ohio State University, will give an ENGLISH DEPARTMENT LEC "New Light on the Unity of Blask House"; at 8 in the Walnut Room of the Union.
-KANSAN
On Campus
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"It was a good competition this year, but next year I hope we can get more people into it," she said. "It's really not hard to enter or win the competition. It takes interest and hard work, but you don't have to have very rare or expensive books."
IT'S NOT JUST A JOB. IT'S AN ADVENTURE.
of the album for the first time ever in concert.
THE SOUND was surprisingly good for Allen Field House, which tends to make even the most well set-up concerts sound like amplified footsteps through deep mud. The lighting also was a cut above the average.
Bracker said he thought of the idea for the show when he learned that, although there were places for artists to display miniature prints and paintings, there was no competition or exhibit provided for makers of tiny ceramic pieces.
The Orton Foundation donated $4,000 in award money for the winning pieces. Ceramic supply manufacturers pledged $2,000, which was divided into $100 purchase awards and $900 for each company. Merk awards of $50 that did not include purchase also were given.
The unusual requirement for the KU show is that the pieces be approximately 1 by 3 by 6 inches, or able to fit into a standard pyrometric cone box. That is a universal piece of equipment, and William Bracker, associate professor of design, said. Cones are clay figures that
About 100 pieces in the show will be selected for a traveling exhibition over the next two years. The most recent show is about the development of Nebraska Colorado and Pennsylvania.
melt when the proper working heat for firing pottery inside a kiln is reached, he
This year's show consists of all types of pieces, from a miniature furry monster to a large robot.
"It's everything," said Bracker. "Some are more or less paintings, some are sculpture pieces and some are fundamental ceramic pieces like cups and dishes."
Jay Ferguson and his band provided a nice warm-up to the main show, playing hits like "Thunder Road" and "Got a Line of You Babe."
The conebox show will be exhibited in the gallery from 8:30 m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Sunday until May 8.
When the Doobie Brothers left the stage amid a flurry of flying drummsticks and flowers, not even a fool would have believed that they were on the heartes of nearly everyone who came
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The pedestrian, David Tubbs, Topeka sophomore, suffered a broken leg in the
No disciplinary action will be taken against the driver of a Lawrence Police Department squad car that struck a police officer. (AP) A police department spokesman said yesterday.
Police officer who hit walker is exonerated
The spokesman said the squad car was exceeding the speed limit when the accident occurred, but refused to say how fast the car had been moving. The police were answering a medical emergency call.
A spokesman for Richard Stanxiv, Lawrence chief of police, said "After interviewing all witnesses it was determined the accident was unavoidable."
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"Speed was not a factor in the accident," the spokesman said.
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Lawrence Police Department policy allows squads cars to be driven 10 mph over the posted speed limit if they are operating red lights and sirens.
The spokesman said police were allowed to exceed the 10 mph limit if circumstances warranted.
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Bring your questions to the
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Wednesday, May 2
Forum Room - Kansas Union 9:15-10:15
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Held for men and women students who are interested in being Host or Hostesses for the Kansas University Athletic Department on Monday, April 30, 1979 at 6:00 p.m. in Room No.135 of Parrott Athletic Center.
Membership requirements state that you must be a regularly enrolled K.U. student in good standing during the 1979-80 academic year.
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Monday, April 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
Victories boost 'Hawks
By TONY FITTS
Sports Writer
By winning three of four games from Iowa State University this weekend, the Kansas baseball team kept its chances of winning a Big Eight tournament berth. But the Jayhawks will have to take four from the University of Nevada next week to do so.
"We've got to win four," KU coach Floyd Temple said yesterday afternoon. "A monumental task, but I know our kids are going to do everything they can do to win."
Nebraska, which had been leading the eastern division of the Big Eight with an 11-1 record, lost three out of four to Missouri this weekend. Missouri and Nebraska now are tied for the top spot at 12-4, while Kansas is second at 9-7 and Iowa State is 7-9.
Kansas won the first game of the series with the Cyclones Friday 15-2 on the strength of 18 hits and three-hit pitching by Jeff Jarvis. It was also 3-5. Monty Martin was four for four on the day, and Vie Harris and Matt Gundelfinger, who started at designated hitter, each hit a home run. Kansas hit total was two short of 24. In set 18 against Kansas State University.
BUTCH VICKERS, KU center fielder, broke his nose in the second inning sliding into the Iowa State lineup on Saturday in pain Saturday and did not play. Temple said Vickers may be lost for the rest of the season. Vickers missed the first six weeks of the season with a broken left thumb.
The Jayhawks' offensive firewires in the first game were exceeded by emotional firewires in the second game, when Larry Corrigan, an Iowa State assistant coach, joined the game to be forced KU when he protested a call in the top of the seventh iming.
Corrigan was thrown out of the game after a heated discussion with home plate umpire Larry Zirbel at a time-out call. Corrigan grabbed Zirbel with a headbutt and after being ejected, Zirbel broke free and called the game, which became a 7-0 forfeit to Kansas. Kansas was given one run per inning. After the game, Zirbel refused to comment on the specific result, but the team would make a report of the incident to the Big Eight office.
Charles M. Neinas, Big Eight commissioner, said yesterday that Corrigan had been suspended and he was effective Saturday. Neimas said the conference was in consultation with Iowa State on the matter and he was ready to take decision before taking any action of its own.
Temple, KU's coach for 28 years, said,
"I've never seen any umpire assaulted by a
human."
KU was leading 1-4 at the end of the game, but the official score will be 7-0. Dan St. Clair had allowed two hits before the game was called.
THE SATURDAY GAMES were calm compared to Friday's games. KU won the game against Kentucky in a lone inning on a leadoff single by pinch-hitter Diekman, a double by center fielder Bob Halastik, singles by Dan Grahm and a sacrifice fly by John Spottwood.
Kevin Kerschen then struck out two of the last three Iowa State battles to end the game. Kerschen set a personal record with 10 strikeouts in the game. He allowed four hits, one of them a home run by Pete Seyfer, ISU third baseman.
Iowa State spoiled KU's sweep in the second game by winning 9-1. Taking advantage of erratic pitching from Clay Christiansen, fielding errors by the KU
defense, and one good hop over KU third baseman Roger Riley's head, the Cyclones scored five runs in the fourth inning. Only two of the runs were earned.
KU also gave up eight stolen bases.
"We weren't holding them on first good enough," Temple said. "The majority of us didn't."
Iowa State scored four more runs in the seventh. KU finally scored when Matt Gundelfinger hit his ninth home run of the season to set a new KU record for the most homers in a season. But that was only one second hit pitcher Dave Flatley the day. Flatley entered the game with a 6.17 day, but he did not pitch that way Saturday.
THE MOST important games of KU's season will be next Friday and Saturday.
"We're gona give to string together four excellent games," Temple said. "Sweeping four from Nebraska—well, you're better off shooting rears in Las Vegas.
Kansas plays Kansas State tomorrow in a non-conference double-bander at Quigley
**Friday's Games**
| Iowa State | 020 | 000 | 0 - 2 | 3 a |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | | | | |
Friday's Games
| Iowa State | 020 | 000 | 0 - 2 | 3 a |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | Grape, Gripe, 4 Bounce and Flipper and Ledge 6; Suttle and Bragg, BH-Trimmer, Iowa State, Gray, Graham, Martin, KU-1B, Grayman, KU-1H, Harris (4); | | | |
| Iowa State | 020 | 000 | 0 - 2 | 3 a |
| Kansas | | | |
Saturday's Games
| Iowa State | 020 | 000 | 0 - 2 | 3 a |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | Game forfeited to Kansasmen; KU-1B, Clair and Gundelinger, KU-W-Clair (1); L-Riley (4); | | | |
| Iowa State | 020 | 000 | 0 - 2 | 3 a |
| Kansas | Loss and Flattery; Kerecen and Gruban, RH-Riley; Suttle and Flipper (2), Iowa State, W-Kerchen (6); L-Lea (34) | | | |
| Iowa State | 020 | 000 | 0 - 2 | 3 a |
| Kansas | Flipper and Flattery; Christensen, Fleeman, 4 Warley, 4 Walk and 2 Bragg, Flipper, Benson 2, Iowa State | | |
Two qualify for track nationals
By CARLOS MURGUIA
Sports Writer
Facing its toughest competition of the outdoor season yet, the women's track team still managed to add two more individuals to the starting lineup. Relay this weekend in Des Moines, Iowa.
KU women's-track coach Terl Anderson said the team's placings were misleading and didn't reflect the tough, Olympic competition that participated in the meet.
"We had personal bests in practically every event." Anderson said. "We qualified for finals in each of the events we were entered in and I thought we did a fine job of representing KU. This meet was good preparation for the Big Eight meet and we qualified more people to nationals, which was one of our main objectives."
KAREN FITZ, who has progressively improved her time since the season started, qualified for nationalists in the 5,000-meter run. She finished sixth with a KU record of 27.1 seconds just missed qualifying by 2.1 seconds as she finished seventh with a time of 17:28.1.
The team's other national qualifier was Michelle Brown in the 1,500. Brown placed seventh in the race with a KU record of time 4.30. She was under the national qualifying time of 4.30.
Fitz and Brown now join Shelia Calmese (100-meter dash), Lori Green (100- and 200-meter dashes), the 400-yard and womile race, and the 800-meter hurdles, as the Jayhawks' entrants for the Association of Intercollegiate National Nations May 24-26 in East Lansing, Mich.
AT DRAKE, LOWREY broke her own school record of 61.51 in the 400-meter hurdles by finishing fourth with a time of 61.36.
Lowrey joined Claire Overstake, Lori Green and Deb Hertzog to place fourth in the sprint medley relay with a time of 1:54.0.
The two-mile relay team of Vick Simpson, Denise Homa, Marianne McCowen and Hertzog set a KU record with a seventh place time of 9:09.1.
Shawn Corwin did double duty for the team in the field events. She just missed the 5-9 national qualifying mark in the high jump by finishing ninth in the meet's competition with a jump of 5-8-4. She also completed fourth in the long jump with a leap of 18-3.
1979 Season Football Tickets at Reduced Rates for Recent Grads
1977-1978-1979 Graduates are eligible to receive up to 2 tickets for the reduced price of $42.00 per ticket
Come by or mail your check to:
1. Remittance must accompany your order. Make your check payable to: KUAC.
3. In the event you have a change of address on Sept. 1, please notify the trainee.
ATHLETIC TICKET OFFICE Allen Field House Lawrence, Kansas 6015
2. Do not expect to receive tickets before September 1.
4. Late season ticket orders received 14 days prior to the first game, cannot be mailed and must be picked up under name in which ordered at WILL CALL
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6. People who had season tickets last year and want to reorder the same seats this year must do so before May 15th.
7. New season ticket holders will be assigned the best seats that become available.
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KU
--and helped give Kerschen his sixth victory against no losses this season. KU won three of four games with the Cyclones here this season.
KANSAN
Sports
Southpaw ace
Kevin Kerschen, KU's only left-handed pitcher, struck out 10 batters in the first game of a double-hitter Saturday against North Carolina State.
The members of the KU men's 400-meter relay team had a good laugh when they watched Saturday night's news in Des Moines, Iowa.
A few hours earlier, in the 70th running of the Drake Relays, the featured television incident wasn't very humorous. But by then the initial disappointment of freshman Deon Hogan's naive mistake that cost Kansas a baton victory had long since worn off.
KU relay blunder laughable later
By GENE MYERS Sports Writer
KU's Kevin Newell, who ran the third leg in the 400-meter relay, had the lead rounding the final curve and was ready to deliver a winning touchdown. Hogan, pinching run for the injured David Blutcher, was positioned in the wrong exchange zone. An international zone was being used, but instead of being there, KU's patients waited patiently 15 yards down the track.
"GOING AROUND the turn I saw the seven other anchors on the track," Newell said, "but I couldn't find Deen. I just kept running and when I finally saw him he had this amazed look. He must have been saying 'I blew it' to himself.
"We had a very nice lead and we were going away with the watches, but Deon just got crossed up. But we did get a good laugh watching it, on the news. There's no hard
The second-place finish was characteristic of KU's efforts at Drake; good attentiveness, teamwork, and experience.
teams, despite injuries to both Blutcher and Skan Whitaker, also captured seconds in the playoffs.
LESTER MICKENS AND TIM Jones joined Hogan and Newell in both the 400 and 800 relay. The University of Texas edged KU in the 800-meter relay during the cold Friday session in which temperatures dipped into the 40s.
The weather improved a few degrees Saturday but Texas was still a step ahead of KU, this time in the 1,600-meter relay. The longhorns won the mile metric in 3:04:45, breaking the meet record set 11 years earlier by another Texas squad.
KU, however, ran a season best 3:06.06 even though Newell was a last minute replacement for Whitaker, who had injured his foot Friday.
Newell used some usually fatal strategy to finish third in the invitational 100-meters in 19.43. Facing Texas &M's Curtis Dickey, who had lost outdoors just three times in three years, and the University of California at Irvine's LaMonte King, who was famous for outlining out his rivals by taking advantage of the no-false start rule by purposely false-starting.
Dickey and Newell were stride for stride
in the races when cards by Dickey pulled
away to win in 10.5
KU's other players at Drake were Jeff Buckingham, third in the pole vault at 170-145, and Chris Fitzgerald, intermediate hurdles; Mike Stancill, fifth in the javelin; Matt Friedeman, seventh in the discus, and the distance medley team of Kate O'Neill, Cameron Anderson and David Bauer, which took seven.
Men golfers second after playoff
KU's men's golf team won a sudden-death play to play second and D. Rensen.tam tied for individual honors at the cold, windy Drake Invitational Golf Tournament
of the playoff. Western Michigan finished
fourth in the 11-year team at 971.
Nebraska, with four golfers finishing in the top 12, easily won the seventh annual 54-hole tournament at the U.S. National Golf Course of Mount Shasta of 1969, but the Jayhwaks were the official second-place finishers because
Sensenman tied Minnesota's Tom Lehman for individual medalist honors at 235. Sensenman shot rounds of 77.76 and 82. Other KU scores were Doug Anderson, 241; Mark Steinner, 244; John Lyons, 249; and Jim Dovle, 256.
KU will host the Big Eight Tournament,
which starts Thursday at the Alvamar Golf Course.
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The weekly feature page of the University Daily Kansan
April 30,1979
Arena
15
Turning Allen Field House or any large arena into a sound stage is the work of the roadies. Starting at noon and working through until 3 or 4 in the morning, the roadies unload and load three semitrailer trucks full of everything from rubber pig masks to Gibson guitars Doing 18 one-night stands in a 2O-day tour is only one small part of
Life on the Road
Steve Hurd monitors lights as the Doobies rehearse late in the afternoon. "Whoever said 'this life is exciting was wrong,'" he said.
"Let the roadies take the stage, pack it up and tear it down. They're the first to come and the last to leave, working for that minimum wage. They'll set it up in another town."
from "The Loadout," by Jackson Brown Spotlights sprinkle the expectant faces of the crowd with light as taped warm-up music wafts from the loud-speakers on stage. For the audience, the show begins when the band appears and strikes in its first powerful chords.
But for the roadies, the show begins at noon, when they arrive with three truckloads of equipment to begin the tedious task of setting up the stage. For four hours, it is a carnival of activity as huge loudspeakers ride on for rikits to the stage and daring members of the light crew shriek with excitement, focusing and adjusting the multicolored lights.
By 4 p.m., the guys in the stage crew are making the final instrument installments as the band warm up for rehearsal. Their hair glows eerily as they work, first green then pink, then red, as color by color, the lights are
Backstage, other roadies lean against black packing crates; thick electrical cords snake around their feet. Some swivel their heads to measure the progress of a girl in gym shorts who joins on the track that skirts the
"Life on the road is, well, repetitions," said Timmy McCormick, a roadie with graying cains and a pewter sailboat earring. "It really doesn't matter where you are or what town you're in. It's still the same stage."
For the past six weeks, the schedule has not varied for the Doubie Brothers' 14* races: get up for a stage call on noer or earlier, unload the trucks and set up, do the concert, tear it all down, go to the hotel, have a party, go to bed and be at the plane in the morning to it all over again somewhere else.
"It's really a love-hate relationship," Michael Shean said, pulling electrical cords and piano parts from the depths of a black clatr. "Some tourists last for 10 weeks, and when you get home, everything has changed. Couples have broken up, people have moved away, but, at the same time, I never waste my life on one of those ordinary jobs."
The roads try to fill their backstage worlds with things
other than headphones, sound boards and broken microphone, and to make the backstage scene a bit more exciting.
The lid of one box is plastered with magazine clippings, some of women in seemingly impossible positions. A buxum bunny with shell-pink eeps ears from the lid of another, and the door of yet another cabinet is covered with a gallery of Dolly Parton memorabilia, including a realistic-looking "one Dolly bill."
The black boxes contain a seemingly endless supply of ammunition, some of them smokable, more surely to the
"The pink panther is Kato, and the pink elephant is Fiffi, and Popeye and Olive Oyl, well, they're just Popeye and Olive Oyl, I guess." jerry J. D.'D. Danielson tells us that to demonstrate how brittle the toys really are.
One roadie has arranged a small menagerie of benda plastic toys on the top of a cabinet facing the stage
"We put Popeye and Olive Oyl in lewd positions and have little movie movies back here during the show." He
"It like this," Reve Hurd said, hanging Olive Olive on an electrical cord and positioning Popeye in close pursuit. "We're so busy we don't have time to do lewd things ourselves, so we do them with plastic, inanimate objects."
It seems as if the roadies don't have time for much but work. One man pulps a plastic packet of multicolored pills from his travel bag and downs them with a gulp of expensive carbonated water.
"They're vitamins," he explained. "The Doobies supply all roads with multivitamin packets. When you're on the road six days a week, you don't have time to get that much good food, even though it's in our contract to be fed."
"I don't know," Shehan said, shaking his head. "I seems kind of backwards that we get tacos in Kansas and the Bay Area."
Somebody brings in a load of greasy tacos for lunch.
But the roadies think they have traded their settled lives for the hurried, nomadic existence of the road for good reasons. For some, it offers the chance to escape from a job that holds no meaning.
"I got my B.A. in history," Danielson said, swinging his legs off a backstage platform. "Then I taught freshman literature."
BATTLEGROUND MUSEUM
"We all need toy boxes back here," said Maurice Brunkow, who does the special of elf-
For others, it is a chance to be close to the world of music that they couldn't enter as performers.
For still others, the pay is reason enough to endure the long hours, tasteless meals and sterile hotels.
But the job offers fringe benefits as well, one of which is riding in a remodeled plank, just for the roadies.
"The plane is really one of the high points of my day," Mark Brown said. "It's really nice to know that wherever I fly, I'm going to the airport."
The "Doblineliner" is a home-away-from-home for the roads. It is equipped with couches, a gailley and a television set with earphones. After an endless Friday night of tearing down the set and returning to the motel for a post-concert party, the roads struggle onto the plane, bleary-eyed and yawning.
Hard switches on the television, flipping the dials in search of Bugs Bunny, and everyone else crowds into the kitchen.
One by one, the roadies stake out their chairs for an hour of sleep before they land in another college town for a day.
Photos by Randy Olson Story by Judy Woodburn
21
Off to another one-night stand, three exhausted crew members try to catch a little sleep or a bite to eat in the modified 42-seat
8
Monday, April 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
'Equus' excellent by any standards
Bv KATHLEEN CONKEY
Reviewer
It is almost invariably necessary when reviewing a college theatre production to judge it with a lower set of standards. A review learner not to expect as much quality from a college show as from a professional theatre piece.
Happily, no such allowances are needed to review the KU production of Peter Shaffer's "Equus" Ronald Willis, the director, and his crew and have done a thoughtful, adult job with "Equus." The director is professional-in-work work. This production of "Equus" is riving, energized and breathtaking.
Shaffer's drama is about a 17-year-old boy, Alan Strang, who is sent to a psychiatric hospital after blinding six children in a host pick at a stable where he worked.
HIS PSYCHIATRIST, Martin Dysart,
is intrigued by the boy's case when he
discovers that Strang has created a
religion involving the horses and a god,
Equus, whom the boy says lives inside
each horse.
Dysart, a dispassionate man, becomes further intrigued when he finds that Strang's religious zeal for the horses also is sexual.
in Strang, Dyart sees the kind of man he would like to be, full of action, energy and passion. It is Dyars't job to cut that passion from the boy, to make him "normal." The play is a study of a questioning man. The character quieshes over seeing himself as the killer of passion, a passion he is not convinced is wrong.
Although the action of the play is somewhat contrived, the importance of Shaffer's questions is undeniable. Who decides what is normal? Is Strang's god any less reat than a Christian or Buddhist? What reason for this difference or way of thought is more acceptable than another? Why does society find it so important to make everyone think alike?
KANSAN Review
How valid is a profession that tries to define "normal?"
THE BEAUTY of Shaffer's play is the way he forces these questions on the viewer even when the viewer thinks he knows the answers.
The beauty of this production cannot be summed up so easily. The acting is excellent, without exception. Each role has a character who one in the plot that chance slide by.
Enough cannot be said about Bart Ewings' portrayal of Alan Strang. Strang is a boy with enough passion to blind six horses. Ewings gives Strang that passion. His energy starts high and remains so throughout the entire play.
William Kuhke, playing Martin Dysart, earns Ewing's outright energy with a cooperation with the other players but there is nothing quiet about the struggle he goes through while treating Strang. Kuhke makes that struggle visible. It is a disquaging
THE MEN who portray the horses are excellent. They wear the masks of horses, but it is mostly their grateful, tender movements that make them seem like horses.
The horse masks and hoofs, designed by Gregory Hill, are beautiful and eerie; earlie because of their realism and beautiful because of stylization within that realism. The wooden hove makes a natural sound during the blinding scene.
the costumes, by Judy Tatum, were good but the blue color of the horses' legs seemed odd.
The University Theatre's production of "Equus" is excellent even so... a professional level. However one judge said, "He has a shining lead team beginning to end."
By LOIS PRESS
People living in residence and scholarship halls next year will be carrying two ID cards as a result of a decision made Friday at writing in the office of residential programs.
Residence hall IDs approved for 1979-80
Staff Reporter
Hall residents will carry a residence hall ID in addition to the student KU ID.
A STRIP for the student's signature also would be put on the card, he said.
There also would be approximately 15 activity squares on the back of the ID, similar to the squares on the back of the KU ID. Dahman said.
Among those present at the meeting were Fred McElhennie, director of the residential property management for the Association of University Residence Halls; Mike Webb, chairman of the subcommittee for residence hall identification; and John Armstrong, AURH chairman of housing services.
*I am so sure about 10 of the squares would be used for AURH or All Scholarship Hall Council functions. The five other squares will be used by the individual residence halls.
Dhilman said that the card, which would be distributed as part of the hall check-in process in the fall, would have printed on it a student number, student number and hall code number.
Someone from the hall could mark off a square when a resident proved he was able to walk through it.
For example, Dahman said, if a resident wanted to use the computer room in McColum Hall, he would have to prove he could properly use the equipment in the
After the resident learned how to use the computer, a square would be marked off to represent the distance.
THE PERSON who would test students' abilities to use the equipment and a way to prevent students from marking squares off themselves have not been worked out yet, he said.
Webb said that specially-shaped punches might be used.
Webb also said he thought the ID card was
Polygraphs
From page one
since we're a neighborhood store it would not be a good thing to do."
. . .
"Without it, it's a guess; with it's a little more calculated guess," he said. "With the
TOM PATEL, assistant manager of Team Electronics, 2191 Louisiana St., said that polygraphics provided an extra advantage for the company. The company had used the test only once in the past year.
test you can find out if your losses are coming from internal theft."
Patel said that no Team employees had ever been fired because of the result of the case.
At least one employee of a store that uses polygraphs says the tests create a feeling of confidence.
OSHA to begin study of mishap at silage plant
Jan Johnson, Lawrence freshman and an employee of Gibon's, said a person felt an air of suspicion when he was hooked up to the machine.
Officials from the Douglas County sheriff's office are investigating the acce-
Carol Moddrell, Douglas County deputy coroner, said Haslitt apparently was
Investigators from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration are scheduled to begin a study today of an applause that killed a Lawrence man Friday morning.
Fidler acknowledged that about 1 percent of the time the machine would react when a power button is pressed.
"As far as I'm concerned, it did not bother me," she said. "In but a way it makes you smile."
The employee, Scott Stoltenow, 2111 Kasold Dr., said, "When you try to keep a steady breath, you can't do it. I told the truth and the machine still reacted."
Rolland F. Hasselt, 101 Michigan St., died Friday morning while working in a storage silo at a storage processing plant north of Altoona, N.J., the National Alfa Lake Dehydration and Milling Co.
According to officials from the Douglas County Sheriff's office, Haslett, 23, and his brother, Wayne A. Haslett of the same address, had entered one of the siles and had the other into a truck. When the men could not get one of the augers and a portable light to work, Wayne Haslett left the silo to check whether electricity was connected to the auger and the light. When he found that his brother dead, the sheriff's office said.
ANOTHER GIBSON'S employee who took the test said it did not seem to be accurate.
However, the tests apparently are relied on heavily by emulators who use the tests.
Cromer, who said he thought the tests were "very accurate," complained of a failure to provide them.
"The theft is overwhelming," he said.
"You have to do something to protect your business."
Fidder agreed. "The retailer has to have a little bit of an edge," he said.
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a good idea because it would make more parking spaces in hall lots available to residents. In the past, some students living in our house have bought residence hill parking permits.
Invites you to attend the 1979
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April 30,1979
7:30 p.m.
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Partially funded by the Student Senate
"Just a few spaces gone that are used by the people who don't live here are crucial." Cruelty
DHAILMAN SAID that when he gave his KU ID to a friend to buy game tickets, for example, he could not check out hall equipment.
Another advantage of the additional hall IID Dohlman said, was that it would free the K10.
Smith said he thought that any problems of the hall ID had been ironed out.
"I wouldn't see my ID for a whole day," he said.
Smith recently had written a letter to Bob Candlin, administrative officer for housing, asking that the negotiations for a residence hall sticker on the KUID be kept on.
The sticker would have taken the place of a senator ID.
Because a signature strip would be used, with said, he withdrew his objection to a coupon.
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Math and Remedial Call. Call now 811-460-7960.
Math and Remedial Call. Call now 811-460-7960.
SERVICES OFFERED
KANSAN WANT ADS
MISCELLANEOUS
PERSONAL
THEISM BINDING COPYING--The House of 'Sheri's' Quick Copy Center is headquarters for their thesis binding and copying in Lawrence. Let us help you at 838 Mass, or phone 832-3610.
GKKS BIRE SHOP is now open. 300 Raleigh,
north of Charlotte, NC. Contact 1-800-625-
4500, quick, quick! Vermont 912-644-1622
and North Carolina 717-238-3484.
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortion up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy tests, Birth Control, Counseling. Tubal Ligation. For appointment call 918-360-2438, 642-618-308, 409-1081, Parkland Park, K.
HAROUND SPECIALS $10-Mon, Tues, and Wed
$25-Sun, Mon-Fri, Tues, and Wed
MARS DAILY NIGHT $10-Wed $150 picture
$30-Wed $250 picture
If this one
doesn't scare you...
You're Already Dead!
PHANTASM
R
Instead of booking and running on the Texas coast. 4-30
Gay Leahman counseling referrals now handed
thru KU Info. 664-2508 Headquarters 98
ff
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC Abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy Testing, Birth Control, Counseling, Total Ligation. For appointment in the Emergency Room. K54-4800, 490 St. Island, St. Overland Park, KS.
Belonging for special people Monastery has its own staff. For more information call 212-455-3000 or Open May 1-Labor Day; Members only No Reservation.
Mother youwu youwa show how you wear on you
photograph indoors or outdoors Make a poster
photograph indoors or outdoors Make a poster
7:30 & 9:30 Varsity
Want to move in? 2 bf 1½; call at apartment at 5.00
apartment for summer Call 825-8798 at Mull
and have a free estimate.
Raise your glass and give him a toast,
The Man with the Tan is the host of host.
Wouldn't it be grand?
SHAY with the opposite sex! We can help For-
mers stay connected and address to Cial Social Learning Center. We are available for your needs.
You have until May 3 to send $1.00 to P.O. Box
7307 NKCM. 64116.
Box 5-2
THE TAN MAN HKIHAI on saln' now CALL 843-760-208 or yours A LETTING used military hkihai with a picture of Tan Man muni-
belt beach—843.59 Tan Man PUMP-- 5 Very Lid
Ladies: Ringer in the haz with the T.2 this week. 845-8244
5-4
Ta. Max Jerry, Frank, Brian, Dave, Harry, and
Ashley will-well we'll see them at 4-30.
Lambie Debbie
Wouldn't it be grand,
If he came back to our land,
For a good time, call T.J. 843-6244
REWRITING EDITING - Your manuscript, thesis or term paper edited into an effective, grammatically correct document. Thinking with precision and smoothness. Outstanding work and articles also available. Ex-works 842-131
EXPERT TUTORS; MATH 000-700; PHYSICS
100-700; STATISTICS 000-700; CALCULATION
@ 843-5727. QUALIFICATIONS: 8.5 in Physics,
programming, 7 years experience in computer
programming.
Lawrence Open School, Excelling Summer program. Attend classes in art, organic gardening, study and hiking, fine arts, organic gardening, international classes in Language Arts, Math, and Reception. Attend summer camp. Call now 850-643-8497 or 850-643-8498.
+
RUESCHHOFF
LOCKSMITHS
Semilate Lock & Key Services
1015 W. 9th 843-2182
Complete Lock & Key Services
Tired of feeding yourself? Naimith Hall is of course over a boarding plan. He'll probably prepare your plans but you can be younge if you choose this plan. Shannon HALL, 1800 Mannheim Drive, B43-8590. **ASIMM HALL**, 1800 Mannheim Drive, B43-8590.
BIOHORTYTH CHARTS BY ACUDACT. Computed guidance, physical—motion and inducible cycles; balloon your spiral boat for 30 minutes; ship your boat back to shore with Shawyton XQ 6450, Leavenson XQ 6450, Shawyton XQ 6450,
Need help in math or CS? Get a tutor who can answer your math or CS problems. Can you bring Bruce 841-7457 or
Rice's Auto Repair. Tired of being tipped off by a shop that does not perform its annual tests, good warranty guaranteed. $150.
TYPING
1 do damned good typing, Peggy, 842-4476. tl
Typher/Editor, IBM Pizza/Eltie. Quality work
requirements. Desire discussion welcome.
M42-1027
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-0980. ff
Now accepting term papers for quality typing,
Lynn, 841-206 after 5.30. tf
Experienced typit-thesis, dissertations, term papers, articles in selected electivearbets, Select Arbets 841-331; evening, 842-331.
Quality typing guaranteed - IBM SelectCases. Terms of sale, dissertations, issue. Carriage 12. Mail to: IBM Research, 1005 Eighth Avenue, New York, NY 10003.
Expert typing all kinds, over night service usually editable availability. Call 841-4712 evening-5-1
Experienced Tynnian—term paper, thesis, mhle
experiments. Research conducted with spelled cep-
tured letters: 843-0544. Mrs. Wright
Testing on Rite Electro Typewriter by expori-
tive prompt service. Proofreading M-5,8,
843-172-1378
Aequateur, experienced typist - form papers, theatres, presentations. Req's Bachelor's degree or equivalent speed studies. Posts 842-7244. Dana S-3. E-Mail: aecuarteur@yahoo.com
I do darner quick typing 20 pp. & under,
call Rest, CallRt 843-6438 p.5 after m.-5.21
Reporter, disratifications, resumes, legal forms,
letters, and telegrams to direct teletext. Call:
7-270 or Joanne Barr, 841-237-2100.
www.jobsonlaw.com
PROFESSIONAL QUALITY TYPHING
Assistants in data preparation. Bait est.
monitoring. Call: 842-6410. Evening
morning.
Typing, editing, experience Electric typewriter, carbon or尼戊钢 I love these. Anne, 85, of New York.
Experimented Typist-accuracy, quick, reasonable
speed, spelling correctness, 6.5
Mathematics at 842.3170
**1.** The average number of words typed is 842.3170.
MASTERMINDS Professional typing, Fast, Accuracy,
Guaranteed. Call 811-3387.
For the channel, all original, trained and cover
images are saved as JPEG files.
841-4900. Space Are Typing
If
Ekward typist will prepare, flush, abortonments,
and correct errors. Work at reasonable rate. Call Ekbh at
617-389-4255 or email ekwbh@ecbh.com.
I do daim needd typing. Under 20 pearson.
I have 4 months of experience.
Ruth, 81-4248 - after 5 p.m. and weekend. call
WANTED
Female roommate for summer to share furnished
bathroom apartment. 1 hour commute from
city. Swimming pool. $911-$1,000 a month.
**Response:** noninforming female to share a bldg.
**Response:** ineligible female to share a bldg.
**Result:** $83 million plus 1.5 percent of $41,692,680.
**Result:** $83 million plus 1.5 percent of $41,692,680.
One or two roommates female nominates for
sundress $60 to $100 a month plus part class
$30.
1 roommate to share, beautiful 3 bedroom! Funny
house! $195/month. Free Wi-Fi, NCSNARYSAT $120 per month. 1.5' tall. Cigar
box. $65/month. No smoking.
One or two female members to share Mail Apli-
for summer. Call after 5. 841-8729
Summer roommates for Large Two Bath, New York
$160. utilities paid. Call 718-412-8638
841-8623
Need roommate for summer stationation. Prefer
own suite with separate bathroom, laundry,
dining room, laundry. L841-8732 evening
check-in.
Room wanted. May 21-31, Aug 1-18 $5 per
per room. Call Mike K41-6203
Laboral, non-studied, non-men-identified, nursing practitioner. One month post discharge, female. Cell Wearers: yes/yes.
2 required girls (125 yrs.) looking for my partner:
* 18 yrs. & over (who is not within a welcome)
* Call 814-7026 or 814-7035
Need three male roommates for summer to share:
1. Bachelor's in accounting, $75 per month.
2. Call 841-660-6963.
In need of three men! commuters for next fall!
$250 monthly,
$1,500 utilities
Call 641-663-7698 for more info.
Wanted -Laboral female graduate to share beauty
and land Park Apt.-Simmons, 6-400-
1857-1857
4-30
Grad student or apprisoner wanted for homo with garden winn teau courts bikki so of campus available May 20. Weekly Call: 842-6980 or 8323, 5:7 p.m. Call: 842-6980 or 8323, 5:7 p.m.
Want to buy large abstract inkjetting, aerial or oil on canvas prints, paintings and where they can be seen?
Nc-d 2 parents to share 3 Babm digital for
children + 4 utilities. Call Saul Smith
at 842-7922.
Shutterly Miller is looking for a bureaucrat. June
1976-June 1980. 842-749 or 644-351.
***
***
**
Male: Christian roommate needed for fall nursing
nurse level or higher? Preferred Call: 612-795-8040
Housemates needed for Kentucky St. cooperative
Call 643-278 for details
5-14
Rand wanted for wedding reception in August
Rand wanted for wedding reception in August
Rand needed for business meeting from $150
Rand needed for business meeting from $150
Monday, April 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
19
2 KU police officers cleared of charges
Two KU police officers were cleared Friday of charges of brutality that stemmed from an arrest made during a demonstration last month at KU.
Mike Maleo, Douglas County District Attorney, said the incident was investigated by two Kansas Bureau of Investigation staff members. The investigation and interviewed about 15 witnesses.
"I have determined that there was no criminal conduct on the part of the campus
The incident occurred March 28 when Arab students were protesting the signing of the Egyptian-Iraeli peace treaty. A KU student, Steven D. Schwartz, Barrington, R.I., freshman, was arrested when a violence broke out between students and KU police.
Malone asked the RB to investigate the incident when Randall Seiden, Fairway junior, alleged that police used excessive force on a man. The officer also alleged that police used excessive force.
Malone said in a letter to Schwartz; "I find from reviewing the completed investigation that your allegation is without merit. It is clear from the investigation that the two police officers in question acted within their authority in arresting you on account of their lack of experience, or existed probable cause for them to believe you were committing a misdemeanor crime."
Schwartz will be tried Thursday in Douglas County District Court on charges of disorderly conduct and obstruction of the legal process.
Seiden refused to comment on the outcome of the investigation.
The U.S. Army now offers a limited number of
LOOK
2 YEAR ENLISTMENTS!
Some include a $7400 Educational Fund option.
843-0465
Call or visit now to see if you can qualify.
Join the people who've joined the Army.
--in English
THE FORTY-SEUEN SAMURAI
(CHUSHINGURA)
A University of Hawaii Production
KABUKI
English Language Premiere
Japan's classic drama
of revenge
is authenti-
cable Kabuki style
一
International Theatre and East Asian Studies Centers of the University of Kansas present
KABUKI performance in English
8. 00 p.m. Tuesday, May 1
(demonstration for young audience at 4.15 p.m) in the University Theatre, Moorhall Hall
KANSAN WANT ADS
Admission $2.50 (50 cents for Demonstration)
Tickets available at the Box Office in Murphy Hall
For reservation call (913) 864-3982
Accommodations, goods/services and entitlements for employees of the BRENGH company. Please call 800-325-1211 or visit www.breengh.com. MERGING WILL BE DIRECTED TO THE BREENGH COMPANY.
CLASSIFIED RATES
power $3.00 + $2.25 + $2.50 + $2.75 + $3.00
each additional
1 01 02 03 04
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Munday 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 inscriptions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or almost by calling the UDK business office.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
Need in subset ballet 3 bedroom apt. Newly.
residency. AC $200 monthly. utilities. UB2941-6-51
4
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Ani-Draft Rally, Tuesday, May 1st, 11:30 a.m.
1:15 p.m. Spring Hall Lawn
5-1
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
Guy serviesers of Kansas will host a plunging plastic container filled with water to the front of the primary air hose g.o.k. for the emergency egress.
4. Appt. 2 BH and efficiency. Close to campus. UUI-137.
5. Clean, quiet, and comfortable. 843-978-5078.
FRONTIER RIDE APARTMENTS NOW WENTING. Studios 1 and 2 bedrooms, furnished and equipped with large walk-in closets, ample parking. On KU bus route 824-444 or on XK at 324 Front Door. Next door 826-444 or at 324 Front Door. Next door
Still looking for a place to call home? Nahmith Hall now has a couple of openings for the re-opening of the library, which will be able or give us a call at 454-8500 and we will be glad to have you there. Our application in *NABMISTH HALL*, 1200 Nahmith Street, Seattle, WA 98103.
Bristol Housing. Now and Summer. Close to
Hurricane Sandy. 842-625-0028, between 2
Keep trying
following with groom in retrexp. Nursery 2 bed, bath,
counselling room, laundry room, and office.
First Floor. Fully furnished. Available in May.
Furnished upstairs. Available in May.
Female roommate for summer 2 bdm.
Appletoft AC; AcP, Call: 811-2270
Fax: 811-2270
Jayhawk Tower 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
MARIK I. & II. Aptaintments now reading for students in history, art, and science atrium honeymoon apartments 7 miles to campus. I 1 2 balconies off the street parking on diagonal, disqualified parking on 6th floor. 1615 Mall. Air 9: 84-8500 - 6121, 6125, 6131, 6135.
THY COOPERATIVE LIVING—In an established
cooperative living community, the
私人社区将租金从 $750-$1,250 included.
Each resident receives a 3-room condo.
Summer studentships—need someone to share large
students with you. Send resume to:
mary@smith.edu, single masters,
80 or couples, $85, 842-7131.
ROOMS FOR RENT. Convenient location—never
houses from Student Union. Call us
415-793-8260.
CUT-RATE Luxury Trailtale Townhouse, 3
Baths, 2 half. sunlit solitude $775 per sq.
ft.
2. bathroom, 2. bathroom, 2-layer spa pool. Measure and record water temperature. Bathroom Keeleent rate rent $49.95/month.
Summer sub-labage, furnished 2-bedroom apt. 16th Floor. Guest rooms. Ensuite. Negotiable. Kitchen. Neighbors. Cute neighbors.
1 bedroom Apt. for silent, June 1 to Aug. 1.
$690. Call急召 $83. p-843-4460. 5-2
Summer sublease, new 2-story duplex 4 BR 2-bath
garage sublease 1080 sq ft. June-July
$399,000/month. Juni-July
Studio for sublease in June and July Pursued
through October. Call 811-7620 for details.
5-8
Must sublet for summer. Make offer. Please help student in a Malmö, Malmö English. 842-750-6388
**PLEASE READ THE DESCRIPTION OF THIS PROJECT**
Wanted! Roommate for two. Nice nct.
prefer grad, student. WE CAN WORK IT OUT!
@wolfgangmike
2 FBR furnished house, AC, large kitchen, 2 porch, room, for garden $350. 842-767-9000.
Sublune Southridge Apt. May-July 3 2 BR
farm, AC. $122. $112 on宅房
SUMMER SUNBUL LEASE, at Mouscrowbrook Appli-
Cation; Call Mike, 827-7580, at Johnsons 827-7018.
Call Mike, 827-7580, at Johnsons 827-7018.
Summer sublease. 2 bedroom Apple Crop Craft.
price increase. Next to campus. 8431-6-5-3
PLEASE HELP out two fellow college kids by the summer, and get a pot for the summer 2-bedroom bathrooms. Use large kitchen and beautiful furniture. Excellent price仍 call Cocktail or Sandy at BURNS.
Summer student-Seasonal two-bedroom Apart-
ment for students in school. Bail 710-381-1204-
5-4 to campus. Bail 710-381-1204-5-4
Summer sublease, 1. bdmr, $150.00. Call: 841-4988
after 7.
SUMMER SULEASE One bedroom apt. nort-
ly furnished. turnstile 141-198, airtable
office 141-198.
From June 1 on, 3 older students seek one or two responsibilities (e.g., help with bedtime, hair care) and two other responsibilities (e.g., help with piano, organ, gardening, most furniture, library, privacy). Free meals are served at home, who can keep up on their homework. Drop off for a
Small one-bedroom house to rent for summer months. $125. Call Rose, 441-876-0199.
Apr. for absentee, 2 BR 1 bath, $170 money
at. May 15 to Aug. 15, Doni 841-5542, 5-2
Specification 2 bedroom Apt. 300 cells from Kansas
Union. Sublet for summer. Call 814-8510.
One two-hundred duplex available May 6 and
July 14. The school is open to students
half year old and new to the campus. 823-0271
Large 4-5 bedroom house available in old West Lawrence early summer this year through July 1980.
Meadowbrook summer subloane, 3 bedroon,
2018-11-25 and pool and terrace calls:
C-5-3
2549 or 843-7735
Sublime studio apartment for summer; AC, furnished, clean pool, tennis. Teach 843-450-6987.
Summer suite larger furnished one bedroom
and bathroom. Great location. 9%/day from Union
Station. Great location. 7%/day from Union
Station.
Summer sublease. (June 1st-July 31st), with option to rent a bedroom, furnished. AC 280V, 60Hz.
Live at the Summit. Beautiful new one bedroom
Summit 6. Fall if desired. 841-844. Keep trying.
Summer sublet 2 bedroom facility Apt. Com-
mission 1, 849-633-4544, Skip-1 to walk to campus Central airlift 841-8134
Eligent, sugar cane $2 barium serum, in dier hide
sauce, potassium $2 barium serum, in dier hide
sauce, 4 barium househouse of carmy. Com-
fortable. 4 barium househouse of carmy. Com-
fortable. 4 barium househouse of carmy. Com-
fortable. 4 barium househouse of carmy. Com-
fortable.
Live in style for summer? Sublue fully
decorated windows and walls.
Paint through, all utilities except electro-
lics.
Meadowbrook-summer sublease single apart
air conditioner, portable TV bit of sale
cable call evening 812-727-2430
Country in City-Detive 2 bedroom duplex with
parking. C/A fenced yard. Pet OK. Quit quiet.
30% down.
A beautiful two bedroom apartment available near campus—campus-321. Call 811-665-2700.
KUMC doubles in events now. Newly refurbished and ideal for students' Parking. Call 519-836-0247.
For rent in KC this summer. 2 BR house, fully
furnished. Price $100 per month. Plaza area.
318-246-6323
Sublease 2 bdm, apt. AC, D W, laundry facility
7 min. walk to campground 291 Call # 805-343-6160
Submarine summer, one bedroom unfurished gut-
air cond. swimming pool. Available May 20 or
June 20. $399.
Summer submarine. Spacious 1 BR. Southside jib, 20 ft. Bow. Gun turret. Avail. upgrade May 21st. $170. Call 841-3529-6828. May book at www.marine.com.
3 bdm. AC, I car garage, unfurnished, available.
June 1, M1-8500 5-4
FOR SALE
Summer sublease 3 BILLURY luxury, bills paid.
Summer furnished $2600. Repair $60. New paid.
Sale price: $18,594.
WATERED MATTRESSES $89.99 3 year guarantee,
WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass, B1285-1286
ff
Sunbloes - Sun glases are our specialty. Non-polarized Sun glases, seasonal, personal
1021 Main 941-870-7070
Watch for truck on Sundays selling produce:
Jawbreak Foods, 9th & Illinois. Also wood
Pender Muttiana Bass Guitar with strings, cords,
cards and covers. Very good condition.
Card cases and covers. Very good condition.
Alternator, shatter and generator Specialties
AUTO MOTIVE TELEVISION, 435-800-3290. 300 W. dh, fh
MOTIVE ELECTRIC, 435-800-3290. 300 W. dh, fh
TAN MAN LIMERICK
CONTEST DEADLINE
is
TODAY!
by 5:00 p.m. in 111 Flint Hall (between Watson & Wescoe).
Come on everyone get your brains in near
the deadline for your limerick draws near
With pencil in hand,
Write one for the Tan Man
Write one for the fun run
And win a cassette recorder that feels
great on the ear!
- Sponsored by The UDR
- Co-sponsored by Team Electronics
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Salel Make some out of Western Civilization Mrs. make some out of Western Civilization Mrs. make some out of Western Civilization 3) For exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Trout University.
72 Custum, lbl new, 14.000 mi² AC, IPS FP1
32 Storm, lbl new, 16.500 mi² AC, IPS FP1
Small engine, Oil on wing lift You come back
Small engine, Oil on wing lift You come back
Yamaha acoustic guitar plus case, like new, $150
and a Yamaha headphones. 2 retails for $189, asking $149 - 81-721-712
SETTING MARRIED Wedding dress for 38-white W.8 Swn. 10x96 $142-524
4-30
4-30
282 Kukunan, PA. sysdiet 120 watt heat, PS15
speaker culture card, PS35 card
on the cord
Sailback Sandpiper 55. New near excellent condition. Carbon, torn and perfect beginners boat. Includes 40% extra fuel.
1978 Yamaha $1050, 6160; kickstart; dual-cub
only; 180 mile; Call Cath 842-600-6600
10-speed lightweight lightweight Regina Sport. Commute brake, single-door; deluxe 500-1132
Honda Express Moped, Near new, low mileage,
euro款 $260, 318-302
Euro款 $260, 891-3182
1973 Avery Hardware, cylinder A, speed Mining
Machine with 200 HP. or best HP.
Construction must be 5000 $/h or best HP.
Enthusiast. Please visit us and shop our selection of Old Town and Coleman Canes and accessories. We rent as well as sell their fine apparel. Notions, Noris, Manshuispeen, Downsland, Lawrence.
1852 Oldsmobile Bucket 86 two-door hardtop,
good condition, low actual mileage Call 841-
370-8500
1. Oahu Triple Beam Scale, Weights 610 Grams;
$5.00.
4-30
Buy from owner and save Very nice 1972 Monte Carlo A.C. P.B.S. B50 - 250 VW Cali - 843 DXF
1974 12 by 55, 2 RR skirted, AC, partial furnished deck, docked boat, lawn swimming pool.
SALE NOTICE: Hiking bots sale begins with
the notice in next thursday's UDK. See Sunflower
Surprise for the finest in Hiking, backpacking,
camping and camping equipment; 844-7300,
setts;
$250 and best offer. Leni 864-212-74
AFO MFED, 600 miles, 75 miles per gallon,
8250 or best offer. Leni 864-212-74
5-4
For Sale. Ross 10-speed bike Call 864-6257
Window van, 68 Dodge, 6 cyl, $700 Call 841-5894 4938 after p. 2
1966 GMC Van-Customized interior, run area 245'
1968 Ford Taurus interior, tire size 140/70 R14
1 at West 107 29th Street. 15-3
77 Fivestar Empiril. Low miles, power plus many
miles. MI-8140, Jeansite. 3/8-
$69.95
1974 Honda Civic, 47,000 miles. Call 842-929-09
8:14 to am. 11 pm. Keep calling.
Pakistan stearer liner deck AWM ram capacity 1750 kg
1974- MG8, ram capacity 2000 mm³ water miles, $2.00
1975- MG8, ram capacity 2300 mm³ water miles, $2.60
Singapore bed and reutility (near near) new,
large, box-concrete like lit. Kit 801-3248 after
1975.
RM 400 SUZUKI CALL 842-6600 AFTER 3 P.M.
35 ce room. 1ff. Fridge in excellent condition. Great for
room. Only 800 $19 Call 604-1228 158
Need good home for 4 mins. Irish better cupu
Has shots, paper traced, fire retardant
Cuphers - 611-725-7172
72 Kawamura 390 Excellent condition. Our owner.
Low inage milkweed to the gallon. Like new.
$85 for a large carton.
BARGAIN USED BOOKS 100% FAST, numbered,
discounted. Bargain Books Store,
South Kearney, Kansas, Missouri 73524
73 Bedside for sale,聘工應员 in excellent condition. Call 842-7426 5-4
FOUND
Mount. 3987 AMB Roadmaster. Good as new. $225.
Nail 82-9728 mornings or evenings. 2-4
Bronze water found near the tennis courts.
Hal 64-10020 Farad.
4-30
Friend. An unidentify on a campus but nomin-
ged, of April 23, to identify to claim 841-608-100.
4-30
2 Irish Sellers. One young, thin male; one older,
heavier female. 832-49745. 5-1
HELP WANTED
SUMMER JOBS, NOW! WORLD CRUNCHES
PLEAUREATE HOURS! No experience! Good pay!
PLACEMENT $350 for $350 for
PLACEMENT $629, Sacramento, Cal. 95800
WORLD CRUNCHES
Box 6023, Sacramento, Cal. 95800
Adult with seen transportation to call for R 800 253 6120. See instructions below.
Adult with seen light beaconing $2.00 per hour.
JOBS LAST TIME CALIF. Postgraduate (U.S.)
*10 yrs exp in a job offered by your employer*
EARLY JOB EARNINGS $25,000 for APPLICATIONS;
$30,000 for LANDWAVE;
$40,000 for MAPPING.
Wanted
Bouncers
& Doormen.
Call Jon at 842-6930
The Lawrence
Opera house
Tennessee
**STUDENTS** summer employment Pinkerton's Inc is now taking applications from standard grads in the Graduate Kansas City Area. Graduates in the Graduate* Kansas City Area will have portability available and telephone in residence. Grand Bryant Building, 1007 North Kansas City, MO 66008. Grand Bryant Building, 1007 North Kansas City, MO 66008. U.S. Bank Group, 1112 Grand An Fajal Opponent
ENGINEERING GRADS. Positions $15,000 up.
Never a fee to applicant. Call Bob Cohn.
913-365-7250 or send resume to Courtney Pens,
Baker St., B Suite 81, Hoboken, NJ 07042.
MK, KS 6202
Did your Kater break leave you with the summer job those three weeks? Are you full free! The answer is available, payable online. You qualify, send name, major, address, & Phone to P.O. Box 2321 Lawrence, KS 6045- 6232.
Mustela habitats in facilities, pre-arrived, pre-hire
pre-registration. Mail resume to:
Michael Maher, 907 397 per month. For interview
contact: Michael Maher, 907 397 per month.
Email: michael.maher@michaelmaher.com
Wanted
A few aggressive,
ambitious females
to wait tables.
Call Jon at 842-6930
The Lawrence
opera house
from 5:30
MAKE $3,000 THIS SUMMER. If you are hard working independently and willing to releax money from your employer, consider making a plan.
Looking for a job to help you through college? We have both morn and midwifes open with no experience. Call us at (800) 267-5900.
We have plenty of summer jobs available in the Kansas City area for security officers. You can work at our location, a phone in your home, apply to and a phone in your home. WELL PARK 3245 Broadway 816-931-0511
BUSINESS ADMN GRADS. marketing & management position $12,000 up. Never after application Call 541-687-3900 Email admnt@businessadmn.com Phone 800-763-8100 Std. 3rd Suite. 105, Shawnee Mishop, KA 66322
Bartenders and custumers eat between moon
and 9 a.m. on Saturdays or come in between
10 a.m. and 4 p.m. 850-7657
$50-$160 pact for person desklifting. 2/30 micromechanical. $19-$39 pact for 6 hft work documentation; soque, parts for motor. $40-$70 pact for motor or battery.
The University of Katsua (Lawrence Campus),
Office of Information Systems is seeking an experienced
data base institute. Required experience includes
understanding of data bases and written communications skills, and knowledge
of data base systems. The position not required is COBOL programmung experi-
ence prior to experience (15% experience) This position will be in owing into the data base administration area,
and must have experience with the individual will be trained in the areas in which he or she is not proficient. Position will be in
career progressing within the school year. Should
perform 80 hours per week during the school year. Should
be familiar with SAS/SQL/Syslog/Services. Office of Information Systems, Lawrence Campus, 6604, Lawrenceton, NJ 07092. Application Deadline May 30th.
SYSTEMS, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS IS AN
EMployer. APPPLICATIONS ARE NOUGHT
EMPOWERED. APPLICATIONS ARE NOUGHT
OF RACE. RELIGION COLOR, SEX DISABILITY
VETERANS STATUS, NATIONAL ORIGIN
Part-time jobs may immediately or for longer periods.
Salary: £20 per hour. Call 415-623-8288 for details.
Ward 10, Hoboken-Cape Coral five-hour transmitter
station. Satellite reception available every
evening, spring and summer. Phone RX:
(212) 649-3857.
The Office of Information Systems Lawrence Company is working a standard typed form. Must be fluent in English, have a minimum of 8 hours of four time blocks required during the day and possess experience in preparing charts and document formation films and photograpy. Position will require: (1) Administrative Secretary; Office of Information Systems; Administration Secretary; Office of Information Systems; and (2) Application deadline is Tuesday, May 4th at 4:25pm. Applications are sought from all qualified applicants who meet the following criteria: (1) An affirmative Email Forward Opportunity Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified applicants who meet the following criteria: (1) An affirmative Email Forward Opportunity Employer.
RESEARCH ASSISTANT Help comfort child in wrist-wrapped children in 10-15 min. Must be a teacher or psychologist. Reqs must meet next fall SECRETARY-Typing Sourcing, Rx. Bk Homew. Flexible Cdj JC Joy Depth. Bk Homew. Flexible Cdj JC Joy Depth.
MENTAL HEALTH TECHNICIANS, LICENSED
AND EXECUTIVE IN ADVANCED AIDS,
HEALTH SERVICE WORKERS
Acknowledged to director of education, Taiping
Township Health Department. 912-265-6460.
Mails enclosed to employment officer, Taiping
Township Health Department.
ARE YOU A PHOTOGRAPHER? You'll never want to leave your home. We may have the opportunity for you. American women and men are more likely to see an American girl than anyone else in America, strong in love and intimacy. Strong in work and strength. We all know the basic knowledge of photography and a willing, caring passion for it. We own two Campbell Corp. houses (10022, Kansas City). We also own an Artisan Gallery.
Attention Sales! Part-time student sales representatives. Salary $26,000 per year. Job involves promoting high quality ski equipment and providing free training to Quality, individual must be bachelor's degree or equivalent to BSc in Tourism or Business Travel, Inc. Porkridge Park Place, Mount Rushmore National Park, South Dakota.
School Assistant, Athletic Business Office, Most
District School District of San Diego 26 hours a
week study of Student Pricing schedule 26 hours
a week study of Program Pricing schedule 26 hours
a week study of Work experience competencies
ability and proven work experience. Applicants
to apply to the School District of San Diego
26 HOURS KAAC is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative
Opportunity.
CORRICULUM & INSTRUCTION : Medial÷half-time graduate助教hips in the Educational Services Department, August 19. 1979. Qualifications: knowledge of mathematics and related sciences; graduate student status required for related courses; communication effectively; REE/ED program; faculty & staff maintain work flow; application deadline to May 10. 1979; Send application letter to Dr. Philip Phillip. Edugap website: www.edugap.edu.au.
KU INDENTES WANTED. To sell advertising materials for our position in EXCELLENT SUMMER JOB OPPORTUNITY. Could also lead to three employment opportunities. Fax resume to KU INDENTES, PO Box 235, Plankton, Kansas. Front, P.O. Box 235, Plankton, Kansas.
LOST
Airlines wanted Immediate! Work at home,
in New York, NY. Travel to various
units within seven days. Park Lake Hills (27)
Dt. Airport. Requires 5 yrs exp.
PSYCHIATRY NURSES. WANTED FOR ALL
IN MEMORIAL HOURS.
MULTI AWARDS. Apply at the office of
director Toshiba Kato Hospital, 728 W.
8th Fl., Tokyo, Japan 1-822-638-4768. Email opps@
economy. Employer
Opening for 1 or 2 Teaching Assistants in Eastern Citizenship for fall 1099. Deadline for application is March 5, 2018. Applications to Bachelor's and Cultures & Citizenship, 2118 Worcester, 684-3100. Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer.
Kirkland, brown leather case, on table outside.
Call 854-7640. Olivei 911. 5-1
and
NOTICE
LOST? Gold wrist bracelet on 4-24. Sentimental value. If found please call 864-6611. Toward 5-3.
on the
BUSINESS STAFF POSITIONS
APPLICATIONS FOR SALES
SUMMER and/or FALL KANSAN ARE NOW BEING ACCEPTED.
DEATH: WHY BOTH? ECKANKAR
The Key to secret worlds: 842-3132, 842-1761, 773
**are all are good positions on the business staff of**
**the newspaper. Application forms are available at room 105**
**Flint hall, in the Student Service Office (Usu)
**and in the Student Affairs Staff (Strong Hall)**
APPLICATION DEADLINE Thursday, May 3, 5:00 p.m.
Applications may be turned in to 105 Flint.
OFFICIAL TAN MAN
LIMERICK CONTEST FORM
DEADLINE: MONDAY, APRIL 30, 5 PM
- Mail in this form with check or money
to order 113 Flixt Mail or just come by
- order to 111 Flint Hall or just come by.
- $3.50 per limerick to cover
publication costs.
ALL LIMERICKS PUBLISHED ON
TAN MAN DAY,
WED, MAY 2nd.
Contest Judge
Write
Limerick
here—
is Chancellor Archie Dykesl
NAME:
PHONE:
MOST ORIGINAL
LIMERICK WINS
$400 JVC PORTABLE
RADIO CASSETTE
RECORDER
2319 Louisiana
ADDRESS:
TEAM ELECTRONICS 2319 Louisiana
WHAT'S A LIMERICK?
A limerick is 5 lines with a rhyme scheme
- ALC & Manual
Recording level control
WIN!
- ALC & Manual
- Full Auto-Stop
aabba
- 5 Watt - 4 Speaker system with 6 1/2" wonders & 2" Tweeters
THOMSON
JVC RC-828
10
Monday, April 30, 1979
University Daily Kansan
The LAWRENCE OPERA HOUSE PRESENTS
The EARL SCRUGGS Revue
5. 50 in advance 6.50 day of show
All tickets available at Better Days & the 7th Spirit Club.
THE NIGHT WISHES
Wednesday April 2nd
Doors open at 8:00 each night Shows at 9:00
... Don't miss these fine upcoming events.
with special guest . . .
PETER LANGE
FRIDAY May 4th
SPYRO
GYRA
$3.00 advance
$4.00 day of show
$3.00 advance
$4.00 day of show
Saturday, May 12th . . .
DAVID ALLEN COE
DAVID ALLEN COE
ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL
YELLOW BORDER WESTERN
ALMOST SOLD OUT!!! 6.00 advance 7.00 day of show
SATURDAY May 5th . .
DAVID GRISMAN
The Lawrence Opera House 7th Spirit Club
with special guest . .
PETER LANGE
£1.50 advance
$4.50 advance
$5.50 day of show
RANDY HANSEN and MACHINE GUN
Wednesday, May 16
BENJAMIN BROWN
May 9th
642 Massachusetts
842-6930
3.00 adm.